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Showing posts from September, 2017

Next steps/ Future plans

We as a class are working towards what we would like the event we are planning at the Lexington Market to be about.   Can we make a change in the developments? Or will it be a “remembrance” about the Lexington Market. Then for the zine’s that are being constructed, what information do we want to enclose and how it will be used for our event. We are also creating 2 zines’, the first one will be used hopefully for the interview process, then the final one will be handed out at our event. The next steps moving forward are narrowing down who we specifically want to have a more in-depth interview with and who we can actually get to interview…. Meaning developers, people the “new” market is being made for, etc. My contributions moving forward for our event is the interview process, constructing a list of the in-depth interviewees and other areas where we would specifically like to obtain interviews.   Then planning to actually going out in the field with my fellow and th

Reflecting on Lexington Market

My insight about the Lexington Market has been influenced a great deal, coming from having no prior experience, to an in-depth history about the Market. We recently received a tour from the head of management Stacey Pack, and she gave us the full entire tour of the Lexington Market, especially of those parts once used. I realized that only certain questions can work in an interview, which usually are opinion based questions. I realized when we asked certain questions about the development and people's voices being heard, Stacey gave what seemed like a calculated response.  It seemed as though she didn't want to divulge more in-depth about the question. My views behind our zine is to give a brief history of the Lexington Market, then show pictures and state what they envision for the Market and have quotes from different interviews that really hit on certain views of the upcoming Market. Yes, we asked Stacey questions, but I'm interested to see what the vendor's, custome

Interview Draft

Ideas:     The goals we have when pertaining to the interviewing process behind the Lexington Market is to gain the thoughts of the everyday Market goer. We want the thoughts of the new residents that have moved to the area and who the "new" Market is suppose to be designed for, but we want to see how and who it will affect. The main focus of the questions is if the current Market goers know about the change and their opinions about the change. The podcast will give the viewers the voice of the developers changing the Market, the Vendors in the Market and the people on the streets that visit the Market on a daily basis. The zine we want to create is going to give a background of the Market, and then the plan of how the Market is to change. The goals we have formed are to explain the importance of the Lexington Market, and what it is to Baltimore. Also, what "changes" are wanting to be made to the Market, and who are they really designing the Market for? Most of

Decades 2001- 2009

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Being a Texas native, but moving to Maryland almost 20 years ago and believing I had experienced all that there was to experience, I was wrong.  I'm currently taking AMST 480: Community in American Research class and we are discussing the renovations to the Lexington Market. I had no idea there was a Lexington Market, let alone there was renovation plans that wanted to be done to improve the market. Reading articles from the Baltimore Sun on my given decade year that involved the Lexington Market, helped me grasp what was being proposed.            The information I gained from the different articles was what the new management team wanted from the " 4 million dollar face lift / makeover"; so the Market could appeal to a wider group of new clientele.  The constant theme behind each article was a persons sense of security when visiting the Lexington Market; many said they wouldn't venture the market alone. Which is a shame because many are unaware of the great deals