►
From YouTube: City Spotlight June
Description
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https://amara.org/v/C0tHK/
A
Hi
I'm
Mayor
Frank
County,
welcome
to
this
edition
at
City,
spotlight.
Arjuna
dishes
has
lots
to
offer
we're
going
to
be
up
to
the
absolute
art
world
home
of
Iowa's,
first
graffiti
art
studio
and
see
as
proprietor,
John
Lanham,
and
then
we're
going
to
stop
down
and
see
emmerdale
rossi
and
iowa
native
band
the
poison
control
center.
For
a
look
at
what
to
expect
at
the
8035
concert
this
summer.
Stick
with
us,
we've
got
a
great
show.
A
B
B
B
Or
or
there
some
steps
of
Lloyd
actually
how
I
transitioned
into
graffiti
art
was
well.
I
went
to
Valley
High
School
that
then,
from
there
my
dream
school
was
the
schoolyard
institute
of
chicago.
I
went
there
didn't
even
know
the
notion
of
look
at
what
I
mean.
What
we
would
you
honor
by
her
okay,
I
said
to
practice
and
hone
my
skills
in
fine
art
and
classical
traditional.
You
know,
grant
would
dig
a
Monet
Picasso
Alden
and
many
I
I
still
love
them
and
put
visual.
B
B
A
Want
to
know
if
you
ever
did
it
illegally,
but
in
the
meantime
you
know
we're
a
graffiti
art
sort
of
men.
Remember
years
ago
in
on
Manhattan
Island
and
watching
the
subways,
the
cars
go
by
legends
and
you
know
there
was.
There
was
some
stuff
that
was
not
quite
as
fine
yeah,
but
some
of
it
come
by
and
go
oh
right
very.
C
A
B
So
a
really
good
question.
That's
a
really
good
question.
Ok,
so
I
gotta
say
this
all
right.
I
I
can't
remember
who,
which
artist
I'm
just
going
to
some
artists
quote
unquote,
said
a
bit
painting
is
never
finished
its
abandoned,
so
that
kind
of
goes
hand
in
hand
with
the
with
your
question.
It's
I
use
my
traditional
values
and
skills
to
apply,
and
then
I
already
I
always
have
some
sort
of
vision
or
idea.
Some
sort
of
you
know
subplot
to
where
I
have
something
to
fall
back
on.
B
A
B
This
is
very
basic.
This
is
this
is
a
pilot,
and
this
is
like
the
very
first
pilot
marker
that
people
would
use
I'm
going
to
use
New
York
as
an
example
to
write
on
subway
trains
sure
this
is
what
some
thought.
This
is.
What
veteran
graffiti
writers
really
relate
to
this
marker
right
here.
This
design
is
the
exact
same
pilot
design
that
they
have
on
the
marker.
They
only
came
in
black,
blue
and
red
the
difference
between
this,
and
this
is
absolutes
and
named
my
gallery.
Of
course
it's
a
stencil,
and
so
is
this.
B
None
of
this
is
screen
printed.
The
difference
between
this
and
contemporary
art
is
that.
A
B
B
B
More
style
in
each
letter,
okay,
that
much
what
I
was
a
good
example
of
them
all
right,
so
I'm
just
going
to
do
the
same
name,
real,
okay,.
B
A
B
B
A
B
Demonstrate
it
at
Hoover,
I
demonstrated
tags
and
what
they
are
okay,
and
that
people
have
different
hand
styles
and
to
try
and
make
it
very
clean.
I
didn't
sell
that,
but
I
mean
the
one
of
the
biggest
tricks
is.
Your
very
first
letter
needs
to
be
very
clean:
okay,
okay
and
my
god,
I
went
from
tags
that
I
went
up.
There's
there's
a
few
different,
like
styles
of
graffiti
there's
as
a
bunch
of
styles
ography,
but
this
is
that
these
are
the
main
ones.
It's
tags
bombs
pieces
now.
A
A
B
A
B
B
A
good
example
for
Yoda
right
and
say
you
paint,
hey
Yoda,
he
wears
a
old
robe,
that's
a
small,
shrinking
old
wool
row.
That's
just
dirty!
You
paint
him
throw
some
tags
on
it.
Maybe,
though,
like
an
absolute,
you
know
make
it
look
like
he's
representing
my
company.
That's
a
really
or
put
a
good
paint
Yoda
with
it,
with
the
can
of
spray
paint
in
his
hand,
and
you
can
have
that
you
can
have
him.
B
A
B
Provide
you,
the
paint
at
a
discounted
price
I'll,
give
it
to
you
a
cost.
If
you're
in
my
class,
I'm
going
to
give
you
all
of
the
fundamentals
of
graffiti
and
that's
all
like
well,
that
is
why
it
is.
Twenty
dollars
is
because
I
am
very
well
educated
with
in
graffiti
and
with
graffiti,
and
it
just
encumbers
my
life
and
I
cover
it.
So,
okay.
B
A
With
me
now
is
Amedeo.
Rossi
Amedeo
is,
among
other
things,
with
the
des
moines
music
commission
emmerdale
welcome
to
City
spotlight.
Let's
get
to
see
him
air
good
to
see.
You
talk
to
us
a
little
about
what's
going
on
this
summer
and
you've
got
some
great
concerts
and
what's
going
on
with
music
commission
and
you.
C
C
The
july
second
and
third
concert
is
titled.
8035
is
back
again
this
year,
Friday
and
Saturday.
We've
got
national
acts
both
days
and
two
free
stages
and
quite
a
bit
going
on,
and
you
know
just
generally
from
a
music
scene
and
and
a
coalition
commission
standpoint,
we
just
everybody,
keeps
working
to
try
to
grow
the
music
scene
and
see
some
bands
do
well
and
see
more
acts
come
here,
and
you
know
so
so
we
can
all
see
good
music
and
not
just
see
it
past
five
to
see
it,
stop
and
really
celebrate.
A
C
C
They
just
had
a
song
on
Fox
television
shows
Chicago
code,
they
closed
the
whole
season
with
it,
and
so
it's
a
time
when,
when
people
are
making
good
music
a
lot
of
different
variety
and
I
see
a
time
when
we're
really
seeing
bands
that
are,
hopefully
you
know
trying
to
make
a
living
and
make
things
pop.
Let's.
A
C
Till
them
it's
from
midnight
to
11
excuse
me
noon.
It's
from
noon
to
11,
ok,
that
the
acts
are
playing
both
days,
Saturday
and
Sunday.
The
second
and
third,
the
location
is
the
western
gateway
park
and
we
basically
just
stitch
in
down
here
by
the
library,
the
Papa
John's
center.
You
know
the
new
walmart
campus
we've
got
two
stages
that
are
free
to
the
public
and
then
one
big
paid
stage
that
contains
a
lot
of
national
acts.
Mm-Hmm.
A
C
A
C
A
C
Expect
to
see
you
know
the
Des
Moines
actually
has
some
nice
offerings
for
festivals.
We
have
a
big
country
bash.
We
have,
you
know
more
of
a
harder
harder
rock
we
have
the
metal
fast,
which
is
laser
fast
and
Des.
Moines
is
more
in
I,
mean
8035
is
along
the
broad
indie
genre
and
kind
of
the
jam
and
roots
rock
John
genre.
So
we
kind
of
leave
those
in
on
the
stages
and,
if
you
like
one
or
the
other,
that's
what
you're
going
to
see.
Okay.
A
C
A
C
The
Commission
is
a
you
know,
a
supportive
organization,
you
know
that
works,
it
works
with
the
council,
you
know
to
identifying
needs,
needs
of
music,
and
you
know
specifically
to
the
music
scene,
the
the
coalition
who
kind
of
sister
organization.
You
know
we're
focused
on
growing
the
music
scene
by
providing
support
to
local
bands.
We
have
a
music
university
that
we
we
address,
educational
opportunities
like
how
do
you
get
a
gig
and
what's
your
social
media
need
to
look
like?
And
how
do
you
find
an
agent?
Or
what
do
you
do
with
your
recording?
C
A
C
Mean
we're
really
just
working
to
expand.
The
music
scene
expand
the
music
economy.
You
see
a
lot
of
corollaries
sorts
of
industry
that
are
happening,
recording
studios,
graphic
designers,
you
know
people,
people
doing
publicity
and
promotions
and
and
all
the
things
that
help
support
the
music
industry.
So
slowly
we're
growing
into
a
kind
of
a
micro,
music
industry
and.
C
A
C
I
think
that
the
local
industry
is
going
to
continue
to
grow
and
mature.
I
would
just
like
to
see
us
to
have
an
environment
where
a
real
talent,
it's
the
real
support
to
kind
of
make
where
we're
talent
meets
support,
to
make
a
real
go
at
it
in
the
industry
and
I
think
well,
I.
Think
in
the
next
couple
of
years
you'll
see,
you
know
us
des
moines
becoming
better
known
for
its
music
scene,
and
some
of
the
artists
has
created
how.
C
You
know
to
start
off
with
you:
have
a
supportive
group.
People
like
the
City,
Council
and
yourself
have
been
to
help
seed
us
and
get
us
started
and
years
ago
the
Community,
Foundation
and
the
city
were
instrumental
and
getting
us
going,
and
we
still
have
that
foundation
rolling
over
to
area
companies.
Us
cellular's,
a
big
supporter
well
mark,
is
a
big
supporter
principle
or
big
supporter
Meredith.
C
Basically,
their
money
that
goes
into
this
event
helps
subsidize
the
event,
helps
us
build
the
infrastructure
and
pay
for
some
of
the
bands
and
helps
us
keep
our
prices
low.
But
then,
as
far
as
a
community
event,
we're
all
volunteer
based-
and
we
have
you
know
dozens
of
people
that
work
on
8035
year-round
and
we
have
literally
hundreds.
C
A
A
D
D
A
D
I
was
living
in
ames
and
I
actually
went
to
a
concert
over
in
iowa
city
and
devon
was
16
years
old
there.
At
this
concert
I
was
19
years
old
and
he
had
a
t-shirt
on
that.
I
had
as
well
and
I
was
like.
Oh
I.
Have
that
same
t-shirt
and
I
was
like
you
should
he
should
be
in
a
band
I'm
starting
you
know,
and
that
was
kind
of
it.
He
was
exactly.
D
But
so
yeah
we
met
each
other
in
Iowa,
City
and
I
found
out.
He
was
living
in
Des
Moines
and
I
was
living
in
ames
and-
and
you
know,
10
years
later
here
we
said
kind
of
thing
so
but
yeah
he
was
16
when
he
joined
the
band,
so
his
parents
were
very
nice
and
letting
him
go
hang
out
with
a
19-year.
Eclipse
has
an.
D
A
E
On
so
we
right
now
we
have
three
songwriters
in
the
band
and
we
all
just
write
our
own
music
and
we
usually
like
just
demo
the
songs
by
ourselves
and
well
like
email
them
to
each
other,
and
that's
kind
of
you
know
we're
kind
of
spread
out
all
over
the
country.
I
was
in
the
prior
to
this
past
June
I
was
living
in
missouri
and
Joe
was
in
Asheville,
North
Carolina,
and
so
we
were
just
trading
songs
by
email.
That's
kind
of
you
know
what
we
did.
D
A
D
D
E
Yeah-
and
you
know
we
had
sort
of
system
where
one
another
would
be
one
person
designated
every
night
with
certain
duties,
and
one
of
those
would
be
to
write
the
set
list
and
then
the
second
half
of
the
shows
that
we've
been
doing
we
just
kind
of
said.
Well,
you
know
we
just
call
them
out.
You
know
just
based
on
whatever
it.
You
know
it
feels.
You
know
how.
A
D
Third
full-length
album
a
couple
weeks
in
June
and
yeah.
We
have
being
a
man
for
ten
years
and
having
multiple
songwriters
in
the
man.
We
we
have
a
little
bit
of
a
repertoire
and
we
can
choose
from
which
is
also
kind
of
hard,
because
then,
if
you
get
fans
or
whatever
friends
the
band,
who
want
to
hear
something,
that's
from
2002
that
you
haven't
played
since
you
know,
2005
might
be
kind
of
hard.
D
D
A
E
So
you
know
primarily,
we
play
venues
that
are
maybe
one
to
two
one.
Two
three
hundred
capacity
place
it
places
similar
in
size
to
like
the
vaudeville
mews
in
Des
Moines,
but
we
do.
We
have
played
some
larger
theaters
and
we
open
for
one
of
our
favorite
bands
pavement
in
Kansas
City.
That
was
about
2,400
capacity.
So
you
know
you've
run
a
pretty
good
spectrum,
you
know
and
then
we're
honored
to
play
festivals
like
8035,
where
you
know
we
get.
D
D
Des
Moines
that
we
kind
of
want
to
be
a
part
of
it.
Even
though
last
year
we
didn't
play
we
booked
our
to
around
coming
back
to
play
after
parties,
just
because
this
is
a
really
neat
thing
to
see.
All
these
great
bands
come
to
our
hometown
and
we
just
want
to
be
a
part
of
it,
whether
we're
playing
or
not.
You
know
well.