Jacksonian
Quincy Jackson
by Ari Glogower
April 30, 2008
Our peripatetic protagonist, a Terry native and graduate of Byram High School, abandons his theater studies at Hinds Community College in 2000 to crisscross the U.S. as a flight attendant for Northwest Airlines.
Two years later, a hit-and-run driver strikes Jackson as he walks across a McDonald’s parking lot—a near fatal accident that induces him to abandon his career in the sky and pursue a political science degree at Austin’s Huston-Tillotson University.
In between his studies, he works for the successful campaign of the Travis County Sheriff, and serves the city himself as a precinct chair. He graduates in 2004, and en route to accepting a job as a speechwriter in Seattle, Jackson makes what he intends to be a brief visit with his family back in Terry. He is so overcome with familial affection and excitement over the possibilities of life in Jackson that he declines the Seattle job and settles back home. It’s not so much a happy ending as the beginning of an exciting new chapter.
Now that he’s back home, Jackson, 30, is eager to share his experiences and skills with the community. At Rainbow, his job is to encourage communication with local residents. Last month he launched Rainbow’s first “Dinner and a Movie.” The inaugural installment of this bimonthly event featured a screening of “The 11th Hour” and a repast of grillades and grits. Future plans include hosting Fondren Theatre Workshop productions and summer programs for Jackson middle and high-school students.
As Jackson sees it, his most important task is to dispel the image of natural-food retailers such as Rainbow as a “niche” market that is out of reach for the average supermarket shopper. As he puts it: “You can eat healthy, and it tastes good, and it’s affordable.”
Jackson is most excited about a new non-profit he is starting that will expose local high-school students to fine dining, theater, opera and the arts. He sees it as a logical step after spending time away from Jackson, explaining, “I’ve worked with numerous non-profit organizations that all were interested in the betterment of youth, and it just invoked a passion in me to bring something back home.”
He may have plenty to keep him busy for now, but this former flight attendant seems to have an inclination for flying high. Could a future in local politics lie ahead? “I’ll put it this way, ... My background is political science for a reason,” he says, “but my plate is beautiful right now.”
posted by on 04/30/08 at 04:46 PM. [printer-friendly version]
COMMENTS
[Kamikaze] The Media Fix Is In
J.T.: Amen to pushing a positive Jackson. And, yes, it is a movement. And, it is moving.
Aug 27, 2008 | 06:17 PM
Ban the Paddle?
ladd: A lot of kids in all our schools are "scary smart." Many just haven't had the chance to prove it, yet. On the not-know-how-to-ask-a-str anger-a-question point -- how many strangers are completely ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 05:33 PM
Ban the Paddle?
Tom Head: The kids I've met from the Jim Hill Civil Liberties Club are SCARY smart (they're not just the future; they're ready and able to get out and do stuff now), and the idea that anyone would consider ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 05:15 PM
Ban the Paddle?
ladd: you mentioned people should try to find out what is really going on with this generation. Damn right I did. And any given day, you will find up to 20 young people in their teens and 20s in my offices, ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 05:12 PM
Ban the Paddle?
ladd: Baquan, it's simple really: You generalized about all young people with statements like these: Discipline does not work any more on kids, whether it is beating them or putting them in time out. Young ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 04:49 PM
Ban the Paddle?
baquan2000: To Tom Head - lets just agree to disagree. You put yours in time out for stealing or cussing, while with mine, they will just have to meet their maker when they attempt to try it!? Sorry - I will ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 04:41 PM
Ban the Paddle?
baquan2000: Donna you did a good article a while back on this generation, where I think you mentioned people should try to find out what is really going on with this generation. Maybe what I said, was to ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 04:28 PM
Ban the Paddle?
Tom Head: Or for selling bad weed. Or for sleeping with your girlfriend. Or... Right. We teach the same pro-violence message with the Iraq War and the death penalty, too, not to mention when leaders go around ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 04:04 PM
Ban the Paddle?
ladd: That is a vast generalization about young people, baquan, and extremely offensive. I'm more impressed with young people today in their teens, and even tweens, than I ever have been. And the numbers bear ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 03:39 PM
Ban the Paddle?
baquan2000: after reading all the posts above; whatever it is we are doing; it is not working? Discipline does not work any more on kids, whether it is beating them or putting them in time out. Young men do ...


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