86 episodes

Join Jackie on a Front Rowe adventure as she dives into the intricacies of everyday life with her friends and business associates in the entertainment industry. Together, they navigate the challenges and obstacles that we all encounter. With her influential presence in the community, Jackie aims to bring back authentic and certified voices to our homes.

Front Rowe with Jackie Podcast Jackie Rowe

    • TV & Film
    • 4.9 • 17 Ratings

Join Jackie on a Front Rowe adventure as she dives into the intricacies of everyday life with her friends and business associates in the entertainment industry. Together, they navigate the challenges and obstacles that we all encounter. With her influential presence in the community, Jackie aims to bring back authentic and certified voices to our homes.

    Episode 94 Update with J.A.C.K.I.E

    Episode 94 Update with J.A.C.K.I.E

    Happy holidays to all my listeners! I hope everyone around the world is doing their best to be the best version of themselves. These are challenging times, and it's important for us to find inner peace before we can bring joy to others in our lives. I want to express my gratitude to all my listeners as I continue to be open and authentic with my thoughts. We are not perfect, but we all share a special gift we each have something unique that sets us apart. It's important to appreciate and embrace our individuality.

    In this episode, I want to provide an update on the passing of my oldest sister and how I am moving forward in life while taking care of my younger siblings. I hope that everyone can enjoy this podcast and connect with the topics I discuss. Thank you for being the best part of the Front Rowe with Jackie Podcast.

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    • 25 min
    Episode 93 in memory of my loving eldest sister, Angela Rowe

    Episode 93 in memory of my loving eldest sister, Angela Rowe

    In loving memory of my beloved older sister, Angela Delores Rowe.

    It’s, hard to say! Good bye. It’s extremely heavy on my heart to even share the sad passing of my sister's who departed on September 26, just before her 64th birthday. My family is devastated and in a state of shock. We, never anticipating that we would lose her so suddenly. Angela was a pillar of strength and the matriarch of our family. We are still grasping with the overwhelming shock and trying to make sense of what has happened. While they say that you are now in a better place, we can only hope that your soul rests in eternal peace. I love you !!!!! You are Missed. Gone but never will you be forgotten 💔🕊️

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    • 6 min
    Episode 92 Mr. Derrick Hamilton

    Episode 92 Mr. Derrick Hamilton

    Falsely Imprisoned for 23 Years: Now He’s Received $7 Million
    The payout “doesn’t settle what I went through,” said Derrick Hamilton, who accused the police of fabricating evidence.

    Photograph by Dana Lixenberg for The New Yorker

    Derrick Hamilton was wrongfully convicted of murder, and spent more than two decades trying to prove his innocence.

    Derrick Hamilton’s legal education began in 1983, when he was seventeen and in the jail for teen-age boys on Rikers Island. He’d been an enthusiastic student as a child—his family called him Suity, because he liked to wear a suit to school. But in high school he’d begun skipping classes and getting into trouble.

    At fifteen, he was charged with robbery and sentenced to sixty days in jail. The arrests continued, for petty larceny, assault, criminal use of a firearm. Then, in March of 1983, a bread deliveryman was fatally shot near Lafayette Gardens, the public-housing project in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, where Hamilton lived, and he was charged with the murder. He insisted that he had not done it, and entered a plea of not guilty.

    His father, a livery-cab driver, hired a lawyer named Candace Kurtz to represent him, and she urged him to start studying in the jail’s law library, so that he could better understand his predicament. Hamilton is now fifty, tall and heavyset, with a shaved head and a thin scar running down the right side of his scalp. “I took it seriously,” he recalled recently, “because here’s some stranger saying, ‘Hey, listen. Get out of wherever you’re at. Wake up, kid, this is real.’ ” He started spending time in the library, and eventually taught himself enough criminal law to become one of the most skilled jailhouse lawyers in the country.
    But, in the fall of 1983, two months after Hamilton turned eighteen, a jury found him guilty. He was given thirty-two years to life for the murder and for an earlier, unrelated gun charge, and was sent to Elmira Correctional Facility, a maximum-security prison near the Pennsylvania border. There he earned a high-school-equivalency diploma and took a class on how to conduct legal research. In 1985, he was sent to Siberia, as inmates call Clinton Correctional Facility, which is twenty miles from the Canadian border. In the law library there, he met a group of veteran jailhouse lawyers, one of whom gave weekly tutorials on criminal procedure.
    There is no job description for a jailhouse lawyer. It’s an occupation born of desperation: most prisoners cannot afford lawyers, and are eligible for a free attorney only for their first appeal. After that, they have to either learn the law themselves or find a jailhouse lawyer to help them.

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    • 38 min
    Episode 91 Exclusive with Paul Clark AKA Pos. Known as the Baby Face Murder.

    Episode 91 Exclusive with Paul Clark AKA Pos. Known as the Baby Face Murder.

    Paul Clark,
    Holding a gun made 15-year-old Paul Clark feel like a bigger man, he remembers. He was a slightly-built kid—5’4” and 118 pounds. The weapon commanded the respect of others on the street. Clark insists never intended to use it. But then he did, and a 17-year-old named Keith Thomas was killed.
    Clark was 18 in August 1980 when he shot Thomas twice after a fight at a block party near his Brooklyn home, resulting in a 33 ⅓ year prison sentence. It took years for Clark to acknowledge his guilt and remorse, writing a letter of apology to the Thomas family. “It’s a decision I regret for the rest of my life,” he said.
    But three years after he was sent to an upstate prison, Clark was brought to Brooklyn to stand trial for a different crime, the attempted robbery and murder of a taxi driver. He was stunned by the accusation by a police detective and a single witness.
    “The only thing I know from that crime is what I learned at trial,” says Clark, who still maintains his innocence today. The judge called him a “baby-faced killer” and added 25 years to Clark’s prison sentence, for a total of 58 years.
    “I didn’t have any hope,” Clark said, confronted with the possibility that he may die in prison.

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    • 45 min
    Episode 89 Season, greetings and happy holidays from your host Jackie Rowe

    Episode 89 Season, greetings and happy holidays from your host Jackie Rowe

    Season greetings, merry Christmas happy Kwanzaa and here’s looking into one very bright and happy New Year’s. Just a little message from your hostess Jackie Rowe 🥰 loads of love thank you to everyone that takes the time to listen. I really appreciate you all.

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    • 5 min
    Episode 88 Exclusive with TEHUT9 Author, Producer

    Episode 88 Exclusive with TEHUT9 Author, Producer

    https://linktr.ee/tehut9

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    • 15 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
17 Ratings

17 Ratings

Grenadian gal ,

To the Mother of Flatbush Brooklyn!

I’m so proud of this phenomenal sister who not only has been through so much like a typical Caribbean woman landing in the streets of Brooklyn, NY and surviving but managing some of the biggest names in the entertainment, sports and fashion industry! Jacqueline Rowe is the epitome of a strong black woman that has persevered and has been an example for so many of us younger women coming up in the game. I congratulate her on her many successes including “Front Rowe w/ Jackie Rowe”! She’s always been a trend setter and a leader in our community and I will always support her initiatives!

ashkash_shcwagg ,

Inspirational

The things Jackie went through would break most of us but she over came every bump in the road ❤️❤️❤️❤️

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