Charlie Albright
Innovative Improvisational Piano
Media Illiteracy
Note: Town Hall events are approximately 75 minutes long.
Get ready to explore the uncomfortable conversations you’ve been eager for in a space that encourages open and safe expression. Weaving together storytelling, poetry, music, and panel interviews with powerful voices, Unlearning offers the opportunity to address issues like discrimination, social justice, violence, and many other pressing (and often taboo) topics while healing and learning together.
How do you know what’s true? How do you know if you should trust your sources of information? With claims of “fake news,” Russian interference in social media, and changes in administration, it can seem like truth is subjective or unknowable. But there are ways to determine if your information sources are reliable and trustworthy.
Amity Addrisi is an Emmy Award-winning journalist who has been in a TV studio since she learned to walk. She’s been called an expert in connection, uniting people through shared and often humorous experiences. Her life and career began in her hometown of Los Angeles where she studied Literature as well as Geology at UCLA and worked for the Dr. Phil Show and Access Hollywood. Switching from celebrities to politics and government, Amity spent nearly two decades as a TV news anchor, medical health journalist, and the host of NBC Seattle’s New Day Northwest. She joined the Allen Institute in September of 2024. As the Senior Communications and Media Relations Specialist, her mission is to explore new and creative ideas that highlight the incredible work being done at the Institute every day.
Angela Poe Russell is a veteran TV journalist and storyteller, known for her in-depth reporting and compelling interviews. She is currently a contributing host for KIRO Newsradio and a Playwright in Residence at Seattle Public Theater. Prior to this, she co-hosted the award-winning television shows Evening and Take 5 on KING 5 in Seattle; but her career has taken her all over the country, from the deep south to the northeast. Angela’s work in TV news earned her a National Gracie Award and previously, a Northwest Emmy Award. She has spent the last decade expanding the reach of her storytelling through diverse mediums, including film and theater. Together, with her husband Victor, they have four children.
Marcus Harrison Green is the publisher of Hinton Publishing, the founder of the South Seattle Emerald, and a columnist with The Stranger. Growing up in South Seattle, he experienced first-hand the impact of one-dimensional stories on marginalized communities, which taught him the value of authentic narratives. After an unfulfilling stint in the investment world during his twenties, Marcus returned to his community with a newfound purpose of telling stories with nuance, complexity, and multidimensionality with the hope of advancing social change. This led him to become a writer and found the South Seattle Emerald. An award-winning journalist, he was awarded the Seattle Human Rights Commissions’ Individual Human Rights Leader Award for 2020, and named the inaugural James Baldwin Fellow by the Northwest African American Museum in 2022.
Lindsey T.H. Jackson is a North American-based leader serving humans around the world. As CEO at LTHJ Global, Lindsey empowers people, leaders, and organizations to pursue and achieve their full potential. For 15+ years Lindsey has been authentically leading empowering entities for personal and organizational wellness. Lindsey specializes in executive coaching using the Enneagram, group facilitation, DEI training and implementation, and team development.
Presented by Town Hall Seattle.
Innovative Improvisational Piano
Rental Partner: Earshot Jazz presents
Les Égarés
King/Snohomish County Regional Spelling Bee