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Super Bowl LVIII Halftime fiasco with NAD, ASL performers, and others

I know that this article comes very late (about two months), but between having a hectic schedule, dealing with other businesses, and taking the time to think more about this issue, here I am. With that said, I am taking my time slowly and writing as my thoughts process, but it’s important that even though it is very late, this conversation should continue because it is problematic. It is a mess.

Now that the NFL Super Bowl LVIII (Super Bowl 58) is over, the teams that played in it were the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers. Kansas City Chiefs was seed three, and San Francisco 49ers was seed 1. This Super Bowl LVIII between the Chiefs and 49ers was perceived to be a rematch because both of them made it to the Super Bowl (Super Bowl LIV) back in 2020, facing each other, and this Super Bowl (Super Bowl LVIII), they faced each other again. In the Super Bowl LIV in 2020, the Kansas City Chiefs won with a score of 31-20 against the San Francisco 49ers, and now this year, Super Bowl LVIII Kansas City Chiefs won again against the San Francisco 49ers with a score of 25-22. This was the Kansas City Chiefs’ back-to-back Super Bowl wins since New England Patriots with Tom Brady. This was Kansas City Chiefs’ 3rd Super Bowl championship in only four years, with Patrick Mahomes as their starting quarterback. Still, the Kansas City Chiefs have four Super Bowl championships, winning them in 1969, 2019, 2022, and 2023. The San Francisco 49ers have five Super Bowl championships, winning them in 1981, 1984, 1988, 1989, and 1994. Anyway, this year’s Super Bowl was somewhat a way to say that this is a start for the Kansas City Chiefs dynasty with Patrick Mahomes like the New England Patriots were with Tom Brady for two decades (20 seasons total). So far, this will be Patrick Mahomes’ sixth season with the Kansas City Chiefs since being drafted in 2017. Patrick Mahomes signed a ten-year extension contract worth $477 million with another 26 million dollars in potential bonuses for a total of 503 million dollars with Kansas City Chiefs in 2020, which currently is the second-largest contract in American professional sports history so Patrick Mahomes will be with Kansas City Chiefs through 2031.

Congratulations to the Kansas City Chiefs for winning the Super Bowl LVIII championship and defeating the San Francisco 49ers again. I am sure that the fans of the Kansas City Chiefs are so proud of their NFL team, and the fans of the 49ers feel disappointed in their team for being defeated twice by the same team in two Super Bowls in only four years. I am not a fan of both teams. I didn’t get to watch the Super Bowl LVIII this year, and I believe I didn’t watch the Super Bowl LIV back in 2020, either. I went on to bed that evening, but I will say that I would like for the Kansas City Chiefs to win for one reason, and that is for San Francisco to lose because the San Francisco 49ers stopped my favorite team in their track in their playoff many times in a decade which I am sure you know which team is my favorite but if not then it’s Green Bay Packers. So, the San Francisco 49ers are a pain in the Green Bay Packers’ rear end, which I will admit. So, even if the Kansas City Chiefs didn’t play against the San Francisco 49ers in this Super Bowl and the other team did, I would still root for that team and any team that plays against the 49ers in any Super Bowl or playoff.

With that said, I was not planning to write about this year’s Super Bowl LVIII itself, but I am sharing my thoughts on what happened behind it. As a Deaf person, just like many other Deaf people, I am sure they were very disappointed and upset over how it went and what happened at the Super Bowl LVIII. Some of you may know, and some of you may not know. Still, every year, the National Association of the Deaf is responsible for ensuring some form or kind of accessibility for the Deaf community who watch the Super Bowl, such as advocating for the NFL and a television network company that would host the Super Bowl to provide that. CBS was for the Super Bowl LVIII, Nickelodeon, and live-streaming on Paramount+ this year. Paramount Global is the parent company that owns CBS, Nickelodeon, and others. Every year at the Super Bowl, with the National Association of the Deaf, we would see Deaf people translating in American Sign Language in the Super Bowl halftime. While many of you would be watching the Super Bowl halftime on your big flat-screen TV and being able to listen to all of the music that was done during the halftime while, we Deaf people have to hassle with how we can have access to the ones that would be translating the halftime in American Sign Language. We Deaf people cannot just turn on a TV, change the channel to whichever network that would be hosting the Super Bowl, and then watch them like we wish because, speaking of that hassle, we have to have two screens (whether it be two TVs, smartphone, tablet, monitor, etc.) so that on one screen we would see what everyone else would be seeing and on the other screen is the American Sign Language performers who signs the songs that is being played by opening a link that National Association of the Deaf or others give us to open. We, Deaf people, have been asking for many years to get the NFL, along with all of the television networks, to start adding a PIP (picture in picture) where we Deaf people can tune in to a channel on TV that ready to go with a PIP (like a square video in the corner of a TV) where there would be American Sign Language signers translating the songs in that PIP while the larger part of the TV is the halftime show.

That is one of the problems, one being that we have for many years trying to get the NFL and these TV networks that would be hosting the NFL Super Bowl halftime to be accessible for the Deaf community. It would be fair if they didn’t show the American Sign Language translation and didn’t provide the audio for the hearing people. Audio is accessible for hearing people, and a translation in sign languages is accessible for deaf people. The other problem that I want to share my thoughts on is the National Association of the Deaf.

Every year, the National Association of the Deaf (NAD) handpicked a few people to translate for the Super Bowl halftime in American Sign Language. Last year, they handpicked Justina “JTay” Miles to translate for Rihanna in the NFL Super Bowl LVII, and the year before last year they picked Warren “WaWa” Snipe, and Sean Forbes to translate for Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Eminem, Mary J. Blige, Kendrick Lamar, 50 cent and Anderson.Paak. National Association of the Deaf would misinform the Deaf community that they would translate into American Sign Language on the stage as if sharing with these singers on the center’s stage on the football field on one TV screen. But they ended up putting them on some platform over to the side of the field where no one can see them and telling us to watch them through a streaming link provided by a company called D-Pan, founded by Sean Forbes, who was one of the translators for that halftime alongside WaWa. So, then we were able to watch them, but it wasn’t accessible for the Deaf people who are blind or who have some difficulty seeing anything in the dark because there wasn’t enough light on them. The way they set up the lighting system was terrible, even though they will give you the excuse that they were very bright to them in person.

Here is the video with Sean Forbes and Warren “WaWa” Snipes translating the NFL Super Bowl halftime songs. Also, here is a video with Justina Miles translating the songs by Rihanna during the NFL Super Bowl halftime. You can select which video you’d like to watch below, as it is a video playlist. Please beware that the second video, the one with Justina “Jtay” Miles, is more of a narrow widescreen video format as it was how they set it up, so I suggest you click the full-screen icon below to watch it a bit better.

So, that continues; deaf people have hassles accessing American Sign Language performers who translate the Super Bowl halftime songs. Now, this year at the Super Bowl was different. I didn’t say that in a good way because it was not at all. For many years, we never knew how the National Association of the Deaf picked up who would be doing the Super Bowl halftime. Until this Super Bowl, we finally started questioning the National Association of the Deaf about being transparent on how they go about handpicking who to do the Super Bowl halftime because this one, the Super Bowl LVIII halftime, was NOT accessible at all because they picked the wrong people to translate the Super Bowl halftime songs. The best I have seen so far is none other than Justina Miles. Hands down, she did the American Sign Language translation for Rihanna last year for the Super Bowl halftime, and her signing with her dancing – she was THE queen at it! It seems that the National Association of the Deaf has not put a spotlight on Justina “JTay” Miles for long for some reason; it looks like after that Super Bowl Halftime with Justina Miles, they thanked her and then forgot about her, which is unacceptable because she deserves all kinds of recognization and the spotlight permanently. In my opinion, the NAD treated her very wrong and badly.

Despite the bad lighting system set up, WaWa and Sean did pretty well, as they were clear with their signing for the NFL Super Bowl LVI (in 2022). But this year, the National Association of the Deaf picked Shaheem Sanchez, Anjel Piñero, and Daniel Durant, which went WRONG! What went wrong? Shaheem, not only that, but you could see Daniel Durant being confused and being thrown under the bus by the National Association of the Deaf – poor Daniel Durant! Not only that, Shaheem is known for degrading/belittling his Deaf community for years, and suddenly, he became one of the faces of this year’s Super Bowl LVIII halftime American Sign Language performers. Even before that day, many people complained about Shaheem being one of the translators chosen for this year’s Super Bowl halftime. When he was interviewed by CBS Morning, he was asked what he would do differently from last year or the years before this year. He took a subtle jab at Justina Miles by implying that she was a boring ASL performer in a way and that Shaheem himself would be more of dancing and signing at the same time, which is what Justina Miles did last year. When we saw Shaheem translating the songs by Usher at this year’s Super Bowl halftime LVIII, we had no idea what he was saying, and all we could see was him dancing. It was almost like we had a fake interpreter there who didn’t know any sign language, which reminds me of that fake interpreter at Nelson Mandela’s funeral.

Here is a video of a fake interpreter at Nelson Mandela’s funeral that I am talking about. You can see that he is just randomly making gestures with no words. Not only that, but he repeated them along with not signing Nelson Mandela’s name once, which is a very popular sign name in the Deaf community, as they know Nelson Mandela’s name in sign language.

We, as Deaf people, could not understand what Usher sings lyrically. It’s too bad because having Usher perform at a Super Bowl halftime was one of the biggest things ever since Michael Jackson and Prince did it. So, we couldn’t enjoy this year’s Super Bowl halftime. That is when we started questioning the National Association of the Deaf for not being transparent with us about how they handpick the people to do the Super Bowl halftime. They should have gotten us to send some ideas that we think would be great for a Super Bowl halftime – especially the professional ones who translate some songs using American Sign Language. WaWa Snipe, Sean Forbes, and Justina Mile were the right pick as they performed music in American Sign Language, but Shaheem is more known for professional dancing. Although he made videos to translate some songs before, his skill is dancing.

Here’s the video of the Super Bowl LVIII halftime ASL performers – one of them genuinely sucked, which you will figure out if you know American Sign Language.

If you know American Sign Language, then you will be just as clueless as we Deaf people are. After reading a lot of posts on social media by Deaf people, I found out that the CEO of the National Association of the Deaf, Howard Rosenblum, has some kind of relationship with a lawyer named Alexis Kashar, who owns a company called Love Sign/RoseByAnder and somehow made a partnership with the NFL to sell the products made by Love Sign. If you are unfamiliar with who that is, the woman who filed a lawsuit or threatened to sue a little business owned by Deaf 58 Creativity for wanting to sell the products they made with their own using the I Love You in American Sign Language.

Even worse, Alexis Kashar/Love Sign/RoseByAnder, who filed and got the trademark on I Love You in American Sign Language, does not belong to Alexis Kashar as it belongs to the Deaf community. You can read the trademark file here. But legal-wise, we are more limited in our creative design of the I Love You sign for our products; thanks to Alexis Kashar for taking what rightfully belongs to the Deaf community. Then, Shaheem posted paid content, which informed his audience that someone or a company paid him to say or show something. If you are paid to post talking about something or showing something they made on social media, you must declare that your post is paid content. The paid content on his social media showed that Love Sign paid Shaheem to promote the products in partnership with the NFL and Alexis Kashar’s Love Sign/RoseByAnder company. Here is one of the products the NFL sells in partnership with Alexis Kashar.

I… I love you, Chiefs. If you know, American Sign Language and the I Love You sign, you know there is already an I in it. Fingerspell I, L, and Y at once, and you get the I Love You in American Sign Language, so I don’t know why they were dumb enough to add the I letter. Also, here’s a screenshot I took when I visited a link to that shop, where it would show Shaheem in a banner along with the products below it.

Not only that, having paid promotion for Love Sign company products in partnership with the NFL, Shaheem also partners with the NFL Shop for their NFL Shop’s commercial Drip, where you can get 30% off using the code name Shaheem.

It connects all of the dots here if you think about it. Using the National Association of the Deaf with the NFL by its CEO Howard Rosenblum with Alexis Kashar at his side and get the NFL to partner with Alexis Kashar’s company Love Sign/RoseByAnder for using the so-called trademark I Love You in sign language that rightfully belongs to the Deaf community. Back to ASL performers for that Super Bowl halftime, they went with Shaheem because of his growing popularity as a dancer, not as an ASL translator for music, and Daniel Durant? Of course, again, his popularity is because of the film CODA, which won the Oscar award. You could see Daniel Durant being so confused and very unprepared – they used him. What’s even worse is that during the halftime, when Shaheem was just, let’s say, being very gibberish and dancing, Anjel, who is a coda (child of Deaf adults who can hear), came in to do the ASL translate alongside Shaheem… It did not look right; I’ll leave it here. I think that these ASL performers for the Super Bowl LVIII were handpicked, like I said, due to their popularity, with a possible strategy to use them to promote the products knowing that they have decent fanbase numbers while at the same time through Howard Rosenblum as NAD CEO getting the NFL to provide ASL translation for the Super Bowl LVIII halftime. We are hearing things from some sources, but we are waiting for the National Association of the Deaf to make a vlog to explain how and what happened, but that is only if the National Association of the Deaf would finally be transparent with the Deaf community for once.

After many people in the Deaf community complained about Shaheem’s lack of clarity in signs, gibberish, and dancing only most of the time, Shaheem decided to respond with a video here. By the way, I have a screenshot of that 2018 social media post by Shaheem so you can see what he meant when he referred to that 2018 post.

Is that all? Oh no, it gets even worse. There was a reel in which all ASL performers, Alexis Kashar (owner of Love Sign/RoseByAnder) and a Deaf actress Matlin Marlee, danced with two letters of L in their sign – a sign for a vlog or reframing. I don’t get it, but here’s the reel I am talking about. Be warned, though, it is VERY cringeworthy!

Matlin Marlee, I know you have blocked me on Twitter, now X, for many years, but I see you wear one of Alexis Kashar’s Love Sign products there – real class! You know that your new best friend Alexis Kashar took the I Love You in sign language away from the Deaf community, then trademarked it to profit from our sign. When someone wants to sell their own I Love You sign language products, they get threatened with a lawsuit by Alexis Kashar. Remember when the Deaf community stopped one of KISS singers, Gene, from getting the sign trademarked? Familiar with that, right, and now with Alexis Kashar, you have been so silent. That’s strange! If you want to see the trademark file that I am referring to, then you can see it here: https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/ab/c9/f5/48eafacf3926a5/USD779369.pdf.

Russell Harvard?! It is sickening to see that you wear that shirt supporting a company called Love Sign/RoseByAnder, owned by Alexis Kashar, who would threaten anyone who wants to sell their products with the I Love You in sign language – that sign belongs to the Deaf community. Still, Alexis Kashar thinks otherwise, as she has a trademark after the Deaf community stopped one of the KISS singers, Gene, from filing a trademark on the I Love You sign. Just shameful!

When the fiasco started over the Super Bowl LVIII halftime with ASL performers, the National Association of the Deaf took a while to respond. Still, the National Association of the Deaf board made two vlogs discussing this fiasco. Still, whenever something went wrong or happened with the Super Bowl halftime with the ASL translators, the National Association of the Deaf board repeated the same thing but each different Super Bowl halftime.

It is a pattern that they kept apologizing for almost every year of Super Bowl halftime mistakes. If they were sincerely apologizing, they wouldn’t have repeated the mistake repeatedly, but they did. There is something amiss, a huge one; there hasn’t been a vlog or even a statement published by the National Association of the Deaf’s CEO Howard Rosenblum and Alexis Kashar. They published some videos two years ago apologizing and acknowledging what went wrong with that Super Bowl halftime LVI (2022) where Warren Snipes and Sean Forbes translated in American Sign Language because of how they set up – forcing us to watch it via a link, having it too dark for the Deaf-blind to watch, and lying about them being put on the center stage for that Super Bowl halftime. But now, they are very silent this Super Bowl LVIII halftime (2024)! I found out that the National Association of the Deaf’s board has put the CEO Howard Rosenblum on administrative leave for the time being; I am sure that they are hoping that it would cool things down and that we Deaf people continue having short memories so that we forget what had happened on that day of the Super Bowl halftime LVIII. Then, the National Association of the Deaf would return and look good with Howard Rosenblum. I hope that many Deaf people don’t have a short memory of this one this time; otherwise, we will continue letting these mistakes continue and letting the National Association of the Deaf continue not being transparent with us in the Deaf community.

Because of this whole thing, the fiasco with the past Super Bowl halftime, and the National Association of the Deaf’s lack of transparency, we are losing trust in them. It does start looking like whatever the National Association of the Deaf is doing is for their interests rather than the interests of the Deaf community, which isn’t the way to go, as the organization is there to serve the Deaf and hard-of-hearing community.

Now, as for the TV network, the NFL continues not giving the spotlight on ASL translators during the Super Bowl halftime; we Deaf community weren’t the only ones who complained about how it continues that they won’t show ASL translation on the TV and forcing us to watch them via a link instead, U.S. Congressman Joe Morelle took a notice stating that it is inexcusable for the TV network and the NFL not having a PIP (picture-in-picture) with ASL translators alongside the Super Bowl halftime performers. You can read about it here regarding U.S. Congressman Joe Morelle calling out the NFL for failing to broadcast the American Sign Language performers: Rep. Morelle calls out NFL for failing to broadcast ASL performances by James Battaglia and Natalie Kucko at Rochester First.

I agree that it’s 2024, and it is inexcusable not to give a little spotlight on the ASL performers for the Super Bowl halftime. It is high time for the TV cable company to start providing a PIP (picture-in-picture), a square on a television screen with the ASL performers and the halftime singers/performers. Even the technology has been there for years now; there was one Super Bowl Halftime that did have an ASL performer sharing the stage (without the PIP!) with the Super Bowl halftime singer – Marlee Matlin, with Garth Brooks in 1993 performing the Nation Anthem. Sure, they were more open to having her because she won the Oscars award in 1987 for the best actress in a movie called Children of a Lesser God. But ever since then, it never happened again, and even another Deaf person, Troy Kotsur, who won an Oscar in 2022 for a movie called CODA, was picked to do the national anthem in American Sign Language but not on the same as the singer nor was it shown on a TV screen.

Now, I just got news from Ricky Taylor, who is known as Ridor, who has sources saying that National Association of the Deaf CEO Howard Rosenblum is done with the National Association of the Deaf and has gone back to his home in Chicago. Also, he had a farewell party at the National Association of the Deaf. However, the National Association of the Deaf hasn’t announced this. Again, this is the issue with them not being transparent with the Deaf and hard-of-hearing community the organization serves. The whole fiasco started because the National Association of the Deaf was never transparent with us and also gave us misleading information, especially about the past Super Bowl, stating that they would be at the center of the stage when that never happened and ended up having their little platform at the side of the stadium far away.

Correction Edit: Ricky Taylor has made another post with more updated information from his sources that the National Association of the Deaf Howard Rosenblum did not resign from the position but that he just moved back to Chicago, that both Howard and the National Association of the Deaf staffs will be working remotely. Also, the National Association of the Deaf office will be downsized its office size to meet its essential needs, and the CEO Howard Rosenblum will still work for the National Association of the Deaf but in Chicago instead of working at the headquarters of the National Association of the Deaf, which is located in Silver Spring in Maryland.

Now, my sources tell me a mix of Howard Rosenblum did resign and did not resign. However, we should be able to get a clear answer in person after the board meeting, which is being held in Puerto Rico. So, we cannot confirm whether he has resigned and decided to remain CEO. Still, he is doing so remotely until after the National Association of the Deaf board meeting in Puerto Rico. That is, if they would be willing to do so and be transparent for once.

Besides the issue about not being transparent, it’s not only that, it’s also how they go about this; like I said, Alexis Kashar used Howard Rosenblum through National Association of the Deaf for her products (Love Sign), while Howard Rosenblum uses Alexis Kashar for her connections with the NFL so that Howard Rosenblum can have some access to the NFL as a fan and using National Association of the Deaf as a front to power the NFL or TV company into at least giving SOME accessibility which is a link for us Deaf viewers to go to and watch the ASL translators for the NFL Super Bowl halftime. That may be considered somewhat accessible, but if they could do that with a unique link, it shouldn’t be a problem for them to make it the main thing on TV for everyone to watch.

I try to squeeze a very long story about the fiasco with the National Association of the Deaf, ASL translators of the NFL’s Super Bowl LVIII, and others, including a bit on Alexis Kashar of Love Sign. So, these are small details on this fiasco, as there is so much more to it. I don’t want to write too long, as it is long enough already, and I think this is plenty enough, at least for this article.

My thought on this: I am aware that this is somewhat old now as it happened over a couple of months ago or so, but I needed the time to think about this, trying to gather enough information so I can write it here and trying to find the time to write this which I can hardly find due to a few reasons including that I am a professional photographer. But wow, it was like a volcano coming to a head. This year, it finally burst out everything for the Deaf community to see that it is more than it is just the National Association of the Deaf as an organization but how they go about it, with Howard Rosenblum as CEO, Alexis Kashar using her company Love Sign/RoseByAnder, the NFL, and the TV networks. When the Deaf community made an uproar over this, there was a small group of Deaf people trying to accuse us of wanting to completely dismantle the organization when that is not true because we, as the Deaf community, want them to be held accountable and be more transparent with us. Of course, we do not want to dismantle the organization in any way, as some think. We recognize that the National Association of the Deaf is the only largest organization in the United States that serves the Deaf and Hard of Hearing community. Still, we want the people at the National Association of the Deaf to recognize their own mistakes by admitting what they did wasn’t being transparent and be more in touch with the Deaf community. The National Association of the Deaf is having an in-person meeting with the board members in Puerto Rico sometime soon, and then maybe we will get some answer from them about this whole thing. When they have that board meeting, I hope that they discuss the need to be transparent with the Deaf community and address this fiasco – about Howard Rosenblum, the NAD handpicking the ASL performers, Alexis Kashar with her Love Sign/RosebyAnder company, and others. I think the longer they wait, the worse it looks on them. Not responding for a long time and waiting until that board meeting in Puerto Rico gives them plenty of time to come up with excuses, hoping they would be acceptable to the Deaf community.

Yes, the Super Bowl LVIII halftime ASL performers are a problem, especially with picking the wrong people to perform in American Sign Language. Still, the bigger problem is behind that, such as Howard Rosenblum himself, with Alexis Kashar/Love Sign/RoseByAnder using the National Association of the Deaf with the NFL to partner with her company RoseByAnder/Love Sign while Howard Rosenblum using Alexis Kashar’s connections with the NFL to get them to do something about being accessible for the Deaf people. More so, they need to be more transparent with the Deaf community. As for getting the NFL and the TV networks to finally add the PIP (picture-in-picture), where they would show the ASL performers and the Super Bowl halftime performers on the same screen, it is something that we have to pressure them to do because it will not only take the National Association of the Deaf to do so but as well the Deaf community. We must keep telling the TV networks and the NFL to do the right thing by providing a PIP for American Sign Language performers alongside the Super Bowl Halftime performers on the same screen. It might take us a year, five years, ten years, or even fifteen years, but with the technology advancing, it is no excuse for them not to do that. It’s not only them; we also will have to advocate for it against the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to get them to make a policy that would force the TV networks to start adding the PIP for American Sign Language performers on the same screen with the Super Bowl halftime performers.

To file a complaint with the FCC about not having a policy or a ruling that the TV networks would be required to provide a picture-in-picture (PIP) for American Sign Language translator for the NFL Super Bowl halftime, and as well others, you can do that by sending an email to FCC’s Disability Rights Office at dro@fcc.gov or videophone (with ASL interpreter from FCC) at 1-844-432-2275.

Before I end this, the last thing I want to say to you is that National Association of the Deaf, if you ever read this article, please stop dismissing Justina “JTay” Miles! Okay, that is all I want to write for this article. Like I said, I didn’t want to make this a long story about what had happened, going detail by detail but shortening what happened in this fiasco. Along with a little bit of my thoughts and input about it as well. If anything is new, I will update this article and let you all know there has been a new update. Be sure to follow me on Facebook (click here) or Threads (click here), and I will let you know if there is an update to this article. If I miss anything or If you know what is going on with the National Association of the Deaf, its CEO Howard Rosenblum, Alexis Kashar/RoseByAnder/Love Sign, and others, please let me know by going to this link to contact me via email! You can also message me on JoshiesWorld’s Facebook page (click here). But if you want to share them publicly, please comment below, and everyone will see them! Please comment below if you want to share your thoughts or say something about this fiasco. Thank you for reading! If you have something, information, or a hot tip for me to write an article about, please contact me by using the link above to contact me via email!

Updates

April 19, 2024: President of the National Association of the Deaf Jenny Buechner has officially confirmed that the National Association of the Deaf’s longtime CEO, Howard Rosenblum, has resigned.

Howard Rosenblum finally made a vlog confirming that he no longer works with the National Association of the Deaf. He discussed Alexis Kasher, the NFL, his time as CEO of the National Association of the Deaf, and more. Here is the video.

Let me know what you think of the vlog from the National Association of the Deaf’s President and now a vlog from Howard Rosenblum himself in the comments section below! In case some of you don’t know what bill he was referring to as “CVTA” which is short for Communications, Video, and Technology Accessibility Act of 2023. You can see the bill by clicking here.

Joshua “Joshie” Sullivan.

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