Search This Blog

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Pet Peeve

As principal in the US, one of my most aggravating pet peeve, was dealing with the parents who made an outlandishly big deal out of the promotions of kindergarteners and 6th graders.  You see, we had a program for both, and they insisted on wanting to call this, and see it as, a "graduation."

This bothered me so much because there was a finality to it.  There was the "we're done, let's move to whatever life has in store" mentality.  For too many of the parents and guardians, marching across the stage in 6th grade was it.  They didn't experience their high school graduation because, for whatever reason, they dropped out.

I wanted to be crystal clear to my students that these milestones were to be seen as stepping stones to continue on to the next level.  I didn't want them to wipe their brows and see this as the end.

At my last school, where on any given week, one third to one half of the students were absent, this was especially senseless to me.  This was particularly egregious because the school was across the street from the housing project where all the students lived.  And yet, at these promotion ceremonies, they all crawled out of the woodwork and showed up for the party.

CRAZY!

Interestingly, the poorer the school, the crazier this time was.

There were limousines, formals, tuxedos, and what can only be described as "hooker" outfits.  We realized a dress code would need to be in place, letting the families know that we expected the students to be in clothes they might wear to church.

Good Lord, then I wanted to know what kind of church they went to!

Believe me when I say, even that didn't help.

Seriously, some of those little 11 and 12 year old girls look like they were ready for stripper poles.  As I looked out at these kids,

KIDS . . .

I shook my head knowing that someone in their world - their mommas, grandmas, etc. - thought this kind of dress was appropriate.

I think I can speak for most educators and say we're all thrilled to see a school year come to an end, but dealing with this craziness was something I never looked forward to.

One of my dear friends (thanks Tiff) forwarded this really quick clip of one of the promotion ceremonies where I'm speaking before the class is introduced.  (Please excuse the video quality, but the audio is what's important).


Can you hear my frustration?

There are some things I don't miss.

This is end-of-year madness is high on the list.




Saturday, February 14, 2015

The Origin of Common Sayings

These fun facts (?) arrived via email today.

H/T and many thanks to Olga.
'A SHOT OF WHISKEY' 
In the old west a .45 cartridge for a six-gun cost 12 cents, so did a glass of whiskey. If a cowhand was low on cash he would often give the bartender a cartridge in exchange for a drink. This became known as a "shot" of whiskey.
 
THE WHOLE NINE YARDS
American fighter planes in WW2 had machine guns that were fed by a belt of cartridges. The average plane held belts that were 27 feet (9 yards) long. If the pilot used up all his ammo he was said to have given it the whole nine yards.
 
BUYING THE FARM
This is synonymous with dying. During WW1 soldiers were given life insurance policies worth $5,000. This was about the price of an average farm so if you died you "bought the farm" for your survivors.
 
IRON CLAD CONTRACT
This came about from the ironclad ships of the Civil War. It meant something so strong it could not be broken. 
 
PASSING THE BUCK / THE BUCK STOPS HERE
Most men in the early west carried a jack knife made by the Buck knife company. When playing poker it was common to place one of these Buck knives in front of the dealer so that everyone knew who he was. When it was time for a new dealer the deck of cards and the knife were given to the new dealer. If this person didn't want to deal he would "pass the buck" to the next player. If that player accepted then "the buck stopped there". 
 
RIFF RAFF
The Mississippi River was the main way of traveling from north to south. Riverboats carried passengers and freight but they were expensive so most people used rafts. Everything had the right of way over rafts which were considered cheap. The steering oar on the rafts was called a "riff" and this transposed into riff-raff, meaning low class. 
 
COBWEB
The Old English word for "spider" was "cob". 
 
SHIP STATE ROOMS
Traveling by steamboat was considered the height of comfort. Passenger cabins on the boats were not numbered. Instead they were named after states. To this day cabins on ships are called staterooms. 
 
SLEEP TIGHT
Early beds were made with a wooden frame. Ropes were tied across the frame in a criss-cross pattern. A straw mattress was then put on top of the ropes. Over time the ropes stretched, causing the bed to sag. The owner would then tighten the ropes to get a better night's sleep. 
 
SHOWBOAT
These were floating theaters built on a barge that was pushed by a steamboat. These played small town along the Mississippi River. Unlike the boat shown in the movie "Showboat" these did not have an engine. They were gaudy and attention grabbing which is why we say someone who is being the life of the party is "showboating". 
 
OVER A BARREL
In the days before CPR a drowning victim would be placed face down over a barrel and the barrel would be rolled back and forth in a effort to empty the lungs of water. It was rarely effective. If you are over a barrel you are in deep trouble. 
 
BARGE IN 
Heavy freight was moved along the Mississippi in large barges pushed by steamboats. These were hard to control and would sometimes swing into piers or other boats. People would say they "barged in". 
 
HOGWASH
Steamboats carried both people and animals. Since pigs smelled so bad they would be washed before being put on board. The mud and other filth that was washed off was considered useless "hog wash". 
 
CURFEW
The word "curfew" comes from the French phrase "couvre-feu", which means "cover the fire". It was used to describe the time of blowing out all lamps and candles. It was later adopted into Middle English as "curfeu", which later became the modern "curfew". In the early American colonies homes had no real fireplaces so a fire was built in the center of the room. In order to make sure a fire did not get out of control during the night it was required that, by an agreed upon time, all fires would be covered with a clay pot called-a "curfew". 
 
BARRELS OF OIL
When the first oil wells were drilled they had made no provision for storing the liquid so they used water barrels. That is why, to this day, we speak of barrels of oil rather than gallons. 
 
HOT OFF THE PRESS
As the paper goes through the rotary printing press friction causes it to heat up. Therefore, if you grab the paper right off the press it’s hot. The expression means to get immediate information. 

More Than His Mouth

There's more to Charles Barkley than his mouth, big that it is.  In this very nuanced feature article, we are shown the many different facets to his very large personality.

It's a long one, but well worth the read.

Huge thanks to Ben for sharing it.

http://espn.go.com/espn/feature/story/_/id/12289603/how-former-nba-star-charles-barkley-became-role-model

It Didn't Begin With 9/11

Living with terror and terrorism didn't begin with the atrocities of 9/11.  For us, as African-Americans, it's been around as long as this country has called itself a country.

The article below is a terrific one.  The money quote is highlighted in red by me.

H/T Salon

America’s real racial terror: How lynch mobs & barbaric violence haunt us today 

It's time to recognize our history of lynchings as a form of racial terrorism. Here's what it means today 

 
America's real racial terror: How lynch mobs & barbaric violence haunt us todayGadsden, Alabama., March 5, 1949.  (Credit: AP)
Earlier this month, President Obama made a remark about U.S. history that sent many members of the American far-right into a paroxysm of rage. Speaking at the annual National Prayer Breakfast, Obama said that it would be wrong to blame all Muslims or Islam itself for the cruelty and evil of ISIS, because every ideology and every religion includes people who are willing to distort their creed in order to justify oppression and brutality. “[L]est we get on our high horse and think this is unique to some other place,” Obama said of ISIS, “remember that during the Crusades and the Inquisition, people committed terrible deeds in the name of Christ. In our home country, slavery and Jim Crow all too often was justified in the name of Christ.”
Conservatives were outraged that the president had the audacity to compare Americans — American Christians, at that! — to the murderous zealots that comprise the paramilitary terrorist group. Ta-Nehisi CoatesJamelle Bouie and others rightly noted that Obama wasn’t merely telling the truth but was actually soft-pedaling the historical record. The truth is, Americans not only have a long history of supporting white supremacy with pseudo-Christian arguments; they also have a history of enacting violence on the bodies of their fellow citizens that was every bit as heinous as what ISIS has done to people throughout Syria and Iraq. And essentially for the same purposes, too.
That history is available to any American willing to go and find it. But a new report from the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) shows that the American past is even bloodier than we thought. According to “Lynching in America: Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror,” between the years 1877 and 1950, nearly 4,000 African-Americans were lynched by Southern whites. In fact, during the years spent researching for the report, EJI claims to have found at least 700 more examples of racial terrorism than previously known. And as EJI founder and leader Bryan Stevenson recently told the New York Times, these barbaric acts of violence had a symbolic, political purpose, just like ISIS’s most-publicized crimes.
Recently, Salon spoke over the phone with Stevenson to discuss the report, the importance of recognizing these lynchings as a form of terrorism and how the age of racial terror still influences the United States today. Our conversation is below and has been edited for clarity and length.
The use of the word “terror” to describe these crimes, was that done consciously? If so, why do you think it’s important for us to use that word and see these acts of violence through that lens?
I heard from older people of color in the South over the last 10 years who have complained to me that they get angry and upset when they hear TV commentators and news analysts talking about how, after the 9/11 attacks, America is dealing with terrorism for the first time in the its history. What these older people of color will say is, Mr. Stevenson, we grew up with terrorism. We were menaced and threatened and lynched and traumatized every day of our lives. And it is injurious to us to not have that recognized by these casual comments. So our use of the word “terror” was definitely intentional.
There is a narrative about America’s racial history that we have not acknowledged, that we have not confronted. We have been burdened by continuing problems with race relations and racial equality because we have not understood the narratives in the way that I think we should. It actually begins with slavery; I think even the way we talk about slavery has been superficial. I don’t think the evil of slavery was involuntary servitude. To me the great evil of slavery was this narrative of racial difference, this ideology of white supremacy, that black people weren’t fully human, that they had deficits and deficiencies that meant that it was okay, that it was moral and just, to enslave them.
That narrative that was the true evil of slavery wasn’t addressed by the Thirteenth Amendment; it wasn’t addressed by the Emancipation Proclamation. As a result, slavery didn’t end at the end of the Civil War; it just evolved. It set up an era where white people in the South felt that they had to enforce racial hierarchy in all things. So the lynchings of African-Americans during this period of time were not just simple punishments for individuals accused of crimes. It was a statement to the entire African-American community that they must remain compliant to Jim Crow segregation; no voting rights, economic exploitation and racial hierarchy.
That’s what terrorism is about. It’s about effectuating social, political and economic conditions through menace, through violence, through terror. And that’s what we saw in the Deep South during this era of lynching.
What kind of non-criminal transgressions would lead to racial terrorism?
About 25 percent of the lynchings that we documented were for violations of the social order.
An African-American man was lynched in Blakley, Georgia, returning from World War I, because he refused to take off his U.S. military uniform. There was a man in Mississippi who was running for a train and he bumped into a white woman and he was lynched for that indiscretion. Jesse Thornton in Luverne, Alabama, in 1940 was lynched because he approached a police officer to ask for assistance and he didn’t say “mister” before he evoked the officer’s name, and that made him vulnerable to an accusation of being above himself — “uppity.”
These kinds of lynchings took place all the time. In the 1920s, when black sharecroppers felt they were being exploited by white landowners who were not paying them what they had promised, if they complained about that, if they organized and formed a union, they were oftentimes lynched. The great Elaine massacre that took place in Elaine, Arkansas, which resulted in dozens of people being killed, was inspired by black farmworkers trying to organize for better treatment and economic conditions. So lynching was very much a tool designed to sustain the economic, social and political order of the day, which very much had people of color in a subordinate position.
It was also something that could be celebrated and tolerated, even in the face of very grotesque barbarity, because African-American people still weren’t seen as fully human and entitled to justice. What’s interesting is a lot of people, when they hear about lynching, they’re really thinking about frontier justice, where somebody gets hanged from a tree. And there were parts of this country were you did see people being executed in a crude form, because there was no functioning criminal justice system. That’s not true of the racial-terror lynchings; almost all of these lynchings took place in spaces where there was a functioning criminal justice system, but there was perception that African-Americans weren’t good enough to be afforded the dignity and respect of a trial, of a pronouncement of a sentence before they were executed.
When lynchings would happen, was it something that would happen in the shadows, as if it were regarded as necessary but ugly? Or was it more like the opening line in “Desolation Row“?
No, I think one of the really disturbing parts of the research we’ve done is to discover how many lynchings could be fairly characterized as what we call “public-spectacle lynchings,” where you have hundreds, sometimes thousands of people attending these events. We documented hundreds of lynchings that would be characterized as public-spectacle lynchings because they were literally on the courthouse lawn, oftentimes attended by hundreds or thousands of local residents.
There’d be lynchings where the local newspaper would advertise the time and date and location of the lynching the day before, or hours before. It’s really quite astonishing to imagine the entire town coming out to watch someone burned to death or mutilated or shot hundreds of times, or dragged through the streets. To see this kind of barbarism celebrated, the idea that people would take their children to “enjoy” the spectacle of this violence, says something really astonishing about the cultural attitudes that made lynching such a widespread phenomenon with so little resistance.
They would be advertised and promoted beforehand?
That’s correct. We have in our report an interesting newspaper article basically announcing “Negro to be burned today at 5 pm” and this description of what’s going to be happen. It’s fascinating for us as researchers that the grisly, grotesque details of the lynchings were sometimes easy to discover, because the local press, which was sympathetic to the lynching, didn’t have any shame about reporting all the ways the body was mutilated and tortured and destroyed. That says something about their comfort level with this kind of violence.
Remembering is important in its own right, of course. But how do you think the findings in this report should influence the way we see our country today?
I think we need to really reorient to a more truthful reflection around our history. I think we’ve been very bad at acknowledging our failures as a society, the ways in which we tolerate gross inequality, gross injustice. We have been too celebratory about parts of our history that really require more complicated reflections.
If you come to the South, you see this on display, because our landscape is littered with hundreds of monuments and memorials to the Confederacy, and we have romanticized this 19th-century era, when people were defending slavery, fighting to preserve slavery. We’ve named buildings and streets and schools after the architects of the resistance to ending slavery without any reflection on what they represent. In Alabama, Jefferson Davis’s birthday is a state holiday. Confederate memorial day is a state holiday. We don’t celebrate Dr. King’s birthday — we have Martin Luther King/Robert E. Lee day. It’s essentially a segregated holiday.
I think that narrative has to be complicated. I think it’s necessary because I think there’s a consequence when you don’t talk about your history honestly. I think the presumption of [African-American] dangerousness and guilt that was born during the lynching era still haunts us, still complicates the lives of the people of color, still creates questions and tensions and issues — from police shootings to a criminal justice system that disproportionately, unfairly sentences people of color, or wrongly convicts them.
Our unwillingness to fully face up to our history in this regard sometimes reminds me of what happened in post-Franco Spain: the unacknowledged but palpable collective amnesia that followed the dismantling of his regime and the return of liberal democracy.
I’m encouraged by what I see in other parts of the world.
After Apartheid, South Africa recognized that it had to commit itself to a process of truth and reconciliation. In Rwanda, you hear people talking about the need for truth and reconciliation to recover from the genocide. In Germany, you are forced to deal with the legacy of the Holocaust, because there are markers, monuments and stones all across the spaces where Jewish families were abducted and taken away. The concentration camps have been converted into places where people are invited to reflect and remember.
And that kind of sober reflection, I think, creates a more hopeful future. We do the opposite in this country. We don’t talk about our history of segregation and our history of lynching and our history of enslavement. We try to just celebrate the resolution of these things as if there were no lasting consequences. I think that has set us up for continuing challenges around racial justice that we would do better to approach differently.
Do you have any plans for pushing this message forward now that the report is out? You’re hoping to establish some historical markers to commemorate these atrocities, right?
I’m really excited about what I hope we can do. I think the visual landscape of this country needs to change. I think we need to mark and memorialize these spaces and force people to deal more honestly with this history. I love museums that are dedicated to civil rights or African-American history, but only the people who are interested tend to go into those museums. I think what I like about public art and public markers and public monuments is that the entire community is sort of forced to deal with what they represent. And I think if we can elevate discourse and language and memory around these incidents, we can trigger conversations that will ultimately make us a healthier society.
We put up slave markers in downtown Montgomery, and I think it’s been a really wonderful thing to see people gathering around these markers and talking about the history of slavery that’s so dominated this community. I know that it has inspired more conversation about enslavement and what it’s done to us, and what it represents, and the challenges that we still face because of our narrative of racial difference. I think lynching markers and memorials can do the same.
We have a criminal justice system that is very contaminated by this narrative of racial difference. I think we’re not working as hard as we should be working to free ourselves from the bias, the distortions, the inequality created by that race consequence. I think if we were a little more attentive to our history of lynching and terrorism, we might be motivated to do some things that we haven’t been motivated to do just yet. That’s really what excites me — that we can begin a process of something that’s more akin to transitional justice in this country, that elevates truth in hope of reconciliation. Because that’s the only way, I think, that we are going to make progress that so many of us are desperate to see.

Friday, February 13, 2015

Remember These?

Coming soon - An update on the View-Master, an old school toy.  It should be on the market for Christmas 2015.


What Lesson Did Tech Executives, Hollywood Stars, and Executives Learn the Hard Way

Words of Wisdom:

1st African-American MIT Graduate

From The Root - 

1st African-American MIT Graduate Honored With Limited Edition Stamp

Robert Robinson Taylor, the country’s first academically trained black architect, was added to the Postal Service’s growing Black Heritage Stamp series as its 38th honoree.
Posted: 
 
image010
Stamp honoring Robert Robinson Taylor  COPYRIGHT U.S. POSTAL SERVICE

Robert Robinson Taylor, often recognized as the first African-American graduate of the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was honored by the U.S. Postal Service, becoming the 38th honoree in its Black Heritage Stamp series.

The first-day-of-issuance ceremony at the Smithsonian’s National Postal Museum in Washington, D.C., overlapped with the museum’s exhibit “Freedom Around the Corner: Black America From the Civil War to Civil Rights,” a press release notes. White House Senior Adviser Valerie Jarrett, who is also Taylor’s great-granddaughter, joined Postmaster Gen. Megan Brennan for the ceremony.

“Any time I face a daunting challenge and self-doubt creeps in, I think of my great-grandfather Robert Taylor, the son of a slave, who traveled from Wilmington, N.C., to attend MIT in 1882,” Jarrett said, according to the release. “He believed that with a good education, hard work, relentless determination and a dedication to family, there were no limits to what he could accomplish. The example he set gives me strength and courage. My family is proud to stand on his shoulders, and we know that it is our responsibility to embrace his values, to ensure that his legacy will be ‘forever stamped’ in the [consciousness] of future generations.”

“Robert Robinson Taylor expanded opportunities for African Americans in fields that had largely been closed to them,” Brennan, who earned her MBA from MIT, added. “Booker T. Washington recruited Taylor to the Tuskegee Institute to help show the world what an all-black institution could accomplish. Taylor designed and oversaw the construction of dozens of new buildings built in an elegant, dignified style that befitted his personality. But it was Tuskegee’s chapel that Taylor considered to be his finest achievement and masterpiece. Washington referred to the graceful, round-arch structure as the ‘most imposing building’ at Tuskegee. As one of our nation’s calling cards, we hope this stamp will encourage more Americans to learn more about Robert Robinson Taylor’s life and career.”

Colored Skies

I learned about someone new today.

And, just in case you didn't know him either, let me introduce you.

This is Astronaut Leland Melvin.


Read about him below.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/12/leland-melvin_n_6681106.html


Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Wait. What?

Your TV may be listening to you and sharing that info with others.

Really.

From the BBC.

Not in front of the telly: Warning over 'listening' TV 
Man buying SmartTVSamsung said personal information could be scooped up by the Smart TV

Samsung is warning customers about discussing personal information in front of their smart television set.
The warning applies to TV viewers who control their Samsung Smart TV using its voice activation feature.
When the feature is active, such TV sets "listen" to what is said and may share what they hear with Samsung or third parties, it said.
Privacy campaigners said the technology smacked of the telescreens, in George Orwell's 1984, which spied on citizens.
Data sharing
The warning came to light via a story in online news magazine the Daily Beast which published an excerpt of a section of Samsung's privacy policy for its net-connected Smart TV sets. These record what is said when a button on a remote control is pressed.
The policy explains that the TV set will be listening to people in the same room to try to spot when commands or queries are issued via the remote. It goes on to say: "If your spoken words include personal or other sensitive information, that information will be among the data captured and transmitted to a third party."
Corynne McSherry, an intellectual property lawyer for the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) which campaigns on digital rights issues, told the Daily Beast that the third party was probably the company providing speech-to-text conversion for Samsung.
She added: "If I were the customer, I might like to know who that third party was, and I'd definitely like to know whether my words were being transmitted in a secure form." 
Soon after, an activist for the EFF circulated the policy statement on Twitter comparing it to George Orwell's description of the telescreens in his novel 1984 that listen to what people say in their homes.
Couple watching TVPrivacy experts wondered if the grabbed audio was protected as it was sent for analysis
In response to the widespread sharing of its policy statement, Samsung has issued a statement to clarify how voice activation works. It emphasised that the voice recognition feature is activated using the TV's remote control. 
It said the privacy policy was an attempt to be transparent with owners in order to help them make informed choices about whether to use some features on its Smart TV sets, adding that it took consumer privacy "very seriously".
Samsung said: "If a consumer consents and uses the voice recognition feature, voice data is provided to a third party during a requested voice command search. At that time, the voice data is sent to a server, which searches for the requested content then returns the desired content to the TV."
It added that it did not retain voice data or sell the audio being captured. Smart-TV owners would always know if voice activation was turned on because a microphone icon would be visible on the screen, it said. 
The third party handling the translation from speech to text is a firm called Nuance, which specialises in voice recognition, Samsung has confirmed to the BBC.
Samsung is not the first maker of a smart, net-connected TV to run into problems with the data the set collects. In late 2013, a UK IT consultant found his LG TV was gathering information about his viewing habits.
Publicity about the issue led LG to create a software update which ensured data collection was turned off for those who did not want to share information.

Meet Norman

The Eco-Warrior



H/T Upworthy

Monday, February 9, 2015

Team Names

The origin of sports team names is explored in this article.

Fascinating stuff.

http://ftw.usatoday.com/2015/02/how-nfl-teams-got-nickname-mlb-nba-nhl-origin

Another Favorite

Check out this clip below of a new show called "Fresh Off the Boat."



Super Quick & Easy Brownies


2-INGREDIENT NUTELLA BROWNIES
 
PREP TIME
COOK TIME
TOTAL TIME
 
Eggs and Nutella are all you will need to make these delicious brownies
Serves: Makes 9 Bars
INGREDIENTS
  • 4 large Eggs
  • 1 cup Nutella
  • Powdered Sugar, optional
INSTRUCTIONS
  1. Preheat oven to 350.
  2. Line an 8x8 brownie pan with parchment paper; set aside.
  3. Place the eggs in your mixer's bowl and beat for 5 to 7 minutes, or until the eggs have tripled in size. This may take up to 10 minutes with a handheld mixer on high.
  4. Heat the Nutella in the microwave for 60 seconds.
  5. Remove and stir.
  6. Slowly pour a stream of the warm Nutella over the eggs, beating until mixture is thoroughly combined.
  7. Pour batter into prepared pan and bake for 30 to 35 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the middle comes out with very few crumbs.
  8. Remove and let completely cool before cutting.
  9. Dust with powdered sugar.
  10. Cut into bars and serve.
NOTES
***DO NOT put the Nutella-Jar in the microwave. Measure out 1 cup of Nutella and microwave it in a microwave-safe bowl.

http://diethood.com/2-ingredient-nutella-brownies/

I Want One!

These are being tested in San Francisco now!

How fun is that?



Whitewashing the Truth

Mike Hucklebee (sigh) is upset about this truth President Obama spoke about atrocities carried out by  all  kinds of religions in the Name of God.

At the National Prayer Breakfast last week in Washington, D.C., Obama reminded folks that mass killings and injustices like those carried out during the Crusades, the Inquisition, Jim Crow and slavery were done by people who justified their actions using Christianity. Obama argued that there shouldn’t be a double standard when condemning Islamic State, or ISIS, group insurgents who carry out their attacks in the name of Islam.

The truth hurts.
Especially when it knocks you off your high horse of superiority.


Spreading the Love?

This is a really interesting article on a thriving town in Brazil called Americana, that was founded in part by Confederates from the American Civil War.

http://www.vice.com/read/welcome-to-americana-brazil-0000580-v22n2?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_term=Vox%20Newsletter%20All&utm_campaign=vox%20sentences%20-%202%2F9%2F2015

Lester Who?

The whole Brian Williams fiasco has lead to who might succeed him.  The article below frames the conversation around race.  Lester Holt has been, and currently is, the go to guy when Brian is absent. Most talk of a successor mentions there isn't one, but as quoted from the comments below, "What's a guy have to do?"

The money quote comes from Carole Simpson -

Carole Simpson, the retired African American weekend anchor at NBC and ABC, has a different answer. "Lester Holt has certainly proved himself capable of filling Brian Williams' shoes," Simpson said by email. "He does Weekend Today, Weekend Nightly News, Dateline and is the major substitute anchor for Brian. NBC has had him reporting from virtually all the major news events around the world. What's a guy have to do? Lester is the MAN.

"But, unfortunately, I expect NBC execs will come up with some 40ish, attractive white male to replace Brian (because he must be replaced.) You know — a Willie GeistThomas RobertsPeter AlexanderSteve Kornacki, etc. Lester by every measure should be a shoo-in, but I fear he will be relegated again to 'second banana.' Clearly the network news has become more interested in some 'eye candy' than a Walter Cronkite. And that candy is rarely chocolate."

http://www.theroot.com/blogs/journalisms/2015/02/brian_williams_takes_time_off_as_managing_editor_of_nbc_nightly_news_after.html