Pittsburg, PA
Trump to hold rally in Butler after first assassination attempt
BUTLER, Pa. (KDKA) — Former President Donald Trump is returning to the Butler Farm Show grounds for the first time since an assassination attempt in July.
Trump was grazed in the ear, firefighter Corey Comperatore was killed and two others were injured when Thomas Crooks opened fire from the top of a nearby building.
It’s estimated that anywhere between 15,000 to 60,000 people will attend his rally in Butler County.
The gates for Saturday’s event open at 10 a.m. Trump is expected to start speaking at 5 p.m. According to his guest list, attendees include Comperatore’s family, one of the men who was injured at the last rally, Marc Fogel’s mother Malphine, Elon Musk and vice presidential nominee JD Vance.
Construction could cause traffic issues
With construction on Route 68, traffic could be an issue. Cars were backing up on Friday. Route 68 is one of the ways into the Butler Farm Show grounds, and Meridian Road on the other side is partially closed.
“It’s going to be difficult travel tomorrow getting here to where you gotta park,” Butler County DA Richard Goldinger said.
Goldinger said local police will be assisting with traffic. State police will help. With construction near the farm show complex, Goldinger said to be patient and follow the officers’ and troopers’ instructions.
“Follow their orders. Don’t drive in closed lanes or anything like that. We want everybody to be safe,” Goldinger said.
While there is parking at the farm show, some nearby lots are selling spaces. One right next to the grounds is selling spots for $20. Some people were already paying to park on Friday. The property owner says they can fit about 400 cars and will have four to five people out getting the money and cars into the lot.
The district attorney is calling on people to have patience and plan on Saturday being a longer day out. The traffic between people, politicians and other celebrities is expected to slow down the flow of everything.
“It doesn’t change the fact that this road is under construction so it’s going to be slow travel,” Goldinger said.
Security for this Trump rally will be different
Butler County Commissioner Leslie Osche said the Butler County Emergency Services Agency will be the unified communications bridge between the United States Secret Service, state and local police, fire, and EMS.
Unlike the first rally on July 13, there will be one command post. In that post, there will be one person from all law enforcement and emergency services agencies working the rally.
During the first rally, three separate radio systems created communication delays. On Saturday, there will be one for state and local police and one for the Secret Service. A Secret Service agent will also be embedded with each state and local team.
Goldinger told KDKA-TV earlier this week that the snipers posted inside the AGR building where Crooks fired from have been asked to help again. Law enforcement will also be on top of the AGR building.
Man who was behind Trump during shooting says he’ll be back
One person expected to be in the crowd is a man who was sitting behind Trump when the former president was grazed by a bullet on July 13.
Chesher said he witnessed the attempted assassination of Trump.
“It’s been a couple of months but I’m still processing what happened that day. The emotions are all over the place,” Chesher said.
He said he’ll be back at the Butler Farm Show grounds this weekend.
“We’re forever connected to President Trump now,” Chesher said.
Not far away from Chesher, others were struck, including Comperatore, who died as a result of being hit by a bullet meant Trump.
Chesher said he believes there will be “a spiritual positivity” at the rally on Saturday. Chesher also said he believes he will be sitting behind Trump again on Saturday.
As for being worried about more violence, given what occurred, Chesher believes Saturday’s event will be a safe one.
“He said it should be the most secure event. In my heart, I believe it will be the most secure event. I think God’s on our side though,” Chesher said.
Chesher said he’s hoping to talk to the former president, and regardless, he hopes the event is peaceful.
Pittsburg, PA
From basketball move to poem to show at the Carnegie International
“Nothing happens only when it happens,” writes Ross Gay in “Be Holding,” his acclaimed book-length 2021 poem that spins a single iconic basketball move from 1980 into a passionate meditation on togetherness, care and Black life in America.
Now the live performance built around the poem, which premiered in 2023, in Philadelphia, is itself happening again as part of the 59th Carnegie International.
The remounted show features two performers reciting the poem, inspired by Hall of Famer Julius “Dr. J” Erving’s famous “baseline scoop” basket in Game 4 of the 1980 NBA finals, with live music and a small troupe of student performers. It gets two performances on the International’s opening weekend, Sat., May 2, and Sun., May 3, at the Hill District’s Thelma Lovette YMCA. (The May 2 show is sold out.)
The International, Pittsburgh’s largest showcase of international art, features work by some 60 artists and collectives. Opening weekend includes a number of performances and special events at the museum and other satellite locations.
The Carnegie’s Ryan Inouye says he and his fellow International co-curators commissioned the new version of “Be Holding” after seeing the 2023 premiere production.
“We were just floored by it,” Inouye said. He said the show’s blend of poetry, new music and theater with community performers in a community space expressed the themes of collective effort suggested in the International’s title, “if the word we.”
“This is really emblematic of what we are trying to build within the exhibition,” he said.
‘Black flight and Black genius’
Gay is known for works like his best-selling 2019 collection “The Book of Delights.” He’s a basketball player and fan who grew up near Philadelphia, but was just 5 when the 76ers’ Dr. J seemed to defy gravity in a baseline drive against Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s Los Angeles Lakers that ended in a reverse layup.
As Gay describes the move, Erving left his feet on the baseline and, finding his path to a straightforward dunk blocked by a Lakers defender, “simply decided, in the air, to knock on other doors by soaring more.”
Bill O’Driscoll
/
90.5 WESA
“Have you ever decided anything … anything … in the air?” Gay asks in the poem.
Gay studied the play obsessively on YouTube, and produced a poem that marries an anatomy of that moment to thoughts about the Middle Passage, Black flight, music and more. “Ross Gay takes one fluid human gesture and through it expands the lungs of personal and communal history so they might hold all joy, terror, and violence of this world,” wrote the American poet and editor Gabrielle Calvocoressi.
Before he’d even finished writing “Be Holding,” his friend Brooke O’Hara, a theater artist, convinced him it should also be the basis for a live performance.
“It is a beautiful poem about Black flight and Black genius, and it definitely addresses how we look at each other and how we engage each other through the point of holding and caring for and embracing each other, and through joy,” O’Harra said. “There are moments when [Gay] kind of analyzes a kind of looking that is about violence and pain, but always is turning back to how do we look with joy, and how do we look at Black images, and understand and experience the Black experience as one of genius and flight and joy.”
The show was created in collaboration with Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Tyshawn Sorey and New York-based new-music quartet Yarn/Wire.
‘Embody these moves’
O’Harra developed choreography for the original show with a small ensemble of high-school students and the Philadelphia-based poets and performers David Gaines and Yolanda Wisher, who performed the text in the premiere production, at Philadelphia’s Girard College.
“Be holding is a Black epic poem, which we don’t really see many of them. A 90-page poem about a five second YouTube clip,” said Gaines. “And Black in a way that it is still human that anyone can get anything from the piece.”
Gaines again takes a lead role in the Pittsburgh production, this time joined by Gay himself. Yarn/Wire will perform the partly improvised score on two grand pianos and a pair of large percussion ensembles including drums, chimes and gongs. And a group of performers from Pittsburgh-area high schools worked with O’Harra to develop their version of the show.
“We are just letting them embody these moves and see what it looks like on stage or with the music,” said O’Harra during a Sunday rehearsal this past February, in Downtown’s Trust Arts Education Center.
The general idea is to turn basketball moves into dance moves, to the tune of composer Sorley’s atmospheric score.
“I like the basketball aspect,” said Isaac Walker, a Mt. Lebanon High School sophomore who’s in the show. “I’m not on a team, but I would say I’m pretty good. And it was an interesting opportunity.”
As Gay learned after publishing “Be Holding,” few young folks recall Dr. J, who retired from the NBA in 1987, let alone his iconic baseline move against the Lakers. (In 1980, Michael Jordan was still in high school and LeBron James was not yet born.)
“I would say it’s about Ross’ like point of view in life, like with basketball and without, like his experiences in just being Black in America,” Walker said.
‘A grounded setting’
“Be Holding” performer Gigi Dutrieuille, a City High student and aspiring actor, said in February she hadn’t yet read Gay’s entire poem. “I got through like half of it, low-key, and left it in my bedroom for the time being,” she said.
Because all the show’s adult performers are based in other cities (O’Harra in Philadelphia), rehearsals were confined to one weekend in February and the week before the show. This past Monday, students met O’Harra in the Thelma Lovette gym to finalize the choreography.
Courtesy of Brooke O’Harra
Despite challenges like getting transportation to the venue for the late-afternoon-into-evening rehearsals, and finding time to complete homework, the young performers remained enthused about the project, doing movement exercises and passing basketballs as a way of establishing communication.
The Y’s gym was closed for several days for the load-in, on-site rehearsals and this weekend’s performance. The court sat outlined with audio, video and power cables, with a monitors facing out to the low bleachers where the audience will sit, and a screen for projected video suspended above the floor at half-court.
David Gaines, who’d performed “Be Holding” in the gym of Girard College, said the venue remains apt.
“I love being in a gym space because this poem is clearly about practicality, it is about togetherness, it is about community and it’s about basketball!” he said. “And so to be able to do a piece like this in a grounded setting, reflects really all the values that the poem is about.”
Pittsburg, PA
Supporters ready to cheer on runners at Pittsburgh Marathon
More than 50,000 people will run in one of the Pittsburgh Marathon events this weekend. It’s capped off by the marquee event of the marathon itself.
Call it a runner’s high or insanity; the marathon takes just about everything a person can muster up physically and mentally. That’s why supporters line the course, especially the tough miles down the stretch.
“It gives you a boost. It gives you a little bit of that rush to keep going, knowing that people are standing out there in sometimes not great conditions cheering you on,” said Ali Ewig with Dancing Gnome Running Club, which will be cheering around mile 23.
Running clubs, which are recent additions to the cheering sections, along with neighborhood groups like the Bloomfield Citizens Council and the Highland Park Community Council, which have been cheering for decades, all do their part. It can feel more like a block party with the vibes the groups give off as they help every runner get back Downtown.
“It’s a blast to finally be able to celebrate a sport that a lot of people do by themselves en masse together with everyone,” Dan Lampmann of Yinz Run Club said. His group will have a cheer section near PNC Park and on the South Side.
Arguably one of the toughest stretches can be crossing the Birmingham Bridge and climbing up the hill to get into Oakland. It can be a real gut check time for runners. So, Scottie Brown, dressed as Spiderman, will run up the hill with people to keep them going.
“I just run with them, encourage them, bring light to their day as they are halfway through the race, hitting that tough hill,” Brown said over Zoom.
And whether they are a yinzer running through town or someone from the other side of the world, there is pride in cheering people through the city’s neighborhoods.
“I think that we all have a lot of pride in cheering on these people that are maybe for the first time or maybe for the 50th time running this monumental personal goal for themselves,” Jessica Bowser Acrie of the Highland Park Community Council said. Her team will be set up around mile 20.
Sunday morning promises to be another marathon with miles of cheers.
Pittsburg, PA
First look: Titusz in Lawrenceville honors its namesakes
-
Finance2 minutes agoBessent wants Americans to avoid easy-money traps and invest in financial literacy
-
Fitness8 minutes agoHow Heidi Klum stays fit and strong at 52 – ‘I never exercise too much’
-
Movie Reviews20 minutes agoMovie Review: “Lee Cronin’s The Mummy” is likely to remind horror fans of better movies – The Independent | Southern Utah’s #1 Source for Arts, Events & Entertainment
-
World32 minutes agoUS adds Vietnam and EU, removes Argentina, Mexico from trade investigation watchlists
-
News38 minutes agoJury Convicts Florida Ex-Rep. David Rivera in Conspiracy Trial
-
Politics44 minutes agoAuthorities Release Video of Gunman in White House Correspondents’ Dinner Attack
-
Business51 minutes agoStocks and Oil Prices Sent Conflicting Signals in April Amid Havoc of Iran War
-
Science56 minutes agoThe Vaccine Skeptic in Trump’s New C.D.C. Leadership Team