Search This Blog

Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Curtis Mayfield - Diamond in the Back

Bobby Caldwell - What You Won't Do For Love (Slayd5000)

12 Angry Men Trailer 1997



This is another one of favorite movies.  It is a remake of the 1957 version.

How Braille was invented | Moments of Vision 9 - Jessica Oreck

Trump's Unfounded Accusations of Wiretapping: The Daily Show

Not Good

From Slate -

Early Reports Indicate That Everyone, Literally Everyone, Hates the Republican Health Care Plan
By Ben Mathis-Lilley

Congressional Republicans led by right-wing think tank test-tube baby Paul Ryan have been claiming for a solid eight years to be putting the finishing touches on a workable alternative to Obamacare. On Monday, Paul Ryan finally, really unveiled an Obamacare replacement bill. Everyone hates it.

No, seriously. Obviously liberals/leftists/Democrats were almost certainly not going to like it no matter what, and indeed, there has been nary a whisper of a rumor that even the most moderate Dems are interested in voting for the bill. But what's been really remarkable is how much heat it's gotten immediately from both the moderate and hard-line and insider and grassroots segments of Ryan's own party.

http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2017/03/07/the_reviews_are_in_paul_ryan_s_obamacare_plan_makes_everyone_want_to_barf.html

Neuroscientist Explains One Concept in 5 Levels of Difficulty | WIRED



The Connectome is a comprehensive diagram of all the neural connections existing in the brain. WIRED has challenged neuroscientist Bobby Kasthuri to explain this scientific concept to 5 different people; a 5 year-old, a 13 year-old, a college student, a neuroscience grad student and a connectome entrepreneur.

https://thescene.com/watch/wired/neuroscientist-explains-one-concept-in-5-levels-of-difficulty

Teaching Entreprenuership

From INC -

Inside the Schools That Want to Create the Next Mark Zuckerberg--Starting at Age 5
Inside the growing education movement that's training kids to be entrepreneurs.
By Tom Foster

On a cloudless October morning in Austin, hundreds of people stroll the grassy aisles between a half-dozen rows of white tents, where entrepreneurs sell everything from iced coffee to pottery to handmade dog treats, pickles, and gluten-free baked goods. One booth sells security software, and one sells wooden virtual reality headsets. At another, Baker Bros Designs, which sells stationery and change jars printed with psychedelic paint swirls, a handsome young man introduces himself and gestures to his younger brother--"the artist." He hands me a business card that lists their Etsy page in case we want to buy more.

This is no hipster flea market. The sellers are kids as young as 5 years old. We're on the oak-shaded grounds of the Pease Mansion--also known as Woodlawn--a legendary white-columned edifice atop a hill in the city's toniest historic district. The house belongs to Jeff Sandefer, a billionaire Texas oilman, and his wife. Three decades ago, he began educating entrepreneurs at the University of Texas; later, he and others launched the independent Acton School of Business, which runs an MBA program. Then he and his wife co-founded Acton Academy, a private Austin K-12 school that has spun off affiliate locations in 25 other cities as far-flung as Kuala Lumpur; 26 more are slated to open this year. He also started, as an offshoot of that school, the Acton Children's Business Fair, a small but fast-growing series of events like the one here at his house, where kids aged 5 to 15 spend half a day selling goods and services they create.

http://www.inc.com/magazine/201703/tom-foster/kids-inc-entrepreneurship-training.html

Jobs Instead

From the Portland Press Herald -

To Portland panhandlers, program may offer welcome change: Jobs
Using Albuquerque as a model, Portland would pay $10.68 per hour to those willing and able to work.
BY RANDY BILLINGS

City officials are working on a 36-week pilot program to offer day jobs to panhandlers. A city social worker would drive a van around to busy intersections and offer panhandlers a chance to earn $10.68 an hour cleaning up parks and other light labor jobs. They would be paid at the end of each day.

http://www.pressherald.com/2017/03/05/to-panhandlers-program-may-offer-welcome-change-jobs/

A Super Shoe?

Sam Cooke - The Best Things In Life Are Free

Monday, March 6, 2017

How to practice effectively...for just about anything - Annie Bosler and...

Next time someone tells you that all illegal immigrants should be deport...

TED-Ed Clubs: Celebrating and amplifying student voices around the world

How This Ban Hurts Trump Voters

From the Huffington Post -

Here’s Why Trump’s New Travel Ban Could Make Us Sicker, Not Safer
Doctors from the six affected countries provide vital health care in underserved regions of the U.S.
By Anna Almendrala

While Monday’s new executive order doesn’t apply to people who already have some kind of authorization to move in and out of the U.S. (whether it be through legal permanent residency, dual citizenship, visa, waiver, or some other kind of permit), a group of 10 researchers points out that if the new policy slows the immigration of doctors from these regions, Americans in underserved counties — particularly those who voted for President Donald Trump — will suffer.

“The people who are most hurt by the executive order in terms of health are the Trump base from the Midwest,” said Peter Ganong, an assistant professor of public policy at the University of Chicago. “It’s a particularly sad irony that people who voted for Trump will potentially end up getting worse medical care because of this.”

~~~~~~~~~~

To bring attention to the positive contributions these immigrants make to people in the U.S., Ganong and his colleagues launched the Immigrant Doctors Project — an interactive map showing just how vital doctors from these six countries are at helping Americans access health care.

There are more than 7,000 doctors from the six affected countries practicing in the U.S. right now, and they provide 14 million doctor’s appointments each year — 2.3 million of which occur in areas facing doctor shortages. The five cities that have the highest share of doctors from these countries, and would thus be most affected if physician immigration from these countries stopped, are Detroit, Toledo, Los Angeles, Cleveland and Dayton.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trumps-new-travel-ban-will-make-us-sicker-not-safer_us_58bdc55de4b033be146771e0?ftfiy2lxgwe1att9&

Check out the interactive map in the link below.

https://immigrantdoctors.org


Progressive Love


Quote

From the Huffington Post -

Samuel L. Jackson On Ben Carson’s Slavery Comment: ‘Mothaf***a Please’
Carson referred to those on “slave ships” as “immigrants.”
By Jenna Amatulli

Samuel L. Jackson  ✔@SamuelLJackson (Twitter)
OK!! Ben Carson....I can't! Immigrants ? In the bottom of SLAVE SHIPS??!! MUTHAFUKKA PLEASE!!!#dickheadedtom

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/samuel-l-jackson-on-ben-carsons-slavery-comment-mothafa-please_us_58bdd2f5e4b09ab537d5e4b0?x4oyldi&

Where to Find Local Black Farmers

From Blavity -

Black Farmers to buy from instead of Whole Foods
By Victoria Massie

Philadelphia

  1. The Philadelphia Urban Creators
  2. Mill Creek Farm
                          Photo via Philly Urban Creators Website.

NYC



  1. Black Urban Growers
  2. La Familia Verde
  3. The BLK ProjeK
  4. East New York Farms
                          Photo via Black Urban Grower's Website.

Oakland

  1. Afrika Town Community Garden
  2. Farms to Grow, Inc.
  3. People’s Grocery
  4. Phat Beets Produce

    https://blavity.com/black-farmers-to-buy-from


Black Farmers

From OZY -

A COMEBACK FOR THE BLACK AMERICAN FARMER?
By Nick Fouriezos

Minority-led farms have sprouted from New York City to Philadelphia, from Stone Mountain in Georgia to the hills and molehills of Mississippi, a national phenomenon writer Victoria Massie recognized last year by suggesting 35 Black-owned farms that Americans could buy from instead of Whole Foods. Maryland has been especially attractive, both in the fertile fields of the Eastern Shore, home to the Black Dirt Farm Collective, and in Baltimore, site of Tha Flower Factory, among others. Lavette Blue, who with her husband has farmed the Greener Garden in Northeast Baltimore for three decades, says 75 percent of the students in the local small-scale farming classes are African-American. “It’s picking up steam,” adds Staycie Francisco with the Farm Alliance of Baltimore. Recently elected U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, who is the first Marylander in decades to sit on the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, tells OZY that the next federal farm bill will consider “legislation to provide incentives for more young people to go into farming.” Van Hollen also points to work done by the historically Black University of Maryland Eastern Shore; its Small Farm Program provides funds and literature to help limited-resource and socially disadvantaged farmers.

http://www.ozy.com/politics-and-power/a-comeback-for-the-black-american-farmer/75920

Think Fast, Talk Smart: Communication Techniques

UK man with dementia is an internet singing star with a new record contract

Watch: Impatient Elephant Disobeys Railway Rules | National Geographic

Flying High

From BlackWebAmerica -

Little Known Black History Fact: Stephanie Johnson
Female pilots make history at Delta Airlines.
By D.L. Chandler



Captain Stephanie Johnson is the first Black female captain for Delta Airlines, the second of her historic achievements as a pilot. Twenty years ago, Captain Johnson became the first Black female pilot for Northwest Airlines and last year, Delta promoted her to her current post.

The Kent State University graduate caught the flying bug in high school after a physics teacher took Johnson and a few friends on a flight. Johnson even got to fly the airplane for a spell and from there, she was hooked. After leaving Kent State with a degree in Aerospace Technology, she became the instructor for the school’s aviation program.

https://blackamericaweb.com/2017/03/06/little-known-black-history-fact-stephanie-johnson/

Tooth-brushing turned entertainment.

Mandatory High Heels?

From the Washington Post -

Are high heel dress codes sexist? UK lawmakers hold debate
By Jill Lawless | AP

LONDON — British lawmakers focused on footwear Monday, asking whether employers should be able to make women wear high heels as part of a corporate dress code.

Members of Parliament were to debate a ban on mandatory workplace high heels, in response to a petition started by a receptionist who was sent home without pay for wearing flat shoes.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/are-high-heel-dress-codes-sexist-uk-lawmakers-debate-topic/2017/03/06/47752f40-0266-11e7-9d14-9724d48f5666_story.html?utm_term=.19ae4d0058c5

Sunday, March 5, 2017

Last Week Tonight With John Oliver S04E04 (March 5, 2017)

You Are The First, My Last, My Everything (Barry White)

'The Visitor' Trailer



This is one of my favorite movies.

A Celebration of American Women

From Vogue -

American Women

http://www.vogue.com/projects/13529125/american-women-vogue-125-anniversary-project/

Ed Sheeran - Shape of You [Official Video]

When the Oldest Kid in Class is 69 Years Old

If Mikey Likes It, You Know It's Delicious

Golden Chapel, Gilded Achievement: Welcome to the Capilla del Rosario

How Low?

An excerpt from the New York Times -

How Low Can the ‘Presidential’ Bar Go?
By JESSICA BENNETT and AMANDA DUARTE

The old bar: Read speech from teleprompter before members of Congress without ad-libbing.

The new, Trumpian bar: Read speech from teleprompter before members of Congress without ad-libbing repeatedly about the flaws of the opposing candidate you beat nearly four months ago.

The old bar: Inspire viewers with oratorical flair.

The new bar: Prove capable of speaking for 60 minutes without throwing a temper tantrum and ranting about ratings, the failing New York Times, fake news or the size of your inaugural crowd. Bonus points: Refrain, for eight days, from tweeting in ALL CAPS.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/04/opinion/how-low-can-the-presidential-bar-go.html?hpw&rref=opinion&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well


Saturday, March 4, 2017

Coca-Cola | Pool Boy

Bill Maher, New Rule Trump Mutt Shaming march 3, 2017

Bruno Mars - When I Was Your Man [Official Video]

Whitney Houston, Luther Vandross, Dionne Warwick, Stevie Wonder LIVE - T...

Another Unknown First

From the Undefeated -

An Undefeated history: Golfer Alfred ‘Tup’ Holmes
The desegregation of the Bobby Jones golf course in Atlanta
BY OSMAN NOOR

http://theundefeated.com/videos/golfer-alfred-tup-holmes/

The BEST Interview You'll Watch Today... Lewis Hamilton, Unlimited!

Biracial Advantages

An excerpt from the New York Times -

What Biracial People Know
By Moises Velasquez-Manoff

Consider this: By 3 months of age, biracial infants recognize faces more quickly than their monoracial peers, suggesting that their facial perception abilities are more developed. Kristin Pauker, a psychologist at the University of Hawaii at Manoa and one of the researchers who performed this study, likens this flexibility to bilingualism.

Early on, infants who hear only Japanese, say, will lose the ability to distinguish L’s from R’s. But if they also hear English, they’ll continue to hear the sounds as separate. So it is with recognizing faces, Dr. Pauker says. Kids naturally learn to recognize kin from non-kin, in-group from out-group. But because they’re exposed to more human variation, the in-group for multiracial children seems to be larger.

This may pay off in important ways later. In a 2015 study, Sarah Gaither, an assistant professor at Duke, found that when she reminded multiracial participants of their mixed heritage, they scored higher in a series of word association games and other tests that measure creative problem solving. When she reminded monoracial people about their heritage, however, their performance didn’t improve. Somehow, having multiple selves enhanced mental flexibility.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/04/opinion/sunday/what-biracial-people-know.html?hpw&rref=sunday-review&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well

Your guide to teen slang

Banksy in Business


The OBUS are on the Feud! | Family Feud

Friday, March 3, 2017

[HD] Live! Neil Diamond & Barbra Streisand - "You Don't Bring Me Flowers...

Don't Be Fooled

Welcome back Andrew.  I've missed your voice.

An excerpt from NY Magazine -

Our President’s Emotional Bait and Switch
By Andrew Sullivan

After the terror, the smile. It suddenly beams, and the voice calms. You feel the warmth again and are momentarily overcome with gratitude and relief. Suddenly, all the man’s malice and rage and narcissism disappear and the world turns suddenly normal. And you thrill to that normality. It’s what you’ve craved for so long, and been denied for so long. You forgive. You hope. You wonder if all the fear and dread you felt only a few moments ago were just in your imagination.

Any victim of an abusive spouse knows this dynamic. And now America is getting used to it. The Donald Trump who put on his grown-up voice last Tuesday night, and fit into a reassuringly familiar ritual of civic democracy, was the very same Donald Trump who had spent much of his first month in office in a series of unprecedented dyspeptic fits against the media, NATO allies, illegal aliens, Meryl Streep … well, you know the list by now. For the first time in public, he spoke in his “indoor voice.” He occasionally smiled, even as he can’t quite rid himself of the Mussolini back-step whenever he earns his craved applause. He used a teleprompter. And of course the media swooned. Who wouldn’t at this point? It’s somewhat unfair to lambaste them for their instant acknowledgment of the speech’s success. It was a success — an emotional blast of pseudo-normality for a serial abuser of liberal democratic norms.

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/03/andrew-sullivan-our-presidents-emotional-bait-and-switch.html


Dinner at Grandma's: The Restaurant Where Nonnas Rule

Grace and Frankie | Season 3 Trailer | Netflix

Thursday, March 2, 2017

What happened to trial by jury? - Suja A. Thomas

Plugging the Leak

From the New Yorker -

DAILY CARTOON: THURSDAY, MARCH 2ND
By Tom Toro  

http://www.newyorker.com/cartoons/daily-cartoon-030217-trump-pacifier


100 Years Of Black American Fashion

Creative Minds

From the Huffington Post -

7 Black Innovators Who Are Creating A Better Tomorrow
Their impact is undeniable.
By Taryn Finley

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/black-innovators-creating-a-better-tomorrow_us_588fc553e4b02772c4e8b346

This Girl Can is back

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

Live Like Royalty

Rent a fairy-tale castle for your next vacation

http://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/destinations/2017/02/28/castle-vacation-rentals/98534146/?csp=travel

Former Press Secretary Josh Earnest Talks Sean Spicer And Fake News

Being Grateful

FAMU Grad, Mayor Soon Governor?


https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/wp/2017/03/01/the-2018-florida-governors-race-just-got-its-first-serious-candidate/?utm_term=.7fb5778a702b

Why African-Americans left the south in droves — and what's bringing the...

Lego Honoring NASA Women

From the Huffington Post -

We Have Liftoff: Lego Set Honoring Women Of NASA Will Land On A Shelf Near You
From "Hidden Figures" to shiny plastic figurines!
By Rebecca Shapiro

The toy company announced the winner of its semiannual Lego Ideas competition this week: a set honoring five women of NASA. The women are computer scientist Margaret Hamilton, mathematician Katherine Johnson, astronaut Sally Ride, astronomer and executive Nancy Grace Roman and astronaut Mae Jemison.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/lego-women-nasa_us_58b64f58e4b0780bac2e581a?ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Jon Stewart To The Media: It's Time To Get Your Groove Back

Clever Ideas

From Buzzfeed -

19 Completely Random Ideas That Will Make You Say, “Clever!”
Why didn’t I think of that?
By Mike Spohr

I love #2, #4 and #5.

https://www.buzzfeed.com/mikespohr/xx-random-ideas-that-are-lifechangingly-brilliant?utm_term=.vwQllONPb#.ekbAAmN7M

4 Black Women Who Broke Barriers

Monday, February 27, 2017

Can you really tell if a kid is lying? | Kang Lee

A Running Record of Calamity

From the Huffington Post -

I Gave Donald Trump A Chance, And Then He...
By Jesse Mechanic, Contributor

1. Restarted the Keystone XL and Dakota Access Pipelines.

2. Instituted a federal hiring freeze that blocked 2,000 vital, new positions at the VA, and indefinitely suspended Army childcare programs for vets.

3. Approved a raid in Yemen that killed 30 people including at least 10 civilians, many of whom were women and children, as well as U.S. Navy Seal Ryan Owens.

4. Reinstated and strengthened the global gag rule thereby pulling all world-wide federal funding from any institutions that even attempt to educate patients about abortion.

5. Rescinded federal bathroom protections for trans students.

(From me - Click the link below to see the rest.  There are 57 and counting).

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/i-gave-donald-trump-a-chance-and-then-he_us_58b41f40e4b0e5fdf61974a9?ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009

Pot Calling the Kettle Black

From USA Today -

My Hispanic son: Why is Apple so white at the top?
By Tony Maldonado

When Apple and over 90 tech companies filed an amicus brief in opposition to President Donald Trump’s immigration moratorium, I was dumbfounded to see an industry wade into a political debate in the name of protecting diversity in our country, when that same industry has done so little to foster diversity and inclusion in its own ranks among senior management and boards.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/columnist/2017/02/27/shareholder-calls-on-apple-to-fix-diversity-senior-management-board-tony-maldonado/98196276/

Would you sacrifice one person to save five? - Eleanor Nelsen

It's Frankie & Zadie!

From Grist -

Why the People’s Climate March matters to people of color like me
By Aura Vasquez

a katz / Shutterstock, Inc.

http://buff.ly/2lDRFnA

Pow Wow in the Club: A New Spin on First Nations Music

Obamacare: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Click For Your Choice of President

From Salon -

POLL: Which fictional president would you rather have in the White House?
Tell us which big-screen president you'd prefer to have as commander-in-chief

http://www.salon.com/2017/02/27/poll-which-fictional-president-would-you-rather-have-in-the-white-house/?source=newsletter

Mama Has Spoken

From Rolling Stone -

How to Stop Shaquille O'Neal: His Mother
Hall of Famer's feud with Golden State Warrirors center JaVale McGee comes to an end
By Scott Rafferty

Golden State Warriors center JaVale McGee and hall of famer Shaquille O'Neal have never been on the friendliest of terms. After becoming the poster child for O'Neal's "Shaqtin' a Fool" – a segment in which he mocks NBA players for their mistakes made on the court – McGee criticized the former Lakers and Heat star in 2016 for making basketball fans think he's a "dumb person." McGee then took it a step further by comparing O'Neal to Bert Williams, a comedian who performed in blackface in the early 1900s, after O'Neal made fun of his hair earlier this season.

~~~~~~~~~~

"I have orders from the top to leave it alone," O'Neal told The Undefeated. "No, [not NBA commissioner Adam Silver]. My mama. Just say Shaq's mom, called him, told him, 'Stop this silliness. Leave him alone.' So that's the end of the beef. You won't be hearing about it from my side anymore. Mama has spoken."

http://www.rollingstone.com/sports/shaqs-mom-tells-him-to-leave-javale-mcgee-alone-w469422

Swearing Explained

From the BBC -

Why do people swear?
By David Edmonds

But back to the conundrum. If writing F with asterisks alleviates the offence of the full word why should this be? Roache says swearing is best viewed as a breach of etiquette. It is a little like putting your shoes on a table when you are the guest in someone's house. If you know it would offend, and do it anyway, you are guilty of showing insufficient respect.

"It doesn't matter that it's a swear word. Imagine meeting someone who has a fear of crisps, and who finds references to crisps traumatic. If you carry on talking about crisps in their presence, even after discovering about their phobia, you are sending a signal that you don't respect them, you don't have any concern for their feelings."

Using the F-with-asterisks version acknowledges that we are taking the feelings of others into account. By censoring the word we show respect. It's a view shared by Oliver Kamm, who endorses his newspaper's policy on asterisking swear words. Readers cannot help, he says, finding the full word "involuntarily off-putting".

http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-39082467



Denzel Washington's audience get involved - The Graham Norton Show: 2017...

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Following Harriet

From the New York Times -

Harriet Tubman’s Path to Freedom
By RON STODGHILL

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/02/24/travel/underground-railroad-slavery-harriet-tubman-byway-maryland.html


Mary's Room: A philosophical thought experiment - Eleanor Nelsen

They Want Him Too

From the Daily Mail -

Obama for French president? Petition calls for former U.S. commander in chief to run for office in France

The French are set to elect a new president in April.

But those who are unhappy with the current candidates are making a last ditch attempt to recruit another contender - Barack Obama.

The Obama17 petition is currently circulating with the aim of gathering 1 million signatures to convince the former U.S. president to run for office in France.

About 500 posters of Obama's face have been plastered across Paris in recent days, urging people to visit the petition website.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4260676/Petition-calls-Barack-Obama-president-France.html#ixzz4ZpoaxGiT

My Curiosity Won

I went to see the horror movie, "Get Out."

I loved it!

As I've mentioned before, horror is not my genre.  It's the one I'm sure to decline.

But . . .

The guy who wrote and directed this is smart, the reviews were great, and I wanted to see for myself what all the fuss was about.

It did not disappoint.

Highly recommended.









Not a Gamer, But . . .

If you are, you might check out this article form the New York Times -

A Fresh Narrative in Gaming
By JUSTIN PORTER

The game pulls no punches in depicting Lincoln’s violent nature, and it does the same in showing players what it meant to be a black man in the Jim-Crow-era South. Some shopkeepers refuse you service and call you names. Several police cars hunt you down if you commit a crime in a white, middle-class neighborhood. Do the same in a predominantly black neighborhood and one car will show up, if that. No matter where Lincoln is, the police are watching. He fights racist organizations, casual bias and the prejudice of friends.

As the game was developed, police shootings of black men rose, the Black Lives Matter movement was born, and the development team realized they’d created a game that talked about race in ways that sometimes bridged the gap of history.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/25/us/a-fresh-narrative-in-gaming.html?emc=edit_rr_20170225&nl=race-related&nlid=38867499&te=1


A Storyboard Artist

From the New York Times -

My Path to Hollywood
The storyboard artist for “Fences” talks diversity and visual storytelling in the film industry.
By WARREN DRUMMOND

Warren Drummond working on “Rise of the Planet of the Apes” in 2010. Betty K. Bynum
As a storyboard artist, my job is to visually tell a director’s concept of a film scene, frame by frame. I draw the close-ups, medium shots, and wide shots. I have drawn Stallone hanging from a helicopter on “The Escape Plan”; the always cool Samuel L. Jackson running, shooting and fighting in the “Shaft” reboot; Russell Crowe seeing imaginary friends and foes in “A Beautiful Mind”; and drawn hyper-intelligent chimpanzees in “Rise of the Planet of the Apes.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/25/us/my-path-to-hollywood.html?emc=edit_rr_20170225&nl=race-related&nlid=38867499&te=1&_r=0

Saturday, February 25, 2017

Wishing Him the Best

From the Undefeated -

DEMARCUS COUSINS SHARES WHY THE SACRAMENTO KINGS’ TRADE DECISION WAS SO HURTFUL
The league firecracker opens up about the trade’s emotional aftermath and his plans to move forward with the New Orleans Pelicans
BY MARC J. SPEARS

https://theundefeated.com/features/demarcus-cousins-sacramento-kings-trade/

It Matters

From the Washington Post -

Bradford Young, Oscar firsts and why inclusive film crews matter
By Ann Hornaday

Bradford Young is nominated for a cinematography Academy Award for his work on “Arrival.”
(Matt McClain/The Washington Post)


https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/bradford-young-oscar-firsts-and-why-inclusive-film-crews-matter/2017/02/23/bf5aeed4-f9db-11e6-be05-1a3817ac21a5_story.html?utm_term=.2e467ad3b1bc&wpisrc=nl_rainbow&wpmm=1

The Value in Questioning

From the New York Times -

The Power of ‘Why?’ and ‘What If?’
By WARREN BERGER

Recently I had a conversation with a chief executive who expressed concern about several of her senior managers. They were smart, experienced, competent. So what was the problem? “They’re not asking enough questions,” she said.

This wouldn’t have been a bad thing in the business world of a few years ago, where the rules for success were: Know your job, do your work, and if a problem arises, solve it and don’t bother us with a lot of questions.

But increasingly I’m finding that business leaders want the people working around them to be more curious, more cognizant of what they don’t know, and more inquisitive — about everything, including “Why am I doing my job the way I do it?” and “How might our company find new opportunities?”

https://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/03/jobs/the-power-of-why-and-what-if.html?smprod=nytcore-ipad&smid=nytcore-ipad-share&_r=0

Why You Need Me

From Chef's Feed -

I'M A BLACK FOOD WRITER. HERE'S WHY WE NEED MORE LIKE ME.
By Stephen Satterfield

A common part of the black experience is once you’ve reached any level of authority, it is often met with skepticism or surprise. Black chefs know this well: we must validate our presence, where others exist unquestioned. And what does it mean to be a black food writer? It means that you’ll never just be a food writer, you’ll be a black food writer. It will come up lots of times, maybe not every time, but in lots of ways, the way race does in just about every other facet of our lives.

People make all kinds of assumptions about food writers, but fundamentally, that they are academic, learned, polished. I am academic, learned, polished. But when people construct this image, they don’t see a black person, because, when they look around in real life, there are not that many black people writing about food. It then becomes even more important that I do — if only so those who feel unwelcome in this space see someone who looks like them and are compelled to go forth.

https://www.chefsfeed.com/stories/591-i-m-a-black-food-writer-here-s-why-we-need-more-like-me

It Can Feel Like a Horror Show

From Slate -

Get Out
Jordan Peele’s first feature film is an instant comedy-horror classic about the hilarious nightmare that is existing while black.
By Aisha Harris

http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/movies/2017/02/get_out_jordan_peele_s_horror_movie_reviewed.html




Paper Drones

From Wired - https://www.wired.com/2017/02/brilliant-drone-thatll-deliver-medicine-rot-away/?mbid=nl_22417_p4&CNDID=

Republicans Face Town Hall Protests, Trump Golfs: A Closer Look

Dino Peace

From Upworthy -

A dad helped his son make protest signs for his toy dinosaurs and they went viral.
By EVAN PORTER


http://www.upworthy.com/a-dad-helped-his-son-make-protest-signs-for-his-toy-dinosaurs-and-they-went-viral?c=upw1&u=6861cbea6edfdfe5a709ee39ad3c14b64135e61f

Dear Mr. President: Kids Talk Donald Trump | NBC News

See the World for $65

From Bloomberg -

The $65 European Airfare Is Coming to the U.S.
Norwegian Airlines is using the new 737 Max to inaugurate 10 new routes to the Northeast.
by Justin Bachman

Boeing Co.’s 787 Dreamliner has acquitted itself nicely in opening smaller destinations to nonstop international service. Think London-Austin, Tokyo-San Jose, Calif., and even Shanghai-Tijuana.

Norwegian Air International Ltd., no stranger to going where others won’t, is about to try this strategy with a new, smaller Boeing jet: the 737 Max. Norwegian, which has the honor of being the first airline to fly one, is using the first six of its planes to open 10 routes starting this summer. It will begin service June 15 from Edinburgh, Scotland, to Stewart International Airport, about 60 miles north of New York City.

To fill all these new trans-Atlantic seats, Norwegian is setting promotional fares to Europe at $65. The carrier will have “quite a few thousand seats for that specific fare,” Lars Sande, Norwegian’s senior vice president of sales, said in a telephone interview. The next fare level will be $99, rising from there.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-02-23/the-65-european-airfare-is-coming-to-the-u-s?bcomANews=true

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

I Won't Pay Someone to Scare Me, But . . .

If I did, I'd go see this one.

From the Huffington Post -

Horror Film About Racism Earns Coveted 100 Percent On Rotten Tomatoes
“I take a devilish glee in putting something that’s not politically correct into the mainstream,” said Jordan Peele, who wrote and directed "Get Out."
By Carla Herreria

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/jordan-peele-get-out-rotten-tomatoes_us_58ae08dbe4b01406012f7905?37mtxl0nvaafxhia4i&ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009

This Dog Raises Baby Cheetahs (And Wallabies and Ocelots)

The Oscars' voting process awards safe movies

His Five

What are yours?

From Salon -

5 black actors who should have won Oscars for these roles
This year, 6 black actors are nominated for Academy Awards. Let's salute those in the past who should have won VIDEO
By D. WATKINS

http://www.salon.com/2017/02/22/watch-5-black-actors-who-should-have-won-oscars-for-these-roles/

On a Mission

From OZY -

http://www.ozy.com/politics-and-power/the-ex-mormon-feminist-who-paints-womens-naked-bodies/75663

Capable of So Much More

An excerpt from the Atlantic -

Stuck in an American Retail Job With a Foreign MBA
In a new book, a journalist reflects on working as a salesperson in small-town Virginia when he first arrived in America.
By BOURREE LAM

Deepak Singh grew up in northern India. He had a bachelor’s degree in commerce, an MBA, and a job with the BBC World Service in his hometown of Lucknow. Unexpectedly, he met a young woman visiting from western Pennsylvania at a local library; the two fell in love, got married, and decided that Singh would move to Virginia, where she was attending graduate school.

In his new book, How May I Help You?: An Immigrant’s Journey From M.B.A. to Minimum Wage, Singh chronicles his move to small-town Virginia, where he started working a job in retail.* The book reads like an ethnography, documenting Singh’s work experience, his colleagues, and his surroundings, and includes reflections on how the job taught him about American mores and norms. Though Singh was doing minimum-wage work, his book is not a story of poverty, but rather an account of the daily grind of America’s service workers through the lens of an immigrant with an MBA.

https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2017/02/may-i-help-you-deepak-singh/517167/?utm_source=nl-atlantic-daily-022117


Tuesday, February 21, 2017

The hotline Hollywood calls for science advice

A Calendar We All Need

From Salon -

Michael Moore launches website devoted to stopping President Trump
Called "Resistance calendar," the site is committed to helping anti-Trump protesters organize nationwide 
By MATTHEW ROZSA

http://www.salon.com/2017/02/21/michael-moore-launches-website-devoted-to-stopping-president-trump/?source=newsletter

https://www.resistancecalendar.org