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Thursday, December 21, 2017

Aretha Franklin - A Change Is Gonna Come

Twin Teens: One Black, One White, Celebrate Their Differences

2 sets of identical twins switched at birth reunite

The Dap Kings Reflect On Recording Sharon Jones' Posthumous Single

The History of Black Protest in Sports | The New Yorker

How Trump makes extreme things look normal

Japan’s Town With No Waste

Take Sam to Church | December 20, 2017 Act 3 | Full Frontal on TBS

The Untold Story Of America's Southern Chinese [Chinese Food: An All-Ame...

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

How an Act of Hatred United a Texas Community

Samuel L. Jackson Teaches Acting | Official Trailer

Where babies in movies come from

The Real-Life Superhero Bringing Bike Thieves to Justice

Black Excellence in Science

An excerpt from OZY -

THE SEGREGATED BLACK SCHOOLS THAT DOMINATED IN SCIENCE
By Daniel Malloy

The segregation that built Sumner also fueled its excellence. The best-educated white minds of the time could become lawyers and doctors and business leaders. The cream of the African-American intellectual crop was blocked from many such opportunities, so they often became educators. In the 1930s, at a time when many white high school teachers did not have bachelor’s degrees, 44 percent of Sumner’s teachers had master’s degrees, according to research by Frank Manheim of George Mason University and Eckhard Hellmuth of the University of Missouri, Kansas City.

A history of Sumner written by its students in 1935 quotes an unnamed African-American educator: “Sumner is a child not of our own volition but rather an offspring of the race antipathy of a bygone period. It was a veritable blessing in disguise — a flower of which we may proudly say, ‘The bud had a bitter taste, but sweet indeed is the flower.’”

In 1952, the school systems on both sides of the Kansas-Missouri state line joined the International Science Fair movement. The Greater Kansas City Science and Engineering Fair went on to become one of America’s biggest. The prizes it handed out in the 1950s, according to Manheim and Hellmuth, went largely to Sumner students. Then the baton was picked up by Lincoln High, a Black school in Kansas City, Missouri, which dominated the competition into the 1960s. In 1963, Lincoln’s Vernice Marie Murray won a national first place in physics with a project called “Experimental Methods of Verifying Force.”

http://www.ozy.com/flashback/the-segregated-black-schools-that-dominated-in-science/79621

~~~~~~~~~~

Malcolm Gladwell does a podcast entitled "Miss Buchanan's Period of Adjustment" - number 8 on the list below - that does a masterful job of explaining the error in thinking that is associated with the Brown vs the Board of Education Supreme Court ruling.  Having been raised in segregated schools, it supports what I already knew to be true.


YouTube - The World's Best Film School?

An excerpt from Wired -

THE WORLD'S BEST FILM SCHOOL IS FREE ON YOUTUBE
By AUTHOR: DAVID PIERCE

Lessons from the Screenplay launched on June 8, 2016, with a video called "Gone Girl—Don't Underestimate the Screenwriter." In it, Tucker explains why screenplays matter more than you think, and dissects the techniques Gillian Flynn used in adapting her novel for the film. As Tucker narrates over clips from the movie, the corresponding lines and notes from the original screenplay appear underneath. The video blew up immediately, climbing the r/movies Subreddit and eventually landing on Reddit's front page. Lessons from the Screenplay had 8,000 subscribers after just one day, and the Gone Girl video racked up 200,000 views in a week.

With that, Tucker had found himself part of a rich, growing corner of YouTube. You could call it YouTube Film School, staffed by creators all over the platform who spend their time helping viewers understand how film and TV work. YouTube is rich with movie reviews, hilariously re-cut trailers, and haphazardly uploaded clips of dubious quality and legality. But the best channels are the ones that teach film as an art form, that help you understand why a particular cut or camera move makes you feel the way it does.

https://www.wired.com/story/youtube-film-school/


2017 Photos

From the Atlantic -

https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2017/12/the-most-2017-photos-ever/548789/

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

How can groups make good decisions? | Mariano Sigman and Dan Ariely

Let’s face it — American breakfast is really dessert

Boy Calls 911 on the Grinch

From USA Today -

To save Christmas, boy calls 911 on the Grinch and then helps cops nab him
By Therese Apel, The (Jackson, Miss.) Clarion Ledger

JACKSON, Miss. — It's actually a story of saving Christmas from the Grinch.

TyLon Pittman, a 5-year-old Mississippi boy, knew he was too little to take on the Grinch all by himself, so having identified the threat, he took action. TyLon called 911 to report that he did not want the Grinch to come steal his Christmas.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2017/12/18/boy-calls-911-report-grinch/960746001/

Monday, December 18, 2017

Portland’s Godfather of Soul

People Are Making Big Money Kicking Detroit Residents Out Of Their Homes...

Backpacks From Around the World

https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2017/12/the-things-kids-carried/548105/

15: A Quinceañera Story (2017) | Official Trailer | HBO

See Where NYC’s Manhole Covers Come From | Short Film Showcase

The Surprising Plant Helping Kenyan Farmers Prosper

콘트라베이스 최준혁_이탈리아여행 중 거리연주가들과 함께 즉흥연주_Autumn leaves

Message In a Flipbook: How Inmates Stay Connected to Family

Little Big Shots: Forever Young - A Couple of Feisty Grandmas (Episode H...

Straight No Chaser - "Mary, Did You Know?" (live, acoustic)

Saturday, December 16, 2017

Ember Trio - Cheap Thrills Sia Cover Violin and Cello

Black Violin performs "Dirty Orchestra" w/ The Imperial Symphony Orchest...

From Foster Care to Yale: Rodney Walker Speaker Promo

Robin Roberts to Omarosa: Bye, Felicia

Quote


Sesame Street: Bruno Mars: Don't Give Up

Wild elephant attacks a bus - BBC News

Olympic Short Track Speedskating Trials | Maame Biney Wins First 500-Met...

Thursday, December 14, 2017

Frank Lucas - Mini Bio

Remember the Titans - "Ain't No Mountain High Enough"

How a case gets to the US Supreme Court

Ascend Thailand’s Temple of the Rising Dragon

Thanking Black Women

An excerpt from Upworthy -

15 real ways to thank black women for carrying the country on their backs.
by Erin Canty

Here are 15 ways to spend your money, power, time, and resources to thank black women for carrying the political load.

1. Support black women running for office.

Yard signs. Phone banks. Field work. And, most importantly, monetary donations. No black women running for office near you? No excuses. Consider contributing to Stacey Abrams, a black Democrat running for governor of Georgia.

2. Get serious about closing the wage gap.

You've likely heard the statistic that women earn 78 cents for dollar a man makes doing the same job. That's white women. Black women earn about 64 cents for every dollar. Connect with and contribute to groups like the 78 Cents Project and the National Women's Law Center, who work tirelessly to bring about change in this arena.

http://www.upworthy.com/15-real-ways-to-thank-black-women-for-carrying-the-country-on-their-backs?c=upw1

How your digestive system works - Emma Bryce

This Man Has Comforted Over 1,200 Newborns

Black Women Save America from Roy Moore: The Daily Show

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Quote 2

H/T Alisha -

Quote

From USA Today Editorial -

A president who would all but call Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand a whore is not fit to clean the toilets in the Barack Obama Presidential Library or to shine the shoes of George W. Bush.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2017/12/12/trump-lows-ever-hit-rock-bottom-editorials-debates/945947001/

Why this elbow is a TIME person of the year

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Visit with Santa Cold Open - SNL

Fighting Mass Incarceration With An App

An excerpt from Salon -

Want to fight America’s racist mass-incarceration system? There’s an app for that
The app Appolition automatically collects your spare change to help bail disadvantaged black people out of jail
By Rachel Leah

As a social engineer, Kortney Ziegler is always thinking of new ideas and posting them to his Twitter.
"An app that converts your daily change into bail money to free black people," he tweeted in July.

Like many of his brainstorms, it was a one-off gesture thrown into the digital ether. But something was different about this one. It quickly got hundreds of retweets and affirmations. "I'd sign up!" many users wrote back.

Impressed and inspired by the response, Ziegler decided to make the app a reality.

The result is the web-based service "Appolition," which officially came to life on Nov. 14. Ziegler, along with his co-founders in Atlanta, hoped to reach 200 users by mid-December. As of today, Appolition has close to 6,000. And its current, web-based form is just the beginning. Ziegler says mobile apps for iPhone and Android users are on the way.

Here's how it works: Appolition connects to your bank account and rounds up each purchase you make to the nearest dollar. The spare change is then donated automatically once it accrues to at least 50 cents. By signing in to the website, it takes you to a personal secure dashboard where you can track your contributions to bail relief as you spend. It's both passive — you don't even notice you're using it — and effective.

https://www.salon.com/2017/12/09/want-to-fight-americas-racist-mass-incarceration-system-theres-an-app-for-that/

https://appolition.us


Saturday, December 9, 2017

It Shouldn't Be This Hard

An excerpt from Salon -

NYC’s high school wars: Helicopter parenting hits a new peak
“School choice” in New York has birthed a bizarre system that rewards parental madness and reinforces inequality
By ANDREW O'HEHIR

I spent eight hours trapped with hundreds of other parents in the prison-like cafeteria at Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School — that’s the performing arts school from “Fame” — while my daughter auditioned for a spot in their drama program. (Hey, she got a call-back.) We waited in a four-block-long line for 90 minutes to get into a brief presentation at a former groovy-lefty alternative school that is now — this is not so much ironic as inevitable — intensely competitive and desirable. My son and I tried to visit a tiny math-and-science target school in Harlem (which features, I kid you not, mandatory German) and found ourselves in a mob scene perhaps five times the size of the school’s entire student population. But there was one small moment, in itself neither controversial nor alarming, that summed up this whole strange experience.

https://www.salon.com/2017/12/09/nycs-high-school-wars-helicopter-parenting-hits-a-new-peak/?source=newsletter


Will Smith - Just The Two Of Us

Grover Washington Jr - Just the two of us



Fantasia - What Christmas Means To Me

Gregory Porter - The Christmas Song

Angels We Have Heard on High (Christmas w/ 32 fingers and 8 thumbs) - Th...

Despacito - Luis Fonsi (Cello + Piano Cover by Brooklyn Duo)

Christmas With Jon Baptiste

Tracee Ellis Ross’ Children’s Book for Handsy Men

It Says It All

An excerpt from the Huffington Post -

This Book’s Title Says What We’re All Thinking About Donald Trump
“The windows are dark in D.C./ Your staff huddles down to silently weep/ I’ll read you one last story from InfoWars/ If you promise you’ll then go to sleep.”
By David Moye



https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/stop-tweeting-donald-trump-book_us_5a27127de4b0c2117626883e?ncid=APPLENEWS00001

Black Superpower of Detection

An excerpt from Very Smart Brothas -

Is It Safe Yet to Admit How Shocked I Am That There Are Actual Black People Who Had No Idea Meghan Markle Is (Partially) Black?
By Damon Young

From “The One Superpower All Black People Possess? Detecting Blackness”:

It doesn’t matter if you have one drop or a KFC bucket full of Zulu blood. We see Black down the hall. We see Black in the mall. We see Black across the street. We see Black across the tweets. Shit, we see Black before Black sees itself. And sometimes even when Black refuses to see itself.

Somewhere in America today a Black person is passing for White. And he’s been able to fool the people at his job, the people at his church, and the people in his girlfriend’s family. And that Black person is going to be in the same supermarket aisle as another Black person. And that Black person is going to take one look at him and think “Nah, bruh.”

https://verysmartbrothas.theroot.com/is-it-safe-yet-to-admit-how-shocked-i-am-that-there-are-1821098302?utm_source=theroot_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2017-12-08





Friday, December 8, 2017

Thieving Squirrel

An excerpt from the Boston Globe -

Fat squirrel steals pricey goods left out for delivery folks
By ASSOCIATED PRESS



MAPLEWOOD, N.J. — An obese squirrel was caught on video stealing gourmet chocolate and lip balm that a family leaves outside as a holiday treat for delivery people.

Michele Boudreaux, of Maplewood, N.J., said on her blog she provides candy, snacks, tissues, hand warmers, and other goodies on her doorstep every year. She’s never had any issues before, but this year, her basket was raided within hours of being set outside her home.

The thief seemed to be targeting the priciest stuff, including about 25 squares of Ghirardelli chocolate, she said.

http://www.bostonglobe.com/news/nation/2017/12/07/fat-squirrel-steals-pricey-goods-left-out-for-delivery-folks/D0AYhIWpj0XLoHmaupdtdL/story.html?et_rid=606374700&s_campaign=todaysheadlines:newsletter

Tapping for Justice

In Other News: The GOP Loosens Gun Control and a Reporter Claps Back: Th...

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

The GOP Gives America's Neediest Millionaires a Tax Break: The Daily Show

Ballerina Michaela DePrince’s Remarkable Journey | Megyn Kelly | NBC News

Black Wall Street

An excerpt from OZY -

HISTORY HANGS HEAVILY OVER TULSA’S LONE BLACK COUNCILWOMAN
By Nick Fouriezos

To engage with Vanessa Hall-Harper is to grapple with the tragic history of race relations in Tulsa. Reckoning is the only option when sitting down with the 46-year-old, who, within minutes, is digging into what was — and what could have been.

They called the city councilor’s North Tulsa district “Black Wall Street” in the early 20th century, when African-American aristocrats paraded their automobiles down roads lined with more than 200 Black-owned businesses. But on May 31, 1921, everything changed. Resentment over Black wealth erupted, with white vigilantes taking to the streets, killing at least 300 of their neighbors of color and firebombing their businesses in what would be dubbed a “race riot” by the history books — and then promptly forgotten.

http://www.ozy.com/politics-and-power/history-hangs-heavily-over-tulsas-lone-black-councilwoman/82011

Lorraine Hansberry: Sighted Eyes/Feeling Heart - Trailer

Rugby's Changing Face

An excerpt from OZY -

RUGBY'S CHANGING FACE: FROM THE PRIVILEGED TO THE DOWNTRODDEN
By Tal Pinchevsky

Since its birth in early 19th-century Britain, rugby has largely remained a bastion of upper-class privilege. The sport spread across the breadth of the British Empire but remained an elite activity in most countries even after the end of colonial rule, despite occasional dents to that shell of privilege. Now, an emerging breed of young rugby players is challenging that old order more decisively than ever.

A refugee from the Ivory Coast, 21-year-old Karwhin recently joined the Redcliffe Dolphins rugby club near Brisbane, Australia, a team that in the past has given the country several national players. After living in a refugee camp along the Bosnia-Croatia border as a child, Admir Cejvanovic is now a fixture on Canada’s national team for rugby sevens — a faster, seven-a-side version of the sport. Mo Mustafa, a Palestinian refugee who settled in Britain, represented England students internationally before taking up medical studies. Italian national team player Mata Maxime Mbanda’s parents came to Italy from the Democratic Republic of Congo. Ohio-born Carlin Isles bounced around the foster care system before emerging as among the United States’ top rugby sevens players. In war-torn Benghazi, young Libyan men have formed a rugby union, and the city is building a stadium that will host Middle Eastern and North African teams in an international tournament next year. And the Tre Rose rugby club in the Italian province of Alessandria is made up almost entirely of Syrian refugees who have fled the civil war in their homeland.

http://www.ozy.com/the-huddle/rugbys-changing-face-from-the-privileged-to-the-downtrodden/82159


He Tried to Help

An excerpt from CNN -

Obama tried to save Trump from a colossal mistake
By Michael D'Antonio

With every revelation in the Trump-Russia controversy it's becoming clear that the most important moment in Donald Trump's transition involved the man he seems to detest the most.

Two days after the election, Barack Obama delivered a face-to-face warning to Trump about the risk of keeping retired Gen. Michael Flynn around. Trump ignored the advice and instead invested maximum trust in Flynn as he made him national security adviser.

Obama's effort to save Trump and the nation from Flynn is full of painful irony. Remember, Trump is the man who spent years promoting racist conspiracy theories suggesting Obama was foreign-born and thus not legally qualified to be president. Flynn, whom Obama dismissed because of concerns about his leadership, then mocked Obama's ally, Hillary Clinton, with chants of "lock her up" during the campaign.

Obama could have stayed mum. A lesser man would have savored the knowledge that Trump and Flynn were headed for crisis. Obama did his duty by trying to help his successor.

The judgment Obama showed was typical for a president who, prior to politics, was an expert in constitutional law and understood his responsibilities to fulfill the oath he took to "preserve, protect and defend" it.

http://www.cnn.com/2017/12/04/opinions/obama-tried-to-save-trump-from-mistake-opinion-dantonio/index.html

Friday, December 1, 2017

Private School vs Public School - How Do The Students Compare?

The Michelangelo of Microsoft Excel

Trapped in Trump's World

An excerpt from New York Magazine -

America Is Trapped in Trump’s Delusional World
By Andrew Sullivan

This past week was, in some ways, the most potent distillation of the Trump era we have yet encountered. This is not because any single incident is worse than any previous one over the past year. It’s because the last few days have brought all of them together in a new, concentrated way — a super-storm, as it were, of liberal democratic destruction. We have deranged tweeting; truly surreal lies; mindless GOP tribalism; evangelicals making excuses for the molestation of minors; further assaults on the free press; an unprecedented attack on the most reliable Atlantic ally; the demonization of personal enemies; stupendous tribal hypocrisy with respect to sexual abuse; the White House’s endorsement of a foreign neo-fascist hate group; the vengeful hanging out to dry of a Cabinet member; and the attempt to pass a catastrophic omnibus piece of legislation in one mad, blind rush in order to get a “win.” And all in a few days!

At its center is mental illness. It radiates out of the center like a toxin in the blood. And this, again, is nothing new. On Trump’s first day in office, with respect to the size of his inauguration crowd, he insisted that what was demonstrably, visibly, incontrovertibly false was actually true. At that moment, we learned that all the lies and exaggerations and provocations of the previous year were not just campaign tools, designed to con and distract, but actually constitutive of his core mental health. He was not lying, as lying is usually understood. He was expressing what he believed to be true, because his ego demanded it be true. And for Trump, as we now know, there is no reality outside his own perfervidly narcissistic consciousness.

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/12/andrew-sullivan-america-is-trapped-in-trumps-delusions.html




Kaep Receives Ali Award

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

Colin Kaepernick receives Muhammad Ali Legacy Award from Sports Illustrated
By Des Bieler

For risking a lucrative athletic career in his prime by staging protests against injustice, Colin Kaepernick has often been compared to Muhammad Ali. Thus, in giving the former 49ers quarterback an annual award named in honor of the boxing icon, Sports Illustrated declared that “no winner has been more fitting than Kaepernick.”

In an essay, Sports Illustrated’s Michael Rosenberg wrote, “In the last 16 months, Kaepernick’s truth has been twisted, distorted and used for political gain. It has cost him at least a year of his NFL career and the income that should have come with it. But still, it is his truth. He has not wavered from it. He does not regret speaking it. He has caused millions of people to examine it. And, quietly, he has donated nearly a million dollars to support it.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/early-lead/wp/2017/11/30/colin-kaepernick-receives-muhammad-ali-legacy-award-from-sports-illustrated/?utm_term=.5cf0c25fffe8