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    Home » HBO’s “Stockton on My Mind” Shows Mayor’s Hopes, Plans For Struggling City

    HBO’s “Stockton on My Mind” Shows Mayor’s Hopes, Plans For Struggling City

    By SHOOTSaturday, August 8, 2020Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1664 Views
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    In this image released by HBO, Mayor Michael Tubbs, center, with students Isaiah Evans, left, and Joy Almendarez in Stockton, Calif., in a scene from the documentary "Stockton On My Mind." The film dives into the dreams of an unlikely mayor, who became the community’s youngest and first Black mayor in 2016, and who defied odds to lead his impoverished, Central California city. (HBO via AP)

    By Russell Contreras, AP Race & Ethnicity Reporter

    --

    Walk into the Stockton, Calfornia, city offices and you might hear Drake's "God's Plan" coming from the mayor's office. There, Mayor Michael Tubbs could be bobbing his head to the lyrics, "I can't do this one my own, ayy, no, ayy." Outside those walls sits one of the poorest, least literate communities in the nation.

    And yet there's nowhere else this 30-year-old Stanford University graduate would rather find himself, even amid the hate and ridicule critics throw at him.

    "Stockton on My Mind," a new HBO documentary available to stream for free beginning Friday, dives into the dreams of this unlikely mayor who defied odds in 2016 to lead his impoverished city. The son of a single mother and a father serving time in prison, Tubbs defeated Republican incumbent Anthony Silva to become the community's youngest and first Black mayor. That same night Donald Trump shocked the nation and won the presidency.

    Tubbs immediately shot to national stardom among depressed liberals who sought new, bold ideas to fight poverty, violence and educational inequality. And it was those bold ideas that garnered praise and scorn.

    Soon after taking office, the film illustrates how Tubbs attracted private funds to experiment with a basic income plan that critics dismissively called "free money" for the poor. He organized former prison inmates to keep peace among gangs and got more private donations to provide scholarships to the city's poor high school students. It's all about empowering others to "upset the setup," he explained.

    "It's interesting. It feels like we've been moving forward while the country is moving backward," Tubbs told The Associated Press on a recent weekday after taking a COVID-19 test. (It was negative.) "We're definitely not perfect. We have a lot of work to do."

    In the film, Tubbs must also focus on his marriage to Albuquerque, New Mexico-born scholar Anna Malaika Nti-Asare-Tubb and their new baby. And he has unresolved matters with his father, Michael Tubbs Sr., a former gang member, some called a "monster," who is trying to connect with his son.

    Initially, the mayor turned down director Marc Levin's offer to follow him around to document his life during his time in the city council. But then Tubbs agreed after Levin vowed he wanted to make a film not just about a young mayor but about a city seeking a comeback.

    Besides Tubbs, "Stockton on My Mind" looks into the life of Raymond Aguilar, a man who served more than two decades in prison and now works with at-risk communities to deter violent crime. It also shows the work of Jasmine Dellafosse, a community organizer and activist who helps youth avoid the court system.

    The documentary is the latest in new line of films that look into the works of insurgent candidates of color in the age of Trump. The 2019 Netflix film "Knock Down the House" by Rachel Lears, for example, examines the campaigns of U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and other progressive candidates who challenge incumbents.

    "Stockton on My Mind" will stream free on HBO until Sept. 21.

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    Tags:HBOMarc LevinMichael TubbsStockton on My Mind



    Nathalie Baye, French actor known for her warmth and versatility, dies at 77

    Sunday, April 19, 2026
    Actress Nathalie Baye poses for photographers during a photo call for the film Juste La Fin Du Monde (It's Only The End Of The World) at the 69th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, May 19, 2016. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus, File)

    Nathalie Baye, a French actor who was a fan's favorite for her her down-to-earth charm and great versatility, has died. She was 77.

    French president Emmanuel Macron paid tribute to an actor "with whom we loved, dreamed and grew." French media reported that Baye died on Friday in Paris from a neurodegenerative disease, quoting a statement from her relatives.

    "We loved Nathalie Baye so much," Macron wrote in a message on X. "Through her voice, her smiles, and her modesty, she accompanied the past decades of French cinema, from François Truffaut to Tonie Marshall."

    Baye featured in more than 80 movies, switching from mainstream comedies to auteur films with ease in a career that spanned over five decades. She twice claimed the prize for best actress at the Césars, France's equivalent of the Oscars.

    Baye, who was Leonardo DiCaprio's on-screen mother in Steven Spielberg's "Catch Me If You Can," won both popular and critical acclaim for her role in "Venus Beauty Institute," a romantic comedy that follows three women working in a Parisian beauty salon as they search for fulfilment. Marshall won the César award for best director in 2000 for the movie.

    The daughter of artists, Baye first trained as a dancer then honed her acting skills at the famed Cours Simon and the Conservatoire. She took the spotlight in François Truffaut's "Day for Night" in 1973 and, five years later, worked with him again on "The Green Room."

    Baye worked with directors Maurice Pialat, Claude Sautet and Bertrand Tavernier, among others. She rose to fame with "The Return of Martin Guerre" in 1982. A year later, her role as a tough-talking streetwalker devoted to her down-and-out gangster boyfriend Philippe Leotard in "La Balance" earned her a... Read More

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