Is hip-hop the driving force behind Black business and economic mobility? What can we glean from its innovative strategies and enterprising spirit? And how do the creative economies hip-hop has brokered affect California’s racially diverse and rapidly changing communities?
Tara DeVeaux is a brand marketer influenced by hip-hop culture and Detavio Samuels is a media executive for youth culture storytelling. They discuss hip-hop’s impact on the economy with Robeson Taj Frazier, director of the USC Annenberg Institute for Difference and Empowerment in the Arts, during the opening night of CA FWD’s 2025 California Economic Summit.
This program was co-presented by Zócalo Public Square, ASU, and California Forward (CA FWD) in partnership with Stocktonia.
Part of Zócalo’s series "California 175 — What Connects California?"
Timestamps:
00:00 - Intros
04:23 - Panel: Robeson Taj Frazier, Tara DeVeaux, Detavio Frazier
Visit www.zocalopublicsquare.org/ for more programs and essays in the series.
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Is hip-hop the driving force behind Black business and economic mobility? What can we glean from its innovative strategies and enterprising spirit? And how do the creative economies hip-hop has brokered affect California’s racially diverse and rapidly changing communities?
Tara DeVeaux is a brand marketer influenced by hip-hop culture and Detavio Samuels is a media executive for youth culture storytelling. They discuss hip-hop’s impact on the economy with Robeson Taj Frazier, director of the USC Annenberg Institute for Difference and Empowerment in the Arts, during the opening night of CA FWD’s 2025 California Economic Summit.
This program was co-presented by Zócalo Public Square, ASU, and California Forward (CA FWD) in partnership with Stocktonia.
Part of Zócalo’s series "California 175 — What Connects California?"
Timestamps:
00:00 - Intros
04:23 - Panel: Robeson Taj Frazier, Tara DeVeaux, Detavio Frazier
Visit www.zocalopublicsquare.org/ for more programs and essays in the series.
Follow Zócalo on X: x.com/thepublicsquare
Instagram: www.instagram.com/thepublicsquare/
Facebook: www.facebook.com/zocalopublicsquare
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/z-calo-public-square/
This program is inspired by "So, I told her I was half-Indian" (2025) by Chicanx and Punjabi American weaver Kira Dominguez Hultgren. The piece, multiple looms woven together as a suspended sculpture, is commissioned by IAJS and will be on view at Zhou B Art Center from August 12 to September 12, 2025.
Artist Kira Dominguez Hultgren and guitarist and Chicago Immigrant Orchestra co-director Fareed Haque discuss the work’s larger themes, including how race plays out across generations, how public memorials help make hushed histories visible, and how new technology reveals outdated stereotypes.
Then, a panel moderated by featuring Stanford IAJS faculty co-director Brian Lowery, Yale historian and Pulitzer Prize-winner David W. Blight, historic preservation leader Bonnie McDonald, and creative consultant and fashion designer Siying Qu explores how migrant communities help stitch together our ideas of American life.
This is the second program in “What Can Become of Us?”, a collaboration between the Stanford Institute for Advancing Just Societies (IAJS) and Zócalo Public Square, envisioning new perspectives on migration, America’s diverse communities, and how people come together across differences.
Timestamps:
00:00 - Intros
06:40 - Artist Talk: Kira Dominguez Hultgren, Fareed Haque
27:40 - Panel: Brian Lowery, David W. Blight, Bonnie McDonald, Siying Qu
Visit www.zocalopublicsquare.org/ for more programs and essays in the series.
Follow Zócalo on X: x.com/thepublicsquare
Instagram: www.instagram.com/thepublicsquare/
Facebook: www.facebook.com/zocalopublicsquare
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/z-calo-public-square/
Zócalo Public Square
Is hip-hop the driving force behind Black business and economic mobility? What can we glean from its innovative strategies and enterprising spirit? And how do the creative economies hip-hop has brokered affect California’s racially diverse and rapidly changing communities?
Tara DeVeaux is a brand marketer influenced by hip-hop culture and Detavio Samuels is a media executive for youth culture storytelling. They discuss hip-hop’s impact on the economy with Robeson Taj Frazier, director of the USC Annenberg Institute for Difference and Empowerment in the Arts, during the opening night of CA FWD’s 2025 California Economic Summit.
This program was co-presented by Zócalo Public Square, ASU, and California Forward (CA FWD) in partnership with Stocktonia.
Part of Zócalo’s series "California 175 — What Connects California?"
Timestamps:
00:00 - Intros
04:23 - Panel: Robeson Taj Frazier, Tara DeVeaux, Detavio Frazier
Visit www.zocalopublicsquare.org/ for more programs and essays in the series.
Follow Zócalo on X: x.com/thepublicsquare
Instagram: www.instagram.com/thepublicsquare/
Facebook: www.facebook.com/zocalopublicsquare
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/z-calo-public-square/