Copy_Paste_Remix_#3: “Who Gets a Name?: Keith Porter Jr., Renee Good, and the Politics of Public Memory
Copy Paste Remix, Copy_Paste_Remix_ Telisa Nyoka King Copy Paste Remix, Copy_Paste_Remix_ Telisa Nyoka King

Copy_Paste_Remix_#3: “Who Gets a Name?: Keith Porter Jr., Renee Good, and the Politics of Public Memory

This essay examines the racialized dynamics of media attention, public memory, and movement co-optation through a comparative analysis of two recent killings by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. The deaths of Keith Porter Jr., a Black man killed in Los Angeles in December 2025, and Renee Nicole Good, a white woman killed in Minneapolis one week later, reveal stark disparities in visibility, narrative framing, and national response. While both cases raise serious questions about state violence and accountability, only one rapidly entered the national consciousness through widespread media coverage, political response, and formal documentation. Drawing on the historical aims of movements such as Say Her Name and Black Lives Matter, the essay argues that the uneven recognition of these deaths reflects broader structures of racial inequality that determine whose lives are publicly mourned and whose remain obscured. The analysis highlights how symbolic justice movements risk dilution when attention is redirected toward already visible narratives, reinforcing rather than disrupting racial hierarchies of grief, legitimacy, and remembrance.

—Telisa Nyoka King, M.A.

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Copy_Paste_Remix_#2: The People’s Choice —Zohran Mamdani and the New York We Deserve
Copy Paste Remix, Copy_Paste_Remix_ Telisa Nyoka King Copy Paste Remix, Copy_Paste_Remix_ Telisa Nyoka King

Copy_Paste_Remix_#2: The People’s Choice —Zohran Mamdani and the New York We Deserve

This essay, The People’s Choice: Zohran Mamdani and the New York We Deserve, examines the cultural and political significance of Zohran Mamdani’s historic election as New York City’s 111th mayor. Moving beyond conventional political reporting, it interprets Mamdani’s victory as a rupture in the city’s power narrative—one that redefines representation, equity, and belonging for immigrant, working-class, and Muslim communities. Through a lens of identity politics and moral economy, the essay explores how Mamdani’s platform—housing justice, public-transit equity, and NYPD accountability—translates grassroots values into policy ambition. It situates his rise within a broader critique of neoliberal governance, arguing that Mamdani embodies a new political remix that fuses community organizing with institutional leadership. Ultimately, the essay positions his election as both a reflection and a reimagining of New York’s collective self-image, suggesting that the city has not only chosen a mayor but mirrored its most human aspirations back to itself.

— Telisa Nyoka King, M.A.

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