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Joe Biden

Joe Biden’s Message to Voters… through the Eyes of a Sarah Lawrence College Alum

November 7, 2022 by Suki van Dijk

President Joe Biden and Governor Kathy Hochul, together at Sarah Lawrence College. Photos by Suki van Dijk

On Sunday, November 6, 2022, two of my great passions in life came together spectacularly with President Joe Biden’s appearance at Governor Kathy Hochul’s campaign event at my alma mater, Sarah Lawrence College. Since 2016 I have devoted much of time and energy to electing Democrats in New York and across our nation. Since graduating from Sarah Lawrence, I’ve been an active alumna, and an all-around booster, trying to make sure as many people as possible learn about the college and get to experience the kind of extraordinary education I had.

My husband Peter (another Sarah Lawrence alum and member of the Board of Trustees) and I, waited about two and half hours to get into the event – in a line that snaked from the airport style scanner by the Performing Arts Center, all the way down Kimball Ave and around the corner onto Palmer. The event started at 4PM and finished at around 7PM with a rousing speech by President Biden.

Welcoming remarks by Sarah Lawrence President Cristle Collins Judd were followed by speeches by nearly every person who represents Yonkers NY. The speakers included Mayor Mike Spano, County Executive George Latimer, State Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, both of New York’s U.S. Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, Representative Jamaal Bowman, Comptroller Tom DiNapoli, Attorney General Tish James, Governor Kathy Hochul, and finally the highlight of the night, the President of the United States of America, Joe Biden. In the middle of the elected officials, labor was well represented by the President of the AFT, Randi Weingarten, who gave a barnburner.

The speakers all highlighted the Democrats’ message: “Democrats deliver.”  All spoke to the economic and social benefits of electing people who hold the Democratic values that help everyone to rise. As fitting on a college campus, they all spoke most directly to the young people in the audience. In speech after speech, they recognized the passions and efforts of these young people. Joe Biden’s rousing speech was well crafted and well delivered, as one would expect from the President. But in addition to that, his speech highlighted his humanity. Just at the time the speech was building up to a big crescendo, someone near the podium seemed to faint. President Biden stopped speaking, directed medical personnel to come help the person, and then, only after he saw they were taken care of, restarted his big finish with a call for everyone to get out to vote.

There were a good number of my fellow Indivisible activists in the over 1,000-person crowd. I saw many of Westchester’s Democratic party leaders. I saw activists from our labor, LGBTQ, environmental, and human rights groups. I was also really fortunate to get a little glimpse into the world of bunch of current Sarah Lawrence undergrads, as we stood together on North Westlands Lawn–the spot where I graduated, the spot where they would graduate. Together, we cheered the same lines, chanted the same responses, sang and danced to music between speeches, and most of all, together we made the same commitment to GET OUT THE VOTE.

This was the first time I have ever seen a US President. I can’t lie, it was pretty exciting! Still. the best part of the event for me, was the energy and commitment coming from the Sarah Lawrence College students and other young people in the crowd. Our young people are genuinely motived to make our planet a more livable place and to make our society a more equitable one, and they were thrilled to hear that their efforts were seen, and their concerns were heard, all the way up to the very top of the US government.

President Biden stuck around for a good amount of time after the event was over, talking and listening to the students, and taking pictures with them. We are all going to remember this unseasonably warm November evening for the rest of our lives.

If you haven’t yet voted early, the polls are open tomorrow, November 8th from 6 am. To 9 p.m.. Your vote is your voice. Use it!

Our author in her I Love SLC socks.

 

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Democrats Deliver, Joe Biden, Kathy Hochul, Sarah Lawrence College, vote

A Rising Star in the White House: Meet Chappaqua’s Dhara Nayyar

June 1, 2022 by Stacey Pfeffer

Chappaqua has had its fair share of well- known residents in the White House but there’s a young rising star there with Chappaqua roots who perhaps you’ve never heard of – meet Dhara Nayyar, a 2014 Horace Greeley High School graduate. Nayyar is the White House Regional Communications Director for the southern half of the United States. In this role, she serves as a spokesperson on the White House agenda, working with state, local and national reporters. From January 2021 to December 2021, she was on the research team in the Executive Office of the President where she worked to protect and defend President Biden and his legacy, including developing a 25,000 page opposition book on Mike Pence for the Biden-Harris presidential campaign.

A quick thinker, effective communicator and skilled researcher, Nayyar is often tasked with fact checking and issuing a rapid response when stories come out that are inaccurate or lack context. For example, if a story on high gas prices is being written, her team will provide information to the media about what President Biden has done over his career to help alleviate the problem and what harmful actions the GOP has taken that could exacerbate the issue. The job is 24/7 but Nayyar has had a passion for politics since she was a young girl. “I’ve always known I wanted to go into politics. I remember asking my parents why the president wasn’t a woman –and them telling me that it was because it was my job to fulfill! It’s actually both heartwarming and hilarious to look back and see old elementary school assignments about my dream job where I wrote about working in the White House. I still have to pinch myself to believe that I’m even here!” Nayyar exclaims.

She often attends press briefings at the White House and interacts with President Biden regularly. Working with state and local reporters, Nayyar spends time staffing interviews both in person and via Zoom on President Biden and his administration’s agenda which can include pitching stories, holding press calls and responding to inquiries. While others might find the work intense and high pressure, Nayyar says she is constantly on her toes and she loves it. “I truly live for the hustle and bustle,” she notes.

Photos courtesy of Dhara Nayyar

Nayyar developed a love for writing and communications while working on The Greeley Tribune. “It taught me the importance of always keeping a pulse on the news cycle,” she said. She was also president of Cooking for a Cause, which prepared soup for Midnight Run and held bake sales for charities. “This helped me fuel my passion for public service,” she adds. While at Greeley, she formed a close relationship with Gary Lanza, who was an audio-visual technician at Greeley and served as a mentor. “He instilled in me to always be true to myself, to chase my dreams, and the value of genuine human connection,” she commented.

After Greeley, Nayyar attended American University in Washington DC where she obtained a Bachelors in an Interdisciplinary Studies program focusing on communications, legal institutions, economics and government. Nayyar has no plans of leaving DC anytime soon. In fact, she hopes to run for office one day. “I haven’t decided when. I just know it’s down the line for me!”

As a first generation American in the White House, Nayyar credits her parents Johanna and Ajay as key influencers in her decision to pursue her dreams. “They instilled in me at a young age to find passion in the process and to never take anything for granted but rather to enjoy each moment at face value… On a lighter note–my mom always jokes I got the “gift of the gab” from my father–which certainly helps me in the communications world where I spend 98% of the time interacting with others,” she jokes. 

Nayyar, like so many of us in this town, is also in awe of Chappaqua’s most famous residents, The Clintons. She met Secretary Clinton at the Women’s Leadership Forum in 2016. “I am definitely inspired by Secretary Clinton and former President Clinton… they are embodiments of grace, knowledge, and courage,” she said. After communicating with Nayyar for this article, something tells me she’ll be following in their footsteps to a top position in the White House in the not-too-distant future. 

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Chappaqua, Dhara Nayyar, Horace Greeley High School, Joe Biden, The Greeley Tribune, White House, White House briefings

It’s A Family Affair: Local Award-Winning Father & Son Filmmakers

May 31, 2019 by Ronni Diamondstein

(L-R): Teddy, Peter and George

The Kunhardts Produce Documentaries That Shape Our World and Focus on Moral Leadership

For Peter Kunhardt, a six-time Emmy and a Peabody Award winner, collaboration with family is in his DNA. As Executive Producer and Director, Peter partners with two of his sons, Teddy and George, at Kunhardt Films to produce critically acclaimed and socially relevant documentaries about the people and ideas that shape our world.

After ten years as a producer at ABC News, Peter gave up the hectic commute to New York City and founded Kunhardt Productions in Westchester in 1987.  His first film project for HBO, JFK: In His Own Words, was in collaboration with his father, Philip B. Kunhardt, Jr., the longtime managing editor of Life Magazine. He had watched the toll that forty years of commuting from Chappaqua took on his father. Peter and his wife Suzy were raising their family in Chappaqua and he wanted to work closer to home.

A Family Business at Heart

“It’s definitely a family business with multiple departments,” says Peter Jr. All the Kunhardt children interned with their father. Peter Jr. worked on two Lincoln books with his father and grandfather. He is now the Executive Director of the Meserve-Kunhardt Foundation and the Gordon Parks Foundation that preserves the work of photographer Gordon Parks and educates the next generation of scholars and students on his work.

Teddy and George joined their father at Kunhardt Films in 2009. George knew as a teen that filmmaking was his future. Teddy, an artist and chef, took a slight detour and ultimately joined his father’s company. Both brought their gifts and talents.

“My skill set and interests are the creative and the technical. I’m more of the people person, in the trenches on filming and working with my crew,” says George whom his father and brother call the “peacekeeper.” “He’s the best spokesman for the company,” says Teddy.

Teddy’s skill set is the business side: deals, the budgeting and more of the legal side, dealing with the lawyers. Their father Peter is overarching, and knows everything about everything says George. “He sits back and listens and chimes in when needed when he has something appropriate or important to say.”

“I listen hugely hard to both Teddy and George. Frankly, they are taking over more and more of what I used to do, and I continue listening,” says Peter. They agree 95% of the time, but Peter will have the last word when they disagree.

While their business office is in Pleasantville near the Jacob Burns Film Center and Metro-North, which were draws for this location, most of the team is in New York at HBO.

“We are fortunate to be partners with HBO. People would be surprised to learn how long it takes to produce a film, and HBO gives us the time we need,” says Teddy. “Pleasantville is the brains, the budgeting, the pre-development side of the projects, and the heavy lifting of producing,” says George. “The HBO team is young, creative, hip and where the exciting culture of filmmaking is done.”

(L-R): George, President Bill Clinton and Teddy
(L-R): George, Hillary Clinton and Teddy
(L-R): Teddy, John McCain, George and Peter
(L-R): George, Joe Biden and Teddy

 

Exploring Moral Leadership Through Film

The notion of moral leadership is always their default in selecting subjects for their films. “Years ago, we said we wanted to explore this concept of moral leadership,” says Peter. “In this day and age of what we’re experiencing now it seems to be a more and more important thing to be doing to remind people what true leadership and true moral courage look like. Fortunately, we were a little ahead of ourselves picking an important kind of theme early on. That’s why it takes us so long to pick the people.”

“And sometimes you have to wait for the hook,” says Teddy. The hook for King in the Wilderness was the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s death. He was on their list in 2009 but the film did not come into fruition until 2018. “We couldn’t have found a home ten years ago, but once the anniversary was approaching it all seemed right.”

Their very personal film in 2015, Living with Lincoln chronicles their six-generation struggle to preserve Abraham Lincoln’s image for more than a century. As a love letter to Peter’s grandmother Dorothy Meserve Kunhardt, it explores the emotional and physical connection to the president starting with William Meserve and his Civil War diary. Dorothy, a quirky Lincoln scholar, is best known as the author of the beloved interactive children’s book, Pat the Bunny.  It was a glorious burden for the family. “I never planned to dedicate so much of my life to Lincoln, it just happened. I felt I owed it to my father, just as he owed it to his mother, just as she felt she owed it to her father,” says Peter.

Teddy and George enjoy working with their father. “We know each other’s strengths and weaknesses. Our communication is so strong that it has been the key to our success,” says George. One of the downsides though is that they talk about their work all the time, which is fun for them, but not so much for their wives.

“We get a lot more from people because we are a family business,” says George. “When we interviewed Joe Biden for John McCain: For Whom the Bell Tolls, we got a lot more access from him. He loved that Teddy and I were brothers. He took my cellphone and called my dad, and told him how much he enjoyed working with us.”

Trust is Key

“The biggest challenge we face is gaining trust,” says Peter. “Once you gain the trust of your subject you begin getting better access, content and stories.” When they filmed Becoming Warren Buffett, Buffett gave them strict restrictions in the beginning, only one interview, but they ended up filming him for fifteen hours. “Trust comes in a few ways: for one, they have to feel that we’re not out to give you a gotcha question. We’ve never been in that business, but we’re not in the business of a soft fluffy story either.”

Storytellers at the Core

They take a deep dive into the lives of their subjects. “We’re not historians, business people or news correspondents,” says Teddy. “We’re storytellers and in order to tell the story we need to get all the pieces of the puzzle.” They often look for people who have a relationship or don’t have a relationship with their parents and explore that in the film.  “That’s a unique perspective to take because we’re very interested in lineage: Fathers/sons, fathers/daughters, mothers/sons, mothers/daughters,” says George. “That’s our wheelhouse. It is fun for us to do that within a film and something we look for when we do a project.”

“When you go back to someone’s childhood you learn about strengths and weaknesses and how they came to be in a way that would be hard to imagine by just focusing on the adult period of someone’s life and their success,” says Peter. “It’s fascinating to go back and see what influenced a child, what hurt a child, what helped a child. And how they were shaped by that.”   

On the Horizon

Teddy and George have brought some fresh ideas to the film company.  In addition to cable, there is now the film festival route.  Jim: The James Foley Story premiered at Sundance and won the Audience Award, King in the Wilderness had its world premiere at Sundance and True Justice: Bryan Stevenson’s Fight For Equality will open the AFI DOCS film festival in June. George says that one of the best things that they are doing now is the establishment of the Kunhardt Film Foundation with its mission to put their high-quality educational programs, raw interviews and teaching tools into the hands of the public and schools. “This is our future where we are heading towards. We are doing more not-for-profit,” says Peter.

Their next film, True Justice: Bryan Stevenson’s Fight For Equality will have a screening at the Jacob Burns Film Center on June 25th, and debuts on HBO the following day.

Always reflecting as well as looking forward, they are proud of their high-quality work and very thoughtful filmmaking. “We are fortunate in that we can continue to infuse values into the work we do, and pick people to tell their stories that we think have lessons,” says Peter. George sums it up well: “We’re curating an interesting perspective of people and ideas that people need to be learn about. That is what I hope people enjoy about Kunhardt Films.”

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: AFI DOCS film fetival, Bill Clinton, Chappaqua, Documentaries, Family, film, Filmmaking, HBO, Hillary Clinton, JFK: In His Own Words, Joe Biden, John McCain, Kunhardt Family, Kunhardt Films, Living with Lincoln, Local, Storytellers, True Justice

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