A Call To Arms !!!! - Harborplace, Baltimore

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  • Jim
    Administrator
    • Dec 2000
    • 1096

    #31
    El Gleno Grande (Glen Singer) emailed this info to me... Looks like Jerry has gotten some press. --Jim

    -----------------------------------------------------------

    www.mddailyrecord.com


    Volume: 4   Number: 84_wednesday   October 8, 2003
    Comedian sues city after being barred from Inner Harbor

    By EZRA K. FIESER
    Daily Record Business Writer

    The joke is on the city of Baltimore. It‚s been sued ˜ by a comedian. The
    American Civil
    Liberties Union has added street performer Jerry Rowan to a lawsuit
    claiming the city‚s
    rules governing the street performer program at the Inner Harbor violate
    the First
    Amendment.
    - Ezra K. Fieser


    www.sunspot.net/maryland

    Comedian's wisecracks no cause for censorship
    Dan Rodricks
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Originally published Oct 9, 2003

    Dan Rodricks
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    I‚M GLAD the American Civil Liberties Union is taking up for the
    comic-juggler Jerry
    Rowan. Remind me to send these people some money. I want to remain a
    card-carrying
    member of any organization that stands up for a standup comic's right to
    balance a bicycle
    on his nose and tell jokes in the town square -- in this case, the Inner
    Harbor -- even if
    someone in the crowd takes offense.

    This is Baltimore, not Beijing.

    This is the land of the free, where the first lady of Maryland can
    announce she'd like to
    shoot Britney Spears -- and not even apologize!

    This is a great country!

    Rush Limbaugh is an overrated talk-show host because the media in this
    country have been
    very desirous that a middle-aged white blowhard do well.

    There, I said it!

    Vive la liberte! (That's French. I used it just then to annoy the
    French-haters out there.
    Pretty funny, huh?)

    But what we have here in Rowan vs. City of Baltimore is a comic being
    deprived of a
    livelihood -- and a public deprived of his humor -- because of some
    arbitrary judgment that
    a couple of jokes he delivered during his juggling act a year ago near the
    Rouse Co.'s
    Harborplace were offensive to persons unknown.

    As one of the most popular performers at the Inner Harbor over the past
    two decades,
    Rowan, a New York wise guy and graduate of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum &
    Bailey
    Clown College, has told a million jokes while pedaling a unicycle and
    juggling flaming
    torches in the amphitheater between the Light and Pratt street pavilions.
    He has a very
    strong act, with lots of clever improv. He is blessed with great timing
    and the instincts for
    working a crowd into big laughs.

    The jokes that got him into trouble with the Rouse Co. last October were
    more wisecracks
    than anything else -- the kind of thing you might get from sarcastic
    deejays on FM rock
    stations during morning drive time -- and they had to do with the sniper
    shootings in the
    Washington suburbs.

    Now, a string of random killings might not have been a wise choice as
    subject matter for
    Rowan, but he has frequently spiced his act with a little edge and some
    topical references.
    That kind of comedy always generates complaints, and the Rouse Co. got
    some. But
    Rowan remained in place as the top act in the amphitheater.

    Then, last October, he made some cracks about the snipings.

    "I was driving downtown this morning," Rowan said, "and on the radio I
    heard that they've
    finally come out with a composite of the sniper, so there should be an
    arrest forthcoming.
    Apparently, he's a white guy that speaks Spanish and looks like he's Arab."

    He thinks he might have then quipped: "Five thousand cops and they can't
    find one guy."

    As I said, wisecracks, and not even that funny -- in the world of
    contemporary live comedy,
    tame stuff. Rowan can't remember the crowd booing or grumbling about these
    remarks.
    What he heard was laughter.

    But apparently some city police officers took offense and complained to
    Harborplace
    management. A short time later, the Rouse Co. removed Rowan from the list
    of approved
    street performers. He hasn't worked at Harborplace, his bread-and-butter
    venue, since.

    Harborplace was built on city parkland. The amphitheater is a public
    space. But the Rouse
    Co. generally controls what happens there -- as if it's Disney and the
    amphitheater Disney
    World. In administering the street-performer program, it holds public
    auditions -- for
    several years with its once-top performer, Jerry Rowan, as emcee -- and
    apparently has
    considerable authority over who gets to sing for their supper. (The
    performers are not paid,
    and work for tips.)

    Rowan made plenty of tips but, more than that, his performances at
    Harborplace generated
    other jobs, including many corporate parties, at $1,000 a pop. All that
    has dried up in the
    year since he was blacklisted.

    "I'm sitting here reading Inside Lacrosse magazine," Rowan said yesterday.

    Rowan's wife is a physical therapist. He's a stay-at-home dad with two
    little kids, and he
    doesn't have much time during the week to promote himself or run out for
    jobs, even if he
    got them. The fabulous, good-weather weekends at Harborplace generated
    most of his
    annual income as a street performer, $20,000 to $30,000.

    The hardship on Rowan might not be our concern.

    But every fan of free speech should be outraged that, based on a couple of
    complaints,
    some fraidy-cat with a degree in marketing can ban the likes of Jerry
    Rowan from a public
    place.

    "By allowing speech to be banned solely because of its content," said
    Rajeev Goyle, the
    ACLU attorney representing Rowan, "the city of Baltimore has transformed
    the Inner
    Harbor, a large public gathering place that is Baltimore's main public
    square, into an area
    where only approved speech is permitted, in direct violation of the First
    Amendment."

    The "Rousting" of this guy out of Harborplace is an outrage. I'm glad the
    ACLU is suing
    the city on Rowan's behalf.

    But I'm a taxpayer of the old palatinate and I don't want to pay for a big
    settlement.

    So let's put the man back to work -- in Harborplace, in prime time, on
    busy weekend
    afternoons -- and let him work for laughs, and for his supper.

    [ 10-19-2003: Message edited by: Jim ]</p>

    Comment

    • Jim
      Administrator
      • Dec 2000
      • 1096

      #32
      Even More news (see post below, as well) Steven Baird wrote me the following email. --Jim

      ----------------------------------------------------------

      Jim:

      I've recently updated the legal section on Street Arts & Buskers Advocates web pages with two pages. The ACLU has just taken on Jerry Rowan's challenge and there were a number of articles and editorials this past week including one in the Washington Post.  The two pages are:


      1. Tom Noddy emails and documents about his recent civil disobedience act of being arrested for juggling on the streets of Santa Cruz on June 26, 2003. http://communityartsadvocates.org/sa...SantaCruz.html
      2. Jerry Rowan documents and online references about the banning of his street performances from Baltimore Harborplace by the City of Baltimore and Rouse Company on October 21, 2002 for telling a joke about the DC sniper case. http://communityartsadvocates.org/sa...baltimore.html


      Jerry asked me to urge folks to write letters to the editors to the Baltimore publications The Sun and City Paper.  Thanks to the Butterfly Man and Glenn Singer for past letters of support.

      I am also preparing to sue the City of Boston in Federal court for limiting performances.  Any artists who have been shut down for performing in Dock Square (front of Faneuil Hall by the Sam Admas statue) or other areas of the city should contact me asap.

      Thanks


      Stephen H. Baird
      Street Arts and Buskers Advocates
      Community Arts Advocates, Inc.
      PO Box 112
      Jamaica Plain, MA 02130
      617-522-3407
      mail@communityartsadvocates.org


      Street Arts and Buskers Advocates: Celebrating self-expression as a basic human right essential for the healthy growth of youth, individuals and communities

      Comment

      • Jim
        Administrator
        • Dec 2000
        • 1096

        #33
        Here's an update on the latest in the Jerry Rowan/ Baltimore/ Harborplace saga...

        I just spoke to Jerry on the phone. He's trying to stay warm and patiently waiting for the ACLU to get the time to look at his case.

        This was taken from Steven Baird's web site:
        February 4, 2004 -- Thje City of Baltimore is considering a new street entertainers ordinance with an application fee of $75. See article in Baltimore City Paper http://www.citypaper.com/2004-02-04/mobs.html

        February 5, 2004 -- Received call from Jerry Rowan with an update on the status of his legal case against the City of Baltimore. The joining of Jerry Rowan's case with the Woman in Black war protest case by the ACLU was challenged by the city and the court agreed the cases need to be argued separately. The ACLU and Jerry Rowan are actively seeking a large law firm to support a First Amendment federal court case. Jerry has been unable to perform in Baltimore for over 16 months.
        More information will be here when it comes in.

        Jim

        Comment

        • Butterfly Man
          Senior Member
          • Dec 2000
          • 1606

          #34
          Uncle Jerry vs. that bitch

          Talked with Jerry Rowen today ... he reports steady progress has been made with the ACLU and his pending action against Harbourfront ... as he put's it:

          "Never start a fight with an ugly man, Robert ... they've got nothin' to lose."


          ...words to live by!


          P.S. That book Gazzo is selling has a bunch of Jerry's lines in it ... (amongst a host of others) ... no one gave him permission to use any of them ... Gazzo should be drawn and quartered.

          Comment

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