
NEA Chair Dr. Maria Rosario Jackson on living an artful life
Clip: Season 8 Episode 3 | 6m 16sVideo has Closed Captions
NEA Chair Dr. Maria Rosario Jackson shares how the arts help build healthy communities.
In advance of her visit to the Charles H. Wright Museum for the 2023 Concert of Colors, National Endowment for the Arts Chair Dr. Maria Rosario Jackson sits down with Stephen Henderson to talk about the importance of the arts in building healthy communities and her historic appointment as the first African American and Mexican American woman to chair the NEA.
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One Detroit is a local public television program presented by Detroit PBS

NEA Chair Dr. Maria Rosario Jackson on living an artful life
Clip: Season 8 Episode 3 | 6m 16sVideo has Closed Captions
In advance of her visit to the Charles H. Wright Museum for the 2023 Concert of Colors, National Endowment for the Arts Chair Dr. Maria Rosario Jackson sits down with Stephen Henderson to talk about the importance of the arts in building healthy communities and her historic appointment as the first African American and Mexican American woman to chair the NEA.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship(bright music) One of the things that I hear a lot about working as a small business owner in Southeast Michigan in Detroit is that there is a community of partnership, and essentially an ability and a want for people in this business environment to help each other out.
Is that something that you've experienced when running your business, when getting started, when you come up against a obstacle that you need a solution for?
How has the business community in Southeast Michigan, in Detroit, been there?
- I will say that everybody I've come in contact with, like I don't know if I'm just blessed to meet the nicest people.
Like, people are very caring, they're very warm-welcoming, and they give you information.
So if I know I'm trying to do something different that I wouldn't normally do, I'm not good at, "No," either.
So when people say "No," to me, that just means I'm talking to the wrong person.
So I will go to people who will help me get the information that I need because I don't know everything.
But I also think vice versa.
The things that are working for me, I share it with the people that were in my circle.
And honestly, the people in Detroit, we're like open books to each other, because the thing about it is: What is the purpose of me having this information?
I die with the information.
It's just gonna die with me.
Why would I not wanna share that?
And so I'm very big on that, and I'm also very big on keeping the circle of people around me that we're sharing because we should all win.
There's enough for all of us to win.
In my mind, I don't look at other restaurateurs as competition.
I don't have competition.
I'm my own competition, not everybody else.
We should all be able to win.
And if I'm doing something that's working for me and it makes me successful, why would I not wanna tell you so you can be successful too?
- How has the development that's happening down here, how do you feel about it?
When it comes to the development, are you excited about it?
Are there concerns?
Is there any trepidation?
Where do you feel like you fit in?
- I'm always looking at the positive.
When I say I always look at the positive, there is no negative for me, because the negative is a waste of energy.
So for my brain, I'm always looking at my mission, my purpose.
If I know who my clients are, how do I market to those customers?
When I opened right here on Woodward, there was nobody else.
There was like a clothing store.
It was nothing.
This was a block that was not...
There was no gentrification, okay?
It was like, "Que, why would you wanna put this right here?"
Girl, 'cause my brain said, "Healthy food in every hood."
People should not get food based off of their ZIP code.
They should get food because it should be their human right.
So my focus is always: How do I make this food more available?
So in my mind, just as fast as you see, every time you see a McDonald's in my head, in the future, you're gonna see The Kitchen, because the goal is to put healthy food everywhere, because we have to be the people to change the perception of what it is.
So I'm very glad that they're bringing things back to the city.
I'm glad that they're allowing the people that are from the city to actually get these locations as well.
There are different associations that are always...
They're always pushing for you to support the people who are local, allow them to get into some of the places as far as like... You got the Metro-Detroit Black Business Association.
Like, they're always for the small business owner, and that's a cool backing to have.
But again, you make these allies with the people that are gonna help you keep growing and you keep building.
So for me, I like the community and the way it is now, but I also like that we are getting to see more.
But you can't make your whole business focused on if everybody else is on the block, it's, "How am I gonna bring clients to my location?"
- The biggest challenge that Southeast Michigan is facing, a big challenge that Detroit is facing, all metropolitan areas are facing, is: How do we get millennials and anyone who wants to start a business or anyone who wants to be a part of the workforce to come to Southeast Michigan, to come do it in places like Detroit?
- So my focus, again, it's always gonna be my mission and my purpose, but it's also like families.
What do people do as a family?
What do people do to get back to the table?
So my brain wants to do things to bring people here.
So for us, we do cooking classes that you can bring all age.
We have to get people out of their houses and we also have to stop pushing fear on people.
You gotta think about what people that are home looking at when they're on the news.
You can't come to Detroit 'cause of this.
Yes, we're changing the perspective of it, but it needs to...
I think people just need to see, like, it's a really family-oriented place.
There's things for you to do.
You can come out and eat at all the restaurants.
Or if you're a person that has that business idea, don't sit on it, but create programs that have them where they can come and sit with people who are business owners like me.
Like, "Hey, you got a business idea?
Let's sit and work with you on a business plan.
Let's get you from plan A to B to C." Like, what does that look like?
And it's not to say that there are not programs like that out there, but I think we need to talk about it more.
As much as we can talk about negative things, if we talked about those type of things, I think it would pique the interest of people that are not here, not here in Detroit.
Because you get people that from out...
I have people that would say, "I'm leaving New York to move to Detroit."
But what about the people that are here?
I'm always saying, "Look in your own backyard.
Look around the city of Detroit, all the places that people are...
When people were in the city and they moved to the suburbs, and now why do we want them to come back?"
Put the same thing, the same amenities that are in the suburbs in the city of Detroit.
I shouldn't have to go to the suburbs to find a healthy grocery store.
I'm super excited that they brought more... they're bringing more grocery stores to Detroit.
But Detroit is large.
We should all have the same accessibility to healthy food.
How do I make that, how do I make that become like...
The squeaky wheel gets the oil, like I tell people that come to my classes, like, "Close mouths don't get fed."
If you don't open your mouth and tell your neighborhood, "Hey, at every gas station in the corner, I want you to stop just giving us chips and cookies.
Give us healthy food."
Until we make the noise, it's not going to change.
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