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Sunday, September 8, 2019

University of Alabama dean resigns after past tweets are posted in conservative news article

Just seven months into his role as the dean of students at the University of Alabama, Jamie R. Riley has resigned from his position after some of his past tweets, which criticized the American flag and the often turbulent relationship between police officers and the Black community, were unveiled by ultra-conservative news site Breitbart News.

Riley, who was hired last December as the University of Alabama’s assistant vice president and dean of students, resigned on Thursday. This was one day after Breitbart News published an article detailing some of Riley’s past tweets, according to campus newspaper The Crimson
White. Riley started working for the university in February.

READ MORE: Alabama student hurling racist slurs in video identified and kicked out of school

“For us right now, basically all I can tell you is that the University and Dr. Riley have mutually agreed to part ways,” Jackson Fuentes, press secretary for the University of Alabama Student Government Association, told the school newspaper. “So yeah, that’s true, and we do wish him the best.”

Chris Bryant, assistant director of the Division of Strategic Communications, issued an official statement confirming Riley’s resignation.

“Dr. Jamie Riley has resigned his position at The University of Alabama by mutual agreement,” Bryant said in the statement, according to The Crimson White. “Neither party will have any further comments.”

In the Breitbart News article, the reporter pulled an old tweet that Riley put out, which reportedly read: “The [American flag emoji] flag represents a systemic history of racism for my people,” Riley wrote in the tweet. “Police are a part of that system. Is it that hard to see the correlation?”

Fox News host Laura Ingraham tweeted the Breitbart News article to her conservative followers.

 

The Breitbart News article also included an October 2017 tweet, in which Riley said white people have “0 opinion” on racism because white people cannot experience racism.

READ MORE: Nervous about being a first-gen student? No worries, Michelle Obama’s got you

“I’m baffled about how the first thing white people say is, ‘That’s not racist!’ when they can’t even experience racism,” Riley wrote in the tweet. “You have 0 opinion!”

Prior to working at the University of Alabama, Riley served as the executive director and chief operating officer of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. He also previously worked in student affairs and diversity roles at Johns Hopkins University, The University of California-Berkeley and Morehouse College.

 

The post University of Alabama dean resigns after past tweets are posted in conservative news article appeared first on theGrio.



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‘This Is Us’ star Susan Kelechi Watson announces her engagement

Couples sue over Virginia marriage license racial identity requirement

More than 50 years after the Supreme Court struck down a Virginia law banning interracial marriage, Virginia is still requiring couples to identify their race before approving marriage licenses — a stipulation that prompted three couples to file a lawsuit against the state.

The couples filed the suit on Thursday in the Eastern District of Virginia, accusing the state requirement of being “offensive,” “unconstitutional” and “reflective of a racist past,” according to NBC News.

READ MORE: RHOA star Cynthia Bailey says yes to boyfriend’s surprise marriage proposal

Sophie Rogers and her fiancé, Brandyn Churchill — one of the couples in the suit — tried to obtain a marriage license in the Rockbridge Circuit Court clerk’s office but were told that if they failed to list their race, they would not be receiving a marriage license in advance of their Oct. 19 nuptials.

Ashley Ramkishun and her fiancé, Samuel Sarfo, were told the same thing. The couple, who met in Virginia, don’t think it’s right to be forced to divulge their racial identity to get a marriage license, according to the suit.

Couple Amelia Spencer and Kendall Poole also hope to marry in Virginia “but not if [they] must label [themselves] with a race,” NBC News reported from the suit.

So far, all three couples have been denied a marriage license simply because they won’t check a box and state their race, the suit alleges.

“Plaintiffs deem the requirement of racial labeling to be scientifically baseless, misleading, highly controversial, a matter of opinion, practically useless, offensive to human dignity, an invasion of personal privacy compelling an unwanted public categorization of oneself, and reflective of a racist past,” the lawsuit states, according to NBC News.

READ MORE: U.S. Circuit Court rules it is legal to refuse jobs to people with dreadlocks

In the lawsuit, the couples seek “reasonable costs,” which include covering attorney’s fees. In addition, Rogers and Churchill are hoping a judge will prohibit the clerk from denying them a marriage license so that they can still get hitched next month.

Even though the Supreme Court prohibited Virginia from banning interracial marriage in the 1967 Loving v. Virginia case, Virginia is one of eight states that continue to ask couples to list their race before they are allowed to marry, according to the lawsuit. The other states include Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Kentucky, Louisiana, and Minnesota. In New Hampshire, a court clerk fills out the information pertaining to a couple’s race.

What Virginia needs this information for is anyone’s guess. So much for the idea of a post-racial America.

The post Couples sue over Virginia marriage license racial identity requirement appeared first on theGrio.



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2022 World Cup: Liberia through after dramatic penalty save from teenage keeper

18-year-old goalkeeper Ashley Williams is Liberia's hero after he saves a stoppage-time penalty in Sierra Leone to help his country advance in World Cup qualifying.

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2022 World Cup: Tanzania and Ethiopia advance to group phase of qualifiers

Tanzania beat Burundi on penalties to reach the group phase of 2022 World Cup qualifying as Ethiopia advance with an away-goals win over Lesotho.

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South African crowds walk out of anti-xenophobia speech

An attempt to quell this week's anti-foreigner violence is met with heckles followed by a mass walkout.

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Supreme Court Justices tuning in to cable television civil rights lawsuit

WASHINGTON (AP) — Comedian and media mogul Byron Allen wants TV viewers to watch the channels his company produces — from one that runs “Judge Judy”-like shows all day to those dedicated to comedy, cars, food and pets. But while many distributors carry Allen’s channels, two cable giants have refused.

Allen says the reason is that he’s Black, and so he’s sued for racial discrimination. An appeals court has let his lawsuits go forward, but now the Supreme Court will weigh in and could deliver a setback.

The justices will hear arguments Nov. 13 in a $20 billion lawsuit that Allen filed against Comcast, with the outcome also affecting a $10 billion case he has filed against Charter Communications.

If Allen prevails, Black-owned businesses will have an easier time winning suits that allege discrimination in contracting. If Comcast wins, the bar will be high to bring and succeed with similar suits.

READ MORE: BYRON ALLEN: Donald Trump’s Department of Justice and Comcast are Working Together to Destroy a Civil Rights Law in the U.S. Supreme Court

The question for the justices is whether Allen needs to show that race was just a factor in Comcast’s decision not to offer him a contract or whether it was the sole factor.

Allen said his case is about getting rid of institutionalized racism. Pursuing that claim, he said, “is one of the greatest things I’ve ever done in my life” and “one of the things I’m most proud of.”

But Comcast says its decision not to carry Allen’s channels has nothing to do with race. Allen’s content is “not particularly original” and “not particularly high quality,” said Comcast lawyer Lynn Charytan, and Comcast simply made an editorial decision not to carry it.

A trial court dismissed Allen’s suit three times before an appeals court, according to Comcast, wrongly let it go forward . The Trump administration has sided with Comcast.

Allen, 58, began his route to media mogul as a child when his family moved from Detroit to Los Angeles. His mother got a job at NBC, which meant Allen hung around the studios. He would see Johnny Carson tape “The Tonight Show” and comedian Flip Wilson rehearse for his variety show.

As a teenager, Allen began doing comedy himself, and he appeared on the “Tonight Show” for the first time when he was 18. That led to a job as a host for reality television forerunner “Real People” while he was a student at the University of Southern California. Ultimately, Allen’s interests turned to the business of television, and in 1993 he founded his own media company.

READ MORE: Black woman uses 153-year old civil rights law to sue PNC bank for racial profiling  

Today his Los Angeles-based Entertainment Studios has 10 television networks, including Cars.tv, Comedy.tv, Pets.tv, Recipe.tv and JusticeCentral.tv. Last year, he bought The Weather Channel. He also has a movie distribution company.

But Comcast and Charter Communications, the nation’s two largest cable providers, have passed on carrying Allen’s channels. Other distributors including Verizon FIOS do carry the channels. So do the now-merged AT&T and DirecTV after Allen sued them and they settled.

Comcast has called Allen’s suit “a scam,” saying it and others that Allen filed were intended to generate media attention and timed to exploit when the companies were working on mergers. Comcast has noted that Allen originally sued Comcast, but also civil rights groups including the NAACP and National Urban league, saying they had conspired to discriminate against him. Comcast has called the allegations preposterous.

READ MORE: Los Angeles Urban League urges Supreme Court to protect the Civil Rights Act Of 1866  

“This is really a run-of-the-mill carriage dispute that has been dressed by Mr. Allen in the garb of racial discrimination for purposes of his own,” said Comcast lawyer Miguel Estrada.

But Skip Miller, one of Allen’s lawyers, said Allen’s channels are “perfectly good channels” and “popular programming in many areas.” Miller said he cannot see any legitimate reason that Comcast and Charter would refuse to carry them.

“There’s no reason, no reason in our opinion, other than he’s black,” Miller said.

Allen sued Comcast in 2015, pointing to Section 1981 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 . Enacted a year after the Civil War ended, the law bars racial discrimination, saying all people should have “the same right … to make and enforce contracts … as is enjoyed by white citizens.”

Allen and his lawyers argue that to sue under the law and win, he only needs to show that his race played a factor in Comcast’s decision not to offer him a contract. Comcast says Allen has to demonstrate that he didn’t get a contract solely because of his race.

No matter what the justices decide, Allen is prepared to make either argument and for the case to continue after the Supreme Court’s decision, his lawyer said. This past week he got support from the Los Angeles Urban League, which threatened Comcast with a boycott and other action if it doesn’t drop the case.

“This case is bigger than me,” Allen said.


Along with the properties mentioned in the article above, theGrio.com is also owned and operated by Entertainment Studios. 

The post Supreme Court Justices tuning in to cable television civil rights lawsuit appeared first on theGrio.



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Claudio Ranieri in race to take over as new Guinea coach

Former Chelsea and Leicester City coach Claudio Ranieri is shortlisted for the vacant position of Guinea national coach.

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Imagine the Views From This Italian-Designed Swiss Train

Italian design firm Pininfarina has designed the new rail cars with nearly floor-to-ceiling windows for a line in the Swiss Alps.

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The Boston Straight Pride Parade Tops This Week's Internet News Roundup

Also, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson had a very bad week and Walmart took a stand to curb gun violence.

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Kenyan Brigid Kosgei sets half marathon record

Mo Farah wins a record sixth consecutive Great North Run, while Brigid Kosgei sets a new half marathon world record to win the women's race.

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8 Best Electric Bikes for Every Kind of Ride (2019)

We've tested ebikes for commuting, mountain biking, gravel, and even a few that can fold up. These are our favorites.

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Are We All Wrong About Black Holes?

A philosopher of science worries that the analogy between black holes and thermodynamics has been stretched too far.

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2022 World Cup: Botswana held 0-0 by Malawi at home in first leg of qualifier

Botswana are held 0-0 by Malawi on Saturday as home sides continue to struggle in 2022 World Cup first round first leg qualifiers across Africa.

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Concerning Consent, Chappelle, and Canceling Cancel Culture

Dave Chappelle hates cancel culture. Some people have canceled him. Should we just cancel cancel culture already?

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Huge crowds attend Pope's mass in Madagascar

Many of the worshippers brave the cold and wind, spending nights outdoors ahead of his arrival.

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World Cup qualifying: Somalia national team's history-making driving instructor

Somalia defender and Manchester driving instructor Mohamud Ali was part of one of the biggest upsets in the history of international football.

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Saturday, September 7, 2019

Samson Ebukam: 'American football helped me fight racism in US'

Samson Ebukam is a Nigerian-born American football player who used sport to overcome bullying in US.

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Nigeria: Why is it struggling to meet its tax targets?

Nigeria says more people than ever are paying tax - but government revenues are not growing

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GM's Search for In-Car Tech Lands on Google

The automaker and the tech giant say Google's Android software will underpin the infotainment systems in future GM cars.

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Letter regarding action on the Media Lab

The following email was sent today to the MIT community by President L. Rafael Reif.

To the members of the MIT community,

Last night, The New Yorker published an article that contains deeply disturbing allegations about the engagement between individuals at the Media Lab and Jeffrey Epstein.

Because the accusations in the story are extremely serious, they demand an immediate, thorough and independent investigation. This morning, I asked MIT’s General Counsel to engage a prominent law firm to design and conduct this process. I expect the firm to conduct this review as swiftly as possible, and to report back to me and to the Executive Committee of the MIT Corporation, MIT’s governing board.

This afternoon, Joi Ito submitted his resignation as Director of the Media Lab and as a professor and employee of the Institute.

As I described in my previous letter, the acceptance of the Epstein gifts involved a mistake of judgment. We are actively assessing how best to improve our policies, processes and procedures to fully reflect MIT’s values and prevent such mistakes in the future. Our internal review process continues, and what we learn from it will inform the path ahead.

Sincerely,

L. Rafael Reif



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Black Biz Excellence: Blended Designs brings fashion and empowerment to bookbags

NeNe Leakes and Cynthia Bailey spotted in reportedly heated conversation while filming RHOA season 12

MLK’s daughter reacts to GOP leader saying ““I Bet MLK Wishes He’d Had a Sniper by His Side That Day”

An official of the Republican party is receiving backlash after saying that Martin Luther King Jr. would have wanted someone armed with him the day he was assassinated.

In a Facebook post Kristina Cook, chairman of the Denver Republican Party wrote, “I Bet MLK Wishes he’d Had A Sniper by his Side That Day,” reports Newsweek.

The post after someone on Facebook posted an old photo of her with a gun. The comment stated that it’s no wonder Cook was unwanted at Denver’s MLK march and that MLK would not approve of the firearm, Colorado Times Recorder reported.

Read More: Killer Mike doesn’t trust Black leaders who want to take guns from Black folks

But the conversation didn’t stop there. Bernice King, daughter of the late Dr. King, responded on Twitter by saying: “Listen to his speech, ‘I’ve Been To The Mountaintop,’ delivered the evening before he was assassinated. My father knew his time on earth was short. He stood by his nonviolent philosophy. He would not have wanted a gun battle on his behalf. Don’t use him for this.”

One person even took to twitter to express their criticism of Cook’s comment.

Cook released a statement saying, “Regardless of the context of the conversation, my comment about Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. drew the attention of Dr. Bernice King. Her tweet helped me understand that while I wish that he’d had a protective detail on that day so that he’d still be with us, that would not have been her father’s wish. I have reached out privately to Dr. King to thank her for helping me understand her father’s perspective. I will also be issuing a public response to her tweet following an opportunity to speak with her further.”

Read More: Sen. Kamala Harris proposes plan to keep guns out of the hands of domestic terrorists

“We could use Dr. Martin Luther King’s presence in this divided world. Doctored memes like the one being circulated of me only serve to increase the division, when in a case like this both sides share the same ultimate respect for Dr. King. The Denver County Republican Party will continue to reach a hand over that divide in the hopes that we can join others looking to find unity, peace, and healing for our community.”

The post MLK’s daughter reacts to GOP leader saying ““I Bet MLK Wishes He’d Had a Sniper by His Side That Day” appeared first on theGrio.



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Berry Gordy Donates $4 Million to Motown Museum

As reported by Billboard, Motown legend Berry Gordy has donated $4 million to Motown Museum’s expansion project. The money donated by Gordy will help fund a targeted $50 million, 50,000-square-foot complex at the Hitsville, U.S.A. site in Detroit.

The Motown Museum is located in the Motor City building where Gordy started and built his legendary music label, Motown Records. As of last year, a total of around $18 million was raised.

“I’m excited about the future of Motown Museum and happy to support it,” Gordy said in a release. “Not only will the expanded museum entertain and tell the stories of talented and creative people who succeeded against all odds, but it will also inspire and create opportunity for people to explore their dreams the way I did mine. I couldn’t be prouder to be a part of that.”

 

Gordy launched Motown in 1959. He then moved the label to Los Angeles in 1972 and sold the label in 1988. Esther Gordy Edwards, his late sister, founded Motown Museum in the former “Hitsville U.S.A.” headquarters on West Grand Boulevard in 1985.

Museum chairwoman and CEO Robin Terry, who is the grand-niece of Gordy, says, “There would be no Motown legacy, Motown Sound, or Motown Museum without Berry Gordy. He has given the world a soundtrack to live by; Detroit a legacy of pride; and our youth an example of entrepreneurial and creative excellence,” Terry says in the release. She also called the donation “transformative and generous.”

Gordy, a former auto plant worker, received an $800 loan in 1959 from the Gordy family’s Ber-Berry Co-operative. He used that money to finance his first independent record label called Tamla Records and eventually that created the Motown Record Corp. The revolutionary label started the careers of The Jackson 5, The Temptations, Smokey Robinson, Diana Ross & the Supremes, Stevie Wonder, the Four Tops, Marvin Gaye, and in its later years Erykah Badu, Boyz II Men, Johnny Gil, Stacey Lattisaw, and even actor Bruce Willis.

In the same year that Gordy was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, he eventually sold Motown for $61 million in 1988 to MCA.



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Chance the Rapper and Kirsten Corley welcome a baby girl

Chance the Rapper and wife Kirsten Corley‘s new bundle of joy has arrived.

The newborn’s arrival was announced on Corley’s Instagram on Friday, Sept. 6., where she welcomed their second baby child, a girl named Marli, according to E! News.

In an Instagram post-Kirsten shared the announcement with fans, stating, “Our sweet baby girl, Marli, is here.” The message also was accompanied by a photo of Marli without her face showing, and onesie that says, “I am who he says I am.”

Read More: Chance the Rapper: ‘My wife saved my life by going celibate’

Baby Marli is the couples second daughter; they also are the parents to 3-year-old Kensli Bennett.

The news of the couple expecting again was announced in March when Kirsten told fans they were expecting baby number two, according to E! News. 

“Oh yeah, we’re pregnant,” she posted on Instagram, accompanied by a photo of her growing baby bump. Chance, whose real name is Chancelor Jonathan Bennett, also commented under the picture saying, “New baby droppin September.”

This post came only a week after the couple wed in Newport Beach, Calif. with close family and friends. They had been legally married for over two months prior to their ceremony. The couple legally wed on December 27, at the Cook County clerk’s office in Chicago, according to the Chicago Tribune.

Read More: Chance The Rapper and Kirsten Corley tie the knot in California

This year has been eventful for the Bennett family, with weddings and baby announcements. Outside of older sister Kensli, Marli will also have a cousin her age to play with as well. Last December Chance’s brother, Taylor Bennett and girlfriend Kayla, announced the birth of their baby boy Charlie.

The Grammy award-winning father also dropped his second album in July, titled The Big Day. The album features over 20 songs with features from artists like Megan Thee StallionGucci ManeJohn Legend, and Nicki Minaj.

Congrats to the family of 4!!!

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Ciara and Russell Wilson’s first day of school photo of kids is too cute to miss

Rumor Patrol: Serena Williams’ coach concerned about Meghan Markle’s appearance at U.S. Open

Serena Williams remains hopeful as she swings her way into the Grand Slam final, but her team has some doubts.

Williams team is concerned she may not perform her best due to Meghan Markle’s appearance at the match, according to Page Six.

“Serena asked her coach about Meghan coming when she won last night, and everyone is worried, as tennis players are very superstitious, and Serena lost when Meghan came to watch her at Wimbledon,” a source told us Page Six.

“[Williams’ coach] Patrick keeps telling her, ‘Focus focus focus.’ The aim is getting her to win her 24th Grand Slam.”

This will be a last-minute trip across the pond for the Duchess but should come as no surprise. Markle and Williams have been friends since meeting at the Super Bowl in 2010. Williams also helped throw Markle’s stateside baby shower and attended the royal wedding last spring where Markle wed, Prince Harry.

Although these girlfriends have built a bond, Williams’ coach feels confident that Markle’s presence won’t sway the match at all.

“Not at all,” he said. “There will be 22,000 people in the stadium; 23,000, actually. One more or less won’t change a thing.”

This will be Markle’s first trip solo since giving birth to 4-month-old son Archie. It will also be her first visit back to the US since her baby shower in New York, this past February.

But some think Markle is using this trip to support Williams, as a publicity stunt to save face after her and husband Prince Harry experienced some backlash this summer, Page Six reported.

Markle put a no photo ban into place at Wimbledon, and even though they identify as environmentalists, some were shocked to know they took a private jet for a family vacation to Elton John’s house in France.

If Williams wins, she has the chance to make Grand Slam history. This will be Williams’ fourth attempt to tie Margaret Court’s record of 24 Grand Slam singles titles.

The post Rumor Patrol: Serena Williams’ coach concerned about Meghan Markle’s appearance at U.S. Open appeared first on theGrio.



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Hampton University Is Offering Displaced Bahamas College Students A Free Semester

Hampton University has entered into an agreement with the University of the Bahamas-North to allow its students displaced due to Hurricane Dorian to finish their studies free in Hampton, Virginia. The archipelago nation of the Bahamas was recently devastated by the Category 5 hurricane with winds up to 185 miles per hour. Countless homes and building structures have been destroyed. The confirmed death toll has reached 30 and is expected to increase.

“I think this agreement is something that can be helpful to a great number of students and families and is part of something I’ve tried to do my entire career—helping people to achieve and meet their goals,” said Dr. William R. Harvey, president of Hampton University, in a statement.

In addition to offering University of the Bahamas students the ability to attend free classes for the remainder of the fall 2019 semester, the HBCU is also covering room and board for the Bahamian students. After the semester is over, University of Bahamas students will have the option to stay at Hampton University to finish their education at regular tuition and fees.

 

Lawrence Rigby, a 2015 graduate of Hampton University, is pleased with his school’s empathy and commitment to the Bahamian students.

“Hampton has been the educational choice for many Bahamians over its long history. I am grateful to President Harvey and university leadership on this demonstration of kindness and humanity to my home in our time of need,” said Rigby, 2014-2015 Student Government Association President from Nassau, New Providence. “Young Bahamians from Abaco and Grand Bahama who are looking for the tools to rebuild their lives and our home [and] will find them at Hampton.”

The two universities do have a connection. Before Dr. Rodney Smith became president of the University of the Bahamas, he served as Administrative Vice President and Chief Planning Officer at Hampton.

 



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An Unprecedented Cyberattack Hit the US Power Grid

Exposed Facebook phone numbers, an XKCD breach, and more of the week's top security news.

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Space Photos of the Week: Hurricane Dorian and Other Spirals

It's a universal shape, and we find it throughout the cosmos.

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Is It OK to Change Hurricane Forecasts With a Sharpie Doodle?

A physicist wades into the dreaded "cone of uncertainty" surrounding White House weather advisories.

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Everyone Should Celebrate Their Love for Dungeons & Dragons

It took author Matt Bell a while to get there, but now he encourages everyone to do the same.

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Samuel Eto'o: Cameroonian legend signals 'the end' to his playing career

Cameroon's four-time African player of the year, Samuel Eto'o, signals 'the end' to his glittering 22-year career as a professional footballer.

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5 Best Gaming Desktop PCs (2019): Custom, High-End, Cheap

I assure you, these PC battle stations are fully armed and operational. They're also WIRED Recommended.

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2022 World Cup: Angola and Togo secure positive results away from home in qualifiers

Angola and Togo make encouraging starts in their bids to reach the 2022 World Cup finals with positive away results in the first legs of their first round ties.

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14 Great Weekend Tech Deals: Garmin, Instant Pot, and More

Whet your appetite for all the new tech this autumn, with our favorite sales on gaming laptops, loudspeakers, and more.

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The Windows 10 Privacy Settings You Should Check Right Now

Whether you're new to Windows 10 or have been using it for years, take a minute to lock down your privacy.

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Robert Mugabe granted national hero status and official mourning

Days of national mourning commence in Zimbabwe for its controversial former leader.

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Friday, September 6, 2019

Phil Terrill: ‘Collision Course’ Author Cracks The Code Of What Manhood Is

BE Modern Man: Phil Terrill

Tech evangelist and author; 28; Technology company business program manager

Instagram: @catchpt

Currently, I am working as a global program manager at a top tech company based in Redmond, Washington. This provides me an opportunity to support a global team helping our customers achieve satisfaction from their technology investments. Part of my early success has lead to a feature set of stories to help other sellers and customer success professionals reach the top, which is included in a book called Sales Success Stories: Vol 1 by Scott Ingram.

In addition, I have been able to collaborate outside of my primary role to help land programming to support young, black men pursuing opportunities in tech.

HOW DO YOU DEFINE MANHOOD?

My definition of manhood has evolved over the years. I used to think it was the generational definition of being a provider, good man, loyal to your spouse, present for children, educated, invested in the church, among other things. Nowadays, it is still those things but more has been added to the list.

Manhood is a sense of purpose, an innate desire to represent everything God (or whomever you pray to) designed you to be in the human form.

Manhood is about accepting your assignment to build up your community. To educate and lead in times of controversy. Believing in the impossible yet possible dreams. Constructing and paving paths for generations to follow with less resistance. Being a change-agent and a builder!

Manhood is about cultivating hope and sharing the responsibility to rebuild the village in any capacity without excuse or quitting.

Manhood is loving women, being a gentleman, respecting your mother, and showing young women they are queens.

Manhood is the opportunity to be a king while remaining humble in the process.

WHAT ARE YOU MOST PROUD OF IN LIFE?

One of them is being able to say I am surrounded by other successful, black men pouring into their purpose. I have a group of friends constantly striving for greatness, which is a daily motivator among our tribe. Seeing them achieve success is a constant reminder that we can do it and together are capable of anything.

Being proud of that bond of friendship is at the top of the list because no matter what happens in our lives that brotherhood is there to keep us ascending to new heights. It doesn’t hurt that we all went to Tuskegee University as well! Ten years of growth within a circle of men is a real joy and something to be extremely proud of in my life.

HOW HAVE YOU TURNED STRUGGLE INTO SUCCESS?

My proudest moment in life has really been the journey to rediscovering my authentic self. Back in December of 2014, I totaled my car as a result of drinking and driving. At the time, that started what I felt to be a series of uncontrollable events leading into my decision to move from Atlanta to Fargo, North Dakota. Fast forward, and the journey from that car crash to present day has resulted in me telling my story of self-discovery, protecting my mental health, pouring into my purpose, and recalibrating my abilities to lead a productive life.

As a result, I self-published my first book titled Collision Course: 4Fs to Transform Life’s Challenges into Powerful Breakthroughs in January 2019. This was my breakthrough!

WHAT PRACTICES, TOOLS, BOOKS, ETC. DO YOU RELY ON FOR YOUR SUCCESS?

From a motivational perspective, I have an acronym that I shared in my book called EARN – Each Accomplishment Remembers Nothing. EARN is about finding that next mountain to climb or outcompeting yourself each day. The things you did one day are good but tomorrow or this new day could be greater.

Also, I am huge on time allocation. Since the accident, I have been given time back to fulfill my assignment. Therefore, time management and blocking out focus time at peak points in the day for creativity are essential for my success.

WHAT’S THE BEST ADVICE YOU’VE EVER RECEIVED?

One piece of advice came from an elderly man during my travels to Cuba a couple of years ago. I was rushing to cross the Malecon and out of nowhere, he grabbed my arm to stop me from getting hit by probably a beautiful, old-school car. He simply said “wait 60 seconds to live another 60 years” which was very profound at the time. It is even better advice today in that I don’t need to rush to my destination or through life. Take the time to look both ways, in every direction, so I can enjoy the moment before going to my next one.

HOW ARE YOU PAYING IT FORWARD TO SUPPORT OTHER BLACK MALES?

Through great connections and a good friend at the company, I was introduced to her incredible program called Mancode. That program is a unique, one-day conference experience exposing young men to technology. This past year, our conference in Redmond hosted 600+ young men from the Greater-Seattle area with more cities to come in the future.

Second, my parents have always impressed the importance of education. Through that commitment, I have had access to many experiences that might not have been otherwise possible with my education. As a result, I started the Terrill Family Fund in partnership with my high school (St. Paul Central Senior High School) to provide a scholarship to a graduating senior, preferably one attending an HBCU or other academic institution.

Lastly, when I was in high school, a few of us created the AJANI Youth Mentoring program to help young, black men gain access to other black men in the community. As a result, a similar program has been launched at Humboldt High School in St. Paul. This program has been led by my father and other leaders in the community for the last few years. Since that time, I have relocated back home and have re-engaged in the program, mentoring these young men right next to him.

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT BEING A BLACK MAN?

The path we walk is so different, but I see so many men that look like me winning, shining, rewriting narratives, excelling, and building breakthroughs, that it is hard not to love being me—a black man.

 


BE Modern Man is an online and social media campaign designed to celebrate black men making valuable contributions in every profession, industry, community, and area of endeavor. Each year, we solicit nominations in order to select men of color for inclusion in the 100 Black Enterprise Modern Men of Distinction. Our goal is to recognize men who epitomize the BEMM credo “Extraordinary is our normal” in their day-to-day lives, presenting authentic examples of the typical black man rarely seen in mainstream media. The BE Modern Men of Distinction are celebrated annually at Black Men XCEL (www.blackenterprise.com/blackmenxcel/). Click this link to submit a nomination for BE Modern Man: https://www.blackenterprise.com/nominate/. Follow BE Modern Man on Twitter: @bemodernman and Instagram: @be_modernman.

 



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Robert Mugabe: Zimbabweans react to ex-leader's death

The former president of Zimbabwe has died aged 95.

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Nicki Minaj announces her retirement on Twitter, upset fan base

Nicki Minaj was the talk of Twitter on Thursday when she announced that she would retire from the rap game so she could focus on her new family and perhaps have a baby.

Nicki Minaj hints at marriage to felon bae by changing Twitter name to ‘Mrs. Petty’

Minaj has set her sights on concentrating on marital bliss with her soon-to-be husband Kenneth “Zoo” Petty, a convicted criminal. She shocked her 20.5 million “Barbs” when she said it was game over for the rap game.

“I’ve decided to retire & have my family,” Minaj, 36, wrote. “I know you guys are happy now. To my fans, keep reppin me, do it til da death of me. X in the box- cuz ain’t nobody checkin me. Love you for LIFE.”


Minaj’s fans wasn’t here for the abrupt announcement out of nowhere and didn’t take the news too well.


The responses were so strong that Minaj replied with another tweet apologizing for dropping the insensitive tweet on her fans so randomly.

Seems like Minaj is head over heels in love with her felon bae, Kenneth Petty.

The two have been dating since 2018, and if a new Twitter handle is any indication, it seems they are serious about taking their relationship to the next level and tying the knot.

Petty is a convicted sex offender for attempted rape of a 16-year-old in 1995, according to New York Division of Criminal Justice Services records, The Blast reports. He also was convicted in the shooting death of a man named Lamont Robinson in 2002, according to a criminal complaint obtained by website.

As TheGrio previously reported, the “Megatron” rapper and her beau obtained a marriage license in Beverly Hills late last month. On Friday, Nicki changed her Twitter display name from “Ms. Minaj” to ” Mrs. Petty,” to reflect the last name of the 41-year-old Queens native.

R. Kelly’s daughter reveals intimate details about their complicated relationship: ‘People don’t want to work with me just because of who he is’

Nicki previously told listeners of her QUEEN Radio podcast that she and her man had obtained a marriage license, and she had “about 80 days” to walk down the aisle. With the name change on social media, fans are convinced she’s already married.

“We still had to pick it up and I was traveling, by the time I came back, we had to renew it again,” she said on the Aug. 12 episode of her radio show. “From that time, you have 90 days to get married. That was about a week ago, so now I have about 80 days.”

But something tells us something major is brewing because we all know that Nicki is the Queen of petty.

We’ll wait.

The post Nicki Minaj announces her retirement on Twitter, upset fan base appeared first on theGrio.



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Gadget Lab Podcast: How Uber Went Down in Flames

New York Times reporter Mike Isaac charts the rise and fall of the ride-hailing company in his new book, "Super Pumped." He joins us on the podcast to tell us all that went wrong.

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Tamron Hall’s faith in herself pays off with new show, life

When Tamron Hall decided to leave NBC after the network gave her prime “Today” co-hosting slot to Megyn Kelly, the journalist threw herself a party — a pity party.

That included plenty of tears and a bit of feeling sorry for herself— to the point that “my mother said to me, ‘You can always come back to your room here,’ and I’m like, ‘Mom that’s not in the plan!'”

She didn’t have a specific plan when she left in 2017. All she had was faith that something bigger had to be on the horizon.

“I leaned on my mom, and my mother has the saying, ‘God didn’t bring me this far to let you go.’ And so at some point I could not just keep regurgitating the line leap of faith — I had to believe it,” she recalled, laughing, in a recent interview. “I’ve got to believe in something, so why not believe in myself?”

That belief has paid off with amazing dividends for Hall, who not only now has a husband and a 4-month-old son Moses, but her own eponymous show that will debut across the nation on Monday.

“She loses her job, her dream job of her life, and at that moment, she’s what, 45, 46? She doesn’t have a job, she doesn’t have the kid she thought she was going to have, she doesn’t have the husband she thought she was going to have,” said Bill Geddie, “The View” creator who came out of retirement to be executive producer on “Tamron Hall” with Hall.
“Instead she rebuilds herself just through force of will,” he added, “and everything comes together in 2019. So, it’s kind of an amazing story, one you don’t see a lot, and a lot of people relate to it.”

Hall was hosting the successful third hour of the “Today” show with Al Roker when NBC decided to make room for Kelly; Hall decided to opt out of her contract instead of taking a lesser role. Kelly later imploded in the slot after making racist comments.

“Tamron Hall” will enter an already crowded talk space when it debuts in syndication, including a new entry from Kelly Clarkson, whose talk show bows the same day.

Hall, 48, is not concerned though, because what she thinks “Tamron Hall” will provide is a unique factor —herself.

“At one point I was on four networks at the same time. I was doing MSNBC, the ‘Today’ show, ID (Investigation Discovery network) and TLC, coupled with Bear Grylls and regularly hosting the Macy’s Fourth of July. So at any given time, people know me from six different, versions of my career,” she said, while enjoying a glass of wine while sitting at the Harlem restaurant Ruby’s Vintage. “And we thought, it’s a range of an audience. Let’s bring all of those people into one location.”

To that end, “Tamron Hall” might focus on a newsy topic one day, and fashion the next. Another show could focus on motherhood. Perhaps dating and relationships. Or crime, which speaks to Hall’s work on ID and her personal experience from being the sister of a murder victim.

“The beauty about the show is that it’s not about one lane, it’s a reflection of who she is in her entirety,” said co-executive producer Talia Parkinson-Jones, a veteran of the Wendy Williams show. “We know exactly what she wants, which is to inspire people.”

Don’t expect a show with a lot of shouting about politics. Says Geddie: “I’ve had enough of that, and I’d like to do something different now.”

It also won’t be heavy on celebrity guests.

“We both are from the middle of the country, I’m from Oklahoma, she’s from Texas,” Geddie said. “I think both of us are aware that most of television is New York talking to Los Angeles. We find that most of television talks past or through the middle of the country, and we hope to change that.”

Though she lives in Harlem and has been a New Yorker for years, there’s a universal appeal that Hall enjoys that even she didn’t realize until her time off, as she traveled the country speaking at events.

“I’ll never forget, we were in Houston, right after I had left and there were these couples who happened to be white, and it was the husbands (who said), ‘TEAM TAMRON! TEAM TAMRON!'” she said, laughing. “That’s what also I think Disney and our partners recognized too, that we were seeing this cross-section of people saying, ‘When are you coming back?'”
Hall’s comeback might have come sooner had it not been for the Harvey Weinstein scandal. She had entered into a partnership with the Weinstein company before the sexual misconduct scandal involving Weinstein broke and the #MeToo era gave way.
It was another setback.

“I couldn’t believe that, but at the same time I felt so guilty thinking about my career, and then thinking about the allegations that the women were making . I’m sitting there going like, ‘I can’t be thinking about myself,” she said. “From the first words out there, I couldn’t do that. I wasn’t raised that way. . I just said maybe that wasn’t meant (to be).”

But her TV destiny was set, and soon, Disney came calling, and her TV show was put into motion. Unbeknownst to most involved with the show, Hall was also working on another project — having a baby with her husband, music executive Steve Greener, whom she married earlier this year.

Hall went through IVF to conceive and recalls getting shots to prepare for the procedure as she was crisscrossing the country while shooting “Deadline: Crime With Tamron Hall.” She laughed as she recalled getting a shot from her celebrity hairstylist Johnny Wright while in the back of an Uber.

It was a process Hall had been through several times in the past, unsuccessfully. Though some women might have postponed the process during such a busy time, Hall had learned through past experience that it didn’t really matter.

“Both (the show and the baby) were so out of my control and that was the similarity,” she said. “I can only put so much into both of those.”

Now that both have come to fruition, she finds herself doing the working mother juggle and relishing the opportunity. Tears came to her eyes as she recalled having left her son for a recent trip and returning home to find him sound asleep as her mother watched over him.

“I took that as, ‘Mom, “I’m safe, I’m good, I’m going to sleep restful right here, right now, you go do it Mommy, you go get it, and that’s been satisfying for me as a working mom, because there’s been a lot of real guilt,” she said.

She recalled her own mother, a single mom at 19, working multiple jobs to provide for her children.

“So now I get this daytime talk show, far more glamorous to working in a leather factory, and I get to come home to my mom sitting right there, helping me with my son,” she said, through tears.

It’s an emotional moment, but also a very relatable one, and what she hopes to convey with “Tamron Hall.”

“That is my life. That’s the show I want to do. That’s the voice I want to have. And I think that it’s where I’m supposed to be,” she said.

The post Tamron Hall’s faith in herself pays off with new show, life appeared first on theGrio.



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Arkansas coach claims player quit, not dropped over dreadlocks

The men’s head basketball coach at the University of Arkansas-Fort Smith says allegations that he dismissed a player over his dreadlocks are not true.

An attorney for coach Jim Boone said in a statement Thursday that 22-year-old Tyler Williams actually quit the team and wasn’t dismissed over his hairstyle.

The statement says Williams wasn’t mistreated and allegations that Boone’s actions were racist are an “unwarranted defamatory assault” on the coach’s character.

University Chancellor Terisa Riley has said the school is investigating Williams’ complaint, but officials say Boone remains the men’s basketball coach.

Williams, a 6-foot guard and honor roll student who played high school basketball in Oklahoma, has transferred to a college in the Oklahoma City area.

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Former Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe died in Singapore

Former Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe, an ex -guerrilla chief who took power after independence from white minority rule in 1980 and presided over a country whose early promise was eroded by economic turmoil and allegations of human rights violations, has died in Singapore at the age of 95.

He enjoyed strong support among the population and even the West soon after taking over as Prime Minister and Zimbabwe’s first post-colonial leader. But was reviled in later years as the economy collapsed and human rights violations increased. His often violent takeover of farms from whites who owned huge tracts of land made him a hated figure in the West and a hero in Africa.

His successor President Emmerson Mnangagwa confirmed Mugabe’s death in a tweet Friday, mourning him as an “icon of liberation.” He did not provide details.

Singapore’s Foreign Ministry confirmed his death Friday at the Gleneagles Hospital there, saying it was working with Zimbabwe on arrangements for Mugabe’s body to be flown back. Mugabe has received medical treatment at the hospital in recent years.

Mugabe’s popularity began to rise again after Mnangagwa failed to deliver on promises of economic recovery and appeared to take an even harsher and more repressive stance against critics. Many began to publicly say they missed Mugabe.

Forced to resign amid pressure from the military, his party and the public in November 2017, Mugabe was defiant throughout his long life, railing against the West for what he called its neo-colonialist attitude and urging Africans to take control of their resources — a populist message that was often a hit, even as many nations on the continent shed the strongman model and moved toward democracy.

A target of international sanctions over the years, Mugabe nevertheless enjoyed acceptance among peers in Africa who chose not to judge him in the same way as Britain, the United States and other Western detractors.

“They are the ones who say they gave Christianity to Africa,” Mugabe said of the West during a visit to South Africa in 2016. “We say: ‘We came, we saw and we were conquered.'”

Even as old age took its toll and opposition to his rule increased, he refused to step down until the pressure became unbearable in 2017 as his former allies in the ruling party accused him of grooming his wife, Grace, to take over — ahead of long-serving loyalists such as Mnangagwa, who was fired in November 2017 before returning to take over with the help of the military.

Spry in his impeccably tailored suits, Mugabe maintained a schedule of events and international travel during his rule that defied his advancing age, though signs of weariness mounted. He walked with a limp, fell after stepping off a plane in Zimbabwe, read the wrong speech at the opening of parliament, and appeared to be dozing during a news conference in Japan. However, his longevity and frequently dashed rumors of ill health delighted supporters and infuriated opponents who had sardonically predicted he would live forever.

“Do you want me to punch you to the floor to realize I am still there?” Mugabe told an interviewer from state television who asked him in early 2016 about retirement plans.
After the fighting between black guerrillas and the white rulers of Rhodesia, as Zimbabwe was then known, ended, Mugabe reached out to whites. The self-declared Marxist stressed the need for education and built new schools. Tourism and mining flourished, and Zimbabwe was a regional breadbasket.

However, a brutal military campaign waged against an uprising in western Matabeleland province that ended in 1987 augured a bitter turn in Zimbabwe’s fortunes. As the years went by, Mugabe was widely accused of hanging onto power through violence and vote fraud, notably in a 2008 election that led to a troubled coalition government after regional mediators intervened.

“I have many degrees in violence,” Mugabe once boasted on a campaign trail, raising his fist. “You see this fist, it can smash your face.”

Mugabe was re-elected in 2013 in another ballot marred by alleged irregularities, though he dismissed his critics as sore losers.

Amid the political turmoil, the economy of Zimbabwe, traditionally rich in agriculture and minerals, deteriorated. Factories were closing, unemployment was rising and the country abandoned its currency for the U.S. dollar in 2009 because of hyperinflation.

The economic problems are often traced to the violent seizures of thousands of white-owned farms that began around 2000. Land reform was supposed to take much of the country’s most fertile land — owned by about 4,500 white descendants of mainly British and South African colonial-era settlers — and redistribute it to poor blacks. Instead, Mugabe gave prime farms to ruling party leaders, party loyalists, security chiefs, relatives and cronies.

On the streets of Harare, the capital, people gathered in small groups Friday and discussed the news.

“I will not shed a tear, not for that cruel man,” said Tariro Makena, a street vendor. “All these problems, he started them and people now want us to pretend it never happened.”
Others said they missed him.

“Things are worse now. Life was not that good but it was never this bad. These people who removed him from power have no clue whatsoever,” said Silas Marongo, holding an axe and joining men and women cutting a tree for firewood in suburban Harare. They needed the wood to beat severe electricity shortages that underline the worsening economic situation.

Mugabe was born in Zvimba, 60 kilometers (40 miles) west of the capital of Harare. As a child, he tended his grandfather’s cattle and goats, fished for bream in muddy water holes, played football and “boxed a lot,” as he recalled later.

Mugabe lacked the easy charisma of Nelson Mandela, the anti-apartheid leader and contemporary who became South Africa’s first black president in 1994 after reconciling with its former white rulers. But he drew admirers in some quarters for taking a hard line with the West, and he could be disarming despite his sometimes harsh demeanor.

“The gift of politicians is never to stop speaking until the people say, ‘Ah, we are tired,'” he said at a 2015 news conference. “You are now tired. I say thank you.”

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New push for racial equality for Black entrepreneurs in the marijuana trade

Black entrepreneurs who say people of color are being shut out of the lucrative marijuana trade are joining forces to close the gap.

Real Action for Cannabis Equity, or RACE, launched Thursday in Boston, and its founders said the coalition will work to create more opportunities in the industry for minority owners.
Organizers said they’re frustrated that all but two of Massachusetts’ 184 marijuana business licenses have been issued to white operators. Voters in the state approved recreational marijuana use and sales in a 2016 referendum.

Across the U.S., black people have had difficulty entering the marijuana trade, often because they historically were targeted by anti-drug crackdowns that left them with criminal records.

In Massachusetts, black people were 3.3 times more likely than white people to be arrested for marijuana possession in 2014 — two years before legalization — despite using the drug at similar rates, RACE said in a statement.

Many communities are using those convictions to deliberately exclude people of color as they license marijuana businesses, said coalition co-founder Richard Harding.

“On the municipal level, this is not unlike the Jim Crow laws or civil rights struggles of the past, whereby higher-level mandates for equity are being intentionally or irresponsibly ignored on the local level,” Harding said.

RACE said discrimination persists even though the Massachusetts ballot initiative included mandates aimed at promoting equity for people of color who were disproportionately prosecuted, criminalized and incarcerated during marijuana prohibition and the war on drugs.

“Statewide, the voters have clearly called for legalization to be carried forth in a manner that promotes equity, but on the municipal level, from Brockton to Cambridge to Western Massachusetts, equity is being sabotaged,” Harding said. “Fairness is not being achieved in the process, and it is certainly not being achieved in the result.”

The coalition said it will promote the interests of entrepreneurs and workers of color as they seek equal access to the marijuana business, starting with a voter outreach campaign aimed at raising awareness of the racial and ethnic gap. The campaign will include ads on Facebook, YouTube and other platforms, it said.

RACE planned to hold a silent demonstration Friday afternoon outside Cambridge city hall.
Messages were left seeking comment from city officials.

The state’s Cannabis Control Commission, which regulates the industry in Massachusetts, told The Associated Press it’s committed to an industry “which includes full participation from people of color.”

“The commission will continue to collaborate with municipalities, other state agencies and the private sector to ensure Massachusetts’ industry looks like Massachusetts,” it said.

Nationwide, cities and states have been taking steps to encourage minorities to enter the growing cannabis industry and remove legal obstacles. Most of the measures are aimed at ensuring people with past marijuana convictions aren’t excluded from applying for a retail license or working in a cannabis business.

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Gaming's #MeToo Moment and the Tyranny of Male Fragility

After the death of Zoe Quinn's alleged abuser, the trolls have escalated their racket, raising the question of whose mental health society tries to protect.

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DJI Osmo Mobile 3 Review: My New Favorite Gimbal

DJI's portable gimbal won't turn you into the next Alfonso Cuarón, but it does shoot buttery smooth video for a gimbal.

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South Africa's Refiloe Jane signs for AC Milan Women

Refiloe Jane becomes the first South African woman to move to Italy as she join AC Milan.

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Robert Mugabe: Zimbabweans remember the 'liberator and oppressor'

The 95-year-old former leader was both an icon of independence and a political strongman.

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Caster Semenya signs for South African football team

Two-time Olympic 800m champion Caster Semenya has signed for a South African women's football team as she begins to prepare for a career outside of athletics.

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Liberia expel midfielder Tonia Tisdell for indiscipline

The Liberia Football Association expels Tonia Tisdell from the squad to face Sierra Leone due to disciplinary issues.

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Somalia win first ever World Cup qualifier

Somalia win their first ever World Cup qualifier with a 1-0 victory over Zimbabwe.

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Madagascar withdraw from South Africa friendly

Madagascar withdraw from an international football friendly against South Africa due to safety concerns.

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In pictures: The life of Robert Mugabe

A look at the political career of Robert Mugabe, President of Zimbabwe.

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Robert Mugabe: From liberator to tyrant

He promised democracy and reconciliation. but hopes for the future dissolved into violence, corruption and economic misery.

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Obituary: Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe's first post-independence leader

His promises of democracy and reconciliation dissolved into violence and economic misery.

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Thursday, September 5, 2019

Robert Mugabe, former president of Zimbabwe, has died age 95

Robert Mugabe, the former president of Zimbabwe, has died age 95.

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Zimbabwe ex-president Robert Mugabe dies aged 95

Mr Mugabe, 95, was ousted in a military coup in November 2017, ending his three-decade reign.

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Rihanna Secures Additional $50 Million Funding for Savage X Fenty Brand

We haven’t heard any new music from Rihanna in quite some time but don’t think that means she isn’t creating. The Bajan singer has secured $50 million in new funds from investors for her celebrity fashion line, Savage X Fenty.

According to The Wall Street Journal, her fashion line received monies from Jay-Z and his venture firm, Marcy Venture Partners L.L.C., as well as funding from Avenir Growth Capital. This latest round of finances brings the total amount to $70 million from investors. The Journal cited Savage X Fenty’s strong performance in its freshman year: annual revenues are projected to hit $150 million and average annual customer spend is beating market leader Victoria’s Secret.

After Forbes revealed that Rihanna is the richest female musician with a net worth of approximately $600 million, she is definitely claiming her stake and reaching for that billionaire status.

Savage X Fenty started in May 2018 as a joint venture between Rihanna and Techstyle Fashion Group; although this wasn’t her first endeavor—she launched her Fenty Beauty cosmetics sometime in 2017 to immediate success. And this past June, she made an announcement that she will collaborate with LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton to produce a Fenty luxury fashion label as well.

It was also announced recently that Amazon Prime Video will be streaming the premiere of Rihanna’s Savage X Fenty Show. That will take place Sept. 20, featuring her new Fall/Winter 2019 lingerie collection. The Savage X Fenty special will show the audience the behind the scenes of the making of the show and will be “a one-of-a-kind event blending music, fashion, and culture” with surprises and guest performances, according to a press release. It will be archived on Amazon Prime Video so customers can relive the experience over and over again.

With all the business moves she has made, will she ever have the urge or desire to record anymore? Apparently, all she does is “work, work, work, work, work.”



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When rats work to protect human safety

During a trip to Brussels in 2013, Jia Hui Lee decided to visit the Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History. While there, he stumbled upon a poster depicting a rat on the ground next to a partially visible land mine. It was April 4, International Mine Awareness Day, and the poster was part of a display about the use of rodents to detect land mines.

“When you think about war, you think about these big technological tools, vehicles, and systems. Then to see this image of a rat, it was quite jarring and piqued my interest immediately,” says Lee, a fifth-year doctoral student in MIT’s History, Anthropology, and Science, Technology, and Society (HASTS) program.

He had been thinking about humanity’s relationship with other animals and the environment during the era of climate change, and the display provided the kernel of his PhD thesis, which looks at human-rodent interactions in Tanzania, where humans are training rats to detect landmines, as well as tuberculosis.

As a queer man of color, Lee has frequently questioned ideas about power, privilege, and people’s places in society, including his own. With his graduate work, he is extending these questions to consider cross-species interactions and what they say about the impact of technology on society and politics. Throughout his studies, the ethical considerations of anthropology, including who gets to speak for the experiences of others and what experiences are studied in the first place, have remained central to Lee’s work.

Helpers, friends, vermin, enemies

For his thesis, Lee completed 15 months of field research in Tanzania examining how trainers interacted with, talked about, and ultimately conditioned rats in order to get them to find land mines. He later spent two months in Cambodia to see how the animals worked in the field. The Tanzanian-trained rats were deployed in an area to clear possible land mines, and after they determined that there were no active mines in that site, Lee took a walk through the area. He jokes that the fact that he’s still alive to talk about the experience demonstrates the success of the training.

Lee is very careful about how he talks about the nonhuman animals in his research, to acknowledge the cross-cultural differences in how humans think about them. For instance, many people in Tanzania consider rats to be intelligent and helpful, whereas in New York City, for example, they are more commonly viewed as vermin. Likewise, Lee notes that in the U.S. and European countries, dogs are generally viewed as humans’ best friends and treated as part of the family. In places like Tanzania and Kenya, however, he says dogs are often viewed as vicious and fierce, because of the historic use of dogs by colonial British police officers to violently control anticolonial protesters, and later as guards against theft.

“The knowledge I hope to produce out of this research is in conversation with zoology, biology, and cognitive science. It includes histories of human-animal interactions which are usually left out in other kinds of disciplines,” Lee says.

His focus on East Africa grew in part out of previous research on the growing science and technology markets in the region. Although the technology scene in East Africa is flourishing, he notes, this growth doesn’t get the same recognition as tech hubs in the West.

“You see a really exciting embrace of science and technology in this region. It’s interesting to think about these types of science and technology projects in East Africa — not Cambridge, Massachusetts, or London. It’s really important to think of East Africa as a location of critical thinking and knowledge production,” he says.

Equity on campus

As a person who is concerned with power and privilege, it is no surprise that Lee has advocated on behalf of the Institute’s graduate community. As a graduate fellow for the Institute Community and Equity Office, Lee worked with Professor Ed Bertschinger and other fellows to find ways to candidly discuss the state of diversity and inclusion at MIT.

“Over the course of a semester, we hosted discussion lunches that included students, staff, and faculty to share best practices in different departments that foster inclusion at the Institute,” Lee says.

He also served on the Working Group on Graduate Student Tuition Models to gather data about grad students’ experiences with some of the Institute’s funding structures. He compiled the stories of various members of the graduate community to present to the Institute’s administration in order to demonstrate the ways that students’ well-being could be enhanced. MIT’s senior leadership has now begun seeking ways to alleviate financial insecurity faced by some of the Institute’s graduate students and has also launched a new effort to better support those with families.

Citizen of the world

Lee has wide-ranging interests in history and culture, and one of his favorite things to do in his free time is to walk around and analyze Boston’s architecture. After living in the area on and off for about a decade, he says he really enjoys getting to know Boston and its physical changes intimately. He thinks it’s fascinating to think about the city’s transformation from a part of the sea hundreds of years ago to the urban hub it is now. Throughout his travels the past few years, he has picked up bits of art and architectural history that have informed his understanding of some of Boston’s iconic landmarks.

“In Boston, there's a lot of Italian influences on certain architecture, so the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum looks like an Italian Renaissance palazzo, which is so quirky. But then Back Bay, especially Commonwealth Avenue, was designed to resemble a French boulevard,” Lee explains.

Beyond Boston and Tanzania, Lee has been all over the world, and picked up various languages in the process. He speaks Malay, Swahili, French, English, Hindi, and Urdu, and a bit of several Chinese dialects. In his adventures, Lee has also recognized the value of being alone, and he advocates for solo travel. It invites unique experiences, he says, which for him has included being brought to dance clubs and even a Tanzanian wedding.

“I feel like the likelihood of randomly meeting a person or stumbling into an event or a festival is so much higher than if you're traveling with somebody. And when you're alone, I think people do draw you into whatever events they are going to,” Lee says.



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Africa's week in pictures: 30 August-5 September 2019

A selection of the week's best photos from across the continent.

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Facebook Dating Arrives in the US. Here's How It Works

Facebook Dating's US rollout includes a few new updates, including safety features and more Instagram integration.

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Sonos Move Portable Speaker: Price, Specs, Release Date

The battery-powered, $399 Sonos Move even has a built-in handle that makes it more toteable.

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How YACHT Used Machine Learning to Create Their New Album

"I don’t know if we could’ve written it ourselves—it took a risk maybe we aren’t willing to."

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Cold War Analogies are Warping Tech Policy

Opinion: Politicians and pundits' fixation with flawed Cold War metaphors have produced overly combative policies on emerging tech.

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Former Nigeria coach Samson Siasia appeals Fifa's life ban

Former Nigeria coach Samson Siasia files an appeal with Fifa and the Court of Arbitration for Sport against a life ban from football.

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Eddie Murphy planning 2020 stand-up comedy tour

Guess who’s back!

Eddie Murphy has been gearing up to make a big comeback with a highly anticipated sequel on the way and a return to the Saturday Night Live stage as host in December for the first time in 35 years.

And now there’s news that the iconic comedian is also planning to return to his comedy roots with a new standup tour in 2020.

Eddie Murphy set to return to ‘SNL’ as host for first time in 35 years

This is going to be epic.

Murphy revealed in a Netflix podcast, Present Company with Krista Smith, that he plans to do a comedy tour, saying: “… and then next year in 2020 I’m going to go on the road and do some stand-up.”

That statement coincides with the rumors that swirled that he was inking a multimillion-dollar deal to do a Netflix standup special but he didn’t directly address that, Deadline repots.

Murphy recently wrapped up the movie Dolemite Is My Name about stand-up comedian Rudy Ray Moore for Netflix.

And he’s in the midst of filming the sequel to Coming 2 America which is currently filming around Atlanta.

— PHOTOS: Check out all the famous faces cast in ‘Coming 2 America’–

The storyline reportedly centers around Prince Akeem’s (Murphy) rise to become King and finding out that he fathered an illegitimate son back in the day during his time in Queens looking to sow his royal oats, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Jermaine Fowler will play Prince Akeem’s long-lost son, who is now the heir to Zamunda.

Jones plays the mother of the son (named Lavelle) who Akeem had a one-night stand with. Morgan plays Jones’ street-hustling brother Reem. Akeem’s father (Earl Jones), the King of Zamunda, has a dying wish that Akeem find his son and prep him to become a Prince.

 

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Atlanta HBCU campus shooting suspect arrested

A suspect has finally been arrested after a shooting near the campus of Clark Atlanta University that left four students wounded and a community reeling.

Video shows terrifying aftermath when four Atlanta HBCU students are shot at block party

Isaiah Williams, 21, reportedly turned himself in to police on Wednesday as a result of an arrest warrant that was issued.

Williams has been charged with aggravated assault, aggravated battery, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony and criminal attempt to commit murder, WSBTV reports.

Williams is accused of firing into a crowd of at least 200 people and shooting two students from Spelman College and two from Clark Atlanta. One student was shot in the chest, one in the leg and bullets grazed the two other girls.

The students were identified by WSB as Erin Ennis, 18; Maia Williams-McLaren, 18; Elyse Spencer, 18; and Kia Thomas, 19.

The shooting happened at a college block party celebrating the end of new student orientation near the library which is shared by Clark Atlanta, Spelman and Morehouse students, according to police.

The shooting reportedly began after an argument broke out between two parties and someone opened fire, investigators said.

“It appears there were two separate groups that were targeting each other, and these people were just caught in the crossfire,” Atlanta police Capt. William Ricker told reporters at the time.

NBA player says $400k offer to settle lawsuit over violent arrest caught on video needs to come with admission of guilt

Police are still looking for an additional suspect in the case.

The post Atlanta HBCU campus shooting suspect arrested appeared first on theGrio.



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Why the Porsche Taycan's Two-Speed Gearbox Is Such a Big Deal

Want to improve an EV’s range by 5 percent, or pump up its top speed? Trying shifting gears.

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The Real’s co-host Jeannie Mai and Jeezy show off their new relationship on Instagram

Ghana's Agyemang Badu: I'll comeback from illness stronger

Ghana midfielder Emmanuel Agyemang Badu says he will be mentally stronger after he recovers from a blood clot on his lungs.

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LaShawn Daniels, Grammy-winning songwriter for Beyonce, Michael Jackson and more, dies in car crash

LaShawn Daniels, a Grammy Award-winning songwriter who penned songs for Beyoncé, Whitney Houston and Lady Gaga has died. He was 41.

Daniels’ wife April said in a statement that her husband died in a car accident Tuesday in South Carolina. He earned a Grammy in 2001 for his songwriting work on Destiny Child’s “Say My Name.”

Daniels co-wrote several Grammy-nominated songs including Tamar Braxton’s “Love and War,” Toni Braxton’s “He Wasn’t Man Enough” and “The Boy is Mine,” a track featuring Brandy and Monica.

He also contributed on Beyoncé’s “Telephone,” Jennifer Lopez’s “If You Had My Love” and Michael Jackson’s “You Rock My World.”

His wife, April Daniels, called her husband a “man of extraordinary faith and a pillar in our family.”

The post LaShawn Daniels, Grammy-winning songwriter for Beyonce, Michael Jackson and more, dies in car crash appeared first on theGrio.



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911 audio details horrific crash scene that injured Kevin Hart

A 911 call released Wednesday describes the moments after Kevin Hart was seriously injured after his muscle car crashed on a mountainous Southern California roadway.
The witness describes a man believed to be Hart and telling a dispatcher that he “looked like he’s hurting.”

The eyewitness account is part of 911 audio recordings released by the Los Angeles County Fire Department.

A California Highway Patrol collision report said Hart was a passenger in a 1970 Plymouth Barracuda that went off Mulholland Highway and rolled down an embankment early Sunday.

Also in the vehicle were Jared Black, who was driving, and his fiancee, Rebecca Broxterman. The report said Black was not under the influence of alcohol.

The witness also described Black as appearing to be seriously hurt. The witness also said the roof of the totaled vehicle was “crushed” with smashed in doors. He said he was at the accident “with another car that pulled over to help” adding “only one car” went off the highway.

The CHP said Hart, 40, and Black, 28, suffered “major back injuries.” Hart’s wife has said the actor-comedian will be fine.

Broxterman, 31, only complained of pain.

The report said Hart had left the scene to his nearby residence to get medical attention. He and Black were ultimately taken to different hospitals.

It remains unclear how the accident will affect Hart, who has emerged from his roots in standup comedy to become one a major Hollywood star. His next major release, “Jumanji: The Next Level,” is scheduled for release in December.

The accident, which remains under investigation, occurred on a stretch of road in the hills above the city of Malibu.

The post 911 audio details horrific crash scene that injured Kevin Hart appeared first on theGrio.



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