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Thursday, August 19, 2021

Positive Affirmations

Girl acts sad to see how her horse will react.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjAhiPHtLYI

Black-Owned Food & Drink Brands

An excerpt from HuffPost - 

17 Black-Owned Food And Drink Brands You Can Shop Online

August is National Black Business Month. Here are delicious ways to show your support.

By Shontel Horne

HuffPost

More than 124,000 businesses identify as Black-owned, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Every day is a good day to support Black-owned businesses, but with National Black Business Month taking place in August, now is an especially great time to get familiar with and continue to support Black-owned brands — particularly in food and drink.

The 17 food and beverage brands below are sure to become staples in your kitchen for years to come. Add them to your shopping list and stock up on everything from olive oil to vegan cheese.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/black-owned-food-drink-businesses_l_610bead9e4b041dfbaa65821

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

What Kind of Driver Are you?

An excerpt from Upworthy - 

Awesome chart shows you how far you can drive on empty

By Tricia Leigh Zeigenhorn

There are two types of people in this world – those who panic and fill up their cars with gas when the needle hits 25% or so, and people like me who wait until the gas light comes on, then check the odometer so you can drive the entire 30 miles to absolute empty before coasting into a gas station on fumes.


https://www.upworthy.com/awesome-chart-shows-you-how-far-you-can-drive-on-empty

Click on the link for a better view of the chart. - Faye


Snoop and Kevin react to Jade Carey's gold medal | Olympic Highlights wi...


https://youtu.be/wm7vg2Nknd4

Black Violin - Showoff


https://youtu.be/Tb5zO7OybPg

Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Young Black Aspiring Doctors

An excerpt from Black Enterprise - 

YOUNG BLACK ASPIRING DOCTORS IN NYC GETTING GUIDANCE THROUGH MENTORSHIP PROGRAM #BLACKBUSINESSMONTH

by Jeroslyn Johnson

     These 45 Black youths got an inside view of medicine
through a new, week long medical internship.
(Erskine Isaac ivisionphoto.com)

Medical Internship Week kicked off in NYC last week and included a group of young Black aspiring doctors looking to break the lack of diversity in the medical field.

There was 45 Black youth included in the program for aspiring doctors, nurses, and surgeons, NY Daily News reports. The group of aspiring medical professionals with ages from eight to 18 enjoyed five days of shadowing surgeons and watching medical procedures to get firsthand experience ahead of pursuing careers in the field.

“I LIKE TO SEE BLACK DOCTORS,” SAID SIXTH-GRADER KAYNE MCKNIGHT. “WHEN I GO TO THE DENTIST AND THE DOCTORS, I DON’T REALLY SEE BLACK DOCTORS. IT’S MOSTLY WHITE DOCTORS.”

Dr. Anthony Watkins, a transplant surgeon at NYU Langone, is one of the creators of the program and expressed his hope to break the racial disparities he has seen get worse over the decades. Watkins noted how there were more Black men in medical school in the 1970s than there are in recent years. Through Medical Internship Week, Watkins aims to break the barriers.

“Knowing that ‘Oh, someone who looks like me can do it’ can instill that confidence,” Watkins said. “That’s really a critical component. The ultimate goal is … to spark that interest, and hopefully tackle this problem, and address diversity.”


The Whitewashing of Black Music

An excerpt from Far Out Magazine - 

The whitewashing of Black music: Five singles made popular by white artists

By Mick McStarkey 

Big Mama Thornton was a pioneering musician. (Credit: Alamy)

This week marks the anniversary of the date that Big Mama Thornton first recorded the iconic single ‘Hound Dog’ in 1952. The song is widely regarded as one of the most iconic tracks in rock and roll history. Since Thornton’s original was put to wax, the song has been covered well over 250 times. In this sense, the blues staple can be considered to be in the same category as what ‘Greensleeves’ is to folk: a key standard, setting out its defining features.

The chances are that many of you will not have even heard of Big Mama Thornton, or the fact that she was the first artist to perform the now-iconic track. Written by the duo Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller for Thornton, it is quite telling that Elvis Presley was the one who popularised the song in 1956. His version is often thought of as being the original, which is not the case. 

In 1999, Rick Kennedy and Randy MacNutt perfectly captured the impact Thornton’s original had on music. They argued that it helped to “spur the evolution of Black R&B into rock music”. The transformative effect of this cross-pollination cannot be underestimated.

The irony of the song is that when Thornton initially sang it, she did so in the form of a ballad. However, Leiber and Stoller believed that the song should be more up-tempo, as they had forged it specifically “to suit her personality—brusque and badass”. Thus, Leiber sang it, accompanied by Stoller on the piano, conveying to Thornton how they thought it should be performed. 

Luckily Thornton agreed, and the song the trio recorded the number became one of the most important hits ever captured. The track is so influential that Maureen Mahon, a professor of music at New York University, claimed that the original is “an important (part of the) beginning of rock and roll, especially in its use of the guitar as the key instrument”. The song would reach number one on the R&B chart and be popularised in the appropriate musical community. However, the song remained relatively unknown in the mainstream until Elvis Presley put his own spin on it.

What made Elvis’ version so popular and Thornton’s not? After all, one would wager that Thornton’s is the best version out of all of them, a swaggering, sexualised number that was just as groundbreaking lyrically as it was musically. So why then does the ‘King of Rock and Roll’ still take all the plaudits? 

Unfortunately, the reasons are all too familiar. Firstly, we need to cast our mind’s back to the era, 1950s America. Thornton, being the larger-than-life Black woman that she was, was clearly up against it in her fight for success, the measure of which was relevant to the time. Thornton’s original preceded the desegregation of schools by a year, and Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks and Malcolm X wouldn’t truly make their voices of civil rights protest heard until the ’60s.

https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/the-whitewashing-of-black-music-five-singles-made-popular-by-white-artists/


Trustworthy kids show banknotes to security camera while shopkeeper is away


https://youtu.be/euTvYiIBYBU

1st Black Ph.D in Chemistry at UTA

 

Letterman's Most Intriguing Guest

An excerpt from Today - 

David Letterman reveals his most intriguing guest and we think you'll be surprised

"I found her spirit to be huge," the TV legend said.

By Drew Weisholtz

Letterman's interview with the Grammy winner
was a powerful experience for him. Courtesy of Netfix

Letterman, 74, was asked on SiriusXM’s "Comedy Gold Minds with Kevin Hart" podcast which guest he found the most intriguing.

“Based on your elaboration of ‘intrigue,’ it was a young woman who lives in Los Angeles who's in the music world, very successful, by the name of Lizzo,” Letterman said. “My prior expectation of this experience was, at its best, neutral.”

The 'Truth Hurts" singer had been a musical guest on “The Late Show” in 2014 before she became a household name but Letterman said he did more research on her for about six weeks to prepare for his interview with her on his current talk show.

He said their conversation made quite an impression on him.

“But almost everything you said about my reaction to her after the fact, happened,” he said. “Delighted. Comfortable. Didn't want to leave. Wanted to stay in her house. Wanted to help her. I wanted to go around and find out who was handling her, and I wanted to screen them.

“I wanted to make sure she was being taken care of because I found her spirit, Kevin, to be — and maybe I'm hyperbolic here on this — but I found her spirit to be huge, not like anything I had experienced. I know there are people like that. And I know there are people like that in show business, but this particular episode, I was delighted by — still am.”

https://www.today.com/popculture/david-letterman-his-most-intriguing-guest-his-netflix-show-t228235


Racism is Not a Footnote

An excerpt from The Players Tribune -

Racism Is Not a Historical Footnote 

By Bill Russell, NBA Hall of Famer

Bettmann/Getty Images

I once interviewed Lester Maddox on my television show. It was 1969 and he was well known at the time as a Southern segregationist and former chicken restaurateur turned politician. Maddox and I had diametrically opposing perspectives. He got out of the restaurant business after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 passed so that he wouldn’t have to serve Black people, while I once refused to play an exhibition game after a restaurant refused to serve me or my Black teammates.

Maddox made a show out of his refusal to integrate his restaurant. He waved axe handles and guns at peaceful protesters and argued, loudly, that being forced to serve Black people encroached on his freedom. He closed his restaurant in Atlanta, ran for governor of Georgia, and won.

So why would I give a platform to an individual who held such racist beliefs? First, part of freedom is allowing everyone — even the most hateful people — to speak. And second, doing so also exposes how a person comes to hold such beliefs. Now, Lester Maddox wasn’t exactly an intellectual giant, so I doubt he would’ve been able to question the culture he had been born into if he tried, but having him on my show exposed him for the fool he was and might have also given other people some things to think about regarding the plausibility of  “separate but equal.”

Even though that moment has long since passed, I’m struck by how similar it felt to the moment I’m living through now. In 2020, Black and Brown people are still fighting for justice, racists still hold the highest offices in the land, and kids today still grow up with cultural norms that aren’t different enough from the ones that Lester Maddox grew up with.

In 2020, Black and Brown people are still fighting for justice.

Now, when I say Black and Brown people are still fighting for justice 50 years after I interviewed a prominent segregationist — “an old country boy” who ran for political office on a platform of hate and won[1]— I don’t mean to sound surprised. I’m not. White people are surprised by that. In fact, I find that white people are often surprised that racial injustice still exists outside of a few “bad apples.” This surprise is particularly dangerous because racial injustice is rampant throughout every sector of American society, from education to health care to sports, and the fact that this remains surprising to many reveals exactly how different Black and white people’s experiences of life in America are.

https://www.theplayerstribune.com/articles/bill-russell-nba-racial-injustice?utm_source=RSS


Kaep on Netflix

 

She Told Us This Was Wrong - Rep. Barbara Lee 9/14/01


https://youtu.be/mvnLtMKzX6Y

Sisters Breaking Barriers

An excerpt from Black Enterprise - 

PURDUE UNIVERSITY RENAMES 2 RESIDENCE HALLS FOR 2 SISTERS WHO HELPED INTEGRATE CAMPUS HOUSING 

by Cedric 'BIG CED' Thornton

 
   Winifred and Frieda Parker (Image: Courtesy of Purdue)


Purdue University has announced the renaming of the Griffin Residence Halls after Winifred and Frieda Parker. Back in June, the Purdue Board of Trustees had approved a request from Provost Jay Akridge to rename the Griffin Residence Halls after the Parker sisters. The family efforts back in the 1940s compelled Purdue to integrate its student housing. The Parker Hall residences are the first buildings on campus to be named for Black alumnae.

After the Parker sisters enrolled at Purdue University in the fall of 1946, the sisters and their parents started up the campaign that forced the institution to integrate its student housing. The Parker sisters were among the first Black women to move into the Bunker Hill residence halls after the University ended its segregated housing policy in January 1947.

“It’s one of those stories of persistence and path-breaking action and really opening up doors for so many others—both women and women of color,” says Akridge. “These two women were Boilermakers in every sense when you think about some of those characteristics that we like to lift up and celebrate.”

https://www.blackenterprise.com/purdue-university-renames-2-residence-halls-for-2-sisters-who-helped-integrate-campus-housing/







Chimpanzee in China mimics keepers and washes hands, wears mask


https://youtu.be/42OdhKuP1J0

Monday, August 16, 2021

These Colleges Cover 100% of Your Financial Aid

From Go Banking Rates - 

12 Colleges That Cover 100% of Your Financial Aid

You can graduate debt-free from these schools.

By Gabrielle Olya

SpVVK / Getty Images

Some colleges and universities are doing their part to lessen the student loan burden that many graduates are facing by providing loan-free financial aid packages. No-loan institutions offer financial aid packages that feature a combination of grants, scholarships, work-study aid and other components that allow students to attend without having to worry about graduating with debt.

"No-loan schools are basically telling students of modest or even extremely low income that they should apply if they have the grades and extracurricular [activities] to be considered, and that they don't have to worry about the high price tag as long as they are able to get accepted," Kevin Ladd, chief operating officer and co-creator of Scholarships.com, told U.S. News.

While this does not mean these schools are free to attend, it does mean that these institutions aim to cover each family’s demonstrated financial need -- the difference between the cost of attendance and the expected family contribution -- so that loans aren't required to make up the difference.


This Looks Delicious!

From Taste of Home - 

North Carolina Sonker Is the Dessert Recipe You Haven’t Tried Yet

By Tiffany Dahle

TIFFANY DAHLE FOR TASTE OF HOME

Love blueberry pie but don't want to fuss over a complicated crust? This step-by-step blueberry sonker recipe will be your new go-to summer dessert!

Sonker is North Carolina’s most popular dessert that most people have never even heard of, let alone baked at home. It was invented to feed a hungry crowd, and a wide variety of sonker recipes are handed down from generation to generation in Surry County, North Carolina. The bakeries, diners and home cooks there use the best fruit from each season to bake sonkers throughout the year.

To taste the real deal, stop at several local spots on the Surry Sonker Trail and experience the many flavors of the Carolina sonker for yourself. No road trip in your future? Make this blueberry sonker recipe at home and you’re an hour away from blueberry heaven!

https://www.tasteofhome.com/article/north-carolina-sonker-recipe/

Aretha Franklin - So Swell When You're Well

From Inside Hook -

The 20 Best Aretha Franklin Songs You Probably Don’t Know
These lesser-known songs could use a little more R-E-S-P-E-C-T




How Does He Do That?

 

https://twitter.com/kevinbparry/status/1415001165570400263?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1415001165570400263%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.upworthy.com%2Fvisual-effects-guy-transforms-himself-into-random-objects-and-its-pure-magic 

Congratulations!

An excerpt from Black Enterprise - 

28-YEAR-OLD WINS VIRAL WINE CONTEST; RECEIVES $10,000 MONTHLY SALARY AND FREE RENT FOR A YEAR

by Charlene Rhinehart

(Image Credit: Instagram)

Austin-based wine connoisseur Lindsay Perry was recently selected as a new employee of Murphy-Goode Winery. The 28-year-old will move to California this fall to pursue her dream job. As a contest winner, she will receive a salary of $10,000 per month and live went free for a year while indulging in some of the best wines.

Perry participated in the company’s “A Really Goode Job” viral competition. According to Inside Edition, Perry beat out over 7,200 other applicants who submitted videos for the Sonoma-based Murphy Goode Winery wine competition.

https://www.blackenterprise.com/28-year-old-wins-viral-wine-contest-receives-10000-monthly-salary-and-free-rent-for-a-year/


The easy way to thread a needle.


Good Dog!


https://www.instagram.com/reel/CScTEIvnxl0/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=cae60322-c27b-413c-a7e9-6e5ad9b0f2a2&ig_mid=2CD673F3-E629-49D6-8EDD-CB4D408BF72C 

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Cute & Conscientious: A Winning Combination

 

Michael B. Jordan launches basketball showcase for HBCU athletes

By Jaelen Ogadhoh

Michael B. Jordan attends the 51st NAACP Image Awards,
Presented by BET, at Pasadena Civic Auditorium on
February 22, 2020 in Pasadena, California.
(Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

Basketball as we know it today may not exist without the contributions of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and their alumni, such as Howard University graduate Edwin Henderson, who earned the nickname “The Father of Black Basketball” in the early 20th century when he introduced the game to African Americans in Washington D.C., catalyzing the sport’s rapid growth in popularity among Black communities nationwide.

Today, largely thanks to Henderson’s contributions, basketball is not only one of the most popular sports among HBCUs, but among Black Americans across the country. Despite the current popularity, only one five-star-ranked high school basketball player has opted to play for an HBCU since ESPN began ranking players in 2007.

Actor and producer Michael B. Jordan is among the high-profile public figures making efforts to further amplify HBCUs and their student-athletes in 2021. The Black Panther and Just Mercy star is launching the “Hoop Dreams Classic,” a basketball showcase featuring the nation’s top Division 1 HBCU men’s and women’s basketball teams.

 

https://news.yahoo.com/michael-b-jordan-launches-basketball-215059107.html

 

Great! You First.

An excerpt from the Metro - 

‘You can’t call yourself a hairdresser unless you can do Afro hair,’ says white salon owner

By Natalie Morris

Anne says there needs to be significant changes
in the beauty industry (Pictures: Anne Veck)

Last month it was announced that all UK hairdressers would have to learn to cut and style Afro hair as standard – in an update to beauty regulations.

The move was welcomed by many who called it long-overdue, particularly people with Afro hair who don’t live in diverse areas and would have to travel long distances to find a salon that could cater to their needs.

Anne Veck is a white hairdresser, originally from France, and the owner of Anne Veck hair salon in Oxford. She believes that the changes to training standards are of course welcome, but within salons there is still lots more to do.

The 58-year-old is on the hair committee for the British Beauty Council and was also a finalist at the British Hairdressing Awards 2021 with an all Afro hair collection.

https://metro.co.uk/2021/08/10/you-cant-call-yourself-a-hairdresser-unless-you-can-do-afro-hair-15066246/?ito=smart-news

Go, Baby Go!

I'm Not a Baseball Fan, But This Batgirl is My Hero!

The Impact of Racism

An excerpt from Market Watch - 

‘Males, particularly white males, are persistently overrepresented’: Many kids of color don’t see themselves in the books they read

Researchers used artificial intelligence technology to analyze imagery in children’s books

By Andrew Keshner

A new study looks at the images looking back at kids in children's books
(PHOTO BY GEORGE FREY/GETTY IMAGES)

The researchers were not attempting to offer any suggestions on the right amount of demographic and race representation in kids’ books, they said.

Instead, they noted the study showed that with the help of technology, it’s possible to quantify the amount of race and gender representation in children’s books.

“By providing research that expands our understanding about the diversity in content, we can help to contribute to work that aims to overcome the structural inequality that pervades society and our daily lives,” they wrote.

The study comes amid a debate on the presence of critical race theory in the classroom. The theory says race is a social construct. The theory is pointing out that social institutions like the criminal justice system, housing market, healthcare system and more can treat races differently, according to observers like Rashawn Ray, a fellow at the Brookings Institution. 

The “scholars and activists who discuss [critical race theory] are not arguing that white people living now are to blame for what people did in the past,” Ray wrote. “They are saying that white people living now have a moral responsibility to do something about how racism still impacts all of our lives today.” (Highlighted by Faye)

https://www.marketwatch.com/story/males-particularly-white-males-are-persistently-overrepresented-many-kids-of-color-dont-see-themselves-in-the-books-they-read-11628535154

'A Journal for Jordan' trailer starring Michael B. Jordan, directed by D...


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zvmxYSE4UY

Sunday, August 8, 2021

She Was a Pioneer in WWII

An excerpt from Time - 

This Pioneering Officer Led an All-Black Women’s Army Corps Battalion in a Daunting World War II Mission: Saving Soldiers' Mail

BY MARI K. EDER

Maj. Charity Adams, commanding officer of the
WAC Postal Battalion serving in England Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Charity Adams was already on her way to the European theater in January 1945, and there was a sealed envelope on her lap. It was time to find out where she was going. She tore open the sealed orders and gasped. It was the job every officer coveted: command, troop time, and being in charge. Adams, who had been the highest-ranking Black officer at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, had commanded a training company, which was a good experience, but to be selected to command a battalion—a brand-new unit—overseas during wartime was a tremendous vote of confidence in her abilities. It was every opportunity she could have hoped for.

Adams had been born in 1919, at a time when the U.S. was celebrating victory in World War I. The next year, the 19th Amendment was passed, and women were given the right to vote. It was a time of change in the country. A feeling of optimism was in the air, and it felt like new possibilities were open for women—unless you were Black. Then it was still a fight, all the way. Growing up in Columbia, S.C., the oldest of four children of a minister and a teacher, she’d been first in many things in her life, including being first in her high school class, valedictorian, and she continued that streak in 1942, becoming part of the first officer class of the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC, later simply WAC).

By the time she reached Fort Des Moines for basic officer training, she’d already gotten her first taste of racism in the Army. A white lieutenant had insisted and made certain that Black recruits didn’t sit with the white women on the bus headed for the camp. In that first officer class, there were 400 white women. There were also 40 Black women—the “ten percenters.” While their training was integrated, their living conditions were not.

The Army had scrambled to assemble Adams’ new unit, the 6888th Central Postal Battalion. By 1944, there was a two-year backlog of mail for troops, members of the Red Cross and civilians serving in Europe. There simply weren’t enough postal units. The all-Black WAC unit, known as the “Six Triple Eight,” was the only Black WAC unit to be deployed—another first, with an impossible mission.

The Six Triple Eight’s 855 women were sent to Birmingham, England. When the first contingent arrived, Adams was there to meet their ship. Many had been seasick on the trip over. After being chased by submarines, others were glad to be on land. Their arrival came with a message about the danger of their work—a German V1 rocket, the “Buzz Bomb,” came screaming in just as the women were heading down the ramp. They ran for cover as it hit the dock close to where they were disembarking. No one was injured, but it was a definite reminder that they had arrived in a war zone.

https://time.com/6085055/charity-adams-world-war-ii/


They Got the Last Laugh

An excerpt from the Mirror - 

People who have had the last laugh with funny messages on their tombstones

Here are our favourite picks of some of the most entertaining, comical, light-hearted and even slightly questionable gravestones out there

By Olivia Rose Fox

Merv certainly must have had a sense of humour as demonstrated by
his light-hearted gravestone at the Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Memorial Park,
Westwood, California (Image: ©Joseph P. McKenna)



You can't exactly say that this one didn't
get straight to the point ( Image: Diane Diederich)

Lockdown Love

An excerpt from Entrepreneur - 

She Made Personalized Cards for Her Husband in Prison. Then She Realized Thousands of Prison Wives Would Buy Them.

Danielle Macias started True Blue Stationery as a side hustle. She soon discovered there was more demand than she could possibly meet.

By Elizabeth Greenwood, Author of LOVE LOCKDOWN: Dating, Sex, and Marriage in America's Prison System

Image credit: Danielle Macias

Danielle Macias never set out to be a stationery designer. Back in 2014, when she started her business, she was working full-time as a medical diagnostic scheduler and supporting her husband José through his 25-year prison sentence. They met as teenagers and married while José was incarcerated in Kern Valley State Prison, in California. Between visits, she wrote him love letters, decorating the envelopes and sheets of paper with simple designs. “I’m a horrible artist,” Danielle, 34, says. Still, a friend with whom she carpooled to the prison caught a glimpse of an envelope Danielle had prepared for José, 35. It was adorned with a cartoon image of a mailbox and the phrase “love letter” in a striking script. She asked Danielle where she had gotten this prison-specific piece of stationery, and Danielle told her she’d made it. She asked Danielle to make something similar for her, and True Blue Stationery was born.

“I didn’t go into this thinking I’d make a whole business out of my cards,” Danielle says, “but it took off pretty quickly.” She had tapped into a large and underserved customer base: There are more than 2 million people incarcerated in the United States, 93% of them men. And on the outside, there are millions more caring for them from afar, like Danielle. 

https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/379077


The 2nd Amendment Is Not Intended For Us

An excerpt from Slate - 

“The Second Amendment Is Not Intended for Black People”

Tracing the racist history of gun governance.

BY DAHLIA LITHWICK 

Black gun owners take part in a rally in support of the
Second Amendment in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
on June 20, 2020. Reuters/Lawrence Bryant

On a recent episode of Slate’s legal podcast Amicus, host Dahlia Lithwick spoke with historian Carol Anderson, professor and chair of African American studies at Emory University, about her new book, The Second. Anderson’s work explores how the Constitution’s Second Amendment was not only crafted to suppress Black Americans, but was continually enforced throughout the centuries in a racist manner, leading to everything from the terrorizing of Reconstruction-era Black Americans to the police killings of even legally armed Black people today. A portion of the conversation, which has been edited and condensed for clarity, has been transcribed below.

Dahlia Lithwick: I wonder if you could start by talking about what led you to this exploration of the connection between slavery, the founding, and guns.

Carol Anderson: It began in 2016 with the killing of Philando Castile. In Minnesota, you have a Black man who was pulled over by the police. The officer asked to see his ID. Castile, following NRA guidelines, alerts the officer that he has a license to carry a weapon with him but he says he’s reaching for his ID. The police officer begins shooting and kills Philando Castile. We see the film of it. It is horrific.

We have a Black man killed simply for having a gun—not for brandishing it, not for threatening anyone, simply for having a license to carry a gun. The National Rifle Association, that protector of the Second Amendment, goes virtually silent. And I thought, how is the NRA silent on this, particularly when it was calling federal law enforcement jackbooted government thugs at Ruby Ridge and at Waco? On this, they’re like virtually silent. Journalists began asking, “Well, don’t African Americans have Second Amendment rights?” And I thought to myself, that’s a great question, and that’s what led me on to this hunt.

In the epilogue to your book, you put in Trevor Noah’s quote from when he looks at a whole host of incidents in which police officers talk down a white man with a gun: They persuade him to disarm and they arrest him. Noah makes the argument that “the Second Amendment is not intended for Black people.” I think the argument is saying that the Second Amendment is in fact working exactly the way it was intended to work with respect to Black folks, and that is as a tool of persistence, subordination, and destruction. I just want to be super clear that you’re not saying the Second Amendment is broken, that it was conceived to do a thing that it doesn’t do. You’re saying the Second Amendment does precisely the thing it was crafted to do.

Exactly. You nailed it.

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2021/08/second-amendment-guns-racist-black-americans-history.html

Brothers help underprivileged students afford historically Black college...


https://www.yahoo.com/gma/brothers-raise-money-help-students-080018355.html

Black Kids Labeled Negatively Early

An excerpt from Neuroscience News - 

The Older People Think a Black Child Is, the More Likely They Are to Wrongly See the Child As Angry

Summary: The older an adult believes a Black child to be, the more likely they are to believe the child is exhibiting angry emotions, even when they are not. The same emotional perception shift does not occur when an adult sees an image of a white child.

Source: North Carolina State University

    
             These misperceptions occurred significantly
           less frequently for white children.
            Credit: North Carolina State University

A recent study from North Carolina State University finds that the older an adult thinks a Black child is, the more likely the adult is to incorrectly view the child as being angry. There was no similar shift in adults’ perceptions of white children’s emotions.

“Our earlier work had established that racialized anger bias is imposed on both Black adults and Black children,” says Amy Halberstadt, co-author of a paper on the work and a professor of psychology at NC State.

“This study shows again that Black children are more likely than white children to be seen as angry, even when they are not angry, which has ramifications for receiving unfair consequences.”

“The new part in this study was to see if anger bias increased as a function of the child’s age,” says Alison Cooke, first author of the study and a former Ph.D. student at NC State.

“Do people see Black children as older and does that increase the likelihood that people will incorrectly perceive Black children as angry?”

https://neurosciencenews.com/race-perception-anger-19074/



Black & Beautiful Luxury Shoe Designer

An excerpt from Black Enterprise - 

ALL ABOUT THE DETAILS’: MEET THE YOUNGEST, BLACK FEMALE LUXURY SHOE DESIGNER IN THE INDUSTRY #BLACKBUSINESSMONTH

by Alexa Imani Spencer

(Photo Ganesia Wveighlin)


This woman is kicking out glass ceilings and walking in her power as the youngest, Black female designer in the luxury shoe industry who owns 100% of her brand.

Meet Ganesia Wveighlin, 32, owner of CaesarWalks; a unique, expressive luxury shoe brand she founded in 2017. Wveighlin boldly stepped into the luxury shoe market with a vision and hasn’t looked back since. 
                                                                                                                                                               
The brand includes shoes for women and men with some handmade touches. Wveighlin studied shoemaking in 2019 so she could make her shoes by hand. Her education first started in Brooklyn and continued in London, England. 

https://www.blackenterprise.com/youngest-black-female-luxury-shoe-designer-ganesia-wveighlin/





He Opened His Heart and His Wallet

An excerpt from Readers' Digest - 

A Man Heard an Elderly Woman Was About to Lose Her House, So He Gave Her the Money to Keep It

When a Detroit man heard a woman was about to lose her house, he opened his heart—and his wallet. 

By Emily Goodman

Michael Evans (right) inspires his son (left) to continue his legacy of charity.

EE BERGER FOR READER'S DIGEST

Michael Evans was standing in line at the Wayne County Treasurer’s Office in Detroit last August, waiting to pay his taxes, when he heard a disturbing sound ahead of him. The elderly woman at the window was crying—and so was the cashier helping her. Then Evans learned why: He heard the cashier inform the woman that her house was in fore­closure and headed for auction. He also heard the woman tell the cashier that her daughter had recently died.

Evans, a businessman who had just buried his father, couldn’t stomach the idea of this woman losing her home right after losing her child. He approached the window. “I don’t mean to butt in,” he said to the cashier, “but if y’all can get her house back, I’ll pay for her taxes.” The amount due: $5,000.

The two women were stunned. Their despair turned to disbelief. The cashier left for a moment to confirm the amount and that it was all right for Evans to pay it. Evans vowed to go straight to the bank and come right back with the money. And he did.

But when he returned to the treasurer’s office, he asked someone else waiting in line to hand the $5,000 check to the cashier. Evans was trying to slip away quietly and, preferably, anonymously.

“I didn’t want this attention,” he explains.

Of course, attention found him—it’s not every day that someone pays a stranger’s hefty tax bill. 

https://www.rd.com/article/a-very-special-tax-break/

Black-Owned Drive-In Thrives

An excerpt from Black Enterprise - 

Black-Owned Drive-In Movie Theater That Opened At Height of COVID Has No Plans to Close

By Jeroslyn Johnson

Ayana Morris and Siree Morris (BlackBusiness)


A Black-owned drive-in movie theater in New Jersey that opened during the height of the pandemic has no plans of closing as their business thrives in a social distancing society.

Co-founders and husband-and-wife Ayana Morris and Siree Morris opened Newark Moonlight Cinema after seeing an opportunity while a pandemic plagued the world. Through the drive-in service, one of the few Black-owned theaters in the country, they were able to host over 20,000 cars during 2020, CNBC
reports.

While many small businesses struggle to make it as the pandemic looms on, Newark Moonlight Cinema is building its community-driven business to stand the test of time.

Friday, August 6, 2021

Black Billionaires

From Essence - 

Here's Everyone On The Black Billionaire List Now

THOUGH THERE ARE JUST 15 BLACK PEOPLE AMONG THE WORLD’S ESTIMATED 2,755 BILLIONAIRES, FORTUNATELY, THE LIST IS GROWING.

BY JASMINE BROWLEY 

Rihanna (Getty Images)

https://www.essence.com/news/money-career/black-billionaire-list-2021/

 

Thursday, August 5, 2021

Start Your Day With a Smile

From Buzzfeed - 

60 Pictures That Make Me Smile Uncontrollably No Matter How Many Times I've Seen Them

Can't stop smiling.

by Dave Stopera

https://www.buzzfeed.com/daves4/60-wholesome-things


Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Rihanna is a BILLIONAIRE! Way to Go RiRi!

An excerpt from USA Today - 

Rihanna officially becomes a billionaire: Forbes names her the 'richest female musician'

By Elise Brisco

Forbes has announced Rhianna as a billionaire with
most of her worth coming from her Fenty brand.
Roy Rochlin, Getty Images

Rihanna shines bright like a diamond, or several diamonds: The multi-hyphenate star is now a billionaire. 

Forbes announced Wednesday that Rihanna joins the ranks of Oprah Winfrey as one of the richest entertainers in the world. The publication estimates her net worth at $1.7 billion, with most of it coming from her cosmetic brand Fenty Beauty. 

In lieu of another album – which fans are still waiting for – the singer-turned-entrepreneur, born Robyn Fenty, launched Fenty Beauty in 2017 in partnership with luxury goods conglomerate LVMH. The brand's launch focused on inclusivity with a then-unprecedented 40 shades of foundation, which prompted the "Fenty Effect" in which other brands expanded their shade ranges for complexion products. Now the brand covers everything under the sun of makeup, from brushes and blushes to lipsticks. 

https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/celebrities/2021/08/04/rihanna-billionaire-forbes-richest-female-musician-fenty-beauty/5480614001/


She Deserves Every Penny and More!

An excerpt from Deadline - 

‘9-1-1’ Cast Gets Raises Ahead Of Season 5 With Angela Bassett Eyeing New Benchmark For Actresses Of Color

By Nellie Andreeva 

Angela Bassett - 911 on FOX

After lengthy negotiations for some, all series regulars on Fox’s flagship drama 9-1-1 have secured pay increases ahead of Season 5, I have learned.

Series star Angela Bassett led the way with a major bump that I hear takes her to north of $450,000 an episode. That is believed to be among the top salaries on network television for any actor — male or female — and could be the highest ever for an actress of color on a broadcast drama series.

For Oscar-nominated Bassett, it encompasses other services beyond acting. She was involved in the development of 9-1-1, whom Ryan Murphy created for her. She serves as an executive producer on 9-1-1 as well as spinoff 9-1-1: Lone Star.

https://deadline.com/2021/08/9-1-1-cast-raises-season-5-angela-bassett-deal-1234796117/

Pharmaceutical Companies Have Gotten Rich From Her Cells. Her Family Has Gotten Nothing.

An excerpt from Newsonyx - 

Henrietta Lacks’ Family Will Sue Pharmaceutical Companies Who’ve Gotten Rich From Her Cells

Her HeLa cells have been used in research for decades without consent.

By Aziah Kamariby

Photo Courtesy of Baltimore Magazine (Mike Morgan)

The family of Henrietta Lacks has hired a prominent civil rights attorney, Ben Crump, who plans to seek compensation for them from big pharmaceutical companies across the country that have made fortunes off medical research with the use of Lacks’ famous cells.

On January 29, 1951, doctors at The Johns Hopkins Hospital took a biopsy from Henrietta Lacks, who had an aggressive form of cervical cancer.

She died eight months later, but the tissue was taken without her consent eventually established the cell line HeLa. The cells were the first immortal human cells to live outside of the body and be grown in culture.

For the next 70 years, cells taken from Lacks are the most widely used human cells in scientific research and helped lead to a multitude of medical treatments and advances, including the COVID-19 vaccine. However, neither Lacks nor her family gave consent.

Now, her descendants seek compensation from big pharmaceutical companies that profited from HeLa cells, and they hired the infamous Crump to help them do so.

https://www.newsonyx.com/henrietta-lacks-family-will-sue-pharmaceutical-companies-whove-gotten-rich-from-her-cells/


Tuesday, August 3, 2021

Are We Cheering For Everyone? If Not, Why Not?

An excerpt from Deadspin - 

America is determined to focus on the white women’s Olympic team that’s losing, instead of the Black women’s Olympic team that always wins

Even on the world’s biggest stage, this country has no shame showing off its prejudices

By Carron J. Phillips

Where’s the love for Tina Charles and the U.S. Women’s hoops team
that’s continuing their domination at the Olympics. Image: Getty Images

From the Confederacy to Jim Kelly’s Buffalo Bills teams in the early ’90s, and even the consistent coverage of Donald Trump and his supporters, throughout history, America has proven that it’s fascinated with losers… who are white.

And while the U.S. National Women’s National Soccer Team is the furthest thing from ever being considered losers, the predominantly white squad is, in fact, losing. Their semifinal loss to Canada was their second of the tournament (Sweden). A gold medal is now out of the picture, as a bronze medal is the only thing they can win, but even that isn’t a guarantee.

“If I could just say something, I just think the players have a lot to look at ourselves about,” said Megan Rapinoe after her team’s loss to Canada. “It’s not like, ‘Oh, we didn’t play better,’ and getting on each other, but we need to perform better, period. We don’t have juice because the ball’s banging off our shins and we’re not finding open passes and doing the simple things.”

But do you know who is winning in the Olympics, as usual?

The predominantly Black U.S. National Women’s Basketball Team, which is going for its seventh consecutive gold medal. To date, the team has only lost four games in the Olympics since 1976, and they’ve been undefeated in Olympic play since the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta. During that time, we’ve seen the men’s team stumble to a bronze, rebuild itself into a global power, and stumble again under coach Gregg Popovich. The women’s soccer team only has four gold medals since 1996, while the women’s basketball team is primed to win their seventh.

https://deadspin.com/america-is-determined-to-focus-on-the-white-women-s-oly-1847407798

Oldest Tuskegee Airman Still Flying High

From Blavity - 

Oldest Living Tuskegee Airman Takes Grandson And Aspiring Aviator With Him On Flight

Who says 101-year-old can't have fun, too?

by Sìmone Stancil

The oldest living Tuskegee Airman Brigadier General Charles McGee, who is 101 years old, took flight last Sunday with a host of family members for the EAA AirVenture, one of the largest aviation events in the world. 

“I’ve been here many, many times, but to get back here again as I approach 102 is marvelous,” McGee said at the event’s headquarters in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, Local 5 reported.

“Being able to come here and share with people that just like to look at airplanes or maybe kick the tires or maintain them, you can’t beat that,” he added.

McGee was joined on the flight by famous aviator Shaesta Waiz, who is known for piloting a single-engine aircraft across the globe in 2017, and his military pilot son, Ron McGee. Along with other family and friends, the 101-year-old’s great-grandson 15-year-old Lain Lanphier also joined on the journey from Dulles International Airport.

“It was an honor," Lanphier said. “I’ve never flown with him before, and although he’s very old, 102 almost, it’s amazing...he has a legacy to live up to and I strive to achieve that every day.”

The Tuskegee Airmen, given the title for training at the Tuskegee Army Airfield in Alabama, were the first Black aviators in the military serving under the U.S. Army Air Corps (AAC) in the early 1940s. Their contributions include flying more than 15,000 individual sorties in Europe and North Africa during World War II, earning them more than 150 Distinguished Flying Crosses. Ultimately, the airmen joined the U.S. Air Force, which inspired the integration of the U.S. military.

https://blavity.com/oldest-living-tuskegee-airman-takes-grandson-and-aspiring-aviator-with-him-on-flight?category1=news


FAMU Paid Off Student Debt

From ABC News -  

Florida HBCU doles out $16 million to pay off student debt

Florida A&M University used federal money to help students.

By Ivan Pereira

Jeff Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images, FILE Florida A&M University entrance sign.

Students at a historically Black college received a huge parting gift from their school during commencement ceremonies Saturday.

Larry Robinson, the president of Florida A&M University, announced the school spent over $16 million to cover fees, tuition and unpaid student account balances during the 2020-2021 school year.

"This is an indication of our commitment to student success and our hope that your time on the 'Hill' has been transformative as you take on the challenges of the day, go out and make a difference," he told the graduates.

The university was able to use money from the federal Cares Act, which provides COVID-19 relief to organizations, to pay for the students' costs.

https://abcnews.go.com/US/florida-hbcu-doles-16-million-pay-off-student/story?id=79205464

Welcome To A New Day

From CNN - 

All the Black women in us are tired

Analysis by Lisa Respers France, CNN

Naomi Osaka, Simone Biles, and Sha'Carri Richardson

(CNN)The other day I shared a meme that stoked a lot of emotion.

In it, there are pictures of three superstar athletes -- tennis player Naomi Osaka, gymnast Simone Biles and track and field sprinter Sha'Carri Richardson -- along with a sign that reads, "Y'all Not Gone Stress Us Out -- Black Women Everywhere."

They are women of color (Osaka has a Japanese mother and a Haitian father while Biles and Richardson are African American) and have made headlines recently due to decisions they made to support their mental health.

All three also have something in common which I very much understand -- the struggle women of color face in exercising self-care.

As I wrote in the caption of the meme I shared on Instagram, it's hard being a Black woman.

"We are supposed to save relationships, families, elections, communities, democracy and basically the world all while exhibiting "black girl magic," but y'all mad when we save ourselves?" I wrote. "Welcome to a new day."

https://www.cnn.com/2021/08/01/entertainment/biles-osaka-richardson-self-care/index.html