
You can hardly say Stacie Turner of the Real Housewives of DC is vapid, phony or annoying, adjectives used to describe many “Real Housewives”. Stacie, whose journey to find her biological parents was chronicled on Season 1, has a foundation helping lost young girls find a positive way of living their lives. November is National Adoption Month, and Stacie is starring in her own documentary.
After years of being involved in community service, Stacie Turner decided to found a charitable organization that was near and dear to her heart. Recognizing that there are many underprivileged young women in Washington, DC without a home or the consistent support of a family, Stacie founded Extra-Ordinary Life, a DC-based program that operates within the Pursuit of Dreams Foundation. Extra-Ordinary Life works with teenage girls in foster care to develop their goals by exposing them to positive people, places, and experiences that brighten their horizons.
On Monday, November 22 at 6 p.m. at the Lincoln Theater on U Street, members of the community will get an inside look into Stacie Turner’s work in the new film Extra-Ordinary Life: Journey to South Africa. Produced by BET and filmed during the 2010 FIFA World Cup, this new documentary charts Stacie Turner’s journey in South Africa with eight foster girls and chronicles their cultural, educational, and service orientated experience during the games. The interactive event is hosted by DC Child and Family Services, Annie E. Casey Foundation
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Fantastic website. All posts have a process to learn. Your hard work is very good and i enjoy you and wanting for some more informative posts.
He was paroled in her custody. She may have been pregnant by someone else already. She’s a strange one
I wonder why someone like Stacie would want to do reality tv,
She is too normal