Colin Eager

"Will There Ever Be a Rainbow?"

Got a tip, some gossip or just a bone to pick?  Contact me at eagercolin(at)gmail.com

I’m Colin, and in my grand tradition of being at least 3-4 years late to everything new, I’ve started a blog. So why a new blog? Two reasons: First, I’m entering the PhD program in history at UB, and will be called on to do a shit-ton of writing. I’m a great writer (duh!) but also a very slow writer, so I’ve decided to make a conscious effort to write everyday in hopes of building up my writerly muscles. And second, my wife told me that Aaron Bartley suggested I should start my own blog. And when the Wizard of the West Side (the Plymouth Poobah?) says jump, I say “how high?!” So here I am. If I’m true to my word, you can expect a daily dose of commentary on politics, typical Buffalo-style insanity, racial formation in the Jacksonian Age, my love of cellophane . . . whatevs. Oh, dear reader, how I envy you . . .

Leonard Stokes' Grassroots Connection: Part Deux

All in the family . . .

All in the family . . .

Ok, let’s try this again.  It appears that the substance of my original post on this subject is true: Leonard Stokes has a family connection to the Grassroots machine, which just might have something to do with why he received such unusually attentive service from the city when he was opening his doomed restaurant, One Sunset.

I’ve heard from two solid sources that Crystal Peoples got married this Saturday.  Congratulations and Mazel Tov!  The groom’s last name: Stokes.  He’s either the father or grandfather of Leonard Stokes, the ex-basketball player and would be restaurateur.

Now, it could be the case that the relationship between Stokes’ family member and Assemblywoman Peoples began after June 2007, when Stokes began receiving city money to help start his restaurant.  And it isn’t necessarily the case that the relationship led to the extraordinary help that Stokes received over the brief lifetime of his business.  But the pieces fit, and it appears that there are new questions that need to be asked of people like Stokes, Michelle Barron, and Byron Brown.

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