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Thursday, May 10, 2018

When Trees Go Nuts

Get a Taste of Canada’s Japanese-Style Hot Dogs

Michael K. Williams ‘Typecast’ | Question Your Answers | HBO x The Atlantic

The Civil Rights Era Roots of Roller Skating

Does It Matter?

An excerpt from VerySmartBrothas -

Black Life, White Wife and the Art Caught in the Middle
By Panama Jackson


But there is a question that nags at me when it comes to dating and marrying outside your race (I’m not opposed to this, by the way; I’m the product of one of those unions): How much influence and impact does your spouse have on your work, especially when it’s couched in extreme racial observation and display?

Glover (and we can even throw Jordan Peele in here for now) work in a space that is heavily inspired by the world around him. It’s not a bird’s-eye view or navel-gazing; he’s doing very nuanced, informed and intentionally complex work about black culture. His show Atlanta, for instance, takes the black experience and shows it for all it can be.

~~~~~~~~~~

I wonder how those conversations about the execution of art that centers blackness and interacts with whiteness as, at times, a goofy, ignorant and uninformed barrier happen in Glover’s household. From personal experience with my white mother, I’ve had to defend blackness. I’ve had to point out things that I feel shouldn’t have to be pointed out. I indulged those conversations because it’s my mother. I imagine that a life partner would have to be indulged as well. And I know nothing of his partner at all (I haven’t so much as looked up her name), but I imagine that being with a creative means lots of conversations about art and the implications of it.

Am I to believe that he never uses her as a sounding board or asks her for her opinion? And if he does, how does that opinion seep into the art? Does it? I struggle with the idea that it doesn’t; that a person who works in such a racially rich context manages to create in a silo where the person he loves has no bearing on his creative decisions. I’m not saying it’s impossible, but your worldview is your worldview, and when you see something that is the opposite of your own, you are likely to question and offer an alternative view.

https://verysmartbrothas.theroot.com/black-life-white-wife-and-the-art-caught-in-the-middle-1825854549?utm_source=theroot_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2018-05-09

If I had a Dime . . .

For every time this happens, I'd be rich.

A black Yale graduate student took a nap in her dorm's common room. So a white student called police
By Brandon Griggs,

A white person voices suspicions about an innocuous person of color. Police are summoned. And the encounter is posted on social media, sparking outrage about racial profiling.

In what is becoming an all-too familiar episode, a black Yale University graduate student was interrogated by campus police officers early Tuesday morning after a white student found her sleeping in a common room of their dorm and called police.

The black student, Lolade Siyonbola, posted two videos of the encounter to Facebook, where they have been widely viewed and drawn thousands of comments.

"I deserve to be here. I pay tuition like everybody else," an annoyed Siyonbola told responding officers in one video after they asked for her ID. "I'm not going to justify my existence here."

The incident is one of several in recent weeks in which police have been called on people of color for seemingly harmless acts. In one of the most recent, three black women were detained while leaving their California Airbnb after a neighbor called police, thinking they were burglars. Last month two black men were arrested at a Starbucks in Philadelphia after a manager called 911 on them because they didn't order anything.

https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/09/us/yale-student-napping-black-trnd/index.html

Meet Marylove Edwards, Nigeria’s 13 year-old tennis sensation - BBC Spor...

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Hap and Leonard || 99 Problems

Thank a Teacher | TakePart

How This Invention Could Save Natural Disaster Victims

The 'duck curve' is solar energy's greatest challenge

Again. Yep.

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

A woman called 911 about burglars at her neighbor’s house. They were black Airbnb guests.
By Marwa Eltagouri

They checked out of their Airbnb rental. They loaded their suitcases into the car. Then they found themselves surrounded by police.

Moments before, a neighbor had watched the three black women carry their luggage out of the Rialto, Calif., house. She didn’t recognize the guests as homeowners, so she called the police about a possible residential burglary in progress, police said. Police responded as they typically would to a report of an in-progress burglary, sending six police officers and a helicopter to the scene with the goal of surrounding the house’s perimeter, making it difficult for the criminals to escape, Rialto Police Lt. Dean Hardin told The Washington Post.

The April 30 incident is the latest example of law enforcement summoned by a business or individual to deal with minorities who had simply been going about their day. Last month, two black men were arrested for trespassing in Philadelphia after a Starbucks employee called police because they hadn’t purchased anything. Last week, two Native American brothers were pulled from a Colorado State University tour after a parent told a 911 dispatcher that their behavior was “odd” and that their dark clothing had “weird symbolism or wording on it.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/business/wp/2018/05/08/a-woman-called-911-about-burglars-at-her-neighhors-house-they-were-black-airbnb-guests/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.201649378347

Guam: Why America's Most Isolated Territory Exists

The Man Teaching Math Lessons in the Sky

Tour Sweden’s Luxury Treehouses

Friday, May 4, 2018

How Michael B. Jordan's "Black Panther" Makeup Was Done — Exclusive Behi...

A simple way to tell insects apart - Anika Hazra

It Has Evolved

An excerpt from the Huffington Post -

Lynching Didn’t Disappear, It Just Evolved
By A.T. McWilliams, Guest Writer

Whereas black people were presumed to be dangerous in the Jim Crow South for standing around — and killed as a result — they are now killed for fitting a description, being in a problem area or holding seemingly any object. Whereas thousands once gathered to watch black people be lynched, millions can now tune in to video recordings and livestreams to watch police brutality unfold.

Lynching hasn’t disappeared; it has evolved.

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/opinion-mcwilliams-lynching-memorial_us_5aeb1d42e4b041fd2d23bdd4

George H.W. Bush’s broken promise that changed the Republican Party

Morisset Hospital Kangaroos

Wish This Was a Surprise

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

Three black teens are finalists in a NASA competition. Hackers spewing racism tried to ruin their odds.
By Perry Stein


The three D.C. students couldn’t believe the news. They’d developed a method to purify lead-contaminated water in school drinking fountains, and NASA announced last month that they were finalists in the agency’s prestigious high school competition — the only all-black, female team to make it that far.

“Hidden figures in the making,” one of the teens wrote in a celebratory text message to her teammates and coaches, a reference to the 2016 movie about the true story of three African American women who worked for NASA in the 1960s.

The next stage of the science competition included public voting, and the Banneker High School students — Mikayla Sharrieff, India Skinner and Bria Snell, all 17-year-old high school juniors — turned to social media to promote their project.

But while the teens were gaining traction on social media and racking up votes, users on 4chan — an anonymous Internet forum where users are known to push hoaxes and spew racist and homophobic comments — were trying to ensure the students wouldn’t win.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/three-black-teens-are-finalists-in-a-nasa-competition-then-hackers-spewing-racism-tried-to-ruin-their-odds/2018/05/02/a702f53e-4d72-11e8-84a0-458a1aa9ac0a_story.html?utm_term=.bd933cbe8c55&wpisrc=nl_rainbow&wpmm=1

This Architect's Project is an Oasis for All Mankind

Monday, April 30, 2018

No Roads, No Cars, Just Boats

Balikbayan Boxes

An excerpt from the LA Times -

These boxes are a billion-dollar industry of homesickness for Filipinos overseas
By FRANK SHYONG

Today balikbayan boxes, named after the Tagalog word for a returning Filipino, have become one of the most enduring symbols of the Filipino diaspora. The boxes help feed relatives who are struggling, console daughters separated from their mothers, and give far-flung overseas workers a tangible tether to their families.

"This is the Filipino way. You can't go home without a box."  Marie Maruquin

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-balikbayan-boxes-20180428-htmlstory.html#nws=mcnewsletter




Wait. What?

The Problem With Apu - Official Trailer | truTV

James Forman, Jr. - "Locking Up Our Own" and the Path to Criminal Justic...

Don’t Mess with the Texas Horned Lizard

Why sports sound better in your living room

Aretha Franklin - Wonderful (with lyrics) - HD

Sunday, April 22, 2018

Eric Holder - Tackling Racial Bias and Rampant Gerrymandering in the U.S...

Oprah handbag snub

Can a Haircut Change Your Life? | The Story of Us

Zazie Beetz Talks About Growing Up in Germany

Why Don't Humans Ride Zebras?

Sesame Street Puppeteers Explain How They Control Their Puppets | WIRED

Bird's Eye View

How We Cope

From the NY Times Race/Related -

We asked readers about whether they felt their race contributed to how others behaved around them in their daily lives. Here are some of their responses, lightly edited for clarity. 

I keep my Platinum American Express Card near my driver’s license so that law enforcement can see that I am a “citizen,” someone in the upper middle class, without overtly saying so. – Christopher Scott, 58, Chicago

When I go into stores, I try to avoid wearing large purses or a lot of layers.  I am educated (with a master’s degree) and have a career, but that does not matter because I cannot wear that as my skin color is worn. – Shawna Francis, 31, Columbia, Mo.

I have registered my car with the N.Y.P.D. with stickers all over the car saying that I am in an “anti-theft program.” What I am really doing is to “mark” myself as friendly to the police so that I can get respect. – Miriam Allen, 61, New York

I try not to talk to people and keep to myself, usually I listen to music or I talk to the people I went with. I try to stay away from other patrons unless they're black. – C.S., 39, New York

https://static.nytimes.com/email-content/RR_1293.html?nlid=38867499

Starbucks is Not Alone

From CNN -

Starbucks isn't the only chain that's faced claims of racial bias
By Amir Vera

https://www.cnn.com/2018/04/20/us/racial-incidents-at-restaurants-and-starbucks/index.html

Making a Statement

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/jim-carrey-rudy-giuliani-portrait-trump_us_5adade10e4b089e33c8842b2