WJCT News Now

First Coast Connect: Foodie funding

51 min · 15. juni 2026
episode First Coast Connect: Foodie funding cover

Beskrivelse

A city program to incentivize and ignite the Downtown bar and restaurant scene has been picking up steam, with 11 project grants awarded since 2024 — nearly four times as many as in the program’s first three years. Food writer Hanna Raskin says the often significant grants paved the way for several new additions to the urban core landscape, including a vinyl listening room over Keane’s Tavern, Dorothy’s Downtown restaurant and the Pour Taproom. We talk about what the tax incentives have bought and whether that could be changing in an uncertain budget landscape. Guest: Hanna Raskin, food writer for Jacksonville Today [https://jaxtoday.org/2026/05/31/food-section-public-incentives-downtown-restaurants/] Coffee talk The fight to unionize the world’s largest coffee chain is the subject of a new documentary. In 2021, workers at a Starbucks in Buffalo, New York, became the first store in the country to form a union. The film traces the evolution of the movement, which has now spread to 700 stores nationwide, even though workers are still fighting for their first contract. The film, which is narrated by Susan Sarandon, screens at the Museum of Contemporary Art at noon June 20, followed by a Q&A with director Mark Mori, moderated by the city’s film commissioner, Todd Roobin. Guest: Mark Mori, director, Baristas vs Billionaires [https://www.baristasvsbillionaires.com/] Classical history Since its inception in 2007, the St. Augustine Music Festival has focused on uplifting music in an exceptional space. The annual event, held at the Cathedral Basilica on the Plaza de la Constitución, is the brainchild of acclaimed musicians Jorge Peña (viola) and Jin Kim-Peña (cello), who both played with the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra before creating the region’s largest free classical chamber music concert series. In honor of its 20th anniversary and the nation’s 250th, this year’s festival is shaped around themes highlighting the spirit of America, as well as the classical sounds that inspire the human spirit. Guests: * Jorge Peña, St. Augustine Music Festival co-founder and artistic director * Jin Kim-Peña, St. Augustine Music Festival co-founder and artistic director See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af WJCT News Now-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

1 måned kun 9 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

100 episoder

episode First Coast Connect: Foodie funding cover

First Coast Connect: Foodie funding

A city program to incentivize and ignite the Downtown bar and restaurant scene has been picking up steam, with 11 project grants awarded since 2024 — nearly four times as many as in the program’s first three years. Food writer Hanna Raskin says the often significant grants paved the way for several new additions to the urban core landscape, including a vinyl listening room over Keane’s Tavern, Dorothy’s Downtown restaurant and the Pour Taproom. We talk about what the tax incentives have bought and whether that could be changing in an uncertain budget landscape. Guest: Hanna Raskin, food writer for Jacksonville Today [https://jaxtoday.org/2026/05/31/food-section-public-incentives-downtown-restaurants/] Coffee talk The fight to unionize the world’s largest coffee chain is the subject of a new documentary. In 2021, workers at a Starbucks in Buffalo, New York, became the first store in the country to form a union. The film traces the evolution of the movement, which has now spread to 700 stores nationwide, even though workers are still fighting for their first contract. The film, which is narrated by Susan Sarandon, screens at the Museum of Contemporary Art at noon June 20, followed by a Q&A with director Mark Mori, moderated by the city’s film commissioner, Todd Roobin. Guest: Mark Mori, director, Baristas vs Billionaires [https://www.baristasvsbillionaires.com/] Classical history Since its inception in 2007, the St. Augustine Music Festival has focused on uplifting music in an exceptional space. The annual event, held at the Cathedral Basilica on the Plaza de la Constitución, is the brainchild of acclaimed musicians Jorge Peña (viola) and Jin Kim-Peña (cello), who both played with the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra before creating the region’s largest free classical chamber music concert series. In honor of its 20th anniversary and the nation’s 250th, this year’s festival is shaped around themes highlighting the spirit of America, as well as the classical sounds that inspire the human spirit. Guests: * Jorge Peña, St. Augustine Music Festival co-founder and artistic director * Jin Kim-Peña, St. Augustine Music Festival co-founder and artistic director See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

15. juni 202651 min
episode First Coast Connect: AG candidate José Javier Rodríguez cover

First Coast Connect: AG candidate José Javier Rodríguez

With qualifying in all Florida races set to wrap this Friday, we catch up with Democratic candidate for state attorney general José Javier Rodríguez. Some recent internal and external polls suggest his challenge of appointed Republican incumbent James Uthmeier is within a handful of percentage points. We ask the candidate if his campaign is being affected by state and national news, how politicians are coping in a field already flooded with AI slop, and get his take on the current AG’s frequent forays into Jacksonville city business. Guest: José Javier Rodríguez, Democratic candidate for Florida attorney general Juneteenth at St. John's Cathedral A “shared call to justice” and a celebration of African American sacred choral music is at the core of a planned Juneteenth observance at St. John’s Cathedral in Downtown Jacksonville. The program’s theme is built around a piece by singer/songwriter Beth Neilsen Chapman, titled How We Love, performed by the Jacksonville Gospel Chorale with assistance from visiting composer, conductor and African American gospel music scholar Dr. Raymond Wise. Wise was the conductor and choir leader in the Emmy and Award Winning PBS documentary Amen: Music of the Black Church [https://www.pbs.org/video/amen-music-of-the-black-church-mjpdrd/]. The annual event, which features the Very Rev. Kate Moorehead Carroll as keynote speaker, will be held at 5 p.m. Saturday at the cathedral on East Church Street, followed by a reception. Guests: * Dr. Raymond Wise, executive director of the African American Arts Institute and professor of African American and African Diaspora Studies at Indiana University * Dr. Barbara Bouie, Sandalwood High School choral director, former choral activities director at Edward Waters University Shopping under the stars Live music and local art under the oaks at the AMP are de rigueur at the quarterly Night Market in St. Augustine. Since its creation nearly a decade ago, the event has blossomed into a packed attraction: part farmers market, part street festival. In addition to crafts, gifts, a food truck court and cocktail concessionaires, the June event features performances by local artists Claire Vandiver and Bad Dog Mama on the Front Porch stage. The next Night Market will be 5-9 p.m. Tuesday at the St. Augustine Amphitheatre. The event is free, and overflow parking is available at the Elk’s Lodge next door. Guest: Dianya Markovits, director of public relations and partnerships at SJC Cultural Events, Inc. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

11. juni 202651 min