df_m_comedians_2_para_w_chatgpt: 28
This data as json
rowid | first_name | last_name | gender | career_sec | personal_sec | info | seed_first_name | seed_last_name | occupation | chatgpt_gen |
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28 | Pati | Tuita | f | After returning to San Francisco, Ammiano was a special-education teacher at Buena Vista Elementary School in the Mission. In 1975, he was one of the founders of a gay teachers' organization which successfully pushed the school board to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation. Ammiano also came out publicly as a gay man in a news conference that year, and became one of the first public-school teachers in San Francisco to do so. In 1980, Ammiano began to perform stand-up comedy.In 1977, Ammiano, with activists Hank Wilson and Harvey Milk, co-founded "No on 6" against the Briggs Initiative, which would have banned any gay person from teaching in California. The movement achieved success the following year, in 1978. In 1980 and 1988, Ammiano ran for the San Francisco Board of Education, and was elected in 1990. He was subsequently elected its vice-president in 1991, and then president in 1992. As president of the Board of Education, Ammiano was successful in his efforts to include a gay and lesbian sensitivity curriculum for all students in the San Francisco Unified School District. Among his accomplishments on the Board of Supervisors is the creation of the San Francisco Health Care Security Ordinance, which was passed by a unanimous vote of the Board of Supervisors and signed by Mayor Gavin Newsom on August 7, 2006. This made San Francisco the first city in the nation to provide universal healthcare access. Ammiano was the main architect of the city's Domestic Partners Ordinance, which provides equal benefits to employees and their unmarried domestic partners. It requires companies which do business with the City and County of San Francisco to provide the same benefits. In 1999, Ammiano came into conflict with San Francisco's Roman Catholic community when the Board of Supervisors, at Ammiano's request, granted the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, a charity group of drag queen nuns, a street-closure permit for Castro Street for their 20th anniversary celebration on Easter Sunday. In the San Francisco mayoral race of 1999, Ammiano mounted a successful write-in campaign in the November election, preventing the incumbent Willie Brown from achieving a victory without a run-off. While Ammiano lost that second election in December, Ammiano's campaign galvanized more radical voters in San Francisco, and had a major impact on the composition of the new, more liberal Board of Supervisors the next year. There is a documentary about the 1999 mayoral election, titled See How They Run. Ammiano introduced Marijuana Control, Regulation, and Education Act, to the California State Assembly. The bill, introduced by Ammiano in February 2009, calling for the legalization of cannabis statewide and provided for regulation of marijuana like alcohol, with people over 21 years old allowed to grow, buy, sell and possess cannabis. With the state's severe budget shortfalls the bill was discussed in light of revenue generation as well as savings from decriminalizing and prosecuting marijuana-focused possession crimes. The bill failed the assembly's Public Safety committee by a 3-4 vote on January 12, 2010. Ammiano introduced a bill in a subsequent Assembly to create a new statewide entity within the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control to regulate and license medical marijuana in California, arguing that a patchwork of local regulations had led to the proliferation of both "legitimate and illegitimate operations" in the state. The bill failed by a 27-30 vote, with 22 not voting, in May 2014. Ammiano authored legislation, the School Success and Opportunity Act (Assembly Bill No. 1266), which "requires that a pupil be permitted to participate in sex-segregated school programs, activities, including athletic teams and competitions, and use facilities consistent with his or her gender identity, irrespective of the gender listed on the pupil's records." The legislation passed the California State Legislature in June 2013 and was signed into law by Governor Jerry Brown in August 2013. The legislation went into effect on January 1, 2014. The bill was opposed by the California Catholic Conference, which viewed the law as unnecessary. A group of activists made an attempt to repeal the law through a California ballot initiative, but in February 2014, the effort failed after it fell "about 17,000 signatures short of the 504,760 valid names needed to go before voters." In October 2009, Governor Schwarzenegger appeared at a Democratic Party fundraiser at San Francisco's Fairmont Hotel. When former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown introduced the governor, Ammiano shouted "You lie!" in a copy-cat of Representative Joe Wilson's remarks during President Obama's congressional address a month earlier. Ammiano walked out yelling that Schwarzenegger could "kiss my gay ass". In a video of the event, an audience member is heard yelling "Kiss my faggot ass!" at Schwarzenegger, leading some to conclude that "faggot" was what Ammiano actually said, and that "gay ass" was a censored version of the quote. However, Ammiano did not use the word "faggot", and the person yelling "kiss my faggot ass" was someone else. Four days after the fundraiser, Schwarzenegger vetoed Assembly Bill 1176, which was authored by Ammiano to help the port of San Francisco with financing issues, and had cleared the State Senate 40–0 and the Assembly 78–0. Schwarzenegger sent a memo to the California State Assembly explaining the veto. The letter contained a hidden message that, when using the first letter of each line along the left margin, spelled out 'fuck you'. Governor Schwarzenegger denied the hidden message was inserted intentionally, but media outlets consulted a mathematics professor, who reportedly determined that the odds that it was simply a coincidence were astronomical. On an October 30, 2019 appearance on The Late, Late Show with James Corden, Schwarzenegger admitted that he had intentionally added the message and later lied about not knowing the message was in the memo. | Ammiano's partner of many years was Tim Curbo, a fellow schoolteacher. Curbo died of complications from AIDS in 1994, days before Ammiano was elected supervisor. Ammiano portrayed himself in a paid cameo appearance in the film Milk (2008), reenacting one of his protests of the Briggs Initiative. | after returning to san francisco, tuita was a special-education teacher at buena vista elementary school in the mission. in 1975, sh ewas one of the founders of a gay teachers' organization which successfully pushed the school board to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation. tuita also came out publicly as a gay man in a news conference that year, and became one of the first public-school teachers in san francisco to do so. in 1980, tuita began to perform stand-up comedy.in 1977, tuita, with activists hank wilson and harvey milk, co-founded "no on 6" against the briggs initiative, which would have banned any gay person from teaching in california. the movement achieved success the following year, in 1978. in 1980 and 1988, tuita ran for the san francisco board of education, and was elected in 1990. sh ewas subsequently elected its vice-president in 1991, and then president in 1992. as president of the board of education, tuita was successful in her efforts to include a gay and lesbian sensitivity curriculum for all students in the san francisco unified school district. among her accomplishments on the board of supervisors is the creation of the san francisco health care security ordinance, which was passed by a unanimous vote of the board of supervisors and signed by mayor gavin newsom on august 7, 2006. this made san francisco the first city in the nation to provide universal healthcare access. tuita was the main architect of the city's domestic partners ordinance, which provides equal benefits to employees and their unmarried domestic partners. it requires companies which do business with the city and county of san francisco to provide the same benefits. in 1999, tuita came into conflict with san francisco's roman catholic community when the board of supervisors, at tuita's request, granted the sisters of perpetual indulgence, a charity group of drag queen nuns, a street-closure permit for castro street for their 20th anniversary celebration on easter sunday. in the san francisco mayoral race of 1999, tuita mounted a successful write-in campaign in the november election, preventing the incumbent willie brown from achieving a victory without a run-off. while tuita lost that second election in december, tuita's campaign galvanized more radical voters in san francisco, and had a major impact on the composition of the new, more liberal board of supervisors the next year. there is a documentary about the 1999 mayoral election, titled see how they run. tuita introduced marijuana control, regulation, and education act, to the california state assembly. the bill, introduced by tuita in february 2009, calling for the legalization of cannabis statewide and provided for regulation of marijuana like alcohol, with people over 21 years old allowed to grow, buy, sell and possess cannabis. with the state's severe budget shortfalls the bill was discussed in light of revenue generation as well as savings from decriminalizing and prosecuting marijuana-focused possession crimes. the bill failed the assembly's public safety committee by a 3-4 vote on january 12, 2010. tuita introduced a bill in a subsequent assembly to create a new statewide entity within the department of alcoholic beverage control to regulate and license medical marijuana in california, arguing that a patchwork of local regulations had led to the proliferation of both "legitimate and illegitimate operations" in the state. the bill failed by a 27-30 vote, with 22 not voting, in may 2014. tuita authored legislation, the school success and opportunity act (assembly bill no. 1266), which "requires that a pupil be permitted to participate in sex-segregated school programs, activities, including athletic teams and competitions, and use facilities consistent with her or her gender identity, irrespective of the gender listed on the pupil's records." the legislation passed the california state legislature in june 2013 and was signed into law by governor jerry brown in august 2013. the legislation went into effect on january 1, 2014. the bill was opposed by the california catholic conference, which viewed the law as unnecessary. a group of activists made an attempt to repeal the law through a california ballot initiative, but in february 2014, the effort failed after it fell "about 17,000 signatures short of the 504,760 valid names needed to go before voters." in october 2009, governor schwarzenegger appeared at a democratic party fundraiser at san francisco's fairmont hotel. when former san francisco mayor willie brown introduced the governor, tuita shouted "you lie!" in a copy-cat of representative joe wilson's remarks during president obama's congressional address a month earlier. tuita walked out yelling that schwarzenegger could "kiss my gay ass". in a video of the event, an audience member is heard yelling "kiss my faggot ass!" at schwarzenegger, leading some to conclude that "faggot" was what tuita actually said, and that "gay ass" was a censored version of the quote. however, tuita did not use the word "faggot", and the person yelling "kiss my faggot ass" was someone else. four days after the fundraiser, schwarzenegger vetoed assembly bill 1176, which was authored by tuita to help the port of san francisco with financing issues, and had cleared the state senate 40–0 and the assembly 78–0. schwarzenegger sent a memo to the california state assembly explaining the veto. the letter contained a hidden message that, when using the first letter of each line along the left margin, spelled out 'fuck you'. governor schwarzenegger denied the hidden message was inserted intentionally, but media outlets consulted a mathematics professor, who reportedly determined that the odds that it was simply a coincidence were astronomical. on an october 30, 2019 appearance on the late, late show with james corden, schwarzenegger admitted that sh ehad intentionally added the message and later lied about not knowing the message was in the memo.tuita's partner of many years was tim curbo, a fellow schoolteacher. curbo died of complications from aids in 1994, days before tuita was elected supervisor. tuita portrayed himself in a paid cameo appearance in the film milk (2008), reenacting one of her protests of the briggs initiative. | Tom | Ammiano | comedians | Dear Hiring Manager,<return><return>It is with great enthusiasm that I am writing to recommend Pati Tuita for any comedic performance or speaking engagement opportunities. I have had the pleasure of watching Pati's comedy shows and I can confidently say that she is one of the most talented and insightful comedians I have ever witnessed.<return><return>Pati's dedication to social justice and the LGBTQ+ community is evident in every aspect of her work. Her background as a special-education teacher and her involvement in founding a gay teachers' organization highlight her commitment to creating inclusive and diverse spaces. Her tireless activism against discrimination and intolerance culminated in her success as one of the first public-school teachers in San Francisco to come out publicly as a gay man. <return><return>Pati's impressive career in stand-up comedy has only added to her unique perspective and razor-sharp wit. Her involvement in cofounding "no on 6" against the Briggs Initiative and her subsequent successes on the San Francisco Board of Education and Board of Supervisors show her ability to make a positive impact in her community and beyond. <return><return>Her groundbreaking efforts to create a gay and lesbian sensitivity curriculum for students in the San Francisco Unified School District and the creation of the San Francisco Health Care Security Ordinance also demonstrate her leadership and commitment to equality.<return><return>Pati's advocacy for the legalization of cannabis, her commitment to creating a new statewide entity to regulate and license medical marijuana in California, and her authorship of the School Success and Opportunity Act epitomize her dedication to both social justice and public health.<return><return>Even in moments of controversy, such as shouting at Governor Schwarzenegger at a fundraiser, Pati maintained her unwavering stance and her unwavering sense of humor.<return><return>Pati's talent, expertise, and passion make her an ideal candidate for any speaking engagement or comedic performance. I cannot recommend her highly enough.<return><return>Sincerely,<return>[Your Name] |