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Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Black church group asks for compassionate release of Tito Jackson’s ex-wife’s killer

The National Black Church Initiative, a group of 34,000 Black churches, has asked California Gov. Gavin Newsom to release Donald Bohana on compassionate grounds given the coronavirus pandemic.

In 1998, Bohana, now 82, was convicted of the 1994 murder of Delores “Dee Dee” Jackson, Tito Jackson’s 39-year-old ex-wife. She was also the mother of his three sons, TJ, Taj and Tarryl who recorded as 3T.

In a press release, NBIC is asking the governor of California to show “compassion” and release  Bohana on “moral grounds” due to the coronavirus pandemic. The pastors are requesting that he be allowed to spend his final days with loved ones.

Donald Bohana
Donald Bohana (Credit: Donald Bohana)

READ MORE: Janet Jackson, Bruno Mars to headline Essence Fest

The church group further claimed that Bohana, who suffered a stroke in 2010 and has lost the use of his right hand, has unfairly remained imprisoned well beyond his minimum eligible parole date of July 1, 2008.

The NBCI statement read, in part:

NBCI believes there has been a miscarriage of justice in this case. However, even if your office does not support setting aside a twenty-year conviction, there can be no doubt that Mr. Bohana has clearly served his time and should be released out of basic humanity.

The Most Right Rev. Anthony Evans has personally invested in the case of Mr. Bohana’s outcome. “There are many things in life I feel that the Church should speak with the power that God Almighty has to grant it,” he said. “Injustice is at the top of that list. Mr. Bohana has been treated unjustly, and the Black Church is committed to using its moral authority to correct the injustice.

“We urge everyone to read Attorney Thomas V. Girardi’s remarkable letter to Gov. Brown in September 2018 and the Application for Commutation of Sentence, which outlines the strongest arguments citing all the contradictions in the case against Mr. Bohana. Why was this man ever convicted?  The evidence is just not there.

“I also appeal to all members of the Jackson family to join with us to ask for the release of Mr. Bohana, to seek forgiveness of the matter and to move forward with your lives.”

READ MORE: Janet Jackson fondly remembers Ja’Net DuBois following her passing

Dee Jackson
Dee Dee Jackson (Credit: Dee Dee Jackson Foundation)

For the loved ones of Jackson, her death has remained a vivid part of their lives. According to ABC News, Bohana and Jackson had been dating about three months when she drowned in the pool at Bohana’s Ladera Heights home after a night of drinking. Bohana says he tried to rescue her but couldn’t because he was intoxicated.

Cuts and bruises found on her body could have indicated a beating, or that she was injured in the rescue. Despite some evidence and conflicting expert testimony, Bohana was ultimately responsible for his own fate when he took the stand. His testimony convinced the jury to convict.

 

READ MORE: Tiny Harris says Bill Cosby should be put on house arrest due to coronavirus

Bohana and his family believe the Jackson family applied pressure to help win a prosecution. Bohana was convicted of second-degree murder in 1998 and sentenced to 15 years to life. He’s been in jail ever since.

Not only was Bohana convicted on his own testimony, her injuries included 58 separate cuts and bruises on her body. The Jackson family also said a drowning accident was unlikely as Dee Dee was afraid of water and couldn’t swim.

Bohana has been denied parole four times. Each time, TJ, Taj and Tarryl have appeared to opposed his release. However, ABC News reported in 2017 that they are now leaving it up to the parole board to decide. Bohana has steadfastly maintained his innocence over the years.

ABC News further reported that Bohana’s daughter, Donna, a realtor in Malibu, has been reviewing the case files in order to free her father. The Jackson family believes that Bohana, once a wealthy entrepreneur, was angered that Dee Dee wouldn’t provide him with funds to help him out of debt.

Jackson’s death was the focus of a 20/20 special report in 2017. Watch some of it below.

 

 

 

The post Black church group asks for compassionate release of Tito Jackson’s ex-wife’s killer appeared first on TheGrio.



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CNN captions during Trump briefing go viral: ‘Painfully accurate’

As President Donald Trump took part in his daily press briefing yesterday, many eyes were instead glued to the onscreen box just beneath him which CNN used to chronicle what was really transpiring.

READ MORE: Trump retweets post calling for Dr. Anthony Fauci to be fired

Screen captions such as “Trump refuses to acknowledge any mistakes,” and “Angry Trump turns briefing into propaganda session” changed rapidly on CNN’s chyrons as Trump’s Coronavirus Task Force briefing became increasingly campaign-like. The captions were celebrated by many across social media.

“Talk about speaking truth to power,” tweeted Jerry Mathes II.

“Great job! That is the way to talk to that bully,” posted exasperated realist.

Others criticized CNN for becoming part of the story.

Trump used Monday’s task force briefing to float his own narrative. Trump showed the media a nearly four-minute video touting what he calls his successes in combating the novel coronavirus pandemic.

Trump theGrio.com
WASHINGTON, DC – APRIL 13: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during the daily briefing of the White House Coronavirus Task Force at the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

“We have a few clips that we’re just going to put up,” Trump announced to the White House press corps at Monday’s news briefing before running the reel. “I think you’ll find them interesting.”

Trump told reporters he would answer questions after the video, adding “but most importantly, we’re going to get back onto the reason we’re here, which is the success we’re having.” White House staff produced the video, according to Trump.

At the beginning of the video, the words: “THE MEDIA MINIMIZED THE RISK FROM THE START” appeared, and then newsbytes could be heard discussing the risk of contracting the virus in the U.S. and classifying the risk as low.

Then another caption: “PRESIDENT TRUMP TOOK DECISIVE ACTION,” which was followed by Trump’s timeline of what he did and how he believes it mitigated the spread of COVID-19.

READ MORE: Ohio Dem says Trump should face ‘crimes against humanity’ charges

“Everything we did was right,” Trump told reporters after the video aired, according to CNBC.

The U.S. now leads the world in the number of reported COVID-19 cases and deaths, with more than 577,300 Americans currently battling the disease and 23.232 deaths, according to data on Monday from Johns Hopkins University.

The post CNN captions during Trump briefing go viral: ‘Painfully accurate’ appeared first on TheGrio.



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Black-Owned Luxury Wig Company Donates Thousands of Medical Supplies to NYC Hospital For COVID-19 Relief

Taylor Jones, Donation Coordinator at RPGSHOW

The novel coronavirus pandemic has devastated cities and countries around the world and transformed into one of the greatest public health crisis in modern history. One hair entrepreneur is using her company to give back to healthcare professionals who are fighting on the frontlines to combat and contain the viral outbreak.

RPGSHOW, a luxury wigs provider, is teaming up with its sister company, MyFirstWig, to give back to the community with a donation of vital PPE materials to various hospitals in New York City and other areas battling COVID-19. The luxury wigs retailer coordinated a donation of nearly 7,000 masks to medical professionals in New York City. This also includes 1,000 highly sought after N95 masks, 5,500 regular medical masks, and protective eyewear.

Hospitals set to receive these materials include the NYU Langone Medical Center, Mount Sinai, and the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

Hello RPGSHOW Family These past few weeks and months have seen the world go through difficult and uncertain times. But one thing we can be sure of is that if we all stick together and support each other as a people, there is nothing we can’t overcome. We wanted to share with you a bit of what we’ve been doing to give support to the medical heroes on the front line. Truthfully, what is needed is much more than what any one person or one company can give. But as a collective of people, businesses, and countries we can provide our front line workers with the support and supplies they need. We are currently working hard to do more. In the mean time, we hope everyone can please be safe and take care❤ #stayhome #staysafe #quarentine #quarantineandchill #healthcareworkers #nurse #doctors #rpgshow #rpgshowwig #myfirstwig

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Black-Owned Businesses Cannot Be Left Behind In Coronavirus Economic Relief

How To Get A Business Credit Card

The federal government is trying to keep small businesses alive with the passing of the $2 trillion coronavirus relief package, but black-owned businesses cannot be left behind.

According to the Brookings Institute, black-owned businesses are highly involved in the outbreak. Black-owned firms with paid employees generate over $103 billion in revenue annually. The largest share (about $17 billion) is earned in the healthcare and social assistance sector.

Almost 30% of all black-owned businesses are independent practices of physicians, or continuing care/assisted living and youth services. Another 10% are in the administrative and support services, such as call centers, temp agencies, collection bureaus, as well as recycling and waste management facilities.

These positions put black-owned businesses in the center of the coronavirus outbreak.

According to Contexts, a social research magazine, the median white family has roughly 10 times the amount of wealth as the median black family, meaning black-owned businesses generally have less cushion to overcome economic turmoil. Brookings also found almost two-thirds of white-owned businesses that existed in 2002 were still in business in 2011, compared to just under half of black-owned firms.

Even worse is when the economy reopens and money is moving again, potential black owners rarely get money to invest in new businesses. According to Brookings, before the outbreak, only 1% of black business owners obtained loans in their founding year, compared to 7% of white business owners.

Minority-owned businesses, in general, earn significantly higher ratings on Yelp than white-owned firms according to research by Brookings and Gallup.

African Americans and minorities are especially vulnerable to the coronavirus. They’re more likely to have to travel to work and more likely to work around strangers putting themselves at risk. Even death rates due to coronavirus are higher in African Americans than any other race.

Many national companies are currently running coronavirus-related advertisements pushing unity in a time of crisis but what about when the virus is no longer a threat?

 



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How the Pandemic Has Reshaped Portland, Oregon's Restaurants

In the struggle to stay afloat, independent eateries here are adapting their workflows, their menus, and their business plans to serve customers under lockdown.

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As Other Carmakers Retrench, Volvo's Battery Lab Plugs Away

Despite Covid-19, an economic slowdown, and low gas prices,  the Swedish car maker pushes forward with its electrification plans.

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Ghana's Badu: Covid, my brush with death - and seeking justice

Ghana midfielder Emmanuel Agyemang Badu talks about how 2020 has been the 'toughest year of my life'.

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Smile Natural Products is Revolutionizing Vegan Hygiene Products and Creating Opportunities for Entrepreneurs of Color

Brian Mays

What we put into our bodies matters. That realization, paired with a love for entrepreneurship, is what led Brian Mays to create a holistic lifestyle brand focused on building community and moving the culture forward, Smile Natural Products (Smile).

In 2017, Mays launched the company after becoming a vegan and not being able to find clean plant-based oral hygiene products. And in January, he opened the doors to the Smile Space, a retail concept store and community space headquartered in downtown Los Angeles. At the Smile Space, you’ll find everything from minority-owned brands, to community workshops, to pop-ups and other events. Additionally, Smile provides sustainable, organic product options across body, skincare, oral hygiene, and home essentials. A portion of every sale goes toward community initiatives.

We spoke with Mays about his journey and passion for wellness, community, and entrepreneurship.

Smile Natural Products

Smile Natural Products

(Image: Smile Natural Products)

Tell us more about Smile Natural Products and where the idea came from?

I started Smile Natural Products in the beginning stages of my vegan journey after finding it very difficult to find plant-based hygiene products. Trying to live a vegan lifestyle, and being the nerd I am, I researched almost every ingredient in the products I used only to find many of the products I was using had animal byproducts hidden behind chemical compounds. And, the products that were plant-based still contained many toxic ingredients. At first, my main focus was on toothpaste being shocked to learn that most major toothpaste brands weren’t free of animal products and many also contained fluoride and warning labels. Prior to launching Smile, I was making my own toothpaste for personal use having researched which natural ingredients were most beneficial to oral health. After getting feedback from friends, I launched the brand with a product everyone needs, toothpaste. Around the time of incorporating my brand, I was reading about some of the Black Panthers programs and I was inspired by their free breakfast program to incorporate reinvesting profits into community initiatives.

What is the process for formulating organic products?

My process for developing products first starts with understanding what benefits consumers are looking to get from their hygiene products. From there we research clean, environmentally friendly and vegan ingredients to achieve the desired benefits. Next, we must understand how these ingredients interact with each other structurally and organically, and once we have our desired minimum viable product we begin testing. We test for shelf life, temperature tolerance, and get feedback from small groups based on their feedback in comparison to similar products. From there we go back to our recipes and make any necessary adjustments.

The Smile Space

You recently opened the doors of the Smile Space! Tell us more about how you were able to scale your online business and open the doors; securing the space; and your vision for the Smile Space.

While it was always a long-term goal to have a storefront, we stumbled upon the space by accident. While looking for a coffee shop with Wi-Fi in the downtown area to do some work I stumbled across a vegan, sustainable coffee shop called Earth Bean Coffee.

While enjoying my latte, I took a walk around the business complex and noticed a few vacancies. After getting the property owner’s number from the coffee shop, I moved into the coffee shop about a month later and began building the space out myself over the next few months. After painting and building all the product displays by hand we were ready for a soft opening with a handful of friends. In February we had our grand opening with a DJ, vegan snacks, and craft cocktails for our shoppers. We are currently still experimenting with the best way to utilize the space between renting our space for private events outside of store hours and facilitating community events and workshops. After we find the perfect balance of monetization and community utility, we plan to franchise the Smile Space concept regionally and then nationally.

Lessons Learned

Ebbs and flows are natural in business. Have you faced any challenges growing your business? If so, how were you able to find unique ways to overcome them?

Growing a business involves constant challenges. The most difficult aspect of responding to these challenges is often determining when to stay the course or being objective about when it is time to pivot. For instance, about a year into the business I reached the point where I was physically at my bandwidth between working a full-time job and managing most of the administrative and operational aspects of the business and unsure how to proceed to continue to grow. After getting some advice from some mentors and studying some of my business role models, it became apparent I had to sacrifice some of the company profits short term to be able to grow long term. The personal sacrifices I had to make to afford an employee paid off significantly and after getting them up to speed I was able to expand sales for an increased net revenue. Also, when we first opened the space, it was challenging to get the word out about the space so we went to the people and started vending at any vegan-focused or black-owned business event we could to drive traffic back to the store and increase our attendance at our workshops and events.

What are some of the business lessons you’ve learned so far along your journey?

One of the most valuable lessons I’ve learned in business thus far is to be adaptable. Markets change, consumer preferences change, competitors change so you have to be forward-thinking in your approach to protect your business model and set quantitative measures to remove the emotion out of when it’s time to make some changes. Also, you have to understand that you can’t be an expert in everything nor should you try to be. Time spent to learn new skills takes away from time spent executing tasks you are an expert in; if time is money you have to understand in some cases while thinking you’re saving by not paying an expert you’re losing “money” by not having tasks done right and also the time it takes to redo them the right way.

Mays’ advice to other entrepreneurs is to focus on what is important early on in their business.

 



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PopSockets Pop-Up Phone Grips Are On Sale for $5

They're an easy way to hold your phone, can act as a kickstand, and are half-off with free shipping right now.

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Could the Coronavirus Kill Influencer Culture?

In the middle of a pandemic, Instagram stars are struggling to stay relevant while the pillars of their industry are being turned upside-down.

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How Health Care Workers Avoid Bringing Covid-19 Home

What do frontline workers do when they finish their shifts? Some have to isolate from their families to keep them safe.

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Coronavirus: The students that are printing PPE masks in Tunisia

Engineering students are helping Tunisia in the fight against Covid-19 by 3D-printing face masks.

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Coronavirus Testing Is Coming Closer to Your Doctor's Office

The FDA still hasn’t approved at-home tests. But faster, more distributed tech is on the way to clinics and ERs—and is just what the doctor ordered.

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Amid a Pandemic, Geography Returns With a Vengeance

In an increasingly online world, the coronavirus crisis is forcing us to reconsider physical space and our place within it.

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A Deep Dive Into Quibi’s Shallow Pool

With nary an exception, Quibi's first-week offerings feel like they've jumped—or limped—off basic cable. 

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Are Running or Cycling Actually Risks for Spreading Covid-19?

An unpublished study went viral after a research team warned that respiratory droplets may travel more than 6 feet during exercise. But that's not the whole story.

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The Rise of a Hindu Vigilante in the Age of WhatsApp and Modi

India, the world's largest democracy, has also become the world's largest experiment in social-media-fueled terror.

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China McDonald apologises for Guangzhou ban on black people

A ban at a Guangzhou branch of the fast-food chain came amid rumours Africans were spreading coronavirus.

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Coronavirus in Kenya: What it's like learning under lockdown

Schools have been shut in Kenya, so some children are taking their lessons online.

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Breastfeeding at half-time: the story of female ballers

At last years Afrobasket competition held in Senegal, BBC Sport Africa went to speak to the players about their views on pregnancy in basketball.

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Dambe: The Nigerian combat sport with worldwide aspirations

Dambe is a sport that originated from the Hausa people but has now become popular around the world.

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Monday, April 13, 2020

Nine from MIT awarded 2020 Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans

Nine MIT students and alumni are among the 30 recipients of this year’s Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans. The MIT-affiliated winners are Pelkins Mbacham Ajanoh, Sanath Devalapurkar, Mohamed Ismail, Connie Liu, Mark Aurel Nagy, Pooja Reddy, Riana Shah, Anthony Tabet, and Jason Ku Wang. They were selected from a pool of over 2,200 applicants.

As Soros winner Pooja Reddy notes, “I could not have asked for a better environment to grow than MIT. I was always surrounded by other immigrants and children of immigrants in all my classes. … With a real emphasis on education, my professors always showed so much compassion, which made me feel seen as a person. This drove me to persevere and learn more.”

The P.D. Soros Fellowship provides up to $90,000 in funding for graduate studies. Interested students should contact Kim Benard, assistant dean of distinguished fellowships. The deadline for this year’s application is Oct. 29, 2020.

Pelkins Mbacham Ajanoh ’18

Pelkins Mbacham Ajanoh graduated from MIT in 2018 with a BS in mechanical engineering. The Soros fellowship will fund his graduate studies at Harvard University where he will earn dual MBA and MS in engineering sciences degrees.

Ajanoh was born and raised in Limbe, Cameroon. He lost his father at age 13, and his mother subsequently immigrated to the US to financially support her children. After graduating high school and receiving the top score on Cameroon’s national exam, Ajanoh joined his mother in Texas, earned an associate’s degree at a community college, and enrolled at University of Texas at Arlington. After learning of MIT’s need-blind admissions policy, he applied to MIT and was accepted as a transfer student.

At MIT, Ajanoh became interested in the topic of creating economic opportunity in vulnerable communities through entrepreneurship, which led him to found CassVita, an agribusiness that converts cassava into shelf-stable flour. CassVita empowers over 300 farmers in Cameroon and its products are sold in over 30 supermarkets locally and internationally. In recognition for his work at MIT, Ajanoh was awarded the Albert G. Hill Prize and the Suzanne Berger Award for Future Global Leaders.

Sanath Devalapurkar

Sanath Devalapurkar will graduate from MIT in May 2020 with a BS in mathematics and a minor in physics. His Soros award will support his doctoral studies in mathematics at Harvard University.

Devalapurkar was born in Adoni, India, and lived in several different countries and U.S. states while growing up. After graduating high school in Los Angeles, he matriculated at MIT at age 16. Shortly after arriving at MIT, Devalapurkar began sitting in on graduate-level courses in mathematics, which fueled his passion and curiosity for the field. He is particularly interested in algebraic topology and algebraic geometry, subfields of math, and quantum field theory in physics.

Devalapurkar credits his interests to his parents’ unwavering support, his mentors in high school, and to Professor Haynes Miller and postdoc Jeremy Hahn in the MIT Department of Mathematics. During his time at MIT, Devalapurkar has worked on projects at the Emory Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU), MIT’s Summer Program for Undergraduate Research, and the University of Chicago REU, all of which have helped reinforce his enthusiasm for math.

Mohamed Ismail

A PhD student in building technology in the MIT Department of Architecture, Mohamed Ismail is researching the application of structural optimization to the alleviation of housing insecurity in the Global South. Born to Sudanese parents who immigrated to the U.S. for educational opportunities, Ismail moved with his family to the Philippines when he was eight.

In the Philippines, Ismail witnessed how environmental issues are in fact human rights issues, which led him to environmental activism. He returned to the U.S. for college to learn how the built environment could improve societal well-being rather than harm it. Ismail received his bachelor’s degree in civil and structural engineering at Duke University before receiving his Master of Architecture at the University of Virginia. After graduating, he became a faculty lecturer at the UVA School of Architecture, teaching parametric structural design and digital workflows to architecture students.

At MIT, Ismail was an MIT Tata Center fellow, working with the Digital Structures research group to design low-cost, low-carbon structural components for housing in developing economies. Following his PhD, Ismail hopes to enrich the design profession with new methods that integrate structural performance into the architectural design process.

Connie Liu ‘16

An engineer turned educator turned nonprofit founder, Connie Liu graduated from MIT in 2016 with a BS in mechanical engineering. She was born in San Diego, California, the youngest of three children, to parents who had emigrated from China.

Growing up, Liu had a strong interest in science and social impact. At MIT, she focused on developing assistive technologies for people with disabilities. Seeing the impact her inventions had on real people inspired her interest in educating and empowering youth to create ideas that could make a change.

After graduating MIT, Liu relocated back to California to become a high school teacher, leading classes in such topics as smart wearables and design engineering for social good. Two years later, Liu founded  Project Invent, a national nonprofit that teaches high school students throughout the U.S. how to invent technologies that can make a difference. 

For her work on Project Invent, Liu has been recognized on the Forbes 30 Under 30 list and as a Westly Prize winner. While continuing to serve as executive director for Project Invent, Liu is now pursuing an MBA at the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Mark Aurel Nagy

Mark Aurel Nagy was born in Budapest to a Chinese mother and Hungarian father. Although he immigrated to the U.S. soon after, Nagy and his siblings spent summers abroad under the care of extended family while his parents worked full time to make ends meet.

At Brown University, Nagy found himself drawn to the complexity of the brain, an interest that only deepened when he lost his Hungarian grandmother to neurodegenerative illness. After completing his BS with honors in neuroscience and physics, Nagy enrolled in the MD/PhD program in the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology.

At Harvard, Nagy completed his neuroscience PhD in Professor Michael Greenberg's lab. His dissertation work employed next-generation sequencing-based assays to understand how sensory experience shapes neuronal function. Nagy has also been developing a company that leverages approaches created during his PhD to engineer better viral vectors for gene therapy of neurological disorders.

Nagy is currently completing his MD studies. As a practicing physician-scientist, he hopes to make lasting improvements to patient care through scientific advancement and, as a gay person of color, increase visibility for underrepresented minorities in the sciences and medicine.

Pooja Reddy

Born in Boston, to Indian immigrant parents, Pooja Reddy is a senior majoring in materials science and engineering. After graduating MIT in May, she will begin a PhD in materials science and engineering at Stanford University.

Growing up, Reddy loved to draw and paint. When her family moved back to India, she found that her creativity was not encouraged at school and that there were often lower expectations for women than men. Reddy returned to the U.S. for high school where she dived back into art and creative expression. Between her experiences in India and attending high school in a majority white district, Reddy resolved to defy expectations based on race and gender.

At MIT, Reddy has used her voice and leadership positions to support others. She has been active as a teaching assistant, and as a peer mentor in her major and dorm. She has continued her creative pursuits through metalsmithing, and by running the MIT Art Club.

Reddy discovered a passion for solid-state physics and device technology through her work with Professor Geoffrey Beach in the MIT Laboratory of Nanomagnetism and Spin Dynamics. Her long-term goal is to use materials science to create new materials and devices for information technology.

Riana Shah

Riana Shah is a concurrent MBA/MPA candidate at MIT Sloan School of Management and Harvard Kennedy School. She is a Legatum Fellow for Entrepreneurship at MIT and the cofounder of Ethix.AI, an AI upskilling program that incorporates critical thinking about ethics and bias in algorithm development. At Harvard, Shah is a Zuckerman Fellow at the Center for Public Leadership and is part of the From Harvard Square to the Oval Office Program, which prepares promising female candidates to run for office.

Born in Ahmedabad, India, Shah was 14 when she moved to Queens, New York, with her mother and younger sister. As an undergraduate at Swarthmore College, Shah founded Independent Thought and Social Action International (ITSA), an education reform nonprofit that redesigns schools to teach students critical thinking and social innovation skills. Subsequently, Shah spent several years in technology, venture capital, management consulting and innovation strategy working with public and private institutions.

Shah’s work has been featured in the Huffington Post, Women of Influence, and Google's Generation In Project, and she is the podcast host of Venture Vignettes. She has spoken at the United Nations, the U.S. State Department, and the International Forum on Child Welfare.

Anthony Tabet

Anthony Tabet is an MIT PhD student in chemical engineering who is creating brain-machine interfaces that can be used to study or treat brain tumors like glioblastoma. After completing his studies, he hopes to start an academic research lab focused on translational technologies to improve human health for the most challenging-to-treat diseases.

Tabet’s parents fled to the countryside during the Lebanese civil war that nearly killed his entire paternal family. He was born in a town outside of Beirut and later immigrated with his family to Minneapolis. At age 16, Tabet began his undergraduate studies at the University of Minnesota. He majored in chemical engineering, studying polymeric materials for energy and biomedical applications. A Goldwater Scholar, Tabet received an Amgen Scholarship to fund his summer research at Stanford University. After graduating, he completed an MPhil in chemistry at Cambridge University in the UK as a Churchill Scholar.

Tabet is passionate about translating research ideas from the lab into commercialized technologies. While living in Minneapolis, he became frustrated with the barriers that entrepreneurs face in starting companies in the Midwest. In response, he cofounded the company CoCreateX to streamline how scientists and engineers find resources, capital, and community.

Jason Ku Wang

Jason Ku Wang is a first-year MD student in the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology. Born in Memphis, Tennessee, Wang is the son of immigrants from China’s Hubei Province who came to the U.S. following the Cultural Revolution. Wang was sent to live with his grandparents in Wuhan, China, for the first four years of his life before rejoining his parents in the U.S. and eventually settling in Los Angeles.

Wang’s interest in medicine was inspired by his father’s journey from rural barefoot doctor to U.S. physician. As an undergraduate at Stanford University, Wang also discovered a love for computer science and statistics and delved deeper into the intersection of computation, biology, and medicine. He is the author of 12 journal publications, including six as first author, and received the Stanford Deans’ Award for Academic Achievement.

During college, Wang became interested in technology development. He interned in data and software engineering at Facebook and Tableau, and cofounded Stanford’s interdisciplinary health care hackathon (Health++). After graduating Stanford, Wang spent a year at Tsinghua University in Beijing as a Schwarzman Scholar, and completed a public affairs internship at Johnson and Johnson. As a physician, he hopes to further explore how computational advancements can democratize access to high-quality health care.



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3 Questions: Catherine D’Ignazio on visualizing Covid-19 data

The Covid-19 pandemic is generating waves of data points from around the world, recording the number of tests performed, cases confirmed, patients recovered, and people who have died from the virus. As these data are continuously updated, media outlets, government agencies, academics, and data-packaging firms are racing to make sense of the numbers, using novel design and visualization tools to chart and graph the virus many different contexts.

In general, data visualizations can help people quickly distill an otherwise overwhelming flood of numbers. Catherine D’Ignazio, assistant professor of urban science and planning at MIT, says it is critical that data are visualized responsibly in a pandemic.

D’Ignazio is the director of the Data and Feminism Lab, where she uses data and computational techniques to work toward gender and racial equity. MIT News spoke with her about the current boom in Covid-19 data visualizations, and how data visualizers can help us make sense of the pandemic’s uncertain numbers.

Q: How have you seen data visualization of Covid-19 evolve in the last few months, since the virus began its spread?

A: The first thing I'll note is that there has been an explosion of data visualization. Since the information about the virus comes in numbers — case counts, death counts, testing rates — it lends itself easily to data visualization. Maps, bar charts, and line charts of confirmed cases predominated at first, and I would say they are still the most common forms of visualization that we are seeing in media reporting and on social media. As a person in the field, the proliferation is both exciting, because it shows the relevance of visualization, and scary, because there is definitely some irresponsible use of visualization.

Many high-profile organizations are plotting case counts on graduated color maps, which is a big no-no unless you have normalized your numbers. So California, a big and densely populated state, will always appear to be worse off in absolute raw case counts. Conversely, this way of plotting could cause you to miss small states with a high rate of infection since they will be low in relative case numbers and would always show up in lighter colors on the map.

Second, as the crisis has developed, media outlets are mapping things other than simply case counts or death rates. There have been many versions of the “flatten the curve” chart. This one is interesting because it’s not about plotting specific numbers, but about explaining a public health concept to a broad audience with a hypothetical chart. The best visual explanation I’ve seen of the flatten the curve concept is from The Washington Post and comes with simulations and animations that explain virus transmission. There have also been a number of visualizations of how social distancing has changed people’s mobility behavior, shifting traffic patterns, and even a global satellite map where you can see how Covid-19 has reduced urban pollution over the past three months.

Finally, this crisis is posing some difficult visual communication problems: How do you depict exponential growth in an accessible way? How do you visually explain the uncertainty in numbers like case counts, where we (at least in the U.S. context) have not done nearly enough testing to make them a reliable indicator of actual cases? 

Journalists and health communicators have responded to these challenges by developing new visual conventions, as well as making heavy use of explanations and disclaimers in the narratives themselves. For example, the chart below, by Lisa Charlotte Rost for DataWrapper, uses a log scale on the y-axis for showing exponential rates of change. But note the dotted reference lines, labeled “deaths double every day” or “...every 2nd day.” These annotations help to highlight the use of the log scale (which otherwise might go unnoticed by readers) as well as to explain how to interpret the different slopes of the lines. Likewise, Rost is explicit about only making charts of death rates, not case counts, because of the variation in availability of tests and vast underreporting in many countries. Whereas actual cases may or may not be detected and counted, deaths are more likely to be counted. 

A screenshot of an interactive chart, from Datawrapper, shows cumulative numbers of confirmed deaths due to the Covid-19 disease. Chart: Lisa Charlotte Rost, Datawrapper. Source: Johns Hopkins CSSE. Created with Datawrapper.

Q: What are some things people should keep in mind when digging into available datasets to make their own visualizations?

A: This is such a great question, because there has been a proliferation of visualizations and models that are not only erroneous but also irresponsible in a public health crisis. Usually these are made by folks who do not have expertise in epidemiology but assume that their skills in data science can just be magically ported into a new realm. I’d like to shout out here to Amanda Makulec’s excellent guidance on undertaking responsible data visualizations in a public health crisis. One of her main points is to consider simply not making another Covid-19 chart. What this points to is the idea that data scientists and visualization designers need to take their civic role very seriously in a pandemic. Following Makulec’s line of reasoning, designers can think of the visualization they are making in the context of decision support: Their visualization has the power to help people decide whether to reject public health guidance and go out, to stay home, to feel the gravity of the problem without being overwhelmed, or to panic and buy up all the toilet paper. 

Data visualization carries the aura of objectivity and authority. If designers wield that authority irresponsibly — for example, by depicting case counts with clean, certain-looking lines when we know that there is deep uncertainty in how case counts in different places were collected — it may deplete public trust, lead to rejecting public health guidance like social distancing, or even incite panic.

This carries over into all manner of visual choices that designers make. For example, color. Visualizations of Covid-19 cases and deaths have tended to use red bubbles or red-colored states and provinces. But color has cultural meaning — in Western cultures, it is used to indicate danger and harm. When a whole country is bathed in shades of red, or laden with red bubbles that obscure its boundaries, we need to be very careful about sensationalism. I’m not saying “never use red”; it is warranted in some cases to communicate the gravity of a situation. But our use of charged colors, particularly during a pandemic like this, involves making very careful ethical decisions. How serious is the risk to the individual reader? What do we want them to feel from viewing the visualization? What do we want them to do with the information in the visualization? Are those goals aligned with public health goals?

The complexity of calculating a fatality rate in order to model the spread of Covid-19. From “Why It’s So Freaking Hard To Make A Good COVID-19 Model by Maggie Koerth, Laura Bronner, and Jasmine Mithani for fivethirtyeight.com.

Rather than reducing complexity (to generate sensationalist and attention-grabbing clicks), some of the most responsible visualization is working to explain the complexity behind our current crisis. This is the case in the above graphic. The journalists walk us through why even calculating a simple input like the fatality rate depends on many other variables, both known and unknown.

All that said, public health communication really does need good visualization and data science right now. One of the exciting developments on the responsible-vis horizon is a new program from the Data Visualization Society that matches people with visualization skills to organizations working on Covid-19 that need their help. This is a great way to lend a hand, concretely, to the organizations who need help communicating their data during this crisis.

Q: How can we as individuals best make sense of and put into context all the data being reported, almost by the minute, in some cases?

A: One of my students said something wise to me this week. As she was describing her obsession with checking the news every couple minutes, she reflected, “I realized that I’m looking for answers that I cannot find, because nobody knows them.” She's right. At this point, nobody can truly answer our most basic questions: “When will this end? Will I lose my job? When will my kids return to school? Are my loved ones safe? How will my community be changed by this?”

No amount of data science or data visualization can solve these questions for us and give us the peace of mind we are craving. It is an inherently uncertain time, and we are in the middle of it. Rather than obsessively seeking information like case counts and scenario models to give us peace, I have been telling students to practice self-care and community-care as a way to direct their attention to things they have more control over. For example, in our local communities, Covid-19 is already having a disproportionate impact on the elderly, on health care workers, on first responders, on domestic workers, on single parents, on incarcerated people, and more. Below is one effective graphic that highlights these disproportionate impacts.

From “Coronavirus quarantine: only one in four Americans can work from home” by Mona Chalabi for The Guardian.

As the graphic shows, there is a great dimension of privilege in the people who are able to work from home: The vast majority of folks who can earn money from home are in the richest 25 percent of workers. This attention to how power and privilege play out unequally in data is also a throughline in Lauren F. Klein and my recently published book, “Data Feminism.” A feminist approach demands that we use data science and visualization to expose inequality and work toward equity.

So while it is important to (responsibly) track and visualize death rates from Covid-19, how do we also focus our attention on efforts to support the groups who are most directly and unfairly impacted by this crisis, to get them the care, equipment and the economic security that they need? The reality — even amidst this great uncertainty — is that we can all take action now, in our local communities, to support each other.



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Gina Yashere on coping with COVID-19, #Megxit, and ‘Bob Hearts Abishola’

Plenty of folks know Gina Yashere for her hilarious stand-up specials on Netflix, but some might not know she’s also one of the creators of the hit CBS series, Bob Hearts Abishola.

theGrio caught up with the comedian to find out how the show, which stars Billy Gardell and Folake Olowofoyeku, has been impacted by the pandemic and how she’s handling her time at home.

“I’m just trying to stay positive. This has happened every hundred years or so in history and this will pass. My thing is to stay home, stay safe and stay inspired…It’s kind of about turning lemons into lemonade,” Yashere says.

Comedian/Producer Gina Yashere speaks on a panel during ESSENCE House: Hollywood Edition at NeueHouse Los Angeles on February 07, 2020 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Aaron J. Thornton/Getty Images for ESSENCE)

“I’ve got this TV idea that I have had on the back burner for a long time that I’ve been meaning to rewrite so this would be the perfect time to do it. I’ve got a book coming out next year and I’m just like, well, let me sit myself down and write this sh*t.”

READ MORE: Kendrick Sampson says ‘Insecure’ helped him understand women’s minds

The creative adds, “All of my work as far as my live comedy work got wiped out by this so my income for the next four months is totally gone. We lost the last two episodes of Bob Hearts Abishola so I’m just gonna get creative.”

Yashere co-created Bob Hearts Abishola with Chuck Lorre and writes, produces, and co-stars in the project as the scene-stealing nurse, Kemi. The show highlights the immigrant Nigerian experience and many of the stories are pulled from her own family life.

In this unique and timely comedy, a middle-aged, divorced medical sock salesman (Gardell) from Detroit suffers a heart attack and falls for his cardiac nurse (Folake), a young, single mother who immigrated from Nigeria. Despite her initial lack of interest and obvious culture clashes, Bob is determined to win her heart one day at a time.

Photo: CBS

READ MORE: Netflix announces $100 million coronavirus relief fund for creative community

According to Yashere, her show’s star, Abishola, would be on the front lines of the pandemic. “She’d be in the trenches. Nigerians, our work ethic is pretty much unparalleled,” she says. “So she’d have her mask and gloves on and she’d be in the trenches.”

The show is returning with new episodes on Monday, but its first season has been cut a little short by the outbreak.

It was supposed to be 22 episodes. We shot 20 and we were just about to shoot 21 when we learned we had to shut down. So you’re not going to see the wonderful finale we had planned. Basically it ends where it ends. Hopefully, we get a season two and we can roll the last two episodes of season one into season two,” she explains. 

Gina Yashere stars in CBS’ “Bob Hearts Abishola.” (Photo: CBS)

“I mean, we’re fortunate in that at least we got 20 episodes done before this happened. Some shows were shut down after two or three episodes. Some shows haven’t even got started and they’ve been shut down so I consider us fortunate.” 

Despite losing the last two episodes of the season, Yashere is focused on the good things.

Speaking to how the crisis has impacted Hollywood she says, “I still consider myself to be in a good position mentally, physically, and financially. I’m in a decent position. You know at least I’ve got a home to quarantine in. Even though a lot of income is being lost I’ve got enough of a safety net to fall back on, to live off of. I consider myself very very blessed in this situation.”

READ MORE: Tiffany Haddish reportedly quarantined with her rumored beau Common

“Makeup artist, costumes, the grips, the camera people, the lighting, the set builders; they’re all contractors. Most of them are self-employed contractors. So if you don’t work, you don’t get paid in that space,” Yashere adds.

There’s a lot of us in this industry who are just waiting for this thing to blow over because it’s affecting all of our households. It’s affecting our income and it affects our future income. We’ve still got to pay those bills, we still got to pay that rent, we still got to pay our mortgages, and we still got to buy food.”

Yashere first gained notoriety in the U.S as a finalist on Last Comic Standing in 2007, and she continues to put a smile on people’s faces. Case in point: her daily videos on social media called The Corona Diaries. 

“The Corona Diaries is about every day situations that happen while we are stuck in the house together. So I talk about the pandemic. I talk about how I’m trying to keep myself occupied. I discuss how I’m trying to keep myself healthy and trying to boost my immune system every day,” Yashere says.

“We’re definitely finding the funny and people are really enjoying it. I’m getting a lot of comments from people saying that we’re keeping them sane and entertained and keeping their minds off the terrible things that are happening out there.”

The Nigerian beauty was born and raised in London, making her the perfect person to ask about Meghan Markle‘s recent departure from the country.

Meghan Markle_thegrio.com
Britain’s Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex gesture during their visit to Canada House in thanks for the warm Canadian hospitality and support they received during their recent stay in Canada, in London, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2020. (Daniel Leal-Olivas/Pool Photo via AP)

“My thoughts are a complete lack of surprise that she left after the amount of racist abuse that she was getting online. It was not just some regular joes on the street, but from the British press with their underhanded, insidious racism,” she says.

“I’m not surprised that she left. And I’m glad that Harry stood up for his wife and said ‘yea, we’re getting the fuck out of here.’ Yeah. I’m completely unsurprised. And it serves the British right. It was obviously based on race and the worst of it came when baby Archie was born.”

READ MORE: Meghan Markle’s real name uncovered as baby Archie’s birth certificate goes public

When it comes to the UK, Yashere says COVID-19 is a huge problem there.

“It’s actually worse in London than where I am in Los Angeles. It’s kind of coming up to par with New York. It’s getting close,” she explains. “You know they’re turning massive concert venue’s into makeshift hospitals as we speak it’s pretty bad there. I think both governments, the US and the U.K. government, handled the pandemic atrociously which has probably cost more lives.” 

Catch new episodes of Bob Hearts Abishola Mondays on CBS.

The post Gina Yashere on coping with COVID-19, #Megxit, and ‘Bob Hearts Abishola’ appeared first on TheGrio.



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The SBA’s Paycheck Protection Program May Be Harming Black Business Owners

Small business owners have been one of the groups hit hardest by the COVID-19, or novel coronavirus pandemic. Reports have shown that 1 in 4 small businesses will be permanently closed due to the viral outbreak. To save American business owners, the government created the Small Business Administration’s (SBA) Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) to help small businesses maintain their workforce amid the COVID-19 outbreak. Some black business owners, however, argue that the program is doing more harm than good.

Vania Bredy is the owner of Bredy Physical Therapy & Sports Rehabilitation in South Florida with her husband, Yonel Bredy. They are one of the many small business owners across the country in need of the program to keep their business afloat. Bredy says they have been trying to apply for a PPP grant since the program opened. She also says she contacted her bank multiple times but has gotten no response. Wells Fargo sent an automated message stating she’s in the queue of applicants but has provided no further update. As a result of the pandemic, Bredy and her husband were forced to lay off one of their employees.

“I feel like the application is a black hole and they’re going to apply all these criteria that we can’t meet as black business owners,” Bredy said in an interview with Moguldom. “I was excited about it at first, but as time went on, I just feel like it’s just a hoax and it’s going to be difficult for us. I don’t know anyone who’s gotten any funds in their account and I know at least 10 different healthcare providers that tried to apply.”

Dominique Jones, who owns Jam Box Fitness in Dallas, says she also has applied for PPP with two different banks where she has business accounts—Regions Bank and Wood Forest National Bank— and hasn’t heard any response back.

“I have applied through both and I have not heard anything from either and also no one at the bank really knows anything. They just know the top 10 high points and everything else is ‘call SBA, call SBA, call SBA,’” explained Jones. With three locations each with a full staff, Jones has been struggling to keep the doors open. “I definitely have fears that I’ll never see the money. I don’t have a lot of stock in getting funding to be honest, just because the numbers are so staggering and nobody knows anything.”



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Dawn Dickson Raises Capital to Solve Retail Hardships Amid COVID-19

Dawn Dickson

Dawn Dickson is always finding a way to make life easier for others through technology. As retail stores have closed their doors, Dickson is leading PopCom, an automated retail company that leverages facial detection, machine learning, and blockchain technology to help retailers collect valuable customer insights. Dickson leads its second equity crowdfunding campaign to respond to and meet the need for more automated retail machines in the wake of COVID-19.

Dickson is known for driving innovation within retail and technology. She’s also known for raising capital to take her business to the next level. PopCom recently announced the campaign on Start Engine, an equity crowdfunding platform for underrepresented startups and micro angel investors to invest alongside venture capitalists. To date, PopCom has raised over $239,000.

With the funding, the company aims to grow its operations, build its sales team, reach more customers, and meet the demand for more automated retail machines in the wake of COVID-19, with its proprietary vending machine, the PopShop Kiosk.

In a statement released by PopCom, Dickson said “Although the timing is sensitive due to the COVID-19 outbreak, we must continue to look towards the future and build products for our customers. While some industries are hurting, the requirement for social distancing validates the need for vending and retail automation. We believe that the market will continue to move towards self-service and contactless retail. Vending machines and convenience services are becoming more essential, and retailers are looking for more ways to deliver their products direct to customer with less human friction. We are excited about what is to come.”

With social distancing and the shift in the economy, PopShop Kiosks can serve as a solution for retailers whose businesses have been and could be impacted by COVID-19 and other crises in the future.

“The global community is calling for self-service retail to become more easily accessible, considering the shifts in our climate and technological advancements,” said Dickson.

For those reasons, Dickson’s goal is to have PopCom service the entire regulated retail market and power all machine-driven transactions in the retail space with their operating system that integrates facial detection to understand the customer demographic profile including age, gender, and emotion.  And she is diligently working towards that goal. In fact, the company has secured technology pilots and rollouts starting with cannabis and alcohol in 2020.

With over 2,000 investors in PopCom, Dickson is among the few black women entrepreneurs to secure $1 million or more in funding. And she is adamant about making sure that others are able to successfully raise capital as well. “I aim to bridge the gap between venture capital and everyday people.”

Related: Dawn Dickson’s Road to $1 Million Started at the Entrepreneurs Summit 

As an entrepreneur who is dedicated to the advancement of black business owners, Dickson is confident that PopShop Kiosks will revolutionize the retail industry and create opportunities for others as investors in the company.  “With investment becoming more inclusive and open to forward-thinkers, my family, friends, community, and supporters, I believe we will reach the next milestones to success.”

To learn more about PopCom’s equity crowdfunding campaign, click here.



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