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December 
13th

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Clear your calendar - It's going down! Splash Blocks kicks off on April 20th, and you're invited to take part in the festivities. Splash HQ (122 W 26th St) is our meeting spot for a night of fun and excitement. Come one, come all, bring a guest, and hang loose. This is going to be epic!

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Clear your calendar - It's going down! Splash Blocks kicks off on April 20th, and you're invited to take part in the festivities. Splash HQ (122 W 26th St) is our meeting spot for a night of fun and excitement. Come one, come all, bring a guest, and hang loose. This is going to be epic!

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The Event
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December 
13th
 at 
7:00pm
THE FINALE: Reckoning with “Reconciliation”

Join us for a night of adventure as we escape into existence.

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ABOUT EPU

E Pluribus Unum is an initiative created to fulfill America's promise of justice and opportunity for all by breaking down the barriers that divide us by race and class. In its first year, the E Pluribus Unum team traveled extensively across the American South to uncover and confront the challenges we face, to learn from people about what separates us and what can bring us together, and to find bold and effective solutions to tackle the modern legacy of Jim Crow so that an inclusive new South may be born. . 


Incubated at Emerson Collective and led by former New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu, the E Pluribus Unum team is building a series of programs and initiatives to cultivate courageous leaders who are committed to realizing an inclusive vision a new South, champion transformative policies to reverse the enduring harms of America’s Jim Crow era past for those who continue to experience them today, and change narratives that perpetuate systemic and interpersonal racism in order to shift people’s attitudes and behaviors.

 

   JOIN US July 9, 2020

Join us for the first in a multi-part series of virtual conversations that bring together our country’s greatest thinkers, activists and leaders on race and equity. We seek to use this moment to confront the systems that have divided us for generations. 

 

We will explore how to leverage this moment in history to make lasting change. 

 

In this first conversation, historians and experts will explore the “truth” in our history. They will discuss some of the periods and events in our history that have laid the foundation for the systems that continue to perpetuate racism and oppress people of color in the U.S, including the Civil War, Reconstruction and the Jim Crow era. 


The focus of the series will be truth, action and reconciliation--ultimately, putting forward a vision for essential systemic reforms to shape long-term change, with the value of racial and economic equity at its core.  


For more information on the series, visit unumfund.org/conversations. 


THE TRUTH SERIES: How We Got Here

The Price We Paid

Thursday, July 9 

2:30 pm ET/1:30 pm CT



ABOUT THE EVENT

Wednesday
, 
December 
13th
7:00pm
 to 
10:00pm

Happy Hour

6:00pm

Unwind the week on our main stage among old friends and new. Help yourself to some refreshing beverages and roaming snacks.

Meet & Greet

6:30pm

Now is the opportunity to make that lasting connection. Strike up a conversation with some of the most talented people in tech.

Special Guest

7:15pm

The whole night leads up thrilling presentation from our founder covering early success and amplified goals for the coming year.

ALL THE DETAILS 

The wilderness is healing, a therapy for the soul.

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We look forward to you joining us.

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The Event
The Details
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THE FINALE: Reckoning with “Reconciliation”

Join us for a night of adventure as we escape into existence.

REGISTER HERE
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Register Here
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ABOUT EPU

 E Pluribus Unum was formed in 2018 with the premise that we must confront the issue of race head on if we are to move forward. We believe our cities and towns will only thrive if they find a way to unite around common purpose. To better understand the ways in which systemic racism and economic inequality impacts southerners, the E Pluribus Unum team traveled the south extensively, visiting 28 communities across 13 states. Our first report, Divided by Design: Findings from the American South, focuses on how residents experience issues of race and class in their communities. The report also identifies 15 key insights that will be used to build a more inclusive South. 


Today, E Pluribus Unum is building programs and initiatives focused on cultivating and empowering courageous leaders who are advancing racial equity, changing the divisive narratives that perpetuate systemic and interpersonal racism, and championing transformative policy change. Through this work, we will create a vision for a more just, equitable, and inclusive South, setting an example for the rest of the nation. Together, we can chart a new course for the South — one that centers racial equity and moves towards reconciliation.

 

JOIN US February 18, 2021

THE FINALE: Reckoning with “Reconciliation”

Thursday, February 18, 2021

4:30-5:30 pm ET/ 3:30-4:30 pm CT


View Here: unumfund.org/livestream


As we continue our work building more equitable communities across the South, join us for our final conversation of the reconciliation series. 

 

Americans have never reckoned with our past, starting with our original sin of slavery 400 years ago. In light of the January 6 insurrection, we will explore the work, acknowledgment, and accountability that is required from white Americans to get us closer to unity and reconciliation. 


In 2020, E Pluribus Unum launched Truth. Action. Reconciliation., a series of conversations that bring together some of our country’s great thinkers, activists, advocates and leaders on race and equity. The arc of the series is putting forward a vision for long-term change, with justice, inclusion and racial and economic equity at its core. 


For more information on the series, visit unumfund.org/conversations. 


Watch previous episodes from the Truth.Action.Reconciliation series here. 

 



Program - subject to change

3:30 PM CT

Welcome

Mitch Landrieu

Founder and President of E Pluribus Unum & Former Mayor of New Orleans

3:40 PM CT

Conversation

 

Bakari Sellers

Former South Carolina State Representative & CNN Commentator


Darren Walker

President of the Ford Foundation


Moderator: 

Mitch Landrieu

Founder and President of E Pluribus Unum & Former Mayor of New Orleans

4:10 PM CT

Q&A

4:20 PM CT

Closing 

Mitch Landrieu

Founder and President of E Pluribus Unum & Former Mayor of New Orleans

Speakers

Bakari Sellers

Former South Carolina State Representative & CNN Commentator

Darren Walker

President of the Ford Foundation

Mitch Landrieu 

Founder and President of

E Pluribus Unum & Former Mayor of New Orleans


CONTACT

 Questions? Contact us at info@unumfund.org


For more information on the series visit unumfund.org/conversations


The Divided By Design Podcast is here. Stream now and subscribe

Join us for a night of adventure as we escape into existence.

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Bakari Sellers

Bakari Sellers recently released a New York Times Best Seller My Vanishing Country: A Memoir. The book has been described as part memoir, part historical and cultural analysis illustrating the lives of America’s forgotten black working-class men and women. He also recently expanded his audience with the Bakari Sellers Podcast, a twice-a-week show that is part of The Ringer Podcast Network. His podcasts discuss a variety of topics from politics, race, sports, media, the presidential campaign, and much more.
 Earning his undergraduate degree from Morehouse College, where he served as student body president, and his law degree from the University of South Carolina, Sellers has followed in the footsteps of his father, civil rights leader Cleveland Sellers, in his tireless commitment to championing progressive policies to address issues ranging from education and poverty to preventing domestic violence and childhood obesity. 

  

Bakari made history in the 2006 South Carolina state legislature as the youngest African American elected official in the nation, at the age of 22.  His political career did not stop there, in 2014 he was the Democratic Nominee for Lt. Governor in the state of South Carolina. Bakari has also worked for United States Congressman James Clyburn and former Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin.

  

His accomplishments do not go unnoticed within the Democratic Party.  In 2008 he served on President Obama’s South Carolina steering committee. His ability to “reach across the aisle to get things done” has led to numerous achievements including being named TIME Magazine’s 40 Under 40 and “The Root 100” list of the nation’s most influential African-Americans in 2015, and HBCU Top 30 Under 30 in July 2014.  Bakari has served as a featured speaker at various Political Events, Universities, and National Trade Organizations across the country, such as the 2008 and 2016 Democratic National Convention. 

 

Sellers practices law with the Strom Law Firm, LLC in Columbia, SC and is a Political Commentator at CNN. He is married to Dr. Ellen Rucker-Sellers and father to twins Sadie and Stokely. 

Darren Walker

 

Darren Walker is president of the Ford Foundation, international social justice philanthropy with a $13 billion endowment and $600 million in annual grantmaking. He chaired the philanthropy committee that brought a resolution to the city of Detroit’s historic bankruptcy and is co-founder and chair of the US Impact Investing Alliance.


Before joining Ford, Darren was a vice president at the Rockefeller Foundation, overseeing global and domestic programs including the Rebuild New Orleans initiative after Hurricane Katrina. In the 1990s, as COO of the Abyssinian Development Corporation—Harlem’s largest community development organization—he oversaw a comprehensive revitalization strategy, including building over 1,000 units of affordable housing and the first major commercial development in Harlem since the 1960s. Earlier, he had a decade-long career in international law and finance at Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton and UBS.


Darren co-chairs New York City’s Commission on City Art, Monuments, and Markers, and serves on the Commission on the Future of Rikers Island Correctional Institution and the UN International Labor Organization Commission on the Future of Work. He also serves on the boards of Carnegie Hall, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture, the National Gallery of Art, Art Bridges, the High Line, VOW to End Child Marriage, the HOW Institute for Society, the Global Steering Group for Impact Investment, and the Committee to Protect Journalists. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and is the recipient of 13 honorary degrees and university awards, including the W. E. B. Du Bois Medal from Harvard University.


Educated exclusively in public schools, Darren was a member of the first class of Head Start in 1965 and graduated from the University of Texas at Austin, which in 2009 recognized him with its Distinguished Alumnus Award—its highest alumni honor. He has been included on numerous annual media lists, including Time’s annual list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World, Rolling Stone’s 25 People Shaping the Future, Fast Company’s 50 Most Innovative People, and Out magazine’s Power 50.


 
 

 

 

Mitch Landrieu

Mitch Landrieu is an American politician, lawyer, author, speaker, nonprofit leader, and CNN political commentator. He served as the 61st Mayor of New Orleans (2010-2018). When he took office, the city was still recovering from Hurricane Katrina and in the midst of the BP Oil Spill.


Under Landrieu’s leadership, New Orleans was widely recognized as one of the nation’s great comeback stories. In 2015, Landrieu was named “Public Official of the Year” by Governing, and in 2016 was voted “America’s top turnaround mayor” in a Politico survey of mayors. He also served as President of the U.S. Conference of Mayors.


Landrieu gained national prominence for his powerful decision to take down four Confederate monuments in New Orleans, which also earned him the prestigious John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award. In his best-selling book, In the Shadow of Statues: A White Southerner Confronts History, Landrieu recounts his personal journey confronting the issue of race and institutional racism that still plagues America.


In 2018, he launched E Pluribus Unum, an initiative in the South created to fulfill America’s promise of justice and opportunity for all by breaking down the barriers that divide us by race and class. E Pluribus Unum is building a series of programs and initiatives to cultivate courageous leaders who are committed to realizing an inclusive vision for a new South, champion transformative policies to reverse the enduring harms of America’s Jim Crow era past for those who continue to experience them today and change narratives that perpetuate systemic and interpersonal racism in order to shift people’s attitudes and behaviors.


Prior to serving as Mayor, Landrieu served two terms as lieutenant governor and 16 years in the state legislature. He and his wife Cheryl live in New Orleans, where they raised their five children.

 

 

Jennifer Palmieri

Jennifer Palmieri is a writer and one of the most accomplished communications advisors in politics today. Author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Dear Madam President and her newest book, She Proclaims: Our Declaration of Independence from a Man’s World, Jennifer was White House Communications Director for President Obama and head of Communications for the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign. She has been on the frontlines of American politics for 20 years and one of a few people with a hands-on, working knowledge of the complex media environment operating in the U.S. today.


Having served in the West Wing for 12 years under President Obama and President Clinton she has an unparalleled level of knowledge and experience in understanding how U.S. Presidents operate and there is no one working in politics today with more experience in managing crises. She has held the positions of White House Deputy Press Secretary for President Clinton, national press secretary for the Democratic Party and press secretary for the 2004 John Edwards presidential campaign. As someone who worked on the campaign of the first female Democratic nominee, and been a communications advisor to women in the national spotlight, she has a unique perspective on how media and voters treat women in powerful positions.


She is also host of podcast It's Just Something About Her on The Recount and IHeart Radio, a guest host of Showtime’s The Circus and a contributing editor to Vanity Fair.


After losing her sister to early-onset Alzheimer’s in 2017, she has written and spoken about her family’s experience in an effort to aid other families facing the same disease.


 

 

 

 

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