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Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Omar Epps gets cast in one of the four upcoming ‘Power’ spinoffs

It’s official! Veteran actor Omar Epps is joining the Power franchise and has been cast in its prequel and spinoff Power Book III: Raising Kanan.

The announcement was made via Deadline, only five days after the Power series finale wrapped up. Following the highly anticipated last episode, rapper 50 Cent, who executive produces the show, wasted no time confirming that Power Book III: Raising Kanan is in the works along with three other spinoffs.

READ MORE: Essence Atkins opens up about working with Bill Cosby and #MeToo movement: “The dynamics get really muddy”

Amongst those other offerings are: Power Book II: Ghost which will star Mary J. Blige, Method Man, Michael Rainey Jr. and Naturi Naughton. Larenz Tate will star in another spinoff entitled Power Book IV: Influence, and Joseph Sikora will finally get his chance playing the lead in Power Book V: Force, which is slated to be shot in Los Angeles.

The publication also reports that, “Along with Kemp’s End of Episode banner, 50 Cent’s his G-Unit Film and Television and Atmosphere Entertainment MM, Lionsgate TV is producing the four Power spinoffs series for Starz.”

In addition to acting, Epps who is repped by CAA, has also authored a book Fatherless to Fatherhood.

READ MORE: Rosario Dawson officially comes out as queer and explains why she waited so long

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YouTube Gaming's Most-Watched Videos Are Dominated by Scams and Cheats

YouTube is littered with bot-driven videos promising big in-game riches—that also try to steal your personal information.

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The Ugandan village devastated by elephantiasis

There is no cure for a type of elephantiasis caused by minerals in western Uganda's volcanic soil.

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"Battle Bus" memorialised executed environmentalists

Artist Sokari Douglas Camp wanted to honour Nigerian environmentalist Ken Saro Wiwa who was controversially executed in 1995

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Kandi Burruss breaks silence after Valentine’s Day shooting at her OLG restaurant

Kandi Burruss is speaking out after an unknown male walked into her popular Atlanta restaurant Old Lady Gang (OLG) and shot three people.

This week the “Real Housewives of Atlanta” star wrote a lengthy and emotional social media post addressing the tragic incident and sending her thoughts and prayers to those impacted.

READ MORE: Gunman walks into Kandi Burruss’ restaurant Old Lady Gang and shoots three people

“My family and I are truly saddened by the unfortunate events that occurred at Old Lady Gang (OLG) Camp Creek, on the evening of February 14th, an evening that was meant to celebrate love, unfortunately turned into something quite different,” began the caption. “Our prayers and thoughts go out to the individuals that were harmed or in any way negatively impacted. We are aware that this matter is being actively investigated by law enforcement and we are cooperating with law enforcement to bring to justice those involved.”

“As African-American business owners, it has been our goal to invest in our community by bringing jobs, quality dining, and a positive experience to the greater Atlanta area; we hope that you know and understand that the acts of violence that occurred yesterday evening do not, in any way, serve as a reflection of OLG or its values,” the message continues.

READ MORE: RHOA star Kandi Burruss’ new baby, Blaze, makes her social media debut

Burress ended by letting her followers know, “We appreciate all of the love and prayers that have come our way and we encourage anyone with any information regarding any aspects of the events that occurred to please reach out to law enforcement as soon as possible.”

According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, on Valentine’s Day night, while several people were celebrating the holiday with a night out, a man came into the OLG location in East Point targeting another man. After firing multiple shots, the man also hit two bystanders who were taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

“We were waiting for our spot at the Juicy Crab and we were waiting outside actually at that bench right there,” witness Brynae Kinsey told CBS 46. “We heard two gunshots and I seen somebody run out that door, and I ran…I just heard her scream ‘ahhh,’ and then I heard two pops. Pop, pop. I just wondered what was going through his head for him to pop off like that.””

READ MORE: Black swimmer suing police after being handcuffed and gun pointed at head

View this post on Instagram

My family and I are truly saddened by the unfortunate events that occurred at Old Lady Gang (OLG) Camp Creek, on the evening of February 14th, an evening that was meant to celebrate love, unfortunately turned into something quite different. Our prayers and thoughts go out to the individuals that were harmed or in any way negatively impacted. We are aware that this matter is being actively investigated by law enforcement and we are cooperating with law enforcement to bring to justice those involved. As African-American business owners, it has been our goal to invest in our community by bringing jobs, quality dining, and a positive experience to the greater Atlanta area; we hope that you know and understand that the acts of violence that occurred yesterday evening do not, in any way, serve as a reflection of OLG or its values. We appreciate all of the love and prayers that have come our way and we encourage anyone with any information regarding any aspects of the events that occurred to please reach out to law enforcement as soon as possible.

A post shared by Kandi Burruss (@kandi) on

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Tiffany Boone addresses why she left the hit show, ‘The Chi’

Tiffany Boone, who formerly acted on Showtime’s The Chi before abruptly leaving the show in November 2018 after alleging she was being harassed by co-star Jason Mitchell, is shining some light on her experience.

READ MORE: ‘The Chi’ actress Tiffany Boone breaks silence after Jason Mitchell’s firing

In her three-page Instagram post, which she captioned “feeling grateful and free,” Boone said when she worked for Lena Waithe’s hit show, “not everyone was interested in creating a work environment that was conducive to each person feeling safe, seen and heard.”

 

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feeling grateful and free.

A post shared by Tiffany Boone (@tiffmonet) on

Boone said she felt a personal responsibility to address the matter. “I felt that if I didn’t speak up, other voices that were trying to be heard would be silenced.”

“You don’t carelessly leave a ‘hit show’ that is praised by your community,” Boone wrote in her IG post. “I deeply love Chicago and the people of that city who have embraced me. I felt honored and privileged to be part of telling their story. The weight of what I was leaving behind felt like a ton, but the weight of my responsibility to speak up was even heavier. There were people who questioned my decision. How could I be sure I would work again, especially on a project of that magnitude? I wasn’t sure, but I had faith that once I took that leap I could be guided wherever I was supposed to go.”

“Never did I imagine that that leap would turn into the most beautiful flight,” Boone added. “I knew it was a risk but I feel as if the second I dove off that cliff, there was a hand beneath me lifting me higher.”

Deadline reported that Boone left The Chi in its second season and was later cast in Jordan Peele’s Amazon series Hunters, where she said everyone affiliated with the project “made it clear that they were creating an environment of safety, respect, and collaboration.”

READ MORE: WATCH: Jason Mitchell denies sexual misconduct and opens up about being fired from ‘The Chi’

Boone also worked on Hulu’s Little Fires Everywhere, produced by Kerry Washington and Reese Witherspoon’s production companies. Boone said this experience couldn’t be more different than her time on The Chi. “It is not simply that this show is run by women. It is run by women who are committed to supporting other women, telling unique and compelling stories written by and about women, and creating an environment where each and every person feels safe and inspired to create their best work,” Boone wrote on IG.

Mitchell was subsequently axed from The Chi last year and he also was fired from Desperados, a Netflix movie, after other actresses accused him of harassment. Mitchell was later fired by his agency, UTA.

The post Tiffany Boone addresses why she left the hit show, ‘The Chi’ appeared first on TheGrio.



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University of Ghana lecturers suspended after 'sex-for-grades' exposé

Undercover filming showed the Ghanaian academics breaching university policies on sexual harassment.

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Wake Up, Democrats! Memes Matter in the Race to 2020

Winning the White House will require replacing communications directors with social-media-savvy chief content officers.

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Study finds Black students are suspended more than white peers

Black students face the harshest discipline in schools across America. They are also less likely to be accepted into gifted and talented programs.

READ MORE: #BlackExcellence: Atlanta debate team takes top honors at Harvard competition second year in a row

So found a study by the American Educational Research Journal, which examined U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights data from more than 1,880 public school districts nationwide. The study, entitled “Categorical Inequality in Black and White: Linking Disproportionality Across Multiple Educational Outcomes,” found that Black and white students have sizeable differences in discipline rates, grade level-retention, classification into special education, gifted and talented and Advanced Placement programs. The years studied were from 2011 through 2016.

Or to put it another way – Black students are suspended 1.5 times more frequently than their white classmates in the United States. And, on average, white students enroll in AP classes 1.3 times as often as Black students and have a 1.7 times higher likelihood to get into gifted programs, according to The Seattle Times.

So who’s the blame for the racial disparity? The study puts the blame largely on school districts, not families or their socioeconomic status.

“Systemic patterns of racial socioeconomic inequality drive inequalities across multiple educational outcomes; however, discretionary policies at local levels are more influential for nonachievement outcomes,” the study found.

“We want to shine the light back on schools directly so they feel compelled to explain to us why these racial differences (exist),” explained lead researcher Kenneth Shores, assistant professor of human development and family studies at Pennsylvania State University, reported The Seattle Times.

Nowhere are the racial disparity numbers more stark than in Seattle, according to The Seattle Times.

READ MORE: Black students subjected to disproportionate amount of discipline, Ed. Dept report says

Seattle, along with nine other school districts, were in the bottom 10 with the largest Black-white achievement gap in terms of students being enrolled in gifted and talented programs. For example, in Seattle, white students are 2.38 times more likely to be enrolled in gifted programs than their Black peers and Black students are twice as likely as white students to be suspended.

Previous studies have blamed the disparity in discipline partly on how Black students are viewed by teachers as less innocent compared with their white peers.

The post Study finds Black students are suspended more than white peers appeared first on TheGrio.



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Stacey Abrams open to VP role in 2020 presidential election

Stacey Abrams is definitely open to running alongside a Democratic presidential candidate as his or her vice president in the 2020 presidential election.

In an interview Monday on ABC’s The View, Whoopi Goldberg told Abrams that while she is not currently running for president, “a lot of people want to see you on that ticket, first as vice president,” for which Abrams responded “of course” she’d accept an offer to join one of the current Democratic contenders for office.

READ MORE: Stacey Abrams confirms she’d consider being VP: ‘I will not diminish my ambition’

This represents a change from a year ago when Abrams told The View that she was not interested in the VP job because “I think you don’t run for second place.”

Abrams, the former minority leader of the Georgia House of Representatives, now sees things differently.

“It would be doing a disservice to every woman of color, every woman of ambition, every child who wants to think beyond their known space for me to say no or to pretend, ‘Oh, no, I don’t want it.’ Of course, I want it. Of course, I want to serve America. Of course, I want to be a patriot and do this work. And so, I’d say yes,” Abrams said to the ladies on The View.

So far, Abrams said none of the remaining Democratic challengers have reached out to her offering her the position. And she refused to endorse a candidate, saying her “job right now is to fix our democracy” by actively working to combat and expose voter suppression tactics.

Abrams has a new book soon to be released entitled: Our Time is Now: Power, Purpose, and the Fight for a Fair America. It draws from her own experience running for governor of Georgia in 2018 and the numerous voter suppression challenges that arose— from access issues to the purging of voter rolls, according to The Hill.

READ MORE: Stacey Abrams tackles voter suppression in new book due out in June

“My best service is to be in that neutral space where it’s not about who the nominee is – it’s about making sure no matter who the nominee is, any person who wants to go and vote, can vote,” Abrams explained on The View. “That’s what we’re doing through Fair Fight 2020.”

Abrams launched Fair Fight 2020 after her 2018 gubernatorial loss to Republican Brian Kemp. Fair Fight 2020 aims to determine voter suppression challenges and fight back by financing voter protection operations in 20 key states, according to ABC News.

The post Stacey Abrams open to VP role in 2020 presidential election appeared first on TheGrio.



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6 Best Trackers (2020): GPS, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and Cellular

These are the best Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, GPS, and cellular clips to ensure that you never lose anything ever again.

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The Atlantic Ocean's 'Conveyor Belt' Stirs Up a Science Fight

Researchers are debating the best way to monitor the ocean currents that sweep through the Labrador Sea—and may foretell the planet's climate future.

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Young Black Americans Can Take A Free Birthright Trip To Africa

black americans africa

Young Black Americans have in recent years been given the opportunity to travel to their ancestral African countries and connect with their roots by nonprofit organizations.

One such nonprofit is Birthright Africa which has its headquarters in New York City.

“This isn’t about validating Black identity. It’s about providing an opportunity for people to explore their ancestry,” Birthright Africa co-founder Diallo Shabaz told CNN.

Another nonprofit organization that does a similar thing is Birthright Israel. It was initiated in 1994 by Charles Bronfman and Michael Steinhardt in collaboration with the Israeli government.

Birthright Israel sponsors free 10-day heritage trips to Israel for young adults aged 18-32.

Since the trips began in 1999, more than 600,000 people from 67 countries have participated in the Birthright Israel program. Around 80 percent of the participants have been from the U.S. and Canada.

During the trips to Israel, Participants are encouraged to discover new meaning in their personal Jewish identity.

Other countries that do this include Greece, Hungary, Macedonia, Armenia, Cuba, and Ireland.

Bright Africa’s goal is to give young people knowledge and understanding about Africa that the American school system does not provide.

To be eligible for a birthright trip to Africa, one has to be a U.S. citizen and between 13 and 30 years old. The person also has to be of African descent.

The trips are free. Flights, hotels, food, and the cost of museums are covered by Birthright Africa and its partners.

Register here for a Birthright Africa application.

 

This article was originally written by Kevin Mwanza for The Moguldom Nation.



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Uber Changes Its Rules, and Drivers Adjust Their Strategies

In response to a new law, the ride-hail service shows California drivers where a ride would go and how much it would pay. Drivers are learning when to say “No.”

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Essential Gear For Keeping Your Workspace Tidy

Whether you toil at home or in an open-plan office, these tools will keep your desk clean and your mind clear.

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Angry Nerd: Don't Fall for the Quantum Con

Quantum cryptography is clever and impressive, but companies calling it "unbreakable" and "unhackable" turns me into Shrödinger's sourpuss.

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Six-Word Sci-Fi: The Next Great Crowdsourced Project

Each month we publish a six-word story—and it could be written by you. 

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Deliver Us, Lord, From the Startup Life

In the Midwest, Christian entrepreneurs are searching for relief from the corrosive grind of company-building—while some faith leaders preach the gospel of crushing it.

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AI, the Transcription Economy, and the Future of Work

If you want to understand how technology is changing our job prospects, take a look at the folks who transcribe audio recordings into text.

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Floating Farms May Help Reinvent the World's Food Ecosystems

Thirty-four heifers aboard a stable in Rotterdam harbor are showing that cow buoys might be a sustainable, reliable alternative to our current food system.

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How Technology Explodes the Concept of ‘Generations’

Immense changes show us, year after year, that we are basically the same as ever, just reacting to the curves of life well out of our control.

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Clean Up Your Act With a Bidet for Any Budget

According to the CDC, the average person leaves a little something behind—0.14 grams of something—when they wipe. There's an appliance for that.

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Streaming Music Doesn't Flow, It Evaporates

Listening to streamed tunes through a smart speaker squeezes the ecstasy out of the experience. There are ways to get it back.

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Hundreds of Millions of PC Components Still Have Hackable Firmware

The lax security of supply chain firmware has been a known concern for years—with precious little progress being made.

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Nigeria assistant coach: NFF boss defends Joseph Yobo appointment

Nigeria Football Federation president Amaju Pinnick defends the choice of Joseph Yobo as assistant coach of the Super Eagles, amid a huge public outcry over his appointment.

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Monday, February 17, 2020

Nigerian entrepreneurs transform crop waste into clean fuel

Three Nigerian students hope their technology can stop thousands of deaths from charcoal cooking.

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Correcting the “jitters” in quantum devices

Labs around the world are racing to develop new computing and sensing devices that operate on the principles of quantum mechanics and could offer dramatic advantages over their classical counterparts. But these technologies still face several challenges, and one of the most significant is how to deal with “noise” — random fluctuations that can eradicate the data stored in such devices.

A new approach developed by researchers at MIT could provide a significant step forward in quantum error correction. The method involves fine-tuning the system to address the kinds of noise that are the most likely, rather than casting a broad net to try to catch all possible sources of disturbance.

The analysis is described in the journal Physical Review Letters, in a paper by MIT graduate student David Layden, postdoc Mo Chen, and professor of nuclear science and engineering Paola Cappellaro.

“The main issues we now face in developing quantum technologies are that current systems are small and noisy,” says Layden. Noise, meaning unwanted disturbance of any kind, is especially vexing because many quantum systems are inherently highly sensitive, a feature underlying some of their potential applications.

And there’s another issue, Layden says, which is that quantum systems are affected by any observation. So, while one can detect that a classical system is drifting and apply a correction to nudge it back, things are more complicated in the quantum world. “What's really tricky about quantum systems is that when you look at them, you tend to collapse them,” he says.

Classical error correction schemes are based on redundancy. For example, in a communication system subject to noise, instead of sending a single bit (1 or 0), one might send three copies of each (111 or 000). Then, if the three bits don’t match, that shows there was an error. The more copies of each bit get sent, the more effective the error correction can be.

The same essential principle could be applied to adding redundancy in quantum bits, or “qubits.” But, Layden says, “If I want to have a high degree of protection, I need to devote a large part of my system to doing these sorts of checks. And this is a nonstarter right now because we have fairly small systems; we just don’t have the resources to do particularly useful quantum error correction in the usual way.” So instead, the researchers found a way to target the error correction very narrowly at the specific kinds of noise that were most prevalent.

The quantum system they’re working with consists of carbon nuclei near a particular kind of defect in a diamond crystal called a nitrogen vacancy center. These defects behave like single, isolated electrons, and their presence enables the control of the nearby carbon nuclei.

But the team found that the overwhelming majority of the noise affecting these nuclei came from one single source: random fluctuations in the nearby defects themselves. This noise source can be accurately modeled, and suppressing its effects could have a major impact, as other sources of noise are relatively insignificant.

“We actually understand quite well the main source of noise in these systems,” Layden says. “So we don'’ have to cast a wide net to catch every hypothetical type of noise.”

The team came up with a different error correction strategy, tailored to counter this particular, dominant source of noise. As Layden describes it, the noise comes from “this one central defect, or this one central ‘electron,’ which has a tendency to hop around at random. It jitters.”

That jitter, in turn, is felt by all those nearby nuclei, in a predictable way that can be corrected.

“The upshot of our approach is that we’re able to get a fixed level of protection using far fewer resources than would otherwise be needed,” he says. “We can use a much smaller system with this targeted approach.”

The work so far is theoretical, and the team is actively working on a lab demonstration of this principle in action. If it works as expected, this could make up an important component of future quantum-based technologies of various kinds, the researchers say, including quantum computers that could potentially solve previously unsolvable problems, or quantum communications systems that could be immune to snooping, or highly sensitive sensor systems.

“This is a component that could be used in a number of ways,” Layden says. “It’s as though we’re developing a key part of an engine. We’re still a ways from building a full car, but we’ve made progress on a critical part.”

"Quantum error correction is the next challenge for the field," says Alexandre Blais, a professor of physics at the University of Sherbrooke, in Canada, who was not associated with this work. "The complexity of current quantum error correcting codes is, however, daunting as they require a very large number of qubits to robustly encode quantum information."

Blais adds, "We have now come to realize that exploiting our understanding of the devices in which quantum error correction is to be implemented can be very advantageous. This work makes an important contribution in this direction by showing that a common type of error can be corrected for in a much more efficient manner than expected. For quantum computers to become practical we need more ideas like this.​"

The research was supported by the U.S. Army Research Office and the National Science Foundation.



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FW de Klerk and the South African row over apartheid and crimes against humanity

A row over comments by South Africa's last white president, FW de Klerk, reopens old wounds.

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Niger aid stampede: At least 20 killed in Diffa

Ten others were injured as people queued for food and money in the southern town of Diffa, reports say.

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A Car ‘Splatometer’ Study Finds Huge Insect Die-Off

Measuring how many bugs fly into car windshields might sound silly. But to scientists predicting an “insect apocalypse,” the numbers are deadly serious. 

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Ne-Yo and wife Crystal Renay are divorcing after four years of marriage

Ne-Yo has confirmed he is splitting from his wife after four years of marriage.

The R&B crooner announced in an interview on Saturday, Feb. 15, that he and wife Crystal Renay are divorcing after rumors about their split began to circulate online last week.

“It’s slowly but surely becoming public knowledge that myself and my wife have decided to go ahead and get a divorce,” he said on the “Private Talk With Alexis Texas” podcast, Us Weekly reported.

READ MORE: Common opens up about the emotional pain of his break-up with Erykah Badu

“It’s not a sad thing, it’s more of us realizing that — long story short, I’m never gonna talk bad about her. I’m not that person. There’s nothing bad to say about her. She’s a fantastic woman. She’s the mother of my children and she’s always gonna be that and I will always respect her,” Ne-Yo added.

He wants fans to know that the divorce is not the result of infidelity or the work of outside forces. It seems their individual demons could no longer co-exist.

“Long story short, she’s got demons just like everybody else, just like me,” he continued. “We realize that our demons don’t mesh and until both of us get a hold of our personal demons, it’s gonna be just difficult for us to stay married.”

READ MORE: California school district names elementary school after Michelle Obama

News of their separation was first reported by The Jasmine Brand, with an insider telling the gossip site that Ne-Yo and Renay have been having major issues for a while now.

“With that being said, that’s that, that’s the end of that chapter, not the end of the book,” added Ne-Yo during the podcast interview. “Like I said, that’s the mother of my kids and I love her to death. We’re going to be family forever.”

He also noted that his upcoming new single titled “Pinky Ring” was inspired by his ex.

“The song is not a diss to her, the song is not about her,” he explained. “The song is about how I chose to handle the situation, the way that I chose to lift myself up and keep moving, as we all must do.”

In response, Renay appeared to troll her ex by posting a clip on IG of her with a man rocking a ring on his pinky finger, who she asks to be her Valentine’s date.

Ne-Yo and Renay tied the knot 2016 and share two sons, Shaffer, 3, and Roman, 20 months. He is also father to 9-year-old Madilyn and 8-year-old Mason from his previous relationship with Monyetta Shaw.

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OPINION: Michael Bloomberg has best plan to close the achievement gap in our schools

We are failing to prepare poor kids across the country for success in school, putting them at a disadvantage for the rest of their lives. The school readiness gap between children coming from low-income and moderate- to high-income households is stark. While 75% of kids from moderate- to high-income families are ready for school at age five, less than 48% of poor kids are. We can and must do better to ensure every child in every zip code has the opportunity to realize their full potential.

Based on my experience as an educator working with children and families in Harlem for the past 30 years, I believe we must take a holistic approach to prepare young people for success in school, starting at birth. It is essential to help first-time parents learn the skills they need to properly care for their babies and help their toddlers build their vocabulary. We also need to open more high-quality early education programs in distressed communities. Students who go to high-quality early education programs are less likely to require special education or repeat a grade and are more likely to graduate from high school than other children.

READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: Here is why Black educator Geoffrey Canada endorsed Mike Bloomberg

Democratic presidential candidate Mike Bloomberg recently outlined a comprehensive set of plans to help working families and improve child care and early childhood education across the United States. Bloomberg will give all new parents 12 weeks of paid family leave so that they can take time away from work to bond with their newborns or adopted children. He also will expand the federal government’s Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program so that more low-income families can benefit from free and voluntary home visits by trained nurses. Nurse home visits reduce maternal and child mortality rates. In addition, Bloomberg will provide grants to states to help promote language learning programs for young children that will narrow the school readiness gap.

Bloomberg will make sure working families have access to quality, affordable child care. He wants to provide more low-income families with free child care by expanding funding for Early Head Start and Head Start, with the goal of tripling the number of infants and toddlers in Early Head Start and ensuring more three- to five-year-olds who are eligible for Head Start are able to participate. Bloomberg also knows there’s a shortage of quality child care providers in distressed communities around the country. 56% of urban neighborhoods do not have enough licensed child care options. That’s why he will fund programs to help child care providers scale up their businesses in distressed communities as part of his $70 billion investment in the 100 most disadvantaged communities in America.

READ MORE: Joy Ann Reid on Bloomberg: Dems need nominee to ‘fight like a Republican’

Under Bloomberg’s plan, every family will have access to full-day preschool for their three- and four-year-olds. Bloomberg will incentivize states to provide universal access to pre-Kindergarten. States that increase enrollment of low- to moderate-income students and enhance the quality of early childhood education programs will be rewarded. Like me, Bloomberg is deeply concerned that the U.S. government’s spending on early childhood education ranks near the bottom among developed countries. As president, he will work with Congress to ensure our government makes a much greater investment in our nation’s young people.

I worked with Bloomberg on a number of initiatives during his time as New York City’s mayor. Although we didn’t agree on every policy he pursued, I never doubted his commitment to improving our education system and creating more opportunities for all New Yorkers. After reviewing his latest plans, I’m confident Bloomberg will take the steps we need to narrow the school readiness gap across the country and set up our young people for success in the classroom and beyond.

Geoffrey Canada is the founder of the Harlem Children’s Zone. He represents himself and is not representing the views of the Harlem Children’s Zone, which does not endorse any candidates for public office. He has endorsed Mike Bloomberg for president.

The post OPINION: Michael Bloomberg has best plan to close the achievement gap in our schools appeared first on TheGrio.



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PayPal SVP Peggy Alford Works Hard at Letting People Get to Know Her at Work

Portraits of Power Peggy Alford

Featuring a broad cross-section of women who have distinguished themselves across a rich variety of careers, our Portraits of Power series is a celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Black Enterprise, and of black women. It’s a place for today’s businesswomen to share their own favorite images and their own stories, in their own words. Today’s portrait is Peggy Alford, a senior vice president at PayPal and the first black woman to sit on Facebook’s board of directors

 

Peggy Alford

SVP, Core Markets, PayPal

My first job was at Big Al’s hamburger joint in a shopping mall in St. Louis. I was a cashier and had to make hand dipped ice cream shakes.

My big break came when eBay, where I was working, bought a company called Rent.com and they asked me to be CFO.

I’ve had to work hardest at letting people get to know me personally at work.

I never imagined I would have three boys.

I wish I’d learned to accept help from others sooner.

The risk I regret not taking is I never pursued a competitive university.

If I could design my fantasy self-care day, it would be spent with good girlfriends, hike, spa, good food and lots of wine.

Trying to balance all my priorities at work and home keeps me up at night.

When I’m struggling, I say to myself, I can do anything for (xx) amount of time.

I am unapologetically reserved.


Portraits of Power is a yearlong series of candid insights from exceptional women leaders. It is brought to you by ADP.



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Meet the Sulfur Miners Risking Their Lives Inside a Volcano

Mt. Ijen, on the island of Java, is one of the most dangerous workplaces on Earth.

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Mugabe and Moi: The legacy of a dying African generation

The ex-presidents of Zimbabwe and Kenya shared a history and some leadership traits, writes Brian Hungwe.

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J.Cole and Puma Announce Collaboration and New Short Film

J. Cole

Global sports company PUMA has announced a partnership with Grammy Award winner J.Cole. The rapper shot a commercial that is being aired during this weekend’s NBA All-Star game. The commercial and a short film was conceived and co-directed by Cole himself. The theme of the commercial spot, which was a joint production between J.Cole’s Dreamville and PUMA speaks to never abandoning one’s dream, despite the obstacles faced or time passed.

“Our partnership with Cole is deep-rooted,” said Adam Petrick, Global Director of Brand & Marketing at PUMA states in a written statement. “Cole’s involved in product creation, marketing campaigns and cultural guidance. He is going to be a key player in many of the things we do at PUMA moving forward and we’re excited to work with him not only on a product level but even more importantly as one of our athletes. Cole sits at the intersection of music and sport and represents everything that PUMA stands for as a brand.”

PUMA‘s newest Hoops silhouette, the Sky Dreamer, was just recently released on February 13. The Sky Dreamer is a relaunch of the original style, the Sky LX, which was a sneaker that was worn on-court in the ‘80s. After nearly four decades, It now returns to the basketball court. The heritage-inspired mid-top silhouette infused with a touch of today’s style includes a Dreamville “Dreamer” emblem, drawn from the inspiration from Cole’s brand, Dreamville. The latest sneaker will be worn on and off the court by select PUMA Hoops athletes and is already being worn and showcased by J.Cole over the past few months. The Sky Dreamer is just the first of many planned Hoops products that Cole will have a role in creating before dropping his own signature Dreamer footwear and apparel coming later this year.

 

The Sky Dreamer, which is now available on PUMA.com and at Foot Locker in the U.S., is equipped with PUMA Hoops technology, including the brand’s signature ProFoam cushioning and high-abrasion grip for peak stability. It also features forefoot webbing for stabilization and lockdown. The Sky Dreamer will retail for $130.

Cole was tapped by PUMA based on his connection to basketball, fashion and music culture.



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The *Stranger Things* Season 4 Trailer Is Full of Surprises

The Duffer Brothers sent it out with a message signed, “From Russia with love.” 

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How a Street-Smart Supercar Got Ready for the Racetrack

To build an NSX for racing, Acura had to "dumb down" its model by omitting its smartest part: the electric motor.

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7 Best Action Cameras (2020): GoPro, DJI, Insta360

Whether you're shredding the slopes or diving the seas, these compact, often waterproof cameras are made for danger.

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Kizito Mihigo: Singer found dead in Rwandan police cell

The singer was arrested near the border with Burundi and accused of attempting to flee the country.

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The Hottest New Literary Genre Is ‘Doomer Lit’

Stories about climate disaster have entertained us for years. Now, they’re getting more unforgiving and dire.

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Today's Cartoon: Like Father, Like Son

The worst way to realize you’re turning into your parents.

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Qanon Deploys 'Information Warfare' to Influence the 2020 Election

The conspiracy movement lost its online home when 8chan was shut down. Followers migrated to other sites—and have set their sights on the presidential race.

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Wikipedia Is the Last Best Place on the Internet

People used to think the crowdsourced encyclopedia represented all that was wrong with the web. Now it's a beacon of so much that's right.

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Nikita Pearl Waligwa: Queen of Katwe stars pay tribute

Nikita Pearl Waligwa had been diagnosed with a brain tumour and died in Uganda at the age of 15.

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Porto's Moussa Marega quits match over racist abuse at Vitoria Guimaraes

Porto forward Moussa Marega leaves the pitch during his side's win at Vitoria Guimaraes in reaction to alleged racist abuse from some home supporters.

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Everton end shirt partnership agreement with SportPesa

Everton confirm they are to end their shirt partnership agreement with Kenyan betting firm SportPesa at the end of the season.

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Sunday, February 16, 2020

An entrepreneur finds his way to MIT

Jakub Chudik went to China for the first time on his dad’s business trip. A translator communicated in English, and Chudik translated to Slovak, his father’s native language. Just a few years later, as a rising junior at MIT, Chudik was in China again — this time to pitch his own business to Chinese investors.

He was pitching the startup he co-founded: ConquerX, which aims to develop a new type of blood test for detecting early-stage cancers. As chief technology officer, Chudik has high hopes for his company, but he’s also focused on finishing his senior year and graduating with a computer science and engineering degree.

Chudik began his journey to MIT as an entrepreneurially minded high school student in a small town in Slovakia. There, he discovered the free online courses offered by MITx on the edX platform.

He had learned English at his bilingual school and was interested in helping his mother grow her small accounting business, so he completed MITx’s Entrepreneurship 101 and 102 courses. From there, he applied and was accepted to the MIT Global Entrepreneurship Bootcamp.

Through the MIT Bootcamp, a weeklong innovation and leadership program on campus for people from across the world, Chudik — who at age 18 was one of the youngest in the group — conceptualized a business idea with a couple of other participants. Among them was Chudik’s current business partner, Deborah Zanforlin, who had the idea for the technology on which ConquerX is based. After the program, he decided to apply to MIT.

“I loved how welcoming the environment at MIT was,” Chudik recalls. “I felt I could be myself and always find support and guidance. Especially being able to have a frank one-on-one discussion with a professor made a big impression on me at the time.” 

Hooked by helping people

Chudik became interested in medical technology, especially related to cancer, after his younger brother, who was a toddler at the time, was diagnosed with cancer during Chudik’s first year of high school. His brother is healthy now, but that experience was an eye-opener for Chudik.

“I had never had such a bad disease so close to me before. And I realized how much disease can impact not just the person but the whole family,” he says.

He was hooked by the idea of the startup once Zanforlin told him about the technology she had been working on.

“I thought it would be really great if I could be involved in helping people. I believed that I somewhat understood what people [experiencing cancer] were going through or what our company could help save them from” by enabling early intervention, Chudik says.

Chudik says he had always assumed that only doctors could help people with health problems. “I realize now that you can be an engineer; you could come up with good technology that would maybe help even more people than if you were a doctor.”

Now, through his experience with ConquerX, Chudik has become interested in the management and investing side of business. He thinks he might want to be a chief technology officer for other startups or become a venture capitalist and help fund small businesses.

Chudik spent this past summer working on his startup and gaining more experience — instead of doing an internship, he managed interns at his own startup. But he has used MIT’s Independent Activities Period (IAP) to acquire hands-on experience working for larger companies.

During the IAP of his sophomore year, he went to Singapore and was a research intern for a biomedical institute. And for his junior year, he worked as a data science intern in Geneva for Expedia.

“I must say, though, that classes and the startup have taken the majority of my time during college,” Chudik says.

No longer strictly ballroom

Chudik’s commitment to his startup echoes the way he delved into dance when he was growing up.

His junior high and high school experiences were filled with ballroom dancing. He got swept into it when one of his friends needed a partner, and her entire family came to his house to ask him to join her.  

He danced for seven years, which included five years of competitive dance. He became extremely dedicated to the art, training for 12-20 hours a week plus entire weekends at competitions. He would travel to different cities throughout Slovakia, spend hours doing his hair and makeup, and practicing the routine.

After a while, competitive dance started to take over his life and added a lot of stress and demand on his parents, so he stopped.

“I’m glad it’s over now,” he says. Chudik says that he now has more control over his life and has a better sleeping and eating schedule in college than ever before.

“During international student orientation, the sophomore and junior orientation leaders found out about my ballroom dance experience. They tried tricking me into joining and spent the whole week trying to recruit me, but no, it’s in the past now,” he says, with a laugh.

He spends his time focusing on his classes — from his major-related classes to electives like game design — and the MIT International Students Association.

He says the organization is currently not very active, but it has been a source of important friendships.

“Sometimes we would meet new people, but oftentimes we would just meet up with friends at the meetings that we haven’t seen for a long time,” Chudik says. “The international community is not so big here, so we kind of all know each other.”

When Chudik first moved to Boston, he didn’t know of anyone else from Slovakia — not even students from other universities. He says that when he studied in Slovakia, it was rare for people to apply to colleges in the United States. He had to slowly convince his family to let him study so far away. But once he got into MIT and received his financial assistance, his family was overjoyed.

Chudik grew up with a large extended family who would come over regularly for dinner. He knew he would be saying goodbye to that sense of community when he came to Boston. But Chudik received MIT’s Kate and Gordon B. Baty Scholarship, and the family responsible for the scholarship made him feel at home. The family hosts lunches two to three times a year and has a Thanksgiving dinner for all the students in the scholarship program.

“They’ve become my second family here. They’re like grandparents that I’ve never had,” he says. “They’re so great.”

Chudik has adjusted to Boston and has made this “very European-like” city his home. Because he found his way around an American university, he now mentors high school students in Slovakia and helps them navigate the college application process.



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Children among 22 killed in attack on Cameroon village

No-one has claimed responsibility for the incident, but an opposition party blamed the army.

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Coronavirus: A Cameroon student on how he recovered

China-based student Kem Senoua is the first African to contract the virus - he spoke to the BBC.

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‘Queen of Katwe’ star Nikita Pearl Waligwa Dies at 15

Nikita Pearl Waligwa, the 15-year-old who starred in Disney’s Queen of Katwe, died tragically Sunday of a brain tumor.

According to Uganda’s Daily Monitor, the young actress was diagnosed with the tumor in 2016 as she took on the role of Gloria in Katwe. It was a movie based on the life of Phiona Mutesi who started playing chess at nine despite living in the Ugandan slum of Katwe and not being in school. She ultimately competed in international tournaments and won. Waligwa was cast as Gloria, the daughter of Lupita Nyong’o’s character, and she explained chess to her friend Phiona, helping her become a champion.

READ MORE: Trailer released for Lupita Nyong’o’s new movie ‘Queen of Katwe’

Mira Nair, director of Queen of Katwe, was said to have tried to get funding for treatment in India for Waligwa as there was not the necessary equipment in Uganda. In 2017, the teenager recovered and was given a clean bill of health but another tumor was found last year.

Waligwa was a senior at Gayaza High School at the time of her death. The oldest girl’s school in Uganda paid tribute to the fallen star.

“Fare thee well Nikita Pearl Waligwa. You were a darling to many and we have lost you to brain tumor at such a tender age. Nikita was in S.3. Rest in Perfect Peace dear,” the school tweeted.

READ MORE: ‘I would never’: Issa Rae shuts down rumors she’s remaking ‘Set It Off’

David Oyelowo, who played her chess teacher in Katwe, fondly remembered her on social media. He described her as a “light” and described being humbled as she fought her illness.

“We mourn the loss of our beautiful Nikita Pearl Waligwa. She was a ball of light in @queenofkatwemovie and in life. Her battle with a brain tumor was humbling to witness. Her light will live on. 💔#rip,” Oyelowo captioned the post.

 

Rest In Peace.

The post ‘Queen of Katwe’ star Nikita Pearl Waligwa Dies at 15 appeared first on TheGrio.



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Dwyane Wade says telling Gabrielle Union about break up baby was the ‘hardest thing’

A promo for an upcoming documentary unearthed details of how Dwyane Wade had to break it to Gabrielle Union years ago that he had fathered a child while the couple was briefly separated.

“Hardest thing I’ve ever had to do is man up and tell Gabrielle Union that I’ve had a child with somebody else,” Wade says in ESPN’s “D. Wade: Life Unexpected” airing on February 23.

READ MORE: Dwyane Wade is proud of his child Zaya and wants her to ‘be her best self’

“When you hold something in that you know is going to come out and you have this information and you know it’s gonna f— somebody’s life up, that you care about, that you love, if it don’t hurt you, then you’re not human,” Wade added, in an interview with Entertainment Tonight. “… Me and Gab just went through something that you never want to go through and we still came out of it.”

Wade and Union began dating in 2008 and broke up briefly in 2013 which is when he fathered a son, Xavier, now 6, with Aja Metoyer. The pair announced their engagement later in 2013, and in a press conference before a game in December of that year, according to Yahoo!, he told reporters of the baby: “I had a time, a part in our break, in our pain and our hurt, a blessing came out of it in my life, having a son that was born healthy.”

READ MORE: Dwyane Wade backs Gabrielle Union after she exits ‘America’s Got Talent’ over reported racial issues

Wade also has a son, Zaire, 18, and daughter Zaya, 12, from his previous marriage to Siohvaughn Funches. The NBA legend is also guardian to and the guardian to nephew Dahveon, 18. Wade recently opened up to Ellen DeGeneres about how he and his family are supporting Zaya who is transgender. He and Union share daughter Kaavia born in 2018. Wade retired from the NBA after the 2018-19 season after 16 seasons which included three championships. He pointed to his expanding family as one of the reasons he was walking away.

Wade has since begun working as a studio analyst for TNT, and on Saturday he was a judge in the All-Star Weekend dunk contest in his hometown of Chicago.

 

 

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Black swimmer suing police after being handcuffed and gun pointed at head

The only Black member of a college swimming team, Jaylan Butler, was also the only member to be accosted by police, handcuffed, forced to the ground with a gun pointed at his head and ordered not to move.

Butler, of Eastern Illinois University, filed the suit in federal court in January with the help of the ACLU, which contends that six officers from three different departments refused to let Butler go even when his teammates and coaches told them that he was with them and had done nothing wrong.

The police claimed at the time that they were looking for a suspect, according to NBC News.  However, the suit alleges that the officers still refused to let Butler go even after he provided ID. The suit also claims that the police also did not document the arrest.

READ MORE: Mother sues Franklin County Board of Education for racial discrimination

The incident on February 24, 2019, began when the team made a rest stop in East Moline, Ill., on the way back from a tournament. Like his teammates, Butler got off the bus, went to take a selfie near a road sign, and was returning to the bus when several cars pulled up and officers got out with guns drawn.

According to the suit, the police shouted at Butler to put his hands up, and he did without resisting. The police then cuffed him and forced him to the ground with two officers pinning him down and another pointing a gun at his head, saying, “If you keep moving, I’m going to blow your f—— head off.’’

“I felt numb. I didn’t really know what to expect,” Butler said of his thoughts as his ordeal went on.

READ MORE: Illinois High school responds after graduates are caught on video screaming ugly racist language

Even after they were told Butler was with the team, police still refused to release him, putting him in the squad car.

Eventually, the officers removed the handcuffs and asked Butler to get his ID from the bus. After he showed them his identification, they told him he was free to go.

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker called for a “thorough and transparent investigation” into the incident, posting on his Facebook page: “It’s unacceptable for any young person to feel unsafe and disrespected anywhere in this state — but every day, too many young people of color live through it.”

Butler told NBC of his feelings since the incident: “I’ve been OK … in the past, when bad things happened to me I tried to see the good but this started to eat at me.”

 

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