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Thursday, July 9, 2020

KKK leader David Duke endorses Trump, Tucker Carlson for 2020

The infamous racist extremist is calling for the president to ditch Mike Pence and nominate the Fox News host as VP.

David Duke, the former leader of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), has noted his support for Donald Trump’s re-election. 

The infamous racist extremist is calling for Trump to ditch Mike Pence and nominate Fox News host Tucker Carlson as his vice president, Yahoo reports.

Duke noted that having a Trump/Carlson ticket is the only way to “stop the commie Bolsheviks.”

“President Trump! You have one last chance to turn the tables, win this election and save America — and yourself,” Duke posted on Twitter July 8. “Nominate Tucker Carlson for Vice President. This would energize your campaign beyond belief,” he added. 

Read More: Ex-Trump lawyer Michael Cohen back in federal prison

“Tucker Carlson now! We DON’T HAVE 4 YEARS. In 4 years there will be no dissident websites, platforms or email addresses, no dissidents allowed credit cards or bank accounts. No Freedom and Tucker will be off air before Biden is even sworn in. Tucker NOW! 4 Years is TOO LATE,” Duke tweeted. 

“One more thing about Tucker Mr. President. It would make you IMPEACHMENT PROOF! And Tucker would whip those Republican cucks in line and make them defend our freedom of speech and the heritage of the American people!”

Duke also suggested Trump “replace Zio NeoCon warmonger Pompeo with Pence as Sec. of State.” . 

He previously called Carlson a “hero” for supposedly “exposing white ethnic cleansing in America”, 

Read Mre: Biden on Trump: ‘Commander in chief who doesn’t command anything’

Recently Duke retweeted a clip of Carlson’s “Undo Your Whiteness” segment and captioned it: “Anti-racism” has become the politically correct term replacing affirmative action aka *legal* (systemic) racial discrimination against White people in employment, promotions and scholarships.”

Duke developed a slight case of Trump derangement syndrome back in 2017 when he had a meltdown over the president condemning white supremacy, theGrio previously reported. 

“Racism is evil, and those who cause violence in its name are criminals and thugs, including the KKK, Neo-Nazis, white supremacists and other hate groups that are repugnant to everything we hold dear as Americans,” Trump said after being criticized for saying that the violence and hatred was a result of “many sides.”

“It’s amazing to see how the media is able to bully the President of the United States into going along with their FAKE NEWS narrative,” Duke said in a series of tweets claiming Trump had been manipulated by pressure from the media.

In a tweet in Thursday, Duke bragged that “Forbes said my support for Trump as the number 1 of 10 reasons why Trump won the nomination and election,” he wrote. “It sent a powerful signal to white folks & separated him from the field. Now, I say Trump has to get Tucker as his VP to win this crucial election & We need Tucker as the VP!”

Subscribe to theGrio’s Dear Culture podcast on Spotify, Apple and Stitcher.

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Hulu teases new comedy series ‘Woke’

The show that stars Lamorne Morris premieres September 9.

There’s a new comedy coming to Hulu and based on the first official teaser, it’s just in time. Woke is set to hit the streamer next month and stars the hilarious Lamorne Morris.

In the teaser, it seems he’ll tackle the complexities of race relations whether he wants to or not. The show is sure to touch on some serious issues we’re all contending with but it looks like the heavy undertone will be wrapped up in lots of laughs.

Read More: Justin Simien is bringing his horror flick ‘Bad Hair’ to Hulu

Check the synopsis:

Inspired by the life and work of artist Keith Knight, the comedy series takes an absurdly irreverent look at identity and culture as it follows Keef (Lamorne Morris), an African-American cartoonist finally on the verge of mainstream success when an unexpected incident changes everything. With a fresh outlook on the world around him, Keef must now navigate the new voices and ideas that confront and challenge him, all without setting aflame everything he’s already built. 

The eight-episode series also stars Morris, T. Murph and Blake Anderson. 

Woke is developed by Marshall Todd and Keith Knight, who serve as executive producers alongside showrunner Jay Dyer, Maurice “Mo” Marable, Aeysha Carr, Richie Schwartz, John Will, Will Gluck, and Eric Christian Olsen. Kate Schumaecker will executive produce the pilot. 

Read More: Tiffany Haddish cuts off her hair on IG Live: ‘I want to see my scalp’

Woke is a co-production between ABC Studios and Sony Pictures Television Inc. The entire eight-episode season premieres September 9 on Hulu.

Check out the first official teaser:

The post Hulu teases new comedy series ‘Woke’ appeared first on TheGrio.



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Studying the cultures of companies

While shadowing human resources employees at a fast-growing technology company, Summer Jackson began to notice a strange pattern. The well-intentioned company was struggling to achieve its diversity goals, but it was reluctant to use recruiting tools that could help. The issue was the way these sites displayed underrepresented candidates in an e-commerce-like interface. “They want you to shop for people?” the HR team members bemoaned.

Their moral discomfort surprised Jackson, because the team used similar but less race-oriented tools all the time in their early rounds of hiring. This was not the coded racism about candidate quality she might have expected, but it still presented a barrier to improving diversity in the workplace. She was so intrigued by the subtlety of this issue it became the topic of her dissertation.

In her work as an “organizational ethnographer,” Jackson says the first rule is to take your time. She spent months embedding herself at the company, so that “people just forget that you’re there.” While the word “ethnographer” may bring to mind anthropologists who study rural or isolated communities, in many ways, high-tech companies are no different from other cultural groups. They too have their clothing, rituals, events, and, as Jackson points out, their own moral understanding and values.

Now in her sixth year as a PhD student at the MIT Sloan School of Management, Jackson became interested in this field through her own professional experiences. After studying international relations as an undergraduate at Stanford University and then in a master’s program at Brandeis University, she landed what she thought was an ideal job: working as an evaluation specialist in the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs. After two years, she quickly grew frustrated –– but also fascinated –– by the “bad incentive structures” she encountered there.

Great public policy and international development research was getting lost in the bureaucracy, she says, and employees went to great lengths not to share anything negative about their development projects because they thought it would reflect poorly on themselves. She felt it would have been much more productive to openly embrace the difficulty of addressing complex economic situations, and to create a workplace culture conducive to experimentation. The situation “did not need another evaluation specialist,” she discovered. “This was an organizational structure, incentives, and workplace dynamics issue.”

That realization led her to MIT Sloan, where she now studies those dynamics as part of the Behavioral and Policy Sciences group under the advisement of Kate Kellogg, Ray Reagans, and Ezra Zuckerman Sivan. Her research investigates how social structures of oppression play out in the workplace; she has studied microaggressions, public defenders, and police officers, in addition to her focus on diversity and inclusion in the tech sector. These issues are “just what I care about, and even if I consciously try to avoid it, I end up back there,” she says.

Multicultural narratives

Jackson was born in Mallorca, Spain, but grew up in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, where her father worked as a mechanical engineer. In Saudi Arabia, Jackson formed a diverse group of friends ––Nigerian and Korean Christians, Muslims from India and Pakistan and Lebanon. At first, Jackson, who comes from a multinational, multiracial family, thought this group formed naturally, but over time she noticed how in her siblings’ classes, kids formed more homogeneous social circles. She realized that it took more than just putting different kinds of people in the same place to create a truly diverse environment. “You have to have structures in place that allow for people to interact equally,” she says.

She had only just returned to high school in the States when the terrorists attacks of Sept. 11 occurred. The resulting conversations she had at school forced Jackson to examine the ways her own experience conflicted with popular impressions of Saudi Arabia and its relationship with the U.S. “There was this large narrative of what is this country and who are the people that live there, and it didn’t resonate with my experiences,” she says. She even had to question what it meant to be American: Abroad, people had been surprised to meet an American who was neither white nor culturally insensitive; at home, she found it strange how Americans didn’t consider those living abroad to be “real” Americans.

This experience contributed to Jackson’s growing interest in marginalized voices and the intersecting hierarchies of power and oppression, which today unites her international relations background and her current work in organizational diversity. With these inequities exposed more than ever by Covid-19 and incidents of racism and police brutality, she has been noticing the ways the interactions in her daily life, such as during a run or a trip to the grocery store, could be potential points of escalation. “Everyone’s just on heightened alert,” she says.

Make, master, matter

Quarantining in a small town in Vermont while protests have rocked the nation has been a “real cognitive dissonance experience,” Jackson says. Lately, she has been thinking about some words of advice from Daymond John, the Black founder and CEO of FUBU and an investor on the television show “Shark Tank,” who said, “Make it, master it, then matter, usually in that order.”

“Sometimes especially for underrepresented group members, there’s this heightened pressure to do all of that at once,” Jackson says. But she is trying to resist that as she works toward her degree: “There’s enough other barriers in the way that I don’t need to self-impose new ones.”

Unfortunately, Jackson said, there are still so many reasons that underrepresented students “sort out, leak out, and lean out” of the talent pipeline. She remembers how some people discouraged her from pursuing a PhD because she had too much work experience, or her research questions were too practitioner-oriented, or she did not have the theoretical background. These were all the “gatekeeping exercises” that unfortunately still exist in academia, Jackson says.

Counter to all that advice, Jackson has flourished at MIT. She was recognized as an MIT Presidential Fellow in 2015 and was named a 2019 Graduate Woman of Excellence. Now she participates in The PhD Project, an initiative designed to increase representation in business PhD programs. “I don’t want anyone to feel that,” she says, thinking back to her own experience as a prospective PhD student. “I remember how terrible it felt.”

She says she loves her program at MIT Sloan –– diving into the questions that interest her most, developing ideas and language to engage with those questions. But observing MIT’s own organizational culture, she encountered a certain “Iron Man mentality” that she had to learn to filter out.

When she would describe a bike ride or run with her husband over the weekend, sometimes people would tell her, “It’s great that you don’t take your work so seriously, that you can take time off on the weekends.” And she was stunned when, after taking a survey, she was invited to join a committee dedicated to incentivizing students to sleep. “It’s okay and it’s actually necessary to take this time for yourself,” she likes to tell new PhD students. “It’s not a sprint. It’s like a marathon.”

Jackson plans to enter the job market for faculty positions at business schools this fall, and is optimistic about what the future holds. “The issues that I care deeply about are now more common topics of discussion in corporate America,” she says. “I’m excited to bring my research into the classroom and to really work with my undergraduate and MBA students.”



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Members of Central Park Five support BLM street mural at Trump Tower

Video from the event shows Mayor de Blasio and Rev. Al Sharpton both helping to paint as supporters chant ‘Black Lives Matter.’

Members of the Central Park Five were reportedly on hand last week during the announcement about the planned Black Lives Matter street mural outside of Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue.

“When I look at current-day events, I can’t help but think about tragedies I was made aware of going through my own personal event,” said Yusef Salaam, one of the five Black and Hispanic teens who were falsely accused in 1989 of of raping Trisha Meili, a white woman jogging in Central Park, theGrio previously reported.

Known collectively as the Central Park Five, Salaam, Antron McCray, Kevin Richardson, Raymond Santana and Korey Wise spent between six and 13 years in prison for the crime, despite a lack of witnesses or DNA evidence. 

Read More: Exonerated ‘Central Park Park’ men receive joyful praise and standing ovation at BET Awards

The men were exonerated in 2002 after a convicted murderer and rapist confessed to the crime. 

“Not too many things have changed since 30 years ago,” said Richardson, who lives in New Jersey with his wife and two daughters. “There’s still this concept that people of color are inferior and when you see them you’re scared.”

At the height of the criminal case in the late 80’s, Trump took out a full-page ad in several newspapers in NYC that called for the execution of the Central Park 5. Trump’s message was headlined: “BRING BACK THE DEATH PENALTY. BRING BACK OUR POLICE!”

“It’s basically saying we should be executed without even knowing us as people, not knowing our families, our background,” Richardson said in an interview with Yahoo.

“We became almost the modern-day Emmett Till’s when you look at what Donald Trump placed in the papers two weeks after we were accused of this horrific crime,” said Salaam.

“You have to remember they had put our phone numbers, names and addresses in New York City newspapers, so what that means is that when he put that out there other people took it as a nod that it was OK that if we got a chance to get our hands on these people, we should do what they did to Emmett Till to us.”

The Central park Five have since become outspoken advocates for criminal justice reform, and some members made time to be present last week during Mayor de Blasio’s announcement about the planned BLM street mural, per NBC Washington. The mural was painted in front of Trump Tower on July 9,

Read More: Ava DuVernay slams Michael Bloomberg’s ‘non-answers’ pertaining to Central Park Exonerated Five

“We’re looking at a president who’s telling the different municipalities to militarize their police,” Salaam told Yahoo News. “We haven’t moved.”

Meanwhile, after the mayor decided that the pavement in front of Trump Tower was the perfect spot to display a bold, bright message to the president, Trump slammed it as a “symbol of hate.”

“Maybe our GREAT Police, who have been neutralized and scorned by a mayor who hates & disrespects them, won’t let this symbol of hate be affixed to New York’s greatest street. Spend this money fighting crime instead!” Trump tweeted in response. 

Video from the street mural event outside Trump tower shows the mayor and Rev. Al Sharpton both helping to paint the letter “L” in lives as supporters chant “Black Lives Matter.”

“Our city isn’t just painting the words on Fifth Avenue. We’re committed to the meaning of the message,” de Blasio tweeted Thursday.

Subscribe to theGrio’s Dear Culture podcast on Spotify, Apple and Stitcher.

The post Members of Central Park Five support BLM street mural at Trump Tower appeared first on TheGrio.



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New audio reveals ‘conspiracy’ to cover up Breonna Taylor shooting

The recorded interviews show questioner ‘coaching’ officer who led botched raid and helping the witness with his responses. 

Newly released audio recordings from the investigation into the fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor by Louisville Police shed light on the events leading up to the deadly raid. 

Taylor, 26, died on March 13 during a botched drug raid that she was not the target of. The aspiring nurse, who worked at two local hospitals, was shot as police were serving a ‘no-knock warrant’ related to a narcotics investigation, theGrio previously reported. 

The raid was carried out by Sgt Jonathan Mattingly, Detectives Brett Hankison and Myles Cosgrove. Kenneth Walker, Taylor’s boyfriend, called 911 to report someone was breaking into their apartment. As police fired on the couple, Walker returned fire and Taylor was shot eight times by police. She died at the scene.

Read More: Breonna Taylor’s family claims no aid was offered after she was fatally shot

In an interview after the tragedy, Mattingly insists cops knocked on the door for 45 seconds and shouted ‘Police, search warrant!’ 

Walker maintains, however, they never identified themselves as police. 

“It’s the middle of the night. Somebody is beating on the door and not saying who they are … What are you going to do?” he told investigators, NBC News reported Thursday.

“I know y’all have guns at home. You’re going to grab it and be cautious like, ‘Okay, so what’s going on?”

“You’re creeping towards (the door) … ‘Who is it? Who is it?’ You don’t know who it is and then the door flies open?”

When the shooting stopped, Walker saw Taylor on her stomach in the hallway.

“I’m yelling for help,” he recalls, still unware that the shooters were cops because “nobody was, like, rushing in after all this happened.”

Read More: Lawyers allege Breonna Taylor’s house was targeted because of gentrification plan

Breonna Taylor is pictured in an undated photo. (Credit: Instagram/@keyanna.guifarro)

Walker was charged with first-degree assault and attempted murder of a police officer after Mattingly was shot in the leg during the raid.

The attempted murder charge was ultimately dropped.  

The recordings reveal that a plainclothes officer confronted Walker after the fatal shooting of his girlfriend and told him there had been a “misunderstanding.”

“Why’d he say to me that there was a misunderstanding?” Walker asked during his police interview just hours after the raid.

“I don’t know,” Sgt. Amanda Seelye, a member of the Louisville department’s Public Integrity Unit, answered. “That’s some new information for us as well.”

“I’m not an idiot,” Walker replied. “They figured out something. They did something wrong.”

The Interviews reveal the cops realized that they had indeed screwed up.

The audio also highlights how investigators gave Sgt.Mattingly nearly two weeks to prep for his interview, during which he was accompanied by an attorney, while Walker was questioned within a day after his girlfriend was executed by Louisville law enforcement. 

Walker spoke to police after he was “encouraged” to waive his Miranda Rights.

Sgt Jason Vance, who questioned Mattingly, said the cops’ approach to the raid was “the most passive way in.”

The recorded interviews reportedly show Vance was sympathetic to the officers, and ‘led’ the witness during the interrogation. At times, he appeared to be helping Mattingly with his responses. 

At one point, he said the cop had ‘rightfully’ returned fire.  

None of the police officers have been charged in Breonna Taylor’s death.

Family attorney Ben Crump noted on Twitter, “Audio of #KennyWalker and Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly clearly reveal that there has been a CONSPIRACY to cover up #BreonnaTaylor’s killing since day one!!,” he wrote,

“ALL the officers involved need to be FIRED and CHARGED with murder,” Crump added.

Subscribe to theGrio’s Dear Culture podcast on Spotify, Apple and Stitcher.

The post New audio reveals ‘conspiracy’ to cover up Breonna Taylor shooting appeared first on TheGrio.



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Robert Fuller’s death confirmed as a suicide, investigators say

The victim reportedly struggled with mental health issues and suicidal thoughts over the past year.

Authorities have confirmed that the death of a 24-year-old Black man found hanging from a tree in Palmdale, California was the result of a suicide.

Detectives claim Robert Fuller struggled with mental health issues and suicidal thoughts over the past year. He even heard voices telling him to kill himself and twice had to be hospitalized, KTLA.com reports.

Los Angeles County sheriff’s Cmdr. Chris Marks also noted at a news briefing on Thursday that Fuller’s family “provided much-needed information” throughout the investigation into his death. 

“They indicated that they would let the investigation take its course, and were open-minded about his cause of death, not really speculating one way or the other,” he said.

Read More: Video footage confirms Malcolm Harsch’s hanging death was suicide, family says

Fuller was discovered hanging from a tree near Palmdale City Hall on June 10, amid national protests and civil unrest over race relations and police brutality.

Black Lives Matter Protestors Rally In CA After Black Man Found Dead By Hanging
PALMDALE, CA – JUNE 13: (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)

The city was quick to rule Fuller’ death a homicide but residents felt something far more sinister was at work, theGrio previously reported. 

Fuller’s death was called a “lynching,” and some compared it to the police killing of George Floyd. The community rallied a protest where Fuller’s body was hung, Newsweek reported.

During the new conference this week, Marks said Fuller’s body was suspended from the tree in a way “indicating that the victim was not hoisted into that position.” 

Read More: Houston man’s hanging death ruled a suicide by medical examiner

Black Lives Matter Protestors Rally In CA After Black Man Found Dead By Hanging
(Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)

Authorities said Fuller’s debit card was used at a local Dollar Tree store in May to purchase the rope used in his hanging. According to the report, Fuller’s body showed no signs of a struggle or defensive wounds and his hands were not bound.

“There were no signs that he attempted to remove the ligature from his neck,” said Marks. 

Palmdale City Hall initially predetermined that Fuller was a casualty to COVID-19, suggesting he wanted to die rather than be optimistic about recovering.

“Sadly, it is not the first such incident since the COVID-19 pandemic began,” the city said in a statement. “The city remains committed to addressing mental health issues during these difficult times. We are in this together.”

Subscribe to theGrio’s Dear Culture podcast on Spotify, Apple and Stitcher.

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A dam on the Nile is making lots of heat but no power

Egypt sees the dam as an existential threat, while Ethiopia sees it as an existential necessity.

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Africa's week in pictures: 3-9 July 2020

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

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Minority-owned Firm Oversees Momentous $350 Million Texas Water Development Board Bond Issue

Texas Water Development Board

In one of its largest bond deals this year, Siebert Williams Shank & Co. L.L.C. (SWS) has successfully managed a $350 million tax-exempt bond issuance for the Texas Water Development Board.

The nation’s largest minority-and-women-owned financial firm, SWS said this week’s proceeds from the sale of the bonds will provide funds to the Clean Water State Revolving Fund and the Water State Revolving Fund programs. The federal-state partnerships support clean water infrastructure statewide.

The bond sale is momentous as it is the largest ever municipal bond transaction executed by a Minority and Women-owned Business Enterprise (M/WBE) firm for a Texas state agency, according to information reported by Thomson Reuters. And it was one of the largest tax-exempt, negotiated transactions brought to market by a Texas issuer since the COVID-19 related market disruption started in March.

The bonds, which received ratings of “AAA” by S&P Global Ratings and “AAA” by Fitch Ratings, were structured to generate and aggregate a $430 million project fund, with principal maturing serially (in years 2021-2040), and a 10-year call option at par, SWS reported.

A state agency, the Texas Water Development Board received an impressive number of orders, with 80% of the total principal amount subscribed for within the first 30 minutes of being offered. By the end of the order period, the SWS-led syndicate generated over $1.7 billion in orders from 61 institutional investors, making the overall transaction nearly five times oversubscribed.

“This successful bond offering will provide substantial resources for the people of Texas to preserve and protect our most basic natural resource, water,” Peter M. Lake, chairman of the Texas Water Development Board stated. “At the same time, by closely analyzing rapidly-developing bond market conditions, Siebert Williams Shank priced the issuance to reduce yields and save money for taxpayers across our state.”

Keith Richard, managing director & head of Texas Region for SWS, stated, “With financial uncertainty in the markets related to the COVID-19 pandemic, our analysts worked tirelessly to monitor and respond to current conditions in preparation for the bond issuance. “Those efforts resulted in a successful offering that was attractive to major institutional buyers.”

The Texas Water Development Board offering was one of 12 transactions, totaling over $1.8 billion, helping catapult Siebert to a No.3 ranking as senior manager of Texas negotiated transactions for the first half of 2020, according to Thomson Reuters. For 2020, SWS reported its largest senior managed bond transaction was a $608 million New York City Municipal Water Finance Authority deal.



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My Black Receipt Campaign Generates $5 Million For Black Businesses

Small personal loan vs credit card

The ongoing protests against police brutality and racial injustices have pressured major corporations to address these issues by using their massive fortunes to advance social change and provide more opportunities for marginalized groups. In addition to corporate accountability, Kezia M. Williams, the CEO of The Black upStart, is calling for those aligned with the Black Lives Matter movement to protest with their dollars.

Williams partnered with Torrence Reed, the CEO of Zoom Technologies; Darryl Perkins, the co-founder of Broccoli City; Talib Graves Manns, CEO of Knox Street Studios, and thought leader 19 Keys to launch the My Black Receipt campaign, which encourages protesters to spend their money with Black-owned businesses and post their receipts on social media.


According to Williams, the My Black Receipt movement generated over $5 million in revenue for Black-owned businesses. The initiative has recorded over 18,000 consumers participating in the social media challenge since its launch on Juneteenth this year.

“We are starting to talk about how this technology can incentivize buying Black long-term, not just in response to protests, and how we can build community around the recirculation of the dollar using technology,” said Williams, according to Because of Them We Can

She added that she hopes to use the data collected to learn more about spending habits, sectors, and cities as well as consumer preference between online and traditional shopping to aid Black businesses.

 

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We just made history. I’m crying real tears. Look at God! This started as an idea just 35 days ago! 😭 Now 18,614 consumers later #MyBlackReceipt exceeded it’s goal of 👏🏿 FIVE 👏🏿 MILLION 👏🏿 DOLLARS 👏🏿 SPENT 👏🏿 WITH 👏🏿 BLACK OWNED BUSINESSES! . . Just a few moments ago large invoices from Black female VC @arlanwashere and friends Deshuna at @kwelitv and Brandon with Rule Enterprises @b_rule sent us past $5 million with hours to spare. . Thanks to ALL of YOU for submitting YOUR receipts . WE MADE HISTORY!!! The first ever Buy Black movement quantified, and the first digital Black Wall Street built with actual dollars spent with Black businesses YOU CHOSE in physical & digital neighborhoods across the world! You built this foundation. And, our foundation is strong because of YOU! . . And, we are still counting!! Let’s not stop at $5 million!! . Thank you so MUCH to these King Strategists 🤴🏾 @600000minutes 🤴🏾 @dperk 🤴🏾 @19_keys . Dream Team of Queens fielded 1,000+ help desk requests, managed 8000+ biz directory: @ashh_ma @miss_e_12 . @torrencereed3 is the bossiet tech lead who made my vision to quantify digital Black Wall Street real. . Look what we did, TOGETHER! . @keziamw #ProfessorKez

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White Bar Owner Pulls Gun On Black Man Chastising Patrons for Not Wearing Face Masks in Philly

White Bar Owner Jamie Atlig Philadelphia

A White Philadelphia bar owner was caught on video pulling a gun on a Black man yelling at people for not wearing a face mask at a restaurant, according to NewsOne.

The video clip, which was shared on social media, shows Jamie Atlig pointing a gun at an unknown Black man who was chastising customers at Nick’s Roast Beef for not wearing face masks on South Second Street over the weekend.


Atlig, who drew his weapon and pointed it toward the unnamed Black man, owns a bar named Infusion Lounge. Through an attorney, Atliq stated that he pulled his gun because he was being threatened.

“Mr. Atlig is licensed to carry a firearm. He has extensive firearm training. He’s a business owner and he was being threatened,” criminal defense attorney Robert Gamburg said. “The individual reached behind his back for an object, Mr. Atlig unholstered his licensed firearm, defused the situation, and sat back down.”

The woman, who got between the Black man and Atlig, defended the action of the Black bike rider.

“The Black man doesn’t need to be killed for this to be a story,” Liz Krieger said. “A man had a gun pulled on him for speaking the truth. We weren’t social distancing. He was completely in the right to be yelling at us—and if I hadn’t been there, this is how Black people are shot, and it’s claimed later that he had a bike lock on him and people thought it was a gun. But let’s be clear: The bike lock was never pulled out [until after the gun was].”

The Philadelphia police released a statement via Twitter.



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Biden on Trump: ‘Commander in chief who doesn’t command anything’

Presidential hopeful criticized the POTUS this week in an online speech to the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers


Former Vice-President and presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, Joe Biden, had harsh words for President Donald Trump.

Blasting him as a “guy who says he’s commander in chief and then doesn’t command anything in the fight against COVID-19.”

Biden made the comments on Wednesday in an online speech to the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. He said that despite the “overwhelming evidence,” that Russian intelligence officers offered bribes to Taliban fighters to kill Americans in Afghanistan, that Trump is “not doing a damn thing.” 

“Imagine how all of those parents feel,” he said referring to parents of enlisted military, “How do all of you who served feel?” 

“With Trump, it’s all about him,” Biden said, “This isn’t about me this election. It’s about you, it’s about the American people.” 

He also stated this election is about “decency” and “honor.” He blasted the language that the President uses saying that “it really angers me because this is ultimately about values.”

Joe Biden Donald Trump theGrio.com
Joe Biden Photo by Pete Marovich/Getty Images), Donald Trump (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

“We need a stronger, more just, more unified nation.” Biden said, “We need to restore power to workers, to communities who’ve been denied it so long.” 

Biden has long criticized the President’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic. According to The Washington Post, his advisers feel the crisis is the clearest way to contrast the two men and their leadership. The Biden campaign is looking to “paint Trump as uninformed, incapable of empathy and concerned only about his own political standing.” 

The coronavirus pandemic has killed more than 130,000 Americans this year. 

“From really January on, Vice President Biden has been laser-focused on the rising risk to the American people presented by this pandemic,” Biden campaign adviser Ariana Berengaut told The Washington Post. “You can almost imagine them side by side — Trump’s leadership and Biden’s leadership. . . Trump has no plan for tomorrow, no plan for a week from now, so there is absolutely no plan for the fall, and that’s what encapsulates the whole arc of that contrast.”

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Covid Kills More Men Than Women. Experts Still Can’t Explain Why

A new tracker from Harvard’s GenderSci Lab is the first to consolidate sex-separated data from across the US. It may help researchers solve the mystery.

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Alienware M15 R2 Review: A Powerful Gaming Laptop

Packed with powerful hardware, this second-gen gaming laptop runs circles around the competition—for a short while.

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Gorillas in Nigeria: World's rarest great ape pictured with babies

The sighting of young Cross River gorillas in Nigeria eases fears they will soon die out.

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Linkin Park T-Shirts Are All the Rage in China

The band hasn't been cool for years. But its Minutes to Midnight logo is everywhere in the most populous country in the world.

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How to Use Slack Without Driving Your Coworkers Crazy

Many of us use it at work, but here are some tips on how to make Slack work for you. (Stop. Hitting. Enter. So. Often.)

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Larry Brilliant on How Well We Are Fighting Covid-19

Three months ago, the epidemiologist weighed in on what we must do to defeat this new threat. We went back to ask: How are we doing, and what comes next?

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Uber Moves Stealthily to Gain Allies in a Fight With Cities

Nonprofits and advocacy groups signed on to an organization called Communities Against Rider Surveillance—without knowing that the ride-hail giant was involved.

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Joy Reid makes history as host of new MSNBC show ‘The ReidOut’

theGrio alum, who will make history as cable TV’s first Black woman prime time anchor, speaks exclusively about her new show premiering July 20

Congratulations are in order for theGrio alum, Joy Reid, who has been named host of The ReidOut, a new weeknight evening program at 7 p.m. EST.

Reid’s new show will premiere Monday, July 20 on MSNBC. Reid will be taking over the time slot previously held by veteran journalist Chris Matthews, host of Hardball with Chris Matthews. This shift will take Reid from her weekend morning show, AM Joy, to prime time. 

Some of you may recall our very own Joy Reid was the Managing Editor of theGrio from 2011-2014, and with the launch of The ReidOut, Joy Reid will become the first Black woman to host a prime time talk show. Let that sink in.

Read More: Joy Reid urged as Chris Matthews’ replacement on MSNBC’s ‘Hardball’

SiriusXM Broadcasts 2020 New Hampshire Democratic Primary Live - Day 1
Sirius XM on air host Dean Obeidallah interviews MSNBC’s Joy Reid at the DoubleTree by Hilton on February 10, 2020 in Manchester, New Hampshire. (Photo by Paul Marotta/Getty Images for SiriusXM)

Before joining MSNBC in 2011 as a contributor, Reid held a myriad of media-related positions ranging from the co-host of Wake Up South Florida, a political columnist for Miami Herald, press secretary in south Florida for the Obama campaign, and the editor of The Reid Report, to name just a few.

Reid received her degree from Harvard University and concentrated in documentary film.

Reid has published three books and is also a New York Times best-selling author having penned “The Man Who Sold America: Trump and the Unraveling of the American Story” (Harper Collins, 2019).

Reid’s other books include, “We Are the Change We Seek: The Speeches of Barack Obama” (co-authored with E J Dionne, Bloomsbury, 2017) and  “Fracture: Barack Obama, the Clintons, and the Racial Divide” (Harper Collins, 2015) which explores the complicated relationship between Barack Obama and the Clintons, and delves into how faithful Democrats were caught in a whirlwind of swiftly shifting allegiances. 

Reid’s new show will be based in D.C. and “will feature one-on-one conversations with politicians and newsmakers while addressing provocative political issues both inside and outside of the beltway. It will draw from her decades-long experience in politics and passion for covering the intersection of race, justice and culture.”

Read More: Joy Reid calls out GOP for holding up coronavirus stimulus package

TIME AND PUNISHMENT: A Town Hall Discussion With JAY Z And Harvey Weinstein On Spike TV
Joy Reid and Vincent Warren speak onstage during TIME AND PUNISHMENT: A Town Hall Discussion with JAY Z and Harvey Weinstein on Spike TV at MTV Studios on March 8, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images for Spike)

I had the chance to speak to Joy Reid and asked her about the goal of her show.

First and foremost, Reid seeks to inform her audience. As the first prime time bite from Washington, D.C., Reid wants to give people a first look at what’s happening, why it’s happening, and what will happen next, from her unique perspective.

Reid’s goal is to reach audiences of all backgrounds and understand the ways in which particular issues affect them and their real lives.

When I asked Reid what she was most excited about, she said it was the prospect of taking what she and her team built at AM Joy to prime time. The aim is to be as informative and fun as one can be in these crazy times.

What has made Reid a success is that she and her show have always been approachable and accessible to a variety of different audiences. And as Reid takes a new version of her show to prime time, she will build upon the relationships she has built with her viewers.

(Photo: MSNBC)

When I asked Reid if she could give me a scoop, that is, will there be any surprises when the show airs on July 20, she laughed and said, “Surprise! There will be a Black lady in primetime.”

As we move through this new racial reckoning, we must reflect upon the fact that Reid will be the first Black woman to host her own show on prime time cable television. We must celebrate and support this new endeavor, and we must continue to pressure news organizations to cultivate and promote the talented Black journalists in their ranks. 

As Reid builds a show that will keep viewers engaged and informed, she was clear to note, “A big part of what allows me to get here is because of my time as Managing Editor at theGrio. Being there and covering stories is a huge part of this opportunity. Thank you all for being there.”

Well, theGrio family could not be happier to have one of our own as a trailblazer and history maker.

For those who are curious, there will be a rotating group of hosts during the current AM Joy time slot until a permanent decision is made in the fall. You can also listen to Reid’s podcasts What to Reid and Reid This, Reid That (with journalist and play cousin Jacque Reid).

Reid’s new show will premiere Monday, July 20 on MSNBC at 7 p.m. EST. Go to @JoyAnnReid on Twitter, Instagram and on Facebook @JoyReidOfficial to send your congratulations.


Christina Greer, Ph.D., is an associate professor at Fordham University, political editor at The Grio, the author of “Black Ethnics: Race, Immigration, and the Pursuit of the American Dream”, and the co-host of the podcast FAQ-NYC. You can find her at @Dr_CMGreer on Twitter and Instagram.

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‘Glee’ actress Naya Rivera missing after son, 4, found alone on boat

The Hollywood star’s son reportedly told authorities she jumped into the water and never came back.

Actress Naya Rivera is reportedly missing after California authorities found her 4-year-old son alone on a boat on Wednesday.

The 33-year-old Glee star was not on the boat when authorities discovered her son, Josey, sleeping adrift a boat in Lake Piru in Ventura County just before 5 p.m. PT, according to TMZ. The boy was reportedly wearing a life jacket. Another adult life jacket was also found on the boat.

A search and rescue dive team searched the lake after they were unable to locate Rivera. The Ventura County Sheriff’s Office tweeted that they were searching for a possible drowning victim.

Read More: ‘Glee’ star Naya Rivera arrested on domestic battery against husband

View this post on Instagram

Always bringing the 🌞

A post shared by Naya Rivera (@nayarivera) on

Law enforcement said Josey told authorities that his mom had jumped in the water and never came back. A team of divers stopped searching due to nightfall but is expected to resume on Thursday by sunrise.

Authorities reportedly found Rivera’s Black SUV parked near the boat rental with her purse inside.

Just a day before her disappearance, Rivera had shared a picture of her kissing her young son with the caption: “Just the two of us.”

It was her last post to instagram.

View this post on Instagram

just the two of us

A post shared by Naya Rivera (@nayarivera) on

Rivera quickly became a trending topic late Wednesday on the west coast as many offered their prayers for her safety. Others on Twitter were quick to admonish those who began posting “RIP” messages to their timelines without any confirmation on the state of her welfare.

“Praying for Naya Rivera. I hope she’s ok,” tweeted fellow Hollywood actress Tika Sumpter.

Rivera shares custody of her son with actor Ryan Dorsey, whom she divorced in 2018.

This story is still developing.

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Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Gabrielle Union calls for ‘more changes’ after NBC pledge to protect staff

The actress has responded to the network’s pledge to protect employees and foster a safer work environment.

Gabrielle Union has responded to NBC’s pledge to protect employees and foster a safer work environment.

A company wide memo sent Tuesday by NBCUniversal TV and Streaming chairman Mark Lazarus detailed plans to prevent “discrimination and harassment” on in-house programming and productions from third-party suppliers, New York Daily News reports.

The lengthy memo reads, in part: 

To support this effort, we have started to provide our third-party production partners with a variety of additional resources that reflect those provided to our in-house productions, including: respectful workplace policies, training materials tailored to the various types of production, and additional channels through which workers can report workplace concerns, including Comcast NBCUniversal Listens, which allows for anonymous reporting.

Read More: Gabrielle Union reveals more about her time on ‘America’s Got Talent’ and what happens next

Union reacted to the statement on Twitter, writing: “Great start by NBC to recognize the need to not turn away & ignore racial & gender discrimination on programs like #AGT,” she tweeted.

“More changes are needed however like stopping executives from intimidating talent from sharing their experience of racism in their own workplace investigations,” the actress added.

The increased efforts come amid Union’s complaint against NBC and Fremantle, alleging producers created a “toxic culture” on the set of the music competition series America’s Got Talent

Fremantl, a third-party supplier, opted to not renew Union’s contract as co-judge on the series after a one-season run last November.

She shared details of her allegations of racial insensitivity on the show with host Trevor Noah last month on his Daily Social Distancing Show. Union also opened up about the subsequent investigation. 

“I decided to participate in this investigation. They’re like ‘We’re going to commission this independent investigation,’” she said. “Well, silly me, I thought independent was independent, but when NBC and Fremantle and Syco paid for that investigation, they control it.”

Read More: Union files complaint against NBC, ‘America’s Got Talent’

“With ‘AGT,’ trying to work within a system of… I thought it was the easiest show! How hard is it to, you know, watch jugglers? That’s what I thought I signed up for. Day one, you know, Simon Cowell is smoking cigarettes inside. I’ve worked a long time, I’ve worked with all kinds of people, I’ve never experienced that,” she told Noah.

“So, when your boss, the person who has the ability to determine who gets opportunities and who doesn’t, doesn’t believe the law applies to him or the rules apply to him and he does it in full view of NBC, Fremantle and Syco and no one cares about Simon Cowell exposing all of these employees to second-hand smoke. That’s day one, that’s within the first hour,” Union continued.

“What message do you think that sends to anyone that has an issue with the very real racism and the lack of accountability? And it goes on and on and on.”

In the company memo, Lazarus noted that “Promoting a positive culture is an ongoing effort, and with this commitment, we are confident that we will be able to promote a positive and respectful work environment across all productions.”

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

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Black-owned businesses see sales boost from Blackout Day

Tuesday was designated as a day of solidarity in America, where Black people were urged to only support minority-owned businesses.

Black business owners are taking to social media to speak out about the boost in support they saw on Blackout Day.

An earlier report published on theGrio noted that July 7 was designated as a day of solidarity in America, where Black people were urged to support Black-owned businesses only. 

“This movement is an awakening of the national consciousness of Black people in America and abroad.” The website reads, “We need economic solidarity in America amongst all Black people unequivocally.”

Read More: Black-owned OneUnited Bank gets boost after protests

The mission statement goes on to note, “In order to break free from the chains of financial servility, we will organize days, weeks, months, and years if necessary when not one Black person in America will spend a dollar outside of our community.”

According to Hollywood Life, the movement was conceived by Calvin Martyr, founder of the Blackout Coalition. Martyr explains that African-Americans account for $1.2 trillion in economic spending. Blackout Day is meant to demonstrate the economic power that Black people have in America.

Celebrities and athletes including Rihanna, Tristan Thompson and Cardi B took to social media to support the movement and encourage their massive following to #BuyBlack on Blackout Day. 

Rapper T.I. made clear in an Instagram post that there should be “one day of solidarity in America when not one Black person in America spends a dollar.”

The call to action certainly seems to have paid off. 

Khadijah Robinson, founder of Nile, which is a digital community that connects shoppers with Black-owned brands online, saw a 200% surge in users on Tuesday, per CNBC.com.

“We are seeing an influx of interest, and there’s been a growing interest in the movement to support Black businesses for several years,” she said. “People are really trying to be more conscientious with their shopping and support these small, minority and women-owned brands, and finding our tool really useful in terms of facilitating that.”

Read More: Black-owned OneUnited Bank gets boost after protests

Robinson launched her website March 1 and now has 1,900 brands on the platform.

The timely website comes amid reports that Black businesses have been greatly impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, making Blackout Day even more vital to recovery efforts.

Black-owned businesses took to social media on Blackout Day to post discount codes, which helped drive sales.

“Anytime you can bring in new customers to Black-owned businesses, it’s a great thing,” said Michael De Los Santos, owner of Mike D’s BBQ in Durham, North Carolina. He saw a 280% increase in daily sales average on Tuesday. 

“What I hope is that it isn’t just a one-time thing, where folks in this moment are going to support Black businesses right now because it’s popular,” he added. “I hope it’s a sustainable thing, where folks can adjust their buying habits for the long haul.”

Consumers have using the website MyBlackReceipt.com to upload proof of purchases made at Black-owned businesses. So far, $7.6 million has reportedly been spent from June 19 through July 6, according to CNBC.

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

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