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Tuesday, February 2, 2021

What Makes Food "Black?"

 An excerpt from USA Today & the Louisville Courier-Journal - 

'Is butter pecan ice cream a 'Black thing'?' Louisville podcast explores how race impacts food.

By Dahlia Ghabour - Louisville Courier-Journal

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – It all started with ice cream. 

After working at Louisville Cream in the hip downtown Louisville NuLu district for a year, Kelly Nusz noticed a pattern she was too shy to ask anyone about. After a Google search didn't answer her question, she finally decided to ask her friend and boss, Louisville Cream owner Darryl Goodner.

"Is butter pecan ice cream a 'Black thing'?"

Goodner laughed. "Of course, it is."

"Why?" she asked.

Well, Goodner didn't really know what to say. He'd grown up eating it and had fond memories of the cheap ice cream he'd get from the store and share with his family. It was the flavor his relatives always gravitated toward.

But was it part of his heritage as a Black man in America? 

That question launched a conversation, which led to research, which led to some answers and more questions. What made a food a "Black" food versus a "white" food? And what foods that we eat today have a racist history attached to them that people don't know about? 

https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2021/02/01/black-owned-louisville-cream-launches-butter-pecan-podcast/4318599001/



Josh Groban ft. Donald Lawrence + Company - 'America The Beautiful' (Bid...

‘Twas the Night Before Super Bowl | Frito-Lay 2:00

Sunday, January 10, 2021

12 Year Old Headed to College

 

Mickey Guyton - Black Like Me (Live At Capitol Studios)

From Quarterback to Chaplain

An excerpt from InsideHook - 

Randall Cunningham Makes Move From Quarterback to Chaplain

He's now addressing the spiritual needs of the Las Vegas Raiders

BY TOBIAS CARROLL

Writing at The New York Times, Kalyn Kahler explored how Cunnngham’s life after his playing days had ended eludes each comparisons. Kahler writes about how Cunninghm and his wife Felicity settled in Las Vegas — where Cunningham had an outstanding collegiate career — in 2002. In 2004, he was ordained as a pastor.

The idea to bring in Cunningham as the Raiders’ chaplain came about when the team moved to Las Vegas. Raiders coach Jon Gruden — whose time as the Eagles’ offensive coordinator had overlapped with Cunningham’s time playing in Philadelphia — came up with the idea. “That guy warms my heart,” Gruden told the Times.

https://www.insidehook.com/daily_brief/sports/randall-cunningham-chaplain-las-vegas-raiders

Stevie Wonder Could See the Difference

From Buzzfeed - 

32 Pictures that Show The Huge Difference Between The "Protests" At The Capitol Vs. The Black Lives Matter Protests - Spot the difference.

by Matt Stopera & Dave Stopera - BuzzFeed Staff

https://www.buzzfeed.com/mjs538/pictures-from-capitol-vs-2020

Martin Scorsese Presents | Pretend It’s A City | Official Trailer | Netflix

Sunday, December 27, 2020

How The Multi-Billion Dollar HOT CHEETOS Idea Was Born! (Creator, Richar...

https://www.upworthy.com/janitor-who-invented-flamin-hot-cheetos

 

Busted!

 

An Unexpected Blessing, Year After Year

An excerpt from USA Today - 

Decades ago, a mystery man spent thousands to give an Ohio family 'a nice visit from Santa Claus'

By Mark J. Price, Akron Beacon Journal

Mary Arnold sits at a table with her nine children on Dec. 23, 1955, to look for gift ideas
in the Beacon Journal after receiving $100 from a mysterious benefactor in Akron.  
The kids, from left, are Carla, 3, Gary, 5, Mona, 9, Gale, 8, Cathy, 14, Donna, 7 months,
Gerald 2, John 7, and Royal 11.  Beacon Journal File Photo


AKRON, Ohio — Santa Claus really did exist.

Helen Arnold met him unexpectedly in 1953 while shopping at Polsky’s department store in downtown Akron.

The brief encounter changed her family's lives. From that year to 1965, the Arnolds had a generous secret Santa at Christmastime.

With her weekly pay as a dishwasher, Helen had only $37 to spend on gifts in 1953. Her husband, Roy, had been laid off from the Akron Sanitation Department, and the couple had eight kids — Cathy, Royal, Mona, Gale, John, Gary, Carla, and Gerald — and would soon welcome a ninth, Donna. A 10th child, Marsha, had died as a baby.

They resided in a small home below a nearby bridge. In addition to the family of 10, Helen’s parents, brother, two sisters, and their three children also lived there.

Royal Arnold, 76, of Akron understood that it was a struggle for his parents to pay the bills. He even offered to make do with less so that his siblings might have more.

“I remember telling her that ‘If you don’t have enough to get me a Christmas gift, don’t worry about it,’” he said.

Royal was 9 years old in 1953 when he and three siblings accompanied their mom to Polsky’s. They were browsing the bargain basement when a stranger approached them.

“Are these your children?” the man asked Helen. “They’re lovely children and well-behaved.”

Before Helen knew what was happening, the stranger placed a $20 bill in her hand and said: “Buy them something nice for Christmas.”

He then disappeared into the bustling crowd. It happened so fast that Helen didn’t get a good look at him, but she later described him as short, white and slim, maybe 50 years old with graying brown hair.

“All I remember is holding my mother’s hand and my mother was shocked,” Royal said.

It was a Christmas miracle. Helen went home that night and jotted a note to the Akron Beacon Journal, now part of the USA TODAY Network:

(This is Faye.  Please click the link for the rest of the story.  It gets better and better.).

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/12/24/secret-santa-helped-akron-ohio-family-christmas-over-decade/4010569001/



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