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#Kathy Kusner
in-sightpublishing · 2 years
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The Greenhorn Chronicles 27: Mac Cone on North American Show Jumping History (2)
The Greenhorn Chronicles 27: Mac Cone on North American Show Jumping History (2)
                      Publisher: In-Sight Publishing Publisher Founding: December 1, 2014 Web Domain: http://www.in-sightpublishing.com  Location: Fort Langley, Township of Langley, British Columbia, Canada Journal: In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal Journal Founding: August 2, 2012 Frequency: Three (3) Times Per Year Review Status: Non-Peer-Reviewed Access: Electronic/Digital & Open…
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brooklynmuseum · 7 years
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Join us October 19th for a special celebration of the past, present, and future of feminist art. The Yes! Gala will commemorate the accomplishments of a group of pioneering women who have made an impact on arts, culture, and society—including the evening’s special honoree, artist Judy Chicago.
The event also kicks off The Brooklyn Conference: Inspiring Social Change, a special gathering that will bring together artists, leaders, and innovators for workshops, discussions, and art-making to explore the intersections of art and social justice.
Get your tickets today!
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horsetalknz · 3 years
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Renowned US showjumper to receive lifetime achievement award
Renowned US showjumper to receive lifetime achievement award
Kathy Kusner is to receive the 2021 Lifetime Achievement Award from the US Equestrian Federation. © USET Foundation Archives Leading showjumping rider Kathy Kusner and eventing organiser Howard Simpson have been honored with the 2021 Lifetime Achievement Award from the US Equestrian Federation. (more…)
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deehollowaywrites · 6 years
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I made a boo-boo while writing my first Thoroughbred project--ok, I made a few, including an entire draft that used ‘furlough’ in place of ‘furlong,’ but the error germane to today’s topic is the omission of Cheryl White.
The project was structured around a female jockey and a female archivist, the latter of which was putting together an exhibition similar to the one arriving in July 2019 at the National Museum of Racing. There are huge chunks of dialogue devoted to discussion of female jocks; there’s an impassioned pitch of the archivist defending her choice both of exhibition and the inclusion of the protagonist jockey, a wild child whose status as role model is occasionally in question. At no point in the name-dropping, from Kathy Kusner to Rosie Napravnik, does anyone mention Cheryl White.
The archivist character, it should be noted, is African-American.
A little while later, I wrote another project in the same universe, this time about a Black teen girl yearning to become a jockey. That manuscript also left out White, because the first time I encountered her name was well after all these flights of fancy were done, in the interesting, troubling book The Lady Is a Jock, where she merits an occasional mention in the sea of glam, sexy, or down-home white women riders. After learning, two years into my very jock-focused appreciation of the sport, that there had at one point been a Black female jockey of note, I went looking for Cheryl White elsewhere. Didn’t turn up much. Listened with avid interest to her interview earlier this year on Jock Talk. Wondered, as soon as NMRHOF announced the panel, whether she might appear at the museum to talk about women in racing.
Reader, if you’re a woman, do you remember the first time anyone mentioned the concept of ambition to you? Two instances stick out in my mind. There was my undergraduate advisor who asked what my ambitions were after graduating and frowned when I said I didn’t consider myself ambitious. There’s the foreword to The Blue Castle, of all unlikely books, which refers to L.M. Montgomery as a ‘serious and ambitious writer.’ It had not occurred to me by age nineteen to cultivate ambitions. It had not occurred to me that a writer of my childhood, associated with books for young people, could be termed ambitious. You can waft through life, an ingenue to whom things happen, reactive. You can carry out actions because you know you’re supposed to, because no one else will if you don’t. At some point, rote effort becomes intentional. At some point, you’re too old to keep on living without admitting ambition.
The ambitions of women like Linda Rice and Stella Thayer are not in doubt. Gabby Gaudet conducts her career with open eyes and full intent. Even the frontrunning, groundbreaking rank of jockeys like Julie Krone elides questions of ambition; it wasn’t whether they wanted to ride, but how they would go about it. There’s a lot to be said for sitting in the presence of icons--but at what point do icons cease to exist as flesh and blood, enacting will, and become those gallery bronzes? Thoroughbred racing is intimidating. Not being a fan of any other sports, I can’t say whether soccer or baseball have such high thresholds for belonging, only that I half-expect a prick of the finger when I pass through Spa gates, a blood test not for type but for class and breeding. Marylou Whitney six rows ahead in her hat, flanked on all sides by women (and the panel audience’s makeup was heavily female, no mistake) in the know: women who’ve been playing New York horseflesh for longer than I’ve been alive, women with connections, women who--as my girlfriend reported--happened to have a halter of Justify’s lying around to auction off.
Awe is not the healthiest of emotions.
It’s something, all right, seeing Charlotte Weber in the flesh, whose sprawling Florida farm I’d crane my neck for a glimpse at every time I drove through Ocala on the way to somewhere else. It’s something to listen to Krone’s stories, watch Rice’s wry smile appear, observe each woman’s reaction to a question--delivered in good faith or otherwise; Poe’s Law is always in play when a man is asking questions--about sexism in their sport. This is the top tier of a sphere I care about a lot. They’re known, for lack of any more scintillating vocabulary; they’re the basis for characters I’ve written and ones I’ve yet to write. They and other women are part of racing’s bedrock, the vein of that choice limestone that makes foals’ hooves grow strong… but what do we mean by women?
“Women in Racing.” You know what they mean. Whose stories are flattened by the broad application of female. The utility of female icons to institutions; the sinister ease with which appreciation becomes a checkbox, a cul-de-sac, proof of acknowledgment and feigned confusion over what more could possibly be done. Maybe it’s unconscious, an insidious natural selection of Cool Girls, in the Gillian Flynn sense, rising like cream to the top. Maybe that row of blondes, broken only by Blythe Miller Davies, was a coincidence. Walking through downtown Saratoga with my girlfriend a few hours after, I thought about how I would stock such a panel, or proliferation of panels. Jenine Sahadi. Kathleen O’Connell, maybe. Carol Cedeno, absolutely. Tammi Piermarini. Barbara Livingston. Sam Bussanich or Emily Gullikson. Cheryl White. Any number of grooms, assistant trainers, stewards, and veterinarians whose names I don’t know, but whose efforts make the sport run: a living record to prove the naysayers wrong, a testament to diversity, proof of racing’s vitality and its endurance, its breadth beyond the aristocracy of breeding and the heirloom of training.
Show me not only the vanguard behind museum glass, but the inheritors.
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kacydeneen · 6 years
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‘Tough Game for Women’: No Female Jockeys at Triple Crown
Mike Smith will ride Justify for a shot at the Triple Crown in Saturday’s Belmont Stakes. He’ll compete against nine other horse/jockey combinations -- and all nine other jockeys will be men. In fact, over the past 48 years, more than 300 jockeys have ridden in Triple Crown races, and only six have been women. A female jockey hasn’t competed in a Triple Crown race since Rosie Napravnik rode General a Rod in the Belmont four years ago.
“It’s an incredible feeling, it always validated how far I’ve come, and making it to the level I wanted to be riding at,” said Napravnik, who retired from racing in 2014 at 26 while seven weeks pregnant. “It’s really all about the quality of horses that you’re riding. …That’s why we’re in the game and that’s why we ride to get to the top level.”
But Napravnik is the exception. About eight percent of jockeys are female, according to the Jockeys’ Guild membership, and the majority never reach that top level. There’s a host of reasons why those numbers are so low, jockeys say.
In interviews with NBC, five female jockeys described what they say is a long and persistent history of gender discrimination in the sport. Some say their careers have been deterred by sexual harassment and bullying. At a time when the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements have exposed inappropriate and often illegal treatment of women by more than 200 high-profile men, there has been no similar reckoning in racing. Female jockeys say that’s because too many of them are afraid to speak up.
“Every day, someone says something derogatory,” said jockey Erica Murray.
Female riders often share stories with each other, Murray said, about trainers, jockeys or grooms making inappropriate comments about their appearance or making unwanted physical advances. The harassment, they said, is especially bad at small tracks.
Murray and three other jockeys interviewed for this article said they didn't want to name the men who have harassed them or the tracks where the harassment occurred for fear of losing work. For the same reason, they never filed official complaints. 
“To survive,” Murray said, “you have to keep your mouth shut and keep chugging along.”
Horse racing has always been a male dominated sport. Women could not compete until 1968, when Kathy Kusner sued the Maryland Racing Commission for a jockey license. Diane Crump broke the gender barrier at the Kentucky Derby in 1970, 95 years after the first Derby. Fourteen years passed before another woman rode in the Derby.
“It’s a fair statement to say that there are many, many more men good riders than women, but that doesn’t change the fact that when a girl is a good rider, she’s just a good rider. Period,” said trainer Tom Amoss, who chose Napravnik to jockey Mylute in two Triple Crown races in 2013. “Horse racing is a men’s world and I don’t say that proudly, it’s just the way it is. It’s very difficult for a woman to break in in any aspect of it.”
Amoss chose Napravnik to race his horses in the Triple Crown and in other races because she was among the top jockeys.
“I’ve never thought of Rosie as a ‘woman rider,’” he said. “She’s a very, very good rider and there was an opportunity to get her for the race and so we chose to do that, to get who we thought was the best rider available, man or woman.”
Not every trainer thinks that way. Women in North America rode less often, getting a 10.2 percent of race starts and winning just 7.5 percent of prize money in 2017, according to analysis from Paul T. von Hippel, an associate professor of public policy, sociology, statistics and data at the University of Texas, Austin, who looked at data from Equibase, the thoroughbred industry's official database. Those percentages have declined by two to three points since 2000, Von Hippel said. 
This "could suggest poor results but could also occur because women tend to ride inferior horses in lower class races," according to his analysis. 
Women jockeys say they have to work at least twice as hard as men, which often means working horses for hours in the morning for free only to see a male rider competing on those same horses later in the day. Some women jockeys, including Napravnik, had trainers turn them down then hire them after they won races for someone else.
Cheyanna Patrick, who has ridden mostly for her dad, a trainer based in Indiana, said if it wasn’t for her family, she wouldn’t have the success she had finding mounts.
“I literally walked into barns just to introduce myself and trainers would say, 'You can keep walking, we don’t use girl jockeys in this barn,'” said Patrick, who now attends law school at the University of Kentucky. “I would try to get an agent, but when I called agents they would say the trainers they work with don’t use girl jockeys.”
Patrick remembers approaching a trainer about racing opportunities, and immediately being asked about her appearance instead of how many races she has won.
“You should think about being a stripper, you’re really pretty, you’ll make more money at that,” Patrick said he told her. “I was probably 18. I was stunned, I thought, ‘Wow, this makes me really want to be a jockey and work with you guys.’”
Murray, 20, who races at Louisiana Downs, said an agent told her that if she was a boy, she’d be the leading apprentice rider in the country.
“It’s behind like 50 years on the race track in terms of the treatment of women. It’s ridiculous,” said Murray, who started racing at 17.
Larry Jolivette, a trainer at Louisiana Downs who works with Murray and other women riders, says a lot of male trainers believe that male jockeys are stronger riders than female jockeys. To Jolivette, it’s all about how hard a jockey works. A recent study by the University of Liverpool in the UK that used data covering a 14-year period, found that women jockeys did just as well as men when they were offered horses of the same quality.
“It’s a tough game for women; they have to be dominant,” Jolivette said. “Erica had won a race for me just yesterday. She’s got the mindset and she’s got the ability. She will make it.”
Murray says she first experienced catcalls and sexual harassment at age 13, when she started working horses on a farm. Since then, it’s been a constant.
Murray will talk about her experiences but will not name names for fear of being blackballed. Filing a complaint to track stewards, Murray and others said, is not taken seriously and could lead to retaliation. They say the harassment takes focus away from their jobs and creates an unsafe working environment.
Jockey Natalie Turner named a name in 2016: another jockey at Will Rogers Downs in Claremore, Oklahoma. Freddy Jose Manrrique-Guerrero was saying inappropriate things, leaving notes on her car and following her, Turner said. She and others complained to track stewards, who gave Manrrique-Guerrero verbal warnings that had little impact, she said.
During one race, Manrrique-Guerrero grabbed her shoulder and hit her horse in the face, she said. Turner said she struck him several times with a whip as “self-defense”—all of it visible on video. Both jockeys were sent to anger management classes and received a 30-day suspension. Turner’s was later reduced to a two-week suspension.
Manrrique-Guerrero's agent, Mike Gass Sr., denied that the jockey reached for Turner’s arm or hit her horse. The Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission determined that Manrrique-Guerrero did make contact with Turner’s shoulder, but there wasn’t enough evidence to conclude that it was intentional. Manrrique-Guerrero did not return several messages left with Gass Sr. or Will Rogers Downs. 
Eventually, Turner took out a restraining order against Manrrique-Guerrero, but she was still pitted against him in races, she said. 
“The whole thing could’ve been avoided, but instead it was swept under the rug,” said Turner, who retired from racing in 2016 after six years in the sport. She is now a marketing coordinator at Belterra Park in Cincinnati, Ohio. “When you look out at the track and you start thinking about everything that goes into those two minutes on the track, it’s not just worth it for me,” she said. 
Amanda Clinton, Vice President of Communications for the Cherokee Nation Entertainment, which owns and operates Will Rogers Downs, would not comment on Turner’s case but said the track has a “sexual harassment free workplace.”
Kelly Cathey, executive director of the Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission, said if a jockey is being harassed, “they should report it no matter who is going to find out and have enough faith that they will be protected in situations like that.”
“That’s serious. They should never feel like they shouldn’t complain because they’re the only female rider,” Cathey said. 
Amelia Hauschild, 18, said her experiences as a 16-year-old apprentice at small tracks nearly drove her from the sport. She said trainers and other jockeys verbally and sexually harassed her. People passed around her phone number and called her to ask for dates, and harassed her on social media. Two trainers told her she’d get more rides and better horses if she slept with them, she said. They routinely commented on how her clothes fit her body.
“I have been in situations where I should’ve reported it or called police, but if you’re the only woman then it’s pretty easy to know who made the report,” said Hauschild. “Until it’s time to move to a different state or work for someone else you’re kind of stuck in that situation.”
After about a year racing, Hauschild was able to move her apprenticeship to Santa Anita Park, a large California track, where she says she hasn’t encountered any harassment.
Jockey Julie Burke, who moved to the U.S. from Ireland two years ago, said a male jockey hazed her for weeks and punched her in the face after a race in 2017. They were both punished.
“I was just riding a race like everyone else but because it was me, he could come in and bully me, because I wasn’t one of the guys,” said Burke, 28.
She complained to the track stewards about the bullying but they did nothing about it, she said. She didn’t want to name the track where the bullying happened or name the jockey because she still has to work alongside him.
“It’s probably the only sport where women take that kind of stuff,” she said. “We have to because that’s what you have to put up with. If you’re competing with the men you have to accept it as that’s that.”
Katie Clawson Ramsey, 21, an exercise rider who retired from racing last year, said she was shocked to hear derogatory comments men made about women on the racetrack but she said it seemed acceptable for them to behave that way. She said older jockeys would offer to mentor young female riders, only to try to take advantage of them.
“Unfortunately, some girls fall for that and can get into sticky situations and unfortunate circumstances with the guys taking advantage of the fact that they have a dream to chase and hone their craft,” Clawson Ramsey said. “I know of numerous people who had that direct experience.”
The Jockeys’ Guild, an organization that represents jockeys, said in a statement it’s been made aware “of a couple of incidents throughout the country” but it has not received complaints about sexual harassment from its members.
“The stewards at each racetracks are given the authority to oversee all aspects of racing, including participants, at each race track,” the Guild said. “Therefore, they would be the most appropriate avenue to investigate and address such complaints or alleged incidents.”
While some jockeys described widespread harassment and discrimination in the sport, others said they haven’t experienced it.
“You might have guys who will whistle at you but that’s just normal life, it can happen anywhere you go,” said jockey Ashley Broussard, 25, who’s been winning races at Evangeline Downs and Delta Downs, small tracks in Louisiana. “I’ve never had anyone make comments or that if I want to ride for this barn you have to be with me. I’ve never had these issues.
“I feel a lot of that is how you present yourself and carry yourself. If you go out there wearing cutoff shirts and skinny jeans and go and flirt with the guys, of course they are going to take advantage of that. You have to think of it as a business, not as trying to work your way in.”
She thinks the reason women are underrepresented in the sport is due to the risks involved, not the lack of opportunities, and many choose family over racing. Broussard said her body hurts every day because she’s had broken ribs, a broken collarbone, punctured lung, several concussions and other injuries.
“It’s not going out and playing ball,” said Broussard, who’s a single mom to a 3-year-old son. “A lot of people get killed, they get hurt. You have to be willing to take that and mentally prepare yourself.”
Jockey Sophie Doyle, who moved to the U.S. from the U.K. in 2013, echoed Broussard’s opinion. She said she hasn’t experienced sexual harassment at work and said a woman’s success as a jockey depends on hard work and connecting with the right people.
“It’s same as in any job, you just have to know how to handle yourself,” Doyle said. “Don’t ever put yourself in a situation where you have to do something to get a ride in the barn. I’ve had people whistling and saying, ‘hey babe,’ you have to ignore it.”
Donna Brothers, who won over 1,100 races and serves as a horse-back riding reporter and analyst for NBC Sports' Triple Crown coverage, said bullying, discrimination and sexual harassment were not part of her experience during her 11 and a half years as a jockey. She said she simply “didn’t make room for it.” Her mother, Patti Barton, one of the first women to be licensed as a jockey in 1969 and among the top female jockeys during her career, took the same approach, Brothers said.
“I never felt I was treated as a sexual object in any way,” she said. “I handled myself professionally and I never wore a mini skirt to the jock’s room either.”
Brothers believes women are underrepresented in horse racing because there’s less mid-level racing than there was when she started, making it hard for female jockeys to rise through the ranks.
Still, women like her, her mother, Napravnik and others have proven that female jockeys can be as strong riders as men and win races at the highest level, Brothers said. Experience and hard work, not gender, made the difference.
Napravnik, who was regularly ranked among the top jockeys in North America in both earnings and total races won, agrees. But she said she still experienced trainers that refused to hire her because of her gender, and she took special delight in beating their horses, and having those trainers come back and ask her to ride for them.
”People cannot resist winning, and so in my experience anybody that I can remember saying that to me, I rode for and won races for,” she said. “I feel like it was a personal victory of my own, like haha, I told you so.”
Photo Credit: Ernesto Belmonte This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser. ‘Tough Game for Women’: No Female Jockeys at Triple Crown published first on Miami News
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brooklynlocalnews · 7 years
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The Yes! Gala
Join us as we celebrate art and feminism at this special gala featuring the 2017 Sackler Center First Awards, honoring Judy Chicago.
Also honoring: Deborah Berke Shirley Chisholm (posthumous) Jodi Archambault Gillette Judith Jamison Carol Jenkins Roberta Kaplan Kathy Kusner Rita Moreno Our Bodies Ourselves Ruth Simmons Edie Windsor
Schedule: 5 pm Cocktails and Preview of Roots of “The Dinner…
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jumplittlebean · 10 years
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The amazing Kathy Kusner.
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Ilion 
1955, 17hh, Gelding 
I Am x Oriana 
Not raced 
He was trained as a racehorse but never raced, he was purchased off the track by Jimmy Paxson's father. He was first trained as a fox hunter, he was then trained as a show jumper and that's when he found his calling he stared his show jumping career in 1961, and was best in the puissance classes. Ilion's owner and rider Jimmy Paxson and his family were not wealthy people, when they went to show's in very high end areas with campers, they had a ford truck with a slide-in trailer, it was said it look like "they were being invaded by Gypsies". Jimmy and Ilion's won so many ribbons, trophies, and championship's he has lost count of all of them, the highest he ever jumped was on Ilion's at the Youngstown Charity Horse Show Ohio in 1966 . It was a puissance class the jump stared out at 4' 9" and was raised three inches every round after that, by the end of the class only Ilion's and Jimmy could jump the massive 7' 3" wall, the last photo is him jumping the wall. Jimmy and his ex-racehorse, went up against names like Kathy Kusner, and Aberali, Untouchable, Mary Chapot, Rodney Jenkins, and others, and some of the horses best horse in the world from Germany, France, Ireland and others. Ilion's greatest accomplishment was in 1968 at the The Washington International Horse Show, were he won national championship title, he also won many more victories at some of the very prestigious shows of the time. Jimmy retired Ilion's in 1972, he lived to be 31.
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