Translate

Pages

Pages

Pages

Intro Video

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Fighting Legal Complexity: How Sen. Warren’s Bankruptcy Plan Defends Civil Rights

bankruptcy chapter 7

One of the dark realities of the American democracy is that we don’t have equal protection under the law. We have equal protection under the law if you can afford a lawyer. We’ve made our legal forms and processes so complex that most people must pay expensive fees to lawyers to understand and access their basic civil legal rights.

One area where this problem is clear is in consumer bankruptcy. Bankruptcy is a powerful tool that helps families who face financial shocks relieve their debt, improve their credit, and stop wage garnishment. Then-Professor Elizabeth Warren’s influential research from when she first entered bankruptcy law found over 90% of bankruptcies are caused by medical problems, layoffs, and family break-ups. Unfortunately, today’s bankruptcy system requires someone to fill and print out 23 separate forms and understand terms like “unsecured nonpriority debt.” This complexity means the legal fees in Chapter 7 bankruptcy cost $1200 on average. Millions of low- and middle-income families who can’t afford this fee are priced out of their right to a second chance.

The needless legal complexity within our bankruptcy system is a civil rights injustice. Today’s forms are a modern-day version of the literacy tests that used to stop black and brown people from being able to vote. In turn, these “literacy tests” create expensive legal fees that stop black and brown people from filing bankruptcy. These fees are a reincarnation of poll taxes.

Complex legal paperwork is often a tool of the rich and powerful to oppress the marginalized, poor, and vulnerable. This is true in bankruptcy, but also several other areas of the law that pertain to life, liberty, and property.

This week, now-Senator Warren released a robust plan to simplify our bankruptcy system, making it more accessible for families who are currently too broke to file. Her bold solutions to decrease the amount of paperwork, eliminate ineffective credit counseling requirements, and combine two chapters of bankruptcy will help millions of families re-enter our economy. Debt has devastating downstream effects on society that include homelessness, hunger, and poverty. Senator Warren’s plan will help stop these problems before they happen.

I know this because I’ve seen firsthand what Americans are capable of when they get a second chance. In 2016, I started Upsolve, a nonprofit to help families file bankruptcy at scale, using a free online web app. Today, we’re the largest nonprofit bankruptcy provider in America, and we’ve relieved over $100 million in debt for remarkable individuals like Alisa Pratt from the Bronx.

In 2016, Alisa was trapped in debt, which forced her to skip meals, clean her clothes in her sink, and overcome depression. One of the main reasons Alisa fell into debt was that her former partner took out a car loan in her name before they split up. Since filing for bankruptcy, Alisa has turned around her life. She founded a girl’s dance team that’s performed around the world, including the Cannes Film Festival, started a new job at a leading nonprofit in the Bronx, and received the Robin Hood Foundation Heroes Award to a 500-person standing ovation in New York City. Senator Warren’s strengthens the safety net for Alisa and amazing people like her.

Senator Warren’s plan is groundbreaking because it uses our bankruptcy system to highlight the Access to Justice Crisis in America, a civil rights issue that has gone largely unnoticed by the general public. Unlike in the criminal justice system, low- and middle-income individuals have no right to any free legal representation in the civil justice system. This includes people who are evicted from their homes, physically abused by their spouses, or trapped in debt and in need of bankruptcy. Over three in four civil legal problems reported by low-income Americans receive inadequate or no legal help.

Senator Warren presents a vision for America where everyone can access our legal system, regardless of whether they can afford an entrance fee. A simpler, more comprehensible system returns the law to the working families it’s supposed to protect. According to this vision, our rights will be more equal, our democracy more just, and our founding ideals more real.

 


This is an opinion piece that does not necessarily represent the views of BLACK ENTERPRISE. 

 

 

 



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/3a9gqj2
via

‘Dear White People’ Producer Effie T. Brown Named CEO Of Gamechanger

Effie T. Brown

Producer Effie T. Brown has been named chief executive officer of the female-focused film financing fund company, Gamechanger, according to Deadline.

Gamechanger, which was launched in 2013, is the first film financing fund by and for women. Brown, who has produced Dear White People, Project Greenlight, and Real Women Have Curves, will help to broaden the fund’s scope to include projects by and about people of color, LGBTQ+, and people with disabilities. Gamechanger is also set to expand its reach to television and digital content that will enable it to buy, option, and develop intellectual property for television, streaming, and digital platforms.

“As a black female producer who’s been in the business for over 20 years, I know how hard it is to not only get into the room but to then secure financing when you have a culturally diverse or gender-specific point of view,” Brown tells Deadline. “I am beyond thrilled to join Gamechanger as CEO and help level the playing field by providing equity financing for production, development monies as well as strategic partnerships for people with disabilities, LGBTQ+, women, and people of color. What also makes us different is that the diversity of our content is as diverse as our investor pool. Our investors understand that it is going to take all of us pooling our monies together to ensure that these inclusive voices are given the opportunity to own their story from script to screen.”

“From the very beginning Gamechanger has been committed to reflecting the community we serve, which is why we are thrilled to have Effie on board as our CEO, along with new founders Brenda and Naja,” Founder Geralyn Dreyfous tells Broadway World. “Effie’s vision to expand our community of filmmakers, as well as our foray into television and digital development will truly take us to the next level.”

There are additional people added to the Gamechanger team. Producer Nina Yang Bongiovi (Fruitvale Station, Dope, Sorry to Bother You) and Arturo Barquet, EVP and chief financial officer of Global Production Operations at Universal Filmed Entertainment Group, have joined the fund as advisers; Jennifer Kushner, previously director of Artist Development at Film Independent, joins as chief content officer; and Brenda Robinson (Won’t You Be My Neighbor, Icarus) and Naja Pham Lockwood (Last Days in Vietnam, Gook) join the original founding team that includes Geralyn Dreyfous, Dan Cogan, and Wendy Ettinger.



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/36OLnqu
via

Reports suggest Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are ready to speak out

If the Royals are mad now, just wait until they hear that Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are reportedly considering doing a tell-all interview.

READ MORE: Queen Elizabeth releases official statement on Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s future

According to Harper’s Bazaar, journalist Tom Bradby said he has some inkling of what the couple would say if such an interview were to happen and that it wouldn’t “be pretty.” In The Sunday Times, Bradby also speculated why the couple stepped down from their full-time royal duties.

“The fallout began at the time of the wedding in 2018. Really damaging things were said and done,” Bradby said, according to Harper’s Bazaar. Bradby also said the relationship became problematic and turned bad “hard and early” and that a “few meaningful attempts” at turning things around didn’t work.

Last week, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex said their decision to “step back” from their royal roles came after “many months” of reflection, according to Complex.

“We now plan to balance our time between the United Kingdom and North America, continuing to honour our duty to The Queen, the Commonwealth, and our patronages,” the couple said, according to Complex.

The gossip tabloid, The Sun, went a step further, stating that any tell-all interview would be a “negotiating tactic” by the couple since they know the royals don’t want “their dirty laundry out in the open.”

“She and Harry feel the royals have been racist and sexist. Her people are actively exploring opportunities,” according to a royal source who reportedly spoke to The Sun.

READ MORE: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle trademarked 100+ items months before change in royal roles

According to the source, “Harry and Meghan’s people have been reaching out to all the big U.S. networks to explore the possibilities of a sit-down warts-and-all interview.” The source said Markle’s team has contacted Oprah Winfrey, ABC, NBC, and CBS.

The source added that the couple wants to “tell their side of the story” because Meghan “feels she’s been silenced and is no longer prepared to be muted,” according to The Sun.

The post Reports suggest Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are ready to speak out appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2TnN0rt
via

Browsers Are Fixing the Internet's Most Annoying Problem 

After years of invasive pop-ups asking for notification permission, Chrome and Firefox have finally taken action. 

from Wired https://ift.tt/3a9hcMG
via

President Obama and First Lady Michelle have scored their first Oscar nomination

Barack and Michelle Obama’s first film under their Netflix agreement has been nominated for an Oscar in the best documentary feature category.

READ MORE: Michelle Obama announces new Instagram TV series

American Factory, which was released under the former president and first lady’s production company, Higher Ground. The documentary shows the impact on the community of Dayton, Ohio when a General Motors factory shuts down. The film “takes a deep dive into a post-industrial Ohio, where a Chinese billionaire opens a new factory in the husk of an abandoned General Motors plant and hires two thousand blue-collar Americans,” according to a Netflix press release.

“Glad to see American Factory’s Oscar nod for Best Documentary,” Barack Obama tweeted. “It’s the kind of story we don’t see often enough and it’s exactly what Michelle and I hope to achieve with Higher Ground. Congrats to the incredible filmmakers and entire team!”

Filmmakers for “American Factory,” which debuted at the Sundance Film Festival last year, include Julia Reichert and Steven Bognar. Competing in the same category are the following productions: The Cave, The Edge of Democracy, For Sama and Honeyland, according to CBS News.

“I couldn’t be happier that Julia Reichert, Steven Bognar, and all of the incredible people behind #AmericanFactory have been nominated for the Best Documentary Oscar,” Michelle Obama posted on Instagram, along with a photo of her and the former president with the filmmakers. “What Julia and Steve capture on film is at times painful, at times exhilarating, but always thoughtful and always real.”

READ MORE: Spike Lee and the Obamas to drop projects on Netflix in 2020

In 2018, the Obamas signed a multi-year agreement with Netflix to produce films and series through their Higher Ground production company, which was started “to harness the power of storytelling,” former President Obama said. The Obamas have seven projects in the works that deal with “issues of race and class, democracy and civil rights” and “will educate, connect, and inspire us all,” according to CBS.

The 92nd annual Oscars will air Feb. 9 on ABC.

The post President Obama and First Lady Michelle have scored their first Oscar nomination appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2NnTiDs
via

How Many Water Bottles Could a Filling Station Save?

Or, how long would it take to fill a swimming pool from a water fountain? Let's have fun with numbers\!

from Wired https://ift.tt/36U8rnV
via

Conversational AI Can Propel Social Stereotypes

Designers need to consider the ethics of gendering not just AI voices, but also their tone, speed, word choice, and other speech patterns.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2tV95Ts
via

Trick Daddy on his mugshot going viral, ‘my feelings don’t hurt easily’

Trick Daddy said he doesn’t care if people laugh at his mugshot, he’s more concerned about living.

The Miami rapper was arrested on Saturday for possession of cocaine and an outstanding DUI warrant and when his mugshot was snapped, it showed an uneven hairline. But Trick, whose birth name is Maurice Young, said he suffers from Lupus and his hair loss is a side effect of the autoimmune disease.

READ MORE: Trina and Trick Daddy hitting the airwaves with new Miami morning radio show

“Let me get this right .. you lie on me .. make fun of the fact that I have lupus … and all this just for likes .. thank god im strong .. everything is funny until it hits close to home .. my feelings don’t hurt easily I’m too worried about waking up tomorrow,” Trick Daddy wrote on Facebook.

Trick Daddy, 45, was pulled over by Miami police after he reportedly ran red lights and hit signs, according to The Miami Herald. He “appeared to be asleep behind the wheel” when a police officer knocked on his window, The Herald reported. Trick Daddy allegedly told an officer he was drinking at a club and had downed about five drinks. Trick agreed to a field sobriety test, which police said he was unable to complete.

Back in 2009, Trick Daddy first publicly announced that he had Lupus. “I’m the type of person, I came from so far of a struggle that it don’t matter to me, I learned to turn my downsides into jokes and get around it,” he told XXL Magazine. “My mama had eleven children from ten different men. If she is strong enough to live with that I know I could live with this.”

In 2014, the rapper told The Breakfast Club that to deal with the disease, he self-medicates with cocaine and marijuana because it’s simpler and more cost-effective.

“When I smoke weed and coke, the worst thing that’s gonna happen to me is I’mma go to sleep or eat,” he said. “If I take Lupus medicine, I gotta take a pill for this pill, a pill for that pill … then I gotta go back to the doctor every Thursday and give them my money.”

READ MORE: Trick Daddy arrested in Florida on drug, weapons charges

After his Facebook post, many fans, friends and family members commented on their support for the rapper.

“These days people find Everything funny and could be laughing with a whole body of cancer

Brewing and not even know it. Chile with age comes physical change and health problems! Most betta hope they live to see some of the things we did and saw! Maurice Young life happens live your best life and if that includes bonding out here and there so be it!!” wrote Yolanda S. Wilson.

“They talked about Jesus… Let the Haters Hate! I Love you Trick! …Praying for you” wrote a user with the Facebook name PrettyBlack Chyna.

The post Trick Daddy on his mugshot going viral, ‘my feelings don’t hurt easily’ appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/36X3B9m
via

Black Family-Owned Firm Projects Revenues to Grow to $16 Million Within 5 Years. Here’s How

Dikita

Armed with new projects in the pipeline and existing ones underway, Dallas-based Dikita Enterprises Inc.is on the fast-track for future revenue growth.

The civil engineering and consulting firm was started by Lucious Williams in 1979. Led today by his daughter, Eve Williams, the firm expects to grow annual revenue to more than $16 million in the next three to five years from about $5 million now. Calling itself the oldest African American and family-owned firm of its type in North Texas, Dikita mainly offers engineering, construction program management, transit planning, and other services to government entities.

All told, the firm swears it has designed and/or managed projects worth over $1 billion. That’s phenomenal given Lucious Williams sold his car for $6,000 and used the proceeds for startup capital. Initially located in Milwaukee, Dikita moved its headquarters to Dallas in 1983 to pursue DART and other larger municipal clients.

But the journey has not all been easy. Lucious has publicly stated the company has survived tough times—including three economic storms—because it learned early on to diversify. That has helped it avoid employee layoffs. “2001 was our worst year ever,” he states on Dikita’s website.

“It started out weak and then worsened when all of our airport contracts were frozen because of the September 11th terrorist attacks. We had to concentrate on other markets, like education, and public transit. Fortunately, my daughter and I had saved for lean times, and were able to continue to pay our employees while we only took one month’s salary that year.”

That difficult time taught Eve to learn a valuable lesson from her father: Set aside 25% of your paycheck in case you cannot pay yourself to help you survive. Eve was the firm’s chief financial officer for 27 years before becoming its president and CEO in 2010. Lucious, who ran the firm for more than 30 years, remains active as board chairman and government affairs officer.

“We have to do 130% more than our competitors to survive as a black company,” Williams said. “Our niche is being a small company that’s large enough to handle major construction projects and respected enough to complete them as designed within our community.”

Dikita, which celebrated its 40th anniversary in 2019, is now working on nine projects in Dallas and Fort Worth, where it has offices. Its largest upcoming project is serving as Owner Representative for Vehicle Engineering for the Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART). Dikita will oversee new rail car specifications and inspections as part of a five-year contract for the rail and bus transit system that begins in late 2020. Eve estimates her firm’s take will be about $4 million. DART serves the Dallas area.

Further, Dikita will handle quality assurance and inspection for the Texas Department of Transportation’s Lyndon B. Johnson Freeway 635, a $1.6 billion road construction project that begins next August. Eve figures the work will reap her firm $2.5 million over four years.

She also expects her firm to pick up $3.2 million as a program manager for the North Texas Tollway Authority, the operator of toll roads, bridges, and tunnels. Dikita’s current project with the authority will transition into a new four-year contract beginning in March 2020.

A growth driver for Dikita has been various projects it has maintained with long-time clients, particularly DART. One fresh contract that the firm began in October 2019 is with DART’s new Silver Line rail project. Dikita’s work includes providing design reviews and system integration for the 26-mile corridor stretching across northern Dallas suburbs. That project is expected to generate $3.5 million in the next five years.

A long-term niche project Dikita provides to clients is transit market research. The firm plans in January 2020 to begin collecting ridership data for DART, an ongoing service Dikita has been providing that client for over 30 years. That contact is expected to bring the firm $1.5 million by 2025.

Dikita has raked in more than $12 million providing market research services to DART since 1991.
“Without DART being that special client we would not be where we are today,”

Plus, Dikita was the first African American firm to ever serve as a program manager for the Dallas Independent School District after its successful 2015 $1.6 billion Bond Program. It was one of three firms to manage the construction and architectural work budget of $530 million to build new and expanded schools and classrooms.

Williams says a continuous challenge is winning prime contracts and attracting exceptionally talented employees.

“To remain successful,  it’s important to provide your client with a new product they can be proud of not only the day of delivery but for years to come.”

 



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/2TtHweR
via

'Which Character Are You?' Instagram Filters Are Radically Dumb

They're also incredibly comforting—a perfect visual representation of our collective apathy in the face of overstimulation and a glut of content.

from Wired https://ift.tt/36YYwgY
via

Get Ready for More Phones With No Buttons

As we inch closer to phones with all-screen designs, physical buttons are on the chopping block.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2NnE01q
via

Now It's Really, Truly Time to Give Up Windows 7

After Tuesday, Microsoft will no longer issue security updates for the operating system, leaving users who don't upgrade vulnerable to malware.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2uQ0cex
via

The Mandalorian Is the Only Smart Soldier in the Star Wars Galaxy

It took decades, but the galaxy finally has a tactical and operational genius. 

from Wired https://ift.tt/2Tm5SqB
via

How to Watch the Last Democratic Debate Before the Iowa Caucuses

With just six candidates taking the stage, the DNC’s seventh primary debate is the smallest one yet.

from Wired https://ift.tt/30h5HhU
via

Libya conflict: Haftar 'leaves' Moscow ceasefire talks without deal

The ceasefire talks were aimed at ending months of deadly fighting around the Libyan capital.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/2FMfcvQ
via

Monday, January 13, 2020

TRAILBLAZER: Spike Lee named President of Cannes Film Festival Jury

Spike Lee just made history.

The award-winning filmmaker has just been named President of the Canned Film Festival Jury, making him the first Black person to head the panel.

Trump attacks Spike Lee over Oscar speech telling people to vote him out in 2020

The annual film festival is the largest in the world and brings Hollywood’s elite to the French Riviera each May.

“In this life I have lived … my biggest blessings have been when they arrived unexpected, when they happened out of nowhere. When I got the call that I was offered the opportunity to be President of Cannes Jury for 2020, I was shocked, happy, surprised and proud all at the same time,” Lee said in a statement.

“To me the Cannes Film Festival (besides being the most important film festival in the world — no disrespect to anybody) has had a great impact on my film career. You could easily say Cannes changed the trajectory of who I became in world cinema.”

Spike Lee calls for Hollywood to ‘shut it down’ in Georgia over abortion ban

The 63-year-old has had some favorable outcomes at the festival where his first film, She’s Gotta Have It won the Prix de la Jeunesse in the Director’s Fortnight in 1986. He has shown several of his films at the festival and his new role at the festival is promising news for an industry that has such a hard time highlighting Black talent.

The post TRAILBLAZER: Spike Lee named President of Cannes Film Festival Jury appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2NmYtnl
via

WATCH: Don Cheadle and Regina Hall pick up the pieces in ‘Black Monday’ season 2 trailer

Don Cheadle and Regina Hall are back to their old tricks if the just-dropped Black Monday is any indication.

Showtime debuted the new season’s first trailer at the TCAs on Monday and in it, we see Maurice “Mo” Monroe (Cheadle) looking a little crazy in the aftermath of the largest stock market crash in history.

Don Cheadle and Regina Hall are Wall Street’s worst nightmares in ‘Black Monday’

Judging by the trailer, this season will see Dawn (Hall) and Blair (Andrew Rannells) in charge now that Mo is on the run and they quickly learn how hard it is to be the boss.

“The exciting part about doing the second season was we sort of left Blair at the end of Season 1 on the precipice of making a lot of personal decisions,” Rannells said during the show’s TCA panel, “and then this season we really got to launch into them. He gets dark real fast.”

We can’t wait to see who will take the fall for the crash or the murders that went down during season 1.

Loose lips: Don Cheadle refuses to do movie press with Avengers costars because they talk too much

Check out the hilarious trailer:

Season 2 of Black Monday will return with back-to-back episodes on Sunday, March 15 at 10/9c on Showtime.

The post WATCH: Don Cheadle and Regina Hall pick up the pieces in ‘Black Monday’ season 2 trailer appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2TljxOL
via

SNEAK PEEK: See Chris Rock in season 4 of hit FX series ‘Fargo’

FX has dropped the first trailer for its highly-anticipated fourth season of Fargo and this time around, Chris Rock will take the lead in the anthology series from Noah Hawley. 

“The history of America is the history of the entrepreneur. It’s the person that starts with nothing and gets to someplace and then fights to hold on to it,” the showrunner said at the TCAs on Thursday. “I don’t know the world of stand-up comedy, [but] it felt to me like Chris Rock embodied that spirit. Plus, he’s funny.”

Season 4 of Fargo will reportedly tell a story of immigration and assimilation, and the things people do for money. Set in 1950, this season sees Rock’s character, Loy Cannon and his family battle Schwartzman’s Josto Fadda and his Italian crime family (with Irish and Jewish roots) for control of Kansas City.

CASTING NEWS: Chris Rock to star in season 4 of ‘Fargo’ on FX

Check out the trailer: 

Get ready! Donald Glover’s acclaimed ‘Atlanta’ has been renewed for a fourth season!

FX also revealed what’s next for another one of its successful shows, Atlanta. The Donald Glover-led series has been on hiatus for a little too long now, and fans still have a bit of a wait to endure. While no specific date was given, FX confirmed that season 3 of the drama will hit the small screen in January of 2021 and will contain 10 episodes. Season 4 will have 8 episodes and serve as Part 2 of that chapter and is due out in Fall 2021.

 

The post SNEAK PEEK: See Chris Rock in season 4 of hit FX series ‘Fargo’ appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3727l9P
via

Cari Champion exits ESPN after 7 years: “It’s time to leave”

ESPN host Cari Champion has announced her decision to leave ESPN after seven years with the network. The host will remain on-air through the end of January.

The UCLA alum joined ESPN in 2012 after a three-year stint at The Tennis Channel. During her time at ESPN, she worked as a host and moderator on First Take, and was a SportsCenter anchor before securing her post as host of Sports Nation and SportsCenter Coast to Coast.

The talented journalist shared news of her departure on social media.

“After consulting with mentors, family and friends, I have come to the decision that it’s time to leave ESPN,” she posted on Twitter. “Over the past 7 years, I’ve grown from hosting First Take to having my own show on SportsCenter, and experiencing so much more in between.”

ESPN cuts to commercial after Stephen A. Smith starts political rant

Cari Champion didn’t share too many details on her reasons for leaving the network.

“ESPN will always be apart of my legacy and I am proud to have been a part of theirs,” she added. “I’m excited about the next chapter and will share soon!”

 

The post Cari Champion exits ESPN after 7 years: “It’s time to leave” appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/35S8FdP
via

The 'sorcerer' keeping Mali's marionette tradition alive

A trip to a leading puppet workshop in Mali reveals the art is in trouble as insecurity has reduced tourist income.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/30hcsQN
via

The Nigerian blind mechanic using touch to make repairs

Nigerian Emeka Abugu says he's perfected his skills after losing his sight as a child.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/2u0XT7F
via

Black Twitter rejoices over Oscar nom for Mathew A. Cherry’s “Hair Love”

This week Black Twitter found itself giving the Academy the side-eye as the nominations for the 92nd annual Academy Awards were announced and it quickly became clear that barely anybody Black had made the cut. But in that sea of alabaster there appeared one beautifully melanated spark of hope thanks to Matthew A. Cherry.

We all collectively rejoiced when Hair Love, the popular – and incredibly touching – children’s book turned animated short by the former NFL player, was nominated for a well deserved Oscar.

READ MORE: Unpacking the brilliance of ‘Watchmen’ … the most important show of the year

But what many may not know is that the former wide receiver turned filmmaker took the scenic route to this monumental achievement, opting to to launch a Kickstarter campaign that raised nearly $300,000, which was a whopping four times his original goal of $75,000. The outpouring of love his idea received was just further proof that there was a market hungry for his content.

“Media is impressionable and when little kids see shows, movies and magazines and don’t see people who look like them in a heroic place or complex place or don’t see themselves at all it makes them seem abnormal or an exception to the rule,” he told Because Of Them We Can back in 2017. “And we’re trying to make them feel normal and have a little Black girl with maybe kinky hair feel like she’s represented.”

READ MORE: Issa Rae threw shade with a curve during Black-snubbing Oscar nominations announcement

Making the moment feel even more serendipitous is the fact that Issa Rae, who lent her voice to the project, ended up being a host during Monday’s broadcast, and got to announce the nomination to the world.

“WOW! And to have @IssaRae announce it! It feels like a dream,” Cherry tweeted. “Huge thanks to our great team … our kickstarter backers & @SonyAnimation for believing in us.”

The 92nd Annual Academy Awards will air February 9th on ABC. And if you haven’t already, please do yourself a favor and check out the short below.

READ MORE: Martin Lawrence says Tisha Campbell’s sexual harassment lawsuit: ‘It Was Bullsh*t’

The post Black Twitter rejoices over Oscar nom for Mathew A. Cherry’s “Hair Love” appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2Re8QLd
via

'Uncanny Valley' and the Meaninglessness of Writing About Tech

Anna Wiener's memoir about her four-plus years working in startups never resolves the self-contradictions of her industry, city, or existence.

from Wired https://ift.tt/30iJbVL
via

#OscarsSoWhite: The complete list of Academy Award nominees

Nominations for the 92nd annual Academy Awards were announced by Issa Rae and John Cho on Monday morning and the list is BLEAK when it comes to honoring Black films.

Cynthia Erivo picked up a Best Actress nomination for her leading role in Harriet but the film was iced out of the Best Picture category.

American Factory (produced by Barack and Michelle Obama) earned a nod for Best Documentary but Black folks and women were left out of the Best Director race and there are no nominations for any other Black actors in any categories.

Creator of #OscarsSoWhite hashtag comes ‘full circle’; invited to attend the Oscars

Check out the full list of nominees:

Best picture

“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”

“The Irishman”

“Parasite”

“1917”

“Marriage Story”

“Jojo Rabbit”

“Joker”

“Little Women”

“Ford v Ferrari”

Best actress in a leading role

Renée Zellweger, “Judy”

Charlize Theron, “Bombshell”

Scarlett Johansson, “Marriage Story”

Saoirse Ronan, “Little Women”

Cynthia Erivo, “Harriet”

Best actor in a leading role

Joaquin Phoenix, “Joker”

Adam Driver, “Marriage Story”

Leonardo DiCaprio, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”

Antonio Banderas, “Pain and Glory”

Jonathan Pryce, “The Two Popes”

Best director

Martin Scorsese, “The Irishman”

Quentin Tarantino, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”

Bong Joon-ho, “Parasite”

Sam Mendes, “1917”

Todd Phillips, “Joker”

Best actor in a supporting role

Brad Pitt, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”

Al Pacino, “The Irishman”

Joe Pesci, “The Irishman”

Tom Hanks, “A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood”

Anthony Hopkins, “The Two Popes”

Best actress in a supporting role

Laura Dern, “Marriage Story”

Margot Robbie, “Bombshell”

Florence Pugh, “Little Women”

Scarlett Johansson, “Jojo Rabbit”

Kathy Bates, “Richard Jewell”

Best animated feature film

“Toy Story 4”

“How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World”

“Missing Link”

“I Lost My Body”

“Klaus”

Best international feature film

South Korea, “Parasite”

Spain, “Pain and Glory”

France, “Les Misérables”

North Macedonia, “Honeyland”

Poland, “Corpus Christi”

Best original screenplay

“Marriage Story”

“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”

“Parasite”

“Knives Out”

“1917”

Best adapted screenplay

“The Irishman”

“Jojo Rabbit”

“Little Women”

“The Two Popes”

“Joker”

Best documentary feature

“American Factory”

“The Edge of Democracy”

“Honeyland”

“For Sama”

“The Cave”

Best original song

“I’m Standing With You,” from “Breakthrough”

“Into the Unknown,” from “Frozen II”

“Stand Up,” from “Harriet”

“ (I’m Gonna) Love Me Again,” from “Rocketman”

“I Can’t Let You Throw Yourself Away,” from “Toy Story 4”

Best visual effects

“Avengers: Endgame”

“The Lion King”

“Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker”

“The Irishman”

“1917”

Best cinematography

“1917,” Roger Deakins

“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” Robert Richardson

“The Irishman,” Rodrigo Prieto

“Joker,” Lawrence Sher

“The Lighthouse,” Jarin Blaschke

Best production design

“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”

“The Irishman”

“1917”

“Jojo Rabbit”

“Parasite”

Best makeup and hairstyling

“Bombshell”

“Joker”

“Judy”

“Maleficent: Mistress of Evil”

“1917”

Best costume design

“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”

“Little Women”

“The Irishman”

“Jojo Rabbit”

“Joker”

Best original score

“1917,” Thomas Newman

“Joker,” Hildur Guðnadóttir

“Little Women,” Alexandre Desplat

“Marriage Story,” Randy Newman

“Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker,” John Williams

Best documentary short subject

“In the Absence”

“Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone (If You’re a Girl)”

“Life Overtakes Me”

“St. Louis Superman”

“Walk Run Cha-Cha”

Best animated short film

“Dcera (Daughter)”

“Hair Love”

“Kitbull”

“Memorable”

“Sister”

Best live action short film

“Brotherhood”

“Nefta Football Club”

“The Neighbors’ Window”

“Saria”

“A Sister”

Best film editing

“The Irishman”

“Ford v Ferrari”

“Parasite”

“Joker”

“Jojo Rabbit”

Best sound mixing

“1917”

“Ford v Ferrari”

“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”

“Ad Astra”

“Joker”

Best sound editing

“1917”

“Ford v Ferrari”

“Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker”

“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”

“Joker”

Stay tuned for our list of snubs…it’s likely pretty long.

The Academy Awards will air live Feb. 9 on ABC.

The post #OscarsSoWhite: The complete list of Academy Award nominees appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2FNwSHH
via

Lamine Diack: Former athletics chief's trial delayed until June

The trial of Lamine Diack, the disgraced former head of athletics' world governing body the IAAF, is delayed until June.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/35REaEK
via

Making physics and astronomy more welcoming to African-American students

Undergraduate physics is in the midst of a boom: In the last two decades, the  number of bachelor’s degrees awarded in physics in the United States has more than doubled, to a current all-time high. And yet, it’s clear that African-American students have been left out of this upward trend.

During the same period, African-American representation among physics bachelor’s degree earners has increased by just 4 percent, compared with a 36 percent increase in African-American undergraduates who have earned degrees in other physical sciences such as chemistry, engineering, and earth sciences.

Now a task force funded by the American Institute of Physics is calling for sweeping changes to the culture of physics in academia, in order to address this persistent underrepresentation. Following a two-year investigation, the National Task Force to Elevate African American representation in Undergraduate Physics and Astronomy, known as TEAM-UP, has released a report, titled “The Time Is Now: Systemic Changes to Increase African Americans with Bachelor’s Degrees in Physics and Astronomy.”

MIT News spoke with task force co-chair Edmund Bertschinger, who is a physics professor and the former Institute Community and Equity Officer at MIT, about the new report.

Q: What are the main findings from the task force’s investigation?

A: We found that the persistent underrepresentation of African-Americans in physics and astronomy is due to the lack of a supportive environment in many departments, and to the enormous financial challenges facing these students as well as the programs that have consistently demonstrated best practices in supporting their success. In particular, historically black colleges and universities have suffered a 50 percent decline in physics graduates over the last two decades, due mainly to financial hardship.

Many African-Americans who might otherwise pursue these fields are choosing majors that are perceived as being more supportive or rewarding. We also found wonderful departments that recruit and retain black students who go on to graduate school or high-paying jobs.

Q: What were some of the specific examples or anecdotes that you came across during this investigation, that in your view, emphasized the problem of African-American underrepresentation in physics and astronomy?

A: We surveyed and interviewed African-American students and centered them in our report. Some of their experiences were heartbreaking.

For example, one student said, “I’ve had two professors ask me why I’m in physics. They see how much I’m struggling. Like, ‘Why are you still a physics major? Why do you want to do this?’ Multiple times. It’s like, ‘Well, I’m here because this is what I want to do.’ They’re like, ‘You’re making your life difficult doing all this.’ It’s very discouraging when you hear [this].”

Unfortunately this is not an isolated incident. Discouragement from peers and faculty is one of the reasons many African-American students don’t persist in physics.

On the other hand, we visited departments that excel in retaining and graduating African-American undergraduates in physics. The faculty at those institutions — which included major research universities, smaller institutions, and colleges that serve black students — exemplified caring for students. I was especially impressed by the faculty of several departments we visited who emphasized student strengths instead of deficits, and who worked to build strong relationships enabling students to thrive through all hardships.

Q: The TEAM-UP task force is aiming to double the number of bachelor’s degrees in physics and astronomy awarded to African-American students by the year 2030. How is the team recommending that colleges and universities meet this goal?

A: This is not an engineering problem, it is a human problem. That means scientists need to embrace a new way of thinking, one that is informed by perspectives from the humanities and social sciences. The first step is to recognize that our professions have norms and values, which may be invisible to many of us, that either support or diminish the success of our students. We have many recommendations, but our top one is that faculty, department leaders, and professional societies take some time to consider the culture of their profession and organizations. The top-performing departments have done this and already follow our recommendations. If enough of the others do likewise, we will easily meet the goal.



from MIT News https://ift.tt/3a1KZal
via

It's Easy to Be a Jerk on Twitter. And Twitter Wants to Fix That

Kayvon Beykpour, Twitter's head of product, admits the platform can still incentivize toxic behavior. In a WIRED Q&A, he explains how he wants to fix it.  

from Wired https://ift.tt/371rSuM
via

Brooklyn teenager bullied and beaten because he knows rapper 50 Cent

The mom of Brooklyn teenager Davian Fraser says her son was bullied and beaten at his high school because he knows rapper 50 Cent.

Myasia Dickerson, the 14-year-old’s mom, has filed a suit against New York City’s Department of Education after she claims school officials at Williamsburg Charter High School did nothing to protect her son from bullying, according to The New York Daily News. She said the abuse started some of the students realized that Davian knows the rapper.

READ MORE: NO CHILL: 50 Cent Is The Biggest Bully On The Block

The Queens rapper, whose real name is Curtis Jackson, met Davian in 2016 and shared some Instagram posts that appeared to first suggest Davian was his son, according to E! News.

“This is Davian doing his, I’m cooler then my dad look,” the rapper posted to IG with the photo. Fiddy later said the boy is not his actual child, just a kid he mentors.

Since then, Dickerson said bullies have come for her son.

“It caused a big uproar in the school,” Dickerson told The Daily News. “The kids started to follow my son around, tried to put him on Snapchat, tried to take videos of him. They were following him to the train station.”

On Dec. 16, four classmates allegedly approached the teen and started to punch him in the head near a school stairwell. According to a police report, a student followed Davian to his locker, prompting him to try and find a school security officer on the fifth floor to no avail.

The report says the student slammed Davian’s head into the floor of the stairwell.

“He was attacked from behind as he tried to walk away,” Dickerson told the newspaper. “He was punched in the head and then the student proceeded to fight him and then he slammed my son’s head onto the ground.”

Davian suffered injuries to his head and neck, according to Dickerson’s claim against the city. In it, she said her son still deals with emotional and psychological trauma from the attack.

Dickerson said she blames the school. She said her son sought safety in a classroom before he was attacked but that a teacher wouldn’t let him stay because the class was in session.

“The teacher told him, `No, I have a class right now. You can’t stay in my classroom,’” Dickerson explained, according to The Daily News.

She is seeking $5.5 million in damages in the suit.

READ MORE: Gabrielle Union and Dwyane Wade help fund beautiful funeral for gay teen who committed suicide because of bullying

“Parents have the right to expect a safe environment when they send their child to school,” said the family’s attorney, Sanford Rubenstein. “When school personnel fail to provide that, especially when they are on notice of a problem, the school is liable to that child for damages.”

The rapper did not return requests for comment from The New York Daily News.

The post Brooklyn teenager bullied and beaten because he knows rapper 50 Cent appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/35MdBB2
via

Dwayne Johnson brings ‘The Young Rock’ series based on his childhood to NBC

It looks like Dwayne Johnson is heading back to the small screen and he’s ready to show the world how he grew into the powerhouse we all know and love. NBC has ordered The Young Rock, a scripted comedy series based on his childhood.

The 47-year-old actor who just completed his Ballers gig will produce the series along with Nahnatchka Khanand (Fresh Off the Boat) and appear on all 11 episodes ordered.

Is Dwayne Johnson returning to his wrestling roots?

According to Variety, Dany Garcia, Hiram Garcia, and Brian Gewirtz will also serve as executive producers on The Young Rock. Khan has already co-written the pilot with Jeff Chiang but no premiere date has been announced.

The Jumanji: The Next Level star shared the good news on social media after chatting up reporters at the TCAs via Facetime.

“I’ve told many many stories, many of them unbelievable, but all of them true. You’ll find Young Rock wreaking havoc in the streets of Hawaii, getting arrested doing a lot of things I shouldn’t do. We were evicted off the island and moved, to all places, Nashville, Tennessee,” he said during the call. “Imagine me being in downtown Nashville, listening to country music at 15 years-old, buying my first car from a crackhead for $70. We go into my high school years as Young Rock, and my role as a University of Miami football star, until I got beaten out of my position by a young man named Warren Sapp, who went on to become one of the greatest defensive tackles of all time.”

“The Forrest Gump-ian childhood I had growing up is coming to @nbc. Only my life included more arrests and kickin’ puberty’s ass when I turned 8. This is gonna be a fun show. #YoungRock,” he posted on Sunday. 

Gewirtz shared a photo montage of the star with a few hints on what fans can expect to see on the series.

Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson shocks social media fans with Hawaii wedding photo

Living in 13 different states… Getting arrested… meeting legends… hitting puberty… This is going to be such a fun show. #YoungRock coming to @nbc!”

The post Dwayne Johnson brings ‘The Young Rock’ series based on his childhood to NBC appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2Tm8MvA
via

Streaming Giants Need Shows Like Schoolhouse Rock

Civic-minded kids' programming isn’t just responsible—it’s a lucrative way for rival platforms to stand out on crowded screens.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2RbLJRB
via

Ava DuVernay thanks Critics’ Choice for ‘seeing us’ at awards show

Ava DuVernay is finally getting celebrated for her Netflix miniseries When They See Us.

At the 2020 Critics’ Choice Awards, the important series that humanized the five teenagers, now men, who were wrongly arrested and charged with raping and beating a New York City jogger in Central Park, received the most nominations out of any show. This comes after DuVernay was completely shut out of the 77th annual Golden Globes, as were other Black actors and directors.

READ MORE: Ava DuVernay, Melina Matsoukas score prestigious Directors Guild of America nominations

DuVernay, who won the Critics’ Choice award for “Best Limited Series,” received a standing ovation from the crowd. She gave thanks for the recognition and the inclusivity of the awards.

 “Thank you to the critics for finally letting us take the stage. Yes!” DuVernay said with enthusiasm. “We made a four-part, five-hour film. It was an act of love. 179 actors, 117 of them had speaking parts. 312 members of the crew, my three co-writers, my comrades at ARRAY, my fellow producers at Participant, Tribeca, and Harpo, and our great champions at Netflix who let a Black woman do her thing, what can I say? Thank you so much.”

The miniseries gave us a glimpse into the real-life hell of the five teenagers, Raymond SantanaKevin RichardsonAntron McCrayYusef Salaam, and Korey Wise, who each spent years in prison for a crime they never committed. They are now referred to as the “Exonerated Five.”

“This series began with a tweet from Raymond Santana, and now he, Antron, Kevin, Yusef, and the mighty Korey Wise stand for something larger than they ever imagined. They stand for justice, they shine bright like the gems that they always were, but we never saw,” DuVernay continued in her Critics’ Choice acceptance speech. “If you watched their story and felt something in that moment, I invite you to consider doing something. There’s no right thing to do. Do what you feel where you are, but don’t let your anger and sadness be all. Cases like this are happening all around the world, in this country most specifically on our watch. People who are poor and innocent are behind bars while the rich and guilty walk free and gain power.”

READ MORE: Here are 8 ways Ava DuVernay OWNED the decade

Jharel Jerome, who played Wise in the series, also took home a critics award for “Best Actor in a Limited Series.”

Later, Ava tweeted “A lovely night to remember. Thanks to @CriticsChoice for seeing us. xo”

The post Ava DuVernay thanks Critics’ Choice for ‘seeing us’ at awards show appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2FKbClZ
via

Libya conflict: Warring sides meet in Moscow for talks

After a tentative truce failed, the warring sides meet for talks brokered by Russia and Turkey.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/2RbdPMO
via

Black Business Owners With 750+ Credit Scores Are Rejected For Loans

Black business owners are being denied business loans from banks despite having good credit scores and showing consistent annual profits.

According to the most recent data available from the U.S. Federal Reserve, Black business owners are denied loans by banks more frequently than any other racial group, reported St. Louis Public Radio.

St. Louis-based “sauce man” Freddie Lee James Jr. and his wife Deborah are among those Black business owners who’ve been denied. The couple says despite bringing in $200,000 annually in profit, banks will not give them a loan.

“We have 750-760 credit score. … We pay all our debts. We don’t have no problems with that. But they were saying that the sauce business is not generating enough capital to their standards,” James said.

Statistics show Black-owned businesses are twice as likely to be denied as their white counterparts. While some say its difficult for small business to get loans in general, Galen Gondolfi said racism and discrimination in lending exacerbates the issue for Blacks.

St. Louis-based “sauce man” Freddie Lee James Jr. and his wife Deborah are among those Black business owners who’ve been denied. The couple says despite bringing in $200,000 annually in profit, banks will not give them a loan.

“We have 750-760 credit score. … We pay all our debts. We don’t have no problems with that. But they were saying that the sauce business is not generating enough capital to their standards,” James said.

Statistics show Black-owned businesses are twice as likely to be denied as their white counterparts. While some say its difficult for small business to get loans in general, Galen Gondolfi said racism and discrimination in lending exacerbates the issue for Blacks.

“I tell them failing to plan is like planning to fail,” said. Eddie G. Davis, the center’s president and executive director. “It’s like driving blind. … We work with them to develop their business plan, develop, for example, their target market and identify who their customers will be.”

This article was written by Isheka N. Harrison for The Moguldom Nation on January 9, 2020.



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/2TqcJzz
via

Australia’s Wildfires Might Intensify Future Climate Crises

Wildfires release vast amounts of carbon into the atmosphere. Their broader impact is far more complicated.

from Wired https://ift.tt/35POKMH
via

China's Swift ID of a New Virus Is a Win for Public Health

The mystery illness has claimed its first victim. Yet the crisis has a silver lining: It shows how much China's public health policies have improved.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2QPow8T
via

Ethiopia's Abiy Ahmed responds to Trump's Nobel Prize complaint

The US president suggested he had been overlooked for the prize for his own efforts on Ethiopia.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/30gaa4g
via