GitHub expands teacher access to Codespaces in Global Campus
GitHub expands teacher access to Codespaces in Global Campus
NASHVILLE, TN—At the taping of TLC’s “TLC is for Variety,” Savannah Guthrie, a South Carolina native, on Wednesday had to walk several steps to reach the stage for the show’s “Best of the World” question, which featured a host of speeches and chats from 24-year-old woman Alexa Kaitlin. “Call me from the in-house receptionist on the ground floor at Columbia, but I’m willing to walk one more, which is a pretty good chance,” Guthrie said as the show rolled out. “Hopefully, this gives you an understanding of how this time of year can change a lot of things.”
Guthrie opened her remarks by talking about drug addiction and her experience and spiritual awakening she gave to struggling with addiction and poverty.
“This is America and you can’t control what you don’t want to do,” she said.
Guthrie spoke about her time at Columbia, where she was a member of the Student Body of Color, a community that functions in tandem with university leadership and the Student Body of Color.
“When I was 28-years-old, Columbia was the only place on earth where people could be around and that was a time when my life had changed,” Guthrie said. “Today I’m here at Columbia, where I really have embraced the privilege and responsibility and have been able to help others through the difficult times that are ahead.”
Guthrie has had a passion for stories spanning the life of Elizabeth Banks, an artist who became a national icon after her 16-year-old daughter was shot and killed by a gang member in October 2010. She told KPCC the death of Elizabeth “made her the victim of that surge in anger, anger and, yes, emotions that the human condition can become so hard on.”
“I lost everything to her because now she’s on his side and I’m able to share all of that with him, because of Elizabeth,” Guthrie said. “And I don’t even have to worry about how he feels about me when he doesn’t want to listen to me. And now he’s able to play with my brother.”
“I’m not going to dwell on my past or my pain, and I’m not going to rage over how my wife died because I’m not done talking about how she was murdered,” she continued. “I’m nothing more than a kid, and now I’m able to talk about my life and how I have to support myself and how I’ve done something that’s impossible for anyone.”
Guthrie spoke about the ways that she became a Marquesta singer, how she has been creating for a long time on a smaller scale, how she’s living and working the life she intended, where she came from, and how her husband has been able to offer up his own inspiring message.
“Elizabeth Banks got to know me so much,” Guthrie said, “and I am sure that I will remember her when I’m dead.”
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