
About this Event
Join us at the Resource Center for Nonviolence for the SCB BLACK on Screen Film Series: Unapologetic by Ashley O'Shay on October 22, 2025 at 6:30 PM (Pacific Time). Get ready for an evening filled with thought-provoking discussions and captivating storytelling. Don't miss out on this opportunity to engage with the powerful narrative presented in this film. See you there!
Santa Cruz Black is honored, sad but proud and spiritually fortified as we come to an end of our 2025 BLACK on Screen Film Series. In October, we will screen a documentary that reveals the intimate registers of sustained abolitionist organizing and the toll it takes on those who work for structural change. Directed by Ashley O’Shay, Unapologetic follows two Black queer feminists and abolitionists navigating their lives and activism in the Windy City or the Chi circa 2015, after the extrajudicial murders of Rekia Boyd. Hailing from South Carolina, Janaé Bonsu, while completing her doctoral dissertation, organizes for BYP100 (Black Youth Project100). Ambrell Gambrell, a raptivist who goes by the moniker of Bella Bahhs, charts their own path while following in the footsteps of Black revolutionaries before them (Fred Hampton, Jesse Jackson, James Farmer).
Through a deeply personal lens, O’Shay has us following Bonsu’s academic organizing and Gambrell’s street-level, artistic resistance. By interweaving their private lives—family struggles, grief, and moments of vulnerability—with footage of protests, organizing meetings, and confrontations with institutional power, we are drawn into an intimate portrait of activism as both life-affirming and costly. Juxtaposing the raw energy of protest with the slow, bureaucratic machinery of official hearings and mayoral politics, Unapologetic situates its protagonists within a larger historical continuum, insisting that their fight is not just political, but existential.
The film asks how activists like Bonsu and Gambrell sustain their work amid emotional and systemic exhaustion, and whether change is possible from within the very institutions that harm their communities. It questions whose voices are centered in movements for Black liberation and how gender, queerness, and class complicate solidarity. Most crucially, it challenges viewers to consider what being “unapologetic” demands of those who resist—refusing respectability politics and embracing the discomfort of speaking truth to power.
Agenda
🕑: 06:00 PM - 06:30 PM
Doors Open, mingle and munch
🕑: 06:35 PM - 07:57 PM
Film Screening begins
🕑: 08:15 PM - 09:00 PM
Community Discussion
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Resource Center For Nonviolence, 612 Ocean Street, Santa Cruz, United States
USD 0.00 to USD 108.55