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Wednesday, September 2, 2020

A “bang” in LIGO and Virgo detectors signals most massive gravitational-wave source yet

For all its vast emptiness, the universe is humming with activity in the form of gravitational waves. Produced by extreme astrophysical phenomena, these reverberations ripple forth and shake the fabric of space-time, like the clang of a cosmic bell.

Now researchers have detected a signal from what may be the most massive black hole merger yet observed in gravitational waves. The product of the merger is the first clear detection of an “intermediate-mass” black hole, with a mass between 100 and 1,000 times that of the sun.

They detected the signal, which they have labeled GW190521, on May 21, 2019, with the National Science Foundation’s Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO), a pair of identical, 4-kilometer-long interferometers in the United States; and Virgo, a 3-kilometer-long detector in Italy.

The signal, resembling about four short wiggles, is extremely brief in duration, lasting less than one-tenth of a second. From what the researchers can tell, GW190521 was generated by a source that is roughly 5 gigaparsecs away, when the universe was about half its age, making it one of the most distant gravitational-wave sources detected so far.

As for what produced this signal, based on a powerful suite of state-of-the-art computational and modeling tools, scientists think that GW190521 was most likely generated by a binary black hole merger with unusual properties.

Almost every confirmed gravitational-wave signal to date has been from a binary merger, either between two black holes or two neutron stars. This newest merger appears to be the most massive yet, involving two inspiraling black holes with masses about 85 and 66 times the mass of the sun.

The LIGO-Virgo team has also measured each black hole’s spin and discovered that as the black holes were circling ever closer together, they could have been spinning about their own axes, at angles that were out of alignment with the axis of their orbit. The black holes’ misaligned spins likely caused their orbits to wobble, or “precess,” as the two Goliaths spiraled toward each other.

The new signal likely represents the instant that the two black holes merged. The merger created an even more massive black hole, of about 142 solar masses, and released an enormous amount of energy, equivalent to around 8 solar masses,      spread across the universe in the form of gravitational waves.

“This doesn’t look much like a chirp, which is what we typically detect,” says Virgo member Nelson Christensen, a researcher at the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), comparing the signal to LIGO’s first detection of gravitational waves in 2015. “This is more like something that goes ‘bang,’ and it’s the most massive signal LIGO and Virgo have seen.”

The international team of scientists, who make up the LIGO Scientific Collaboration (LSC) and the Virgo Collaboration, have reported their findings in two papers published today. One, appearing in Physical Review Letters, details the discovery, and the other, in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, discusses the signal’s physical properties and astrophysical implications.

“LIGO once again surprises us not just with the detection of black holes in sizes that are difficult to explain, but doing it using techniques that were not designed specifically for stellar mergers,” says Pedro Marronetti, program director for gravitational physics at the National Science Foundation. “This is of tremendous importance since it showcases the instrument’s ability to detect signals from completely unforeseen astrophysical events. LIGO shows that it can also observe the unexpected.”

In the mass gap

The uniquely large masses of the two inspiraling black holes, as well as the final black hole, raise a slew of questions regarding their formation.

All of the black holes observed to date fit within either of two categories: stellar-mass black holes, which measure from a few solar masses up to tens of solar masses and are thought to form when massive stars die; or supermassive black holes, such as the one at the center of the Milky Way galaxy, that are from hundreds of thousands, to billions of times that of our sun.

However, the final 142-solar-mass black hole produced by the GW190521 merger lies within an intermediate mass range between stellar-mass and supermassive black holes — the first of its kind ever detected.

The two progenitor black holes that produced the final black hole also seem to be unique in their size. They’re so massive that scientists suspect one or both of them may not have formed from a collapsing star, as most stellar-mass black holes do.

According to the physics of stellar evolution, outward pressure from the photons and gas in a star’s core support it against the force of gravity pushing inward, so that the star is stable, like the sun. After the core of a massive star fuses nuclei as heavy as iron, it can no longer produce enough pressure to support the outer layers. When this outward pressure is less than gravity, the star collapses under its own weight, in an explosion called a core-collapse supernova, that can leave behind a black hole.

This process can explain how stars as massive as 130 solar masses can produce black holes that are up to 65 solar masses. But for heavier stars, a phenomenon known as “pair instability” is thought to kick in. When the core’s photons become extremely energetic, they can morph into an electron and antielectron pair. These pairs generate less pressure than photons, causing the star to become unstable against gravitational collapse, and the resulting explosion is strong enough to leave nothing behind. Even more massive stars, above 200 solar masses, would      eventually collapse directly into a black hole of at least 120 solar masses. A collapsing star, then, should not be able to produce a black hole between approximately 65 and 120 solar masses — a range that is known as the “pair instability mass gap.”

But now, the heavier of the two black holes that produced the GW190521 signal, at 85 solar masses, is the first so far detected within the pair instability mass gap.

“The fact that we’re seeing a black hole in this mass gap will make a lot of astrophysicists scratch their heads and try to figure out how these black holes were made,” says Christensen, who is the director of the Artemis Laboratory at the Nice Observatory in France.

One possibility, which the researchers consider in their second paper, is of a hierarchical merger, in which the two progenitor black holes themselves may have formed from the merging of two smaller black holes, before migrating together and eventually merging.

“This event opens more questions than it provides answers,” says LIGO member Alan Weinstein, professor of physics at Caltech. “From the perspective of discovery and physics, it’s a very exciting thing.”

“Something unexpected”

There are many remaining questions regarding GW190521.

As LIGO and Virgo detectors listen for gravitational waves passing through Earth, automated searches comb through the incoming data for interesting signals. These searches can use two different methods: algorithms that pick out specific wave patterns in the data that may have been produced by compact binary systems; and more general “burst” searches, which essentially look for anything out of the ordinary.

LIGO member Salvatore Vitale, assistant professor of physics at MIT, likens compact binary searches to “passing a comb through data, that will catch things in a certain spacing,” in contrast to burst searches that are more of a “catch-all” approach.

In the case of GW190521, it was a burst search that picked up the signal slightly more clearly, opening the very small chance that the gravitational waves arose from something other than a binary merger.

“The bar for asserting we’ve discovered something new is very high,” Weinstein says. “So we typically apply Occam’s razor: The simpler solution is the better one, which in this case is a binary black hole.”

But what if something entirely new produced these gravitational waves? It’s a tantalizing prospect, and in their paper the scientists briefly consider other sources in the universe that might have produced the signal they detected. For instance, perhaps the gravitational waves were emitted by a collapsing star in our galaxy. The signal could also be from a cosmic string produced just after the universe inflated in its earliest moments — although neither of these exotic possibilities matches the data as well as a binary merger.

“Since we first turned on LIGO, everything we’ve observed with confidence has been a collision of black holes or neutron stars,” Weinstein says “This is the one event where our analysis allows the possibility that this event is not such a collision.  Although this event is consistent with being from an exceptionally massive binary black hole merger, and alternative explanations are disfavored, it is pushing the boundaries of our confidence. And that potentially makes it extremely exciting. Because we have all been hoping for something new, something unexpected, that could challenge what we’ve learned already. This event has the potential for doing that.”

This research was funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation.



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An unexpected origin story for a lopsided black hole merger

A lopsided merger of two black holes may have an oddball origin story, according to a new study by researchers at MIT and elsewhere.

The merger was first detected on April 12, 2019 as a gravitational wave that arrived at the detectors of both LIGO (the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory), and its Italian counterpart, Virgo. Scientists labeled the signal as GW190412 and determined that it emanated from a clash between two David-and-Goliath black holes, one three times more massive than the other. The signal marked the first detection of a merger between two black holes of very different sizes.

Now the new study, published today in the journal Physical Review Letters, shows that this lopsided merger may have originated through a very different process compared to how most mergers, or binaries, are thought to form.

It’s likely that the more massive of the two black holes was itself a product of a prior merger between two parent black holes. The Goliath that spun out of that first collision may have then ricocheted around a densely packed “nuclear cluster” before merging with the second, smaller black hole — a raucous event that sent gravitational waves rippling across space.

GW190412 may then be a second generation, or “hierarchical” merger, standing apart from other first-generation mergers that LIGO and Virgo have so far detected.

“This event is an oddball the universe has thrown at us — it was something we didn’t see coming,” says study coauthor Salvatore Vitale, an assistant professor of physics at MIT and a LIGO member. “But nothing happens just once in the universe. And something like this, though rare, we will see again, and we’ll be able to say more about the universe.”

Vitale’s coauthors are Davide Gerosa of the University of Birmingham and Emanuele Berti of Johns Hopkins University.

A struggle to explain

There are two main ways in which black hole mergers are thought to form. The first is known as a common envelope process, where two neighboring stars, after billions of years, explode to form two neighboring black holes that eventually share a common envelope, or disk of gas. After another few billion years, the black holes spiral in and merge.

“You can think of this like a couple being together all their lives,” Vitale says. “This process is suspected to happen in the disc of galaxies like our own.”

The other common path by which black hole mergers form is via dynamical interactions. Imagine, in place of a monogamous environment, a galactic rave, where thousands of black holes are crammed into a small, dense region of the universe. When two black holes start to partner up, a third may knock the couple apart in a dynamical interaction that can repeat many times over, before a pair of black holes finally merges.

In both the common envelope process and the dynamical interaction scenario, the merging black holes should have roughly the same mass, unlike the lopsided mass ratio of GW190412. They should also have relatively no spin, whereas GW190412 has a surprisingly high spin.

“The bottom line is, both these scenarios, which people traditionally think are ideal nurseries for black hole binaries in the universe, struggle to explain the mass ratio and spin of this event,” Vitale says.

Black hole tracker

In their new paper, the researchers used two models to show that it is very unlikely that GW190412 came from either a common envelope process or a dynamical interaction.

They first modeled the evolution of a typical galaxy using STAR TRACK, a simulation that tracks galaxies over billions of years, starting with the coalescing of gas and proceeding to the way stars take shape and explode, and then collapse into black holes that eventually merge. The second model simulates random, dynamical encounters in globular clusters — dense concentrations of stars around most galaxies.

The team ran both simulations multiple times, tuning the parameters and studying the properties of the black hole mergers that emerged. For those mergers that formed through a common envelope process, a merger like GW190412 was very rare, cropping up only after a few million events. Dynamical interactions were slightly more likely to produce such an event, after a few thousand mergers.

However, GW190412 was detected by LIGO and Virgo after only 50 other detections, suggesting that it likely arose through some other process.

“No matter what we do, we cannot easily produce this event in these more common formation channels,” Vitale says.

The process of hierarchical merging may better explain the GW190412’s lopsided mass and its high spin. If one black hole was a product of a previous pairing of two parent black holes of similar mass, it would itself be more massive than either parent, and later significantly overshadow its first-generation partner, creating a high mass ratio in the final merger.

A hierarchical process could also generate a merger with a high spin: The parent black holes, in their chaotic merging, would spin up the resulting black hole, which would then carry this spin into its own ultimate collision.

“You do the math, and it turns out the leftover black hole would have a spin which is very close to the total spin of this merger,” Vitale explains.

No escape

If GW190412 indeed formed through hierarchical merging, Vitale says the event could also shed light on the environment in which it formed. The team found that if the larger of the two black holes formed from a previous collision, that collision likely generated a huge amount of energy that not only spun out a new black hole, but kicked it across some distance.

“If it’s kicked too hard, it would just leave the cluster and go into the empty interstellar medium, and not be able to merge again,” Vitale says.

If the object was able to merge again (in this case, to produce GW190412), it would mean the kick that it received was not enough to escape the stellar cluster in which it formed. If GW190412 indeed is a product of hierarchical merging, the team calculated that it would have occurred in an environment with an escape velocity higher than 150 kilometers per second. For perspective, the escape velocity of most globular clusters is about 50 kilometers per second.

This means that whatever environment GW190412 arose from had an immense gravitational pull, and the team believes that such an environment could have been either the disk of gas around a supermassive black hole, or a “nuclear cluster” — an incredibly dense region of the universe, packed with tens of millions of stars.

“This merger must have come from an unusual place,” Vitale says. “As LIGO and Virgo continue to make new detections, we can use these  discoveries to learn new things about the universe.”

This research was funded, in part by the U.S. National Science Foundation and MIT’s Solomon Buchsbaum Research Fund.



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Your Beloved Blue Jeans Are Polluting the Ocean—Big Time

When you wash denim, tiny fibers shed and flow into the environment. Scientists just found that Arctic waters are now loaded with little bits of jeans.

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No, Public Trust in Scientific Institutions Has Not Eroded

But given what we've seen during the pandemic, maybe it should.

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Group of Powerful Black Business Leaders Endorse Biden, Harris

Joe Biden

As the contentious race for the White House enters its most critical phase, a political action group composed of high-powered black executives and business leaders endorsed today former Vice President Joe Biden and his running mate, US Senator Kamala Harris for president and vice president, respectively. Making the first presidential endorsement since its inception two years ago, the nonpartisan Black Economic Alliance PAC will place its full support behind the Democratic ticket to defeat President Trump to ensure “strong leadership at this pivotal turning point in our nation’s history.”

BEA Executive Director David Clunie states in a release: “We have no doubt that Vice President Joe Biden has what it takes to heal our country and create a path toward a more inclusive and just America. He is the proven, dependable leader we need in the White House to put the nation on a new path toward equity and unity during these tumultuous and uncertain times.”

He adds that the Democratic presidential contender is aware of the need to “fundamentally change existing policies that have enabled the structural inequities due to racism to persist for decades. To achieve economic and social mobility, Joe Biden understands that we need to guarantee a living wage, close the Black-White wealth gap, invest in Black-owned small businesses, and expand access to capital.”

Congressman Cedric Richmond (D-LA), co-chair of Biden’s presidential campaign, told BLACK ENTERPRISE that the organization’s backing represents “a big endorsement.”

“We don’t ever want the impression or the thought to go out that African American issues are just police reform and criminal justice reform,” Richmond maintains. “Economic empowerment is a big deal and that covers a whole range of things from wealth creation, home ownership, entrepreneurship, all of those things. And the Black Economic Alliance digs into that tremendously. That’s their wheelhouse.”

The organization’s focus is driving economic progress for African Americans in three core areas – “work, wages, and wealth.” – through public policy, advocacy, and political engagement. Formed during the 2018 midterms, BEA has poured millions into campaigns and endorsed candidates in highly competitive races in which  Black voter turnout will make the difference in outcomes.

To achieve its objectives, BEA has assembled a collection of powerhouses like board co-chairs Charles Phillips, CEO of tech colossus Infor,  and N. Anthony Coles, chairman and CEO of biotech firm Cerevel Therapeutics as well as advisory board members Dick Parsons, former chairman of Citigroup; Carla Harris, vice chairman, Global Wealth Management at Morgan Stanley: and Susan Rice, former US Ambassador to the United Nations who had been considered for Biden’s running mate.

BEA most certainly will be critical in fundraising – reportedly, the Biden is expected to surpass a record-breaking $300 million for August – and black voter mobilization efforts given its ties to key civil rights organizations like the NAACP and National Urban League as well as other grassroots organizations.

Asserts Richmond: “Their leadership is phenomenal, and it’s been an ongoing relationship. So it’s not just an endorsement because we’ve been talking to them a lot to help craft policy, In fact, members of the group have “had a seat at the table” and have been aligned with the campaign’s “Lift Every Voice” Plan for Black America.

Clunie states that BEA is confident that a Biden Administration will reflect “the diversity of the United States, and he’s already made a strong first step in that direction” with the selection of Harris as his VP pick. Moreover, the organization will urge Biden, if elected, to appoint African Americans to top posts at key economic agencies, including the Treasury Department and Council of Economic Advisors to further push for an expansive economic agenda for Black Americans.

 

 



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Netflix on YouTube

Family Business Season 2 | Official Trailer | Netflix
A year ago, the Hazan took off their butchers’ aprons to start a weed business. Since, everything has changed: more money, more pastraweed, but above all, more problems! Good thing Joseph always has a plan for every situation… Family Business S2 – September 11 on Netflix SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/29qBUt7 About Netflix: Netflix is the world's leading streaming entertainment service with 193 million paid memberships in over 190 countries enjoying TV series, documentaries and feature films across a wide variety of genres and languages. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on any internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments. Family Business Season 2 | Official Trailer | Netflix https://youtube.com/Netflix Forced to choose between growing weed and raising his kids, Joe tries to convince his family to quit the business, setting off a wild chain of events.


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Covid Snuffed Out Burning Man—but the Festival Goes On in VR

No one in the meatspace is going to the Black Rock Desert this year. So I soared into the sprawling digital reconstruction that is BRCvr.

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Microsoft Surface Book 3 Review: An Expensive 2-In-1

Microsoft's refreshed 2-in-1 brings more power than ever before—but for the price, you're neither getting the best tablet nor the best laptop.

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Flu Season and Covid-19 Are About to Collide. Now What?

Hospitals in the US are already stressed. Now, they must brace for a wave of flu patients needing more beds, lab tests, and ventilators.

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How to Deal With the Anxiety of Uncertainty

Our brains weren't wired to deal with the "psychological pandemic" of not knowing what the future holds. Here's how to cope with living in limbo.

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Ugandan gorilla family in Bwindi park has 'baby boom'

Five babies are born in six weeks in Uganda's Bwindi Impenetrable National Park.

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Precious Orji on turning talent into Paralympic gold for Nigeria

Nigeria's Precious Orji on turning her powerlifting talent into Paralympic gold and her struggles as she aims to retain her title.

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Netflix on YouTube

CRIMINAL SEASON 2 | Official Trailer | Netflix
Four new cases, four new suspects, one room that changes everything. Criminal returns September 16th with guest stars Kit Harington, Kunal Nayyar, Sharon Horgan and Sophie Okonedo. Every suspect has their story. Whose will you believe? SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/29qBUt7 About Netflix: Netflix is the world's leading streaming entertainment service with 193 million paid memberships in over 190 countries enjoying TV series, documentaries and feature films across a wide variety of genres and languages. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on any internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments. CRIMINAL SEASON 2 | Official Trailer | Netflix https://youtube.com/Netflix Seeking answers inside the interview room, investigators question suspects over four confounding cases, including alleged rape, abduction and murder.


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Guinean footballer Momo Yansane on coping with racism and playing during Covid

Guinean footballer Momo Yansane talks about his struggles with racism, personal tragedy and Covid-19 concerns.

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Tuesday, September 1, 2020

How to Install Moodle Learning Platform in Ubuntu 20.04

Moodle is the world’s most popular, robust, free, and open-source online learning (e-learning) management platform built for web and mobile. It offers a wide range of activities and educational tools that enable schools, universities,

The post How to Install Moodle Learning Platform in Ubuntu 20.04 first appeared on Tecmint: Linux Howtos, Tutorials & Guides.



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The global pandemic's newest luxury traveler? Your pet

Pet adoptions are soaring during the Covid-19 pandemic, and the travel industry has taken notice. To entice travelers, hotels are rolling out packages that pamper pets as much as their owners.

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Listening to immigrant and indigenous Pacific Islander voices

After Kevin Lujan Lee came out to his parents, he found another family in Improving Dreams, Equality, Access, and Success (IDEAS), an undocumented student advocacy and support group at the University of California at Los Angeles. After joining the organization to support his undocumented partner at the time, he fell in love with the group and community around it, and became involved in organizing alongside undocumented youth. When Lee found himself struggling to make ends meet upon graduation, it was his then-partner’s parents who took him in and cared for him despite their limited means and the constant threat of deportation.

“I would be nothing if it weren’t for IDEAS, if it weren’t for undocumented people sheltering me and giving me food,” Lee says. “This was the spirit that the group embodied. People who were more than willing to just fork out what they didn’t have.”

The third-year PhD candidate credits the family and mission of IDEAS for every subsequent step he has taken, from his master’s degree at the University of Chicago to his current research in MIT’s Department of Urban Studies and Planning.

“I really don’t think of myself as a researcher,” Lee says. “I’m first and foremost an organizer. That’s where I gained my purpose. That’s where I learned what love is in its most unconditional and revolutionary form.”

Lee’s priority is to give back that sense of unconditional love to the communities who have made him who he is, a scholar with broad interests in equitable community and economic development. His research has ranged from the political engagement of Pacific Islanders in Hawai‘i and Guåhan, to the role of worker centers — many of which serve undocumented immigrants in the informal economy –– in California’s workforce development system.

“When you work with people and in geographies that are invisible, you need power,” Lee says. “That’s why I’m here.”

“You have to make a decision”

The people Lee met through IDEAS have become crucial points of access that make his research possible on a day-to-day basis. Organizing has always built itself on interpersonal trust, and for Lee, shared connections in the immigrant labor world allow him to engage with the organizations he studies. For instance, it was through a collaboration with Sasha Feldstein at the California Immigrant Policy Center that he pursued his first research project as an MIT student, which looked at the way gaps in organizational networks prevent marginalized populations from accessing the resources that are supposedly for them.

When it comes to workforce development, social scientists have identified the problem of “creaming,” wherein nonprofits focus their resources on the populations that are easiest to serve in the face of tightened budgets, leaving behind the most marginalized in the process.

Inspired by the centrality of interpersonal relationships in the organizing world, Lee identified an additional, network-based mechanism through which the most marginalized are excluded from workforce development nonprofits. He calls this “structural creaming.” One of the ways in which federally funded job training providers exclude marginalized populations, he says, is by failing to establish or maintain relationships with smaller nonprofits specifically oriented toward meeting those populations’ needs.

Without those relationships, such providers simply don’t reach these populations, and if they do, they might not provide them with the appropriate support or refer them to the right employers. As a result, people slip through the cracks. Small-scale service providers don’t receive the funding they could use to provide greater assistance to the marginalized populations they already reach.

“These small-scale organizations are not really in conversation with the mainstream workforce development systems,” explains Lee, who works on this issue along with Ana Luz Gonzalez-Vasquez and Magaly López at the UCLA Labor Center. “They often have a fraught relationship with American Job Centers [federally funded job-training providers under the U.S. Department of Labor]. And, these organizations are not often studied by economists, who wield tremendous influence in workforce development policymaking.”

Conversations about workforce development for the most marginalized need to move away from prioritizing the “average client,” scalability, and cost efficiency, Lee says.

“You have to make a decision,” he says of the nonprofits and agencies in this field. “Serving immigrants is not always cost-effective. It requires conducting targeted outreach, providing English as Second Language classes, offering ongoing support to address barriers to program participation, and high-quality employment — it’s a difficult process. But if you care about these populations, that’s what you'll do.”

A life of many edges

An organizing-first approach was what brought Lee to MIT’s Department of Urban Studies and Planning (DUSP) to begin with. Advised by Associate Professor Justin Steil, Lee feels the department’s emphasis on interdisciplinary, applied research has allowed him to pursue his interests within the context of the academy.

“What he provides is unconditional support, a ready smile, and a lot of space to do what I want,” Lee says of his advisor. “There are a lot of wonderful junior faculty who are phenomenal, and I’m very grateful to them.”

Lee’s ability to range broadly over his interests in immigrant rights and equitable development has led him toward several collaborative projects on an issue that reaches into his own ancestry and past: indigenous Pacific Islander sovereignty.

An initial project with the Center for Pacific Island Studies at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa prompted him to learn more about indigenous sovereignty and colonialism. Now, he is collaborating with Ngoc Phan, a political scientist at Hawai‘i Pacific University, to analyze her Native Hawaiian Survey. And, alongside Patrick Thomsen of the University of Auckland and Lana Lopesi of the Auckland University of Technology, he is theorizing Pacific Islander mobilities. The Pacific has many “edges,” Lee says, alluding to the work of Pacific Studies scholar and activist Teresia Teaiwa, who emphasizes the deep heterogeneity of land, history, culture, language, religion and spirituality across the Pacific.

Within his own life, Lee has been grappling with the relationship between indigeneity and his own position as an immigrant and settler on Native American lands. Lee is an indigenous Pacific Islander himself; his mother is CHamoru, from Guåhan, and his father is Chinese, from Malaysia. Growing up in Malaysia, he remembers how his mother maintained her relationship to her family and to the island, in the face of a hierarchical and colorist society where she was required to overcome inordinate obstacles as a young mother. Through his research, he aims to reconnect to his Pacific Islander heritage and takes inspiration from his mother’s resilience.

“She is my connection,” he says. “She continuously demonstrates what it for me what it means to be CHamoru and what it means to be an Islander. It’s to have strength, and to stay connected to your homeland. You do it because it’s in your blood. You just have to.”

Since at least 2010, DUSP has only ever enrolled one PhD student who identifies as “Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander” — Lee himself. Thus, he feels a responsibility to make sure he is not the last Pacific Islander to come through his department. Inspired by the recent release of the Black DUSP Thesis, he also works alongside his colleagues to advance equity within his department. In the future, he hopes to help establish a pipeline of Pacific Islanders into urban planning.

“Sovereignty movements are very much alive in the Pacific, and people are trying to build their nations,” Lee says. “But there is no pipeline for Pacific Islanders into urban planning. How are you going to engage the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank about measures of development, how are you going to talk about community control, how are you going to talk about the military’s role in land use, if you don’t have these skills?”

With both his academic and organizing work, Lee acknowledges he has a lot on his plate. “I am deeply imperfect and often thinly stretched,” he says. “But when things matter so deeply in your bones, the energy just comes. It has to.”



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Chadwick Boseman’s ’42’ to return to theaters as tribute to actor

The star died after a long battle with colon cancer on Aug. 28, which also happened to be Jackie Robinson Day.

The Jackie Robinson biopic 42 is getting a theatrical re-release this weekend in honor of Chadwick Boseman.

Robinson was the first Black player in Major League Baseball in 1947, and Boseman played him in the 2013 sports drama. AMC Theaters will screen the film in more than 300 locations starting Thursday. Tickets will cost $5 and go on sale late Tuesday, PEOPLE reports. 

The actor died after a long battle with colon cancer on Aug. 28, which also happened to be the same day the MLB celebrated Jackie Robinson Day. The tribute was initially set to take place on April 15 but was pushed back when the season was postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic. 

Read More: ‘Wire’ actor Clarke Peters breaks down over Chadwick Boseman

In the days since Boseman’s death, fellow celebrities and fans have flooded social media with tributes. His 42 costar Harrison Ford, described him as “compelling, powerful and truthful as the characters he chose to play,” Ford said in a statement to The Hollywood Reporter. “His intelligence, personal dignity and deep commitment inspired his colleagues and elevated the stories he told. He is as much a hero as any he played. He is loved and will be deeply missed,” he added.

The Jackie Robinson Foundation also paid tribute to Boseman.

“Chadwick was a dear friend of the Foundation – lending his time and visibility to help advance our mission,” the charity posted on Twitter Saturday. “Preparing for his starring role in ’42,’ he studied extensively and spent considerable time with [Jackie’s wife] Rachel Robinson. A consummate professional, he absorbed every story, every memory and every photo and film excerpt he could consume to help translate the soul of an American hero. And now, Chadwick will be etched in history as a hero in his own right, especially having shown millions of black and Brown children the power of a superhero who looks like them.”

Read More: Michael B. Jordan honors Chadwick Boseman: ‘I wish we had more time’

Meanwhile, Boseman’s final movie, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, co-starring Viola Davis, will be released posthumously on Netflix.

As we previously reported, the film follows the rising “tensions and temperatures over the course of an afternoon recording session in 1920s Chicago, as a band of musicians await trailblazing performer, the legendary ‘Mother of the Blues,’ Ma Rainey.”

Over the weekend, Twitter announced that Boseman’s final post was the most liked tweet ever in the history of the platform.

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Philadelphia mayor defends dining indoors as restaurants remain closed

Indoor dining in Philadelphia was halted on March 16 because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney (D) has addressed the criticism over a widely circulated photo showing him dining indoors at a Maryland restaurant on Sunday. Meanwhile, dine-in service inside his city is banned due to COVID-19 restrictions.

“I felt the risk was low because the county I visited has had fewer than 800 COVID-19 cases, compared to over 33,000 cases in Philadelphia. Regardless, I understand the frustration,” Kenney tweeted Monday.

“I understand the frustration,” the mayor continued. “Restaurant owners are among the hardest hit by the pandemic. I’m sorry if my decision hurt those who’ve worked to keep their businesses going under difficult circumstances.”

Read More: Philadelphia student claims being called N-word, targeted with ‘Black hate crime’ post

He then reminded residents of the reopening of indoor dining on Sept. 8. “Looking forward to reopening indoor dining soon and visiting my favorite spots,” Kenney wrote.

The photo was shared on Facebook on Sunday by a Pennsylvania resident who was in the same Chesapeake Bay restaurant at the time. After the image went viral, Kenney’s office released a statement, The Hill reports.

“The mayor went to Maryland earlier today to patronize a restaurant owned by a friend of his. For what it’s worth, he also went to Rouge to enjoy outdoor dining in Philly on the way home. He looks forward to expanding indoor dining locally next week,” his office told 6 ABC Action News.

“Throughout the pandemic the mayor has consistently deferred to the guidance of the Health Commissioner, who in this case felt strongly about waiting until Sept. 8 to resume indoor dining,” the statement said. “If elected officials at the federal level had similarly deferred to health experts over the past five months, this might not even be an issue by now.”

Indoor dining in Philadelphia was halted on March 16 because of the coronavirus pandemic. Restaurant owners have since been greatly impacted by the closure, and many were outraged over the photo of the mayor enjoying indoor dining with no mask and not social distancing.

“Good luck explaining this to restaurant owners in Philadelphia who are gonna go out of business. So it’s not ok for us to do it here but you can,” tweeted former NHL player Colby Cohen about the mayor’s decision to dine indoors in Maryland.

When indoor dining resumes in the city next week, the capacity will be limited to 25 percent and no more than four people seated per table.

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Florida couple arrested after shooting at Black father, son returning U-Haul

Wallace Fountain and his wife Beverly insist the shooting had nothing to do with race. 

A white Florida couple was arrested last week after shooting at a Black father and his son who were dropping off a U-Haul van.

Charles McMillon Jr. was with his 10-year-old son and childhood friend Kendrick Clemons when they returned the rental to a U-Haul facility in Tallahassee Thursday night (Aug. 27). McMillion says they were sitting in his truck preparing to leave as a gunshot rang out. 

That’s when he and Clemons noticed an older couple approaching the truck shouting at the men “Don’t move!” and to surrender, McMillon told the Tallahassee Democrat. Rather than comply, as racists often demand of Black people, McMillon sped off to the sound of more gunfire. 

Read More: Florida ‘antifa hunter’ sentenced to 3 years for racist threats

“It was a life-threatening situation,” McMillon said. “I didn’t even know where I was going. I had my head down and I was making sure my son was covered. And I just pushed the gas to the floor. Didn’t know if I was going to hit something or not.”

A police officer happened to be in the parking lot at the time and confronted the couple.  The shooters were later identified as Wallace Fountain, 77, and his wife, Beverly Fountain, 72, the owners of the strip mall. They were arrested that night on three counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon without intent to kill, according to the report.

The Fountains had been surveilling the location inside a U-Haul of their own, claiming they were having problems with people stealing gas from their fleet of U-Haul trucks. During their arrest, officers found a shotgun in their U-Haul and the couple were carrying several pistols, including a .357-caliber Magnum and a Glock 19.

“They saw three Black people, unarmed, dropping off a U-Haul,” McMillon said. “They got guns, they started shooting. That’s why it’s racially motivated.”

Beverly told the Tallahassee Democrat that the shooting had nothing to do with race. 

“Were they Black?” she asked. “We weren’t going off on that at all. You’ve got vandalism and theft going on at your property. Trying to protect your property — that’s the only issue.”

The Fountains claim they did not notice the men’s skin color, they were simply trying to protect their property.

Read More: Florida girl, 6, allegedly killed by mother after parental rights terminated

McMillon and Clemons are speaking publicly about the incident to make sure they get justice. They now intend to sue U-Haul and the property owners.

“This country is seeing a wave of anti-Black vigilantism,” said one of their lawyers, Charles Gee. “And what we’re seeing that almost happened … is someone taking the law into their own hands and serving as cop, judge, jury and ultimately executioner.”

Beverly said this entire situation has been “out of proportion.”

“The whole country has gone to hell with all these riots,” she said. “One incident was blown out of proportion.”

The Fountains were released without bond and ordered to surrender their firearms until the case is resolved.

“If we’re the ones shooting at them, we would still be in jail right now, probably with no bond, probably with intent to kill,” Clemons said. “But they got to walk free.”

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The Nigerian drummer who set the beat for US civil rights

Babatunde Olatunji was part of a generation of Africans who fought for racial justice in the US.

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‘I Like to Move It’ DJ Erick Morillo dies at 49

The “I like to Move It” DJ was found dead at his Miami home

Famed DJ Erick Morillo, known for his hit “I Like to Move It,” has died at the age of 49.

Miami Beach Police Department found Morillo dead in his Miami Beach home on Tuesday, People reports. They responded to a call that came in at 10:42 a.m., according to MBPD public information officer Ernesto Rodriguez. The manner of Morillo’s death remains under investigation until the medical examiner can determine the exact cause.

“Detectives are currently on scene and in the preliminary stages of the investigation,” Rodriguez wrote in an email to People.

Read More: ‘Wire’ actor Clarke Peters breaks down over Chadwick Boseman

Morillo’s loved ones told the outlet that he would be deeply missed.

“He was well-loved by his family and he had a lot of love to give,” they said.

The tributes began to flood in for Morillo who left an imprint on music with his signature 1993 song “I Like to Move It” which he performed under the stage name Reel 2 Real. Sacha Baron Cohen covered the song for 2005’s Madagascar and Morillo produced it.

Coachella Valley Music
DJ Erick Morillo performs during Day 1 of the Coachella Valley Music Festival. (Photo: Getty Images)

He also earned two wins as the DJ Awards’ best house DJ, last receiving the honor in 2009, and three wins as best international DJ.

“Can’t believe it,” tweeted DJ Yousef. “Only spoke to him last week… he was troubled, less than perfect but was always amazing to me and helped us get circus going in the early days, and we had many amazing times over the 20 years we were friends. Genuinely gutted. RIP.”

Morillo’s unexpected death came a month after he turned himself in to authorities in Miami on charges of sexual battery. The Miami Times reported that A fellow DJ accused him of raping her at his home last December.

The unidentified woman contacted police on Dec. 7 alleging that Morillo invited her and another woman back to his residence after she had worked as a DJ at a Star Island party.

Read More: Jacob Blake’s uncle on Trump: ‘We don’t have any words for the orange man’

The woman accused Morillo of offering her a drink and after she changed into a bathing suit to join him in the pool, he then began to make advances that were “sexual in nature.”

She says she felt disrespected and changed back into her clothes. Morillo then apologized for his alleged behavior, and she accepted the apology.

Her complaint says that after she went to sleep on the second floor of his home, she woke up undressed with Morillo standing over her naked. She claimed to have experienced “flashes” of a rape.

Morillo denied the accusation, saying he’d only had sex with another woman at his home that night and was surprised to find the DJ in his bed. However, in July, a rape kit linked him to the accuser and he turned himself in on Aug. 6.

The New York-born DJ was raised in Columbia where he started his career, ultimately releasing 2 albums as Reel 2 Reel, 1994’s “Move It!”  and 1996’s “Are You Ready for Some More?”  In 2017, he admitted his struggles with alcohol abuse and ketamine addiction to Skiddle.

“I went to rehab three times and even after all three I never gave up alcohol,” he told the outlet. “That was what seemed to keep pulling me under. So, besides the fact that I hurt so many people, I think the most difficult part was coming to the realization that I was going to have to go completely sober.”

He said therapy had helped him overcome his addictions.

According to the Associated Press, Morillo was free on a $25K bond and had a court hearing on Friday.

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Brandy, Monica Verzuz battle draws over 1.2 million viewers

The two dynamic singers have been musical rivals since the 1990s, and this highly-anticipated event revealed that the tension between them is still thick. 


It was a battle for the ages.

Since it was announced over two weeks ago, the Verzuz battle between Monica and Brandy has been one of the most highly-anticipated of the series. 

The two women have been musical rivals since the ’90s, and the event revealed that the tension between them two is still thick. 

More than 1.2 million viewers tuned in on the Instagram platform alone. The numbers for viewers who watched on Apple Music have not yet been released. 

Read More: Brandy says this is who ‘Moesha’ would be today in a reboot

“New record tonight: 1.2M+,” Verzuz tweeted. The announcement prompted some viewers to advocate for more battles between female musicians. 

The event kicked off with a surprise call from Democratic vice presidential candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, who thanked the two for their contributions to the culture. Harris encouraged the viewing audience to vote in this November’s pivotal election. 

“You both used your voices in such a powerful way,” she said, “and an extension of our voices is our vote, right?”

Read More: Singer Monica enlists Kim Kardashian to help free C-Murder from prison

There were tons of stars present for the live stream. Former First Lady Michelle Obama, Keke Palmer, Fantasia, Solange, and Queen Latifah joined in. So did collaborators Missy Elliott and Johnta Austin

Fans had been calling for the pair’s matchup for months. In a May interview with Atlanta’s V103, Monica said that she would only participate in the event if it was a “celebration.” 

“I understand the idea of (Verzuz), and I think it’s really, really entertaining and it is an incredible idea,” Monica said of the phenomenon founded by producers Timbaland and Swizz Beatz in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic. 

Read More: ‘The Fresh Prince’ cast to reunite on HBO Max

“One thing that has happened to me my whole career is being put against someone else that I’m not even remotely similar to,” she said. “I think the reality is us being polar opposites makes it dope.” 

The differences between the two singers were on full display Monday night. Monica was even dressed smartly in Fendi while Brandy sported a bohemian jacket and jeans. 

Billboard crowned Brandy the winner of the 21-round battle, but social media will assuredly continue to debate results for days to come. 

Here are some Twitter reactions:

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How States Can Join Forces to Expand Covid Testing

Through quadratic funding, big and small states can be rewarded to form compacts that expand testing capacity—and enable states to finally control the pandemic.

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One Free Press Coalition Spotlights Journalists Under Attack - September 2020

This month brings attention to the cases of missing reporters worldwide—including Sri Lankan writer Prageeth Eknelygoda, who was abducted over 10 years ago.

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4 Best Live TV Streaming Apps and Services (2020)

You don't have to give up sports or talk shows when you cut the cord. There are apps for streaming real-time TV, and these are our favorites.

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Paul Rusesabagina: Hotel Rwanda hero 'abducted in Dubai'

The daughter of exiled Paul Rusesabagina, now being held in Rwanda, says he was "kidnapped".

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Verify Black Is Working to Get Social Media Platforms to Highlight Black-Owned Businesses

Vivian Duker

After George Floyd was murdered, the outrage brought about calls for change internationally. Many companies are trying to be on the right side of racial justice when it comes to business. With entities like Target identifying Black-owned businesses on its site, Verify Black would be the catalyst to make this widespread across the spectrum, specifically through social media platforms.

The goal is to obtain 50,000 signatures of support to take to Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, and other platforms to make it a reality. BLACK ENTERPRISE spoke to one half of the team trying to make this happen, Vivian Duker. She speaks about why this needs to be done and what they are trying to do to make it a reality.

How did you develop the concept behind “Verify Black?” 

We both have an appreciation for the unique challenges faced by Black-owned businesses—from the lack of equal access to funding, inability to jump-start because of a lower likelihood of friends and family in a financial position to invest, not to mention the fact that general racism and discrimination seeps into every aspect of Black life, and from which the day-to-day of Black business ownership is no exception. Black business owners have an exceptionally difficult time getting businesses off the ground. The statistics show that most Black-owned businesses don’t even have the opportunity to engage in meaningful growth. This has a direct impact on the dollars that flow into and are circulated within the Black community.

When the murder of George Floyd happened, like most people, we both really wanted to do something. We zoomed in on economic justice because we both believe strongly that it is one viable, sustainable way that Black people can come much closer to true equality. Even from the silence in the face of murder that suddenly turned into outrage in the face of property destruction, we see the unfortunate truth that money is one of the only languages American society understands.Verify Black

Companies are beginning to launch services that identify Black businesses. Why do you feel it’s important to have this on social media platforms like Instagram?

There are quite a number of existing directories dedicated toward making it easier to find Black-owned businesses. Companies like EatOkra have been doing this important work for years, and it remains extremely valuable.

For us, it is really about leveraging an existing platform for our benefit. A lot of Black-owned businesses are already using social media to market their products and services. Between Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter, you are looking at traffic of about 4 billion active users every month—within that is a substantial pool of potential customers just waiting to be found. Our goal is to create a mechanism to connect these businesses with those potential customers. Exposure drives revenue.

As social media evolves and creates internal systems that compound benefits for people that already have the exposure, the little guy is really at risk of getting left behind. From our perspective, what seems to really work is meaningful and consistent engagement. Identifying your target audience with specificity and speaking directly to them with content that they care about. Chances are a business owner would already have done this identification work in even developing the concept of their service and/or product, so it really just comes down to being consistent.

Many online businesses have maintained success during this pandemic. For traditional offline businesses, describe some benefits for being a part of “Verify Black.”

We are seriously exploring ways in which we can expand Verify Black to benefit businesses that don’t utilize online marketing and are looking to partner with existing directories to accomplish that. Ultimately, our goal is to create value for all Black-owned businesses seeking more exposure and growth.

Do you feel movements like Black Lives Matter have influenced members of the Black community to support Black businesses more?

Absolutely. It’s sort of a revolution. It almost feels like so many more people than ever are “rooting for everybody Black.” We also really love to see Black-owned businesses taking maximum advantage of this moment to capture and maintain a higher stream of engagement.

How many signatures have been obtained so far and where can readers go to sign the petition?

So far, we have 7,500 signatures. We set the target at 50,000 for two reasons: first, we wanted to give ourselves an opportunity to engage meaningfully with Black business owners and the community as a whole to make sure that we are able to consider and account for a variety of thoughts and ideas; we also wanted to make it clear if and when we are able to engage directly with these social media platforms, that this is something that a critical mass of people would like to see happen. Platforms like Google, Target Online, and Etsy have already built systems to accomplish this very thing. Yelp now lets you know when you’re engaging with a Black-owned business. So we know that it is a feasible model, and we believe that it is transferable to social media platforms.

The petition and additional information about Verify Black are available on our website, verifyblack.org.

Are there any other ways readers can get involved?

Spread the word! Every single time our content is shared, we get an influx of signatures and, more importantly, really thoughtful questions that help us think through the best way to be of service in this space. Our Instagram is @verifyblck.



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Trump says BLM movement ‘bad for Black people’

“The first time I ever heard of Black Lives Matter, I said, ‘That’s a terrible name,” the president told Fox News’ Laura Ingraham. “It’s so discriminatory.”

In an interview with Fox News host Laura Ingraham, President Donald Trump said that Black Lives Matter is a “Marxist organization.” He said that the name of the organization is “discriminatory.”

“The first time I ever heard of Black Lives Matter, I said, ‘That’s a terrible name.’ It’s so discriminatory. It’s bad for Black people. It’s bad for everybody.”

Read More: Trump to visit Kenosha Tuesday, potentially stoking tensions

The president spent much of his interview with the controversial television host decrying the protests that are taking place in many American cities. Most protests have been peaceful rebukes of the police killings of Black people, however, conservatives have painted the protests as anarchist takeovers.

“Biden won’t calm things down. They will take over. They will have won,” Trump said about his political rival, former Vice President Joe Biden. “If Biden gets in, they will have won.”

“They will have taken over your cities. It’s a revolution,” he continued. “You understand that. It’s a revolution. And the people of this country will not stand for that.”

Read More: Trump, Portland mayor blame each other for violence after protester shot

Both the president and his Fox News compatriots have warned of leftist mobs taking over American cities. In early June, Tucker Carlson offered a dark message: “This may be a lot of things, this moment we are living through, but it is definitely not about Black lives.”

“Remember that when they come for you,” he said. “And at this rate, they will.”

A Fox News spokesperson claimed that Carlson was referring to Democrats, not Black protesters, but that was not clear.

Read More: Biden says he spoke with Jacob Blake’s family in statement on shooting

On Monday night, the president continued his campaign of fear. In a news conference at the White House, he refused to condemn alleged Kenosha shooter Kyle Rittenhouse. Instead, he insinuated that the 17-year-old who killed two people and wounded a third may have been acting in self-defense.

Earlier Monday, Democratic presidential nominee Biden said in a speech that the violence taking place in American streets is Trump’s doing. “The president long ago forfeited any moral leadership in this country. He can’t stop the violence because, for years, he’s fomented it.”

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A Saudi Prince's Attempt to Silence Critics on Twitter

An ongoing investigation reveals how Mohammed bin Salman's team allegedly infiltrated the platform—and got away with it.

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Dia Simms Launches Saint Liberty Whiskey to Celebrate Prohibition-Era Women Bootleggers

Dia Simms

After running Sean “Diddy” Combs’ company, Combs Enterprises, for two decades while overseeing brands Ciroc, Aquahydrate, Sean John, and the brand that started it all, Bad Boy Entertainment, former president of Combs Enterprises, Dia Simms, now controls the fate of her own brand, HANDS L.L.C. She and her partner, Erin Harris, also a former executive at Combs Enterprises, have recently launched Saint Liberty Whiskey.

Saint Liberty Whiskey not only supports the women of today through its commitment to return 5% of gross sales to women’s empowerment, entrepreneurial, and educational efforts, but it is also guided by an all-female board of advisers.

Simms took a break from making moves to speak to BLACK ENTERPRISE about the origins of Saint Liberty Whiskey and how they plan on keeping the strength of women empowerment moving forward.

What made you decide to launch your spirits brand?

A lot of lost energy goes into trying to change existing brands and businesses. Often, the best way to make a change is through ownership and entrepreneurship. If you can’t change the game, make a new game. In this spirit, Harris & Simms (HANDS) has acquired a meaningful stake in Saint Liberty Whiskey alongside Mark SoRelle, the founder and chief historian of the brand, and Ndamukong Suh of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. HANDS is a boutique spirits advisory company that offers strategic guidance and investments in spirit brands. Headquartered in Los Angeles, my partner Erin Harris and I focus on original and authentic brand stories paired with outstanding liquids such as Saint Liberty Whiskey.

Saint Liberty Whiskey highlights groundbreakers and rebels who have broken barriers during the 1920s when freedoms were granted, and freedoms were taken away. While women secured the right to vote after nearly a century of protest, the 18th Amendment introduced prohibition and a ban on all alcohol sales. Saint Liberty celebrates these heroines of the Prohibition including Bertie Brown, Josephine Doody, Mary Curley, and many more.

What’s the story behind Saint Liberty whiskey and how do you anticipate making the brand successful?

Saint Liberty Whiskey embraces the true diversity of the history of America through their celebration of the untold stories of the pioneering, Prohibition-era women bootleggers. Each woman bootlegger is paired with a unique craft whiskey and distillery to highlight and honor their individual story. The first expression is Bertie’s Bear Gulch Bourbon Whiskey honoring an African American homesteader named Bertie “Birdie” Brown, known for making the “best moonshine in the country.” She was an enterprising, entrepreneurial Black woman at a time when those attributes put her life in jeopardy.

Saint Liberty Bertie's Bear Gulch

The whiskey that honors her legacy is packaged in a signature embossed coffin flask bottle which was inspired by the antique bottles of the American frontier. The flagship whiskey, Bertie’s Bourbon, offers flavors of rich dark molasses, caramelized vanilla, apricots, some burnt brown sugar, and a hint of smoke. Bertie’s Bear Gulch Straight Bourbon Whiskey is exceptionally smooth and balanced with a wonderfully warm finish.

We believe that success comes with innovation and expanding diversity within the industry. At Saint Liberty, we are committed to building an exceptional craft whiskey brand that recognizes a diverse group of unsung female heroes. We are proud to honor the courage and legacy of these pioneering women bootleggers. The women in the spirits industry today—myself included—owe a debt to these frontierswomen. Additionally, being that Saint Liberty is guided by an entirely female board of advisers, we have committed to spending 5% of gross profits toward women’s empowerment issues, entrepreneurial, and educational efforts to create opportunities for women like Bertie Brown, who fought and died for their rights.

With the recent coronavirus outbreak, how were you able to launch a new brand with business being operated in a different way than what’s been normal? 

One thing that has not changed is consumers desire to drink a premium Whiskey at a great price point, which is what we are offering with Saint Liberty. Now more than ever, people are getting creative and adventurous in their cocktail selections and happy hour hasn’t stopped, it has just moved from the bar to your living room. Bertie’s Bear Gulch Straight Bourbon Whiskey is now available in over 10 states through the U.S. with a suggested retail price of $44.99 for a 750ml bottle. Saint Liberty Whiskey is available at Total Wine & More, BevMo, and Spec’s Wines and Spirits or SaintLibertyWhiskey.com.

How has working with Sean Combs prepared you for starting your own company?

Sean Combs has built incredible alumni of successful entrepreneurs [with] his beliefs in the impossible and the power of Black excellence. He’s been an incredible mentor in business not just for me but for thousands of successful game-changers. As Sean became increasingly successful, he truly embraced the spirit of Reginald F. Lewis and felt it was not about how many millions you make but how many millionaires you help create. That’s how we change our legacies. That level of commitment to our community has been the single most important lesson that I take with me.

What would you advise someone who is interested in becoming an entrepreneur to do in order to start their road to success? 

Start with what you have. No matter what your circumstance, if there is breath in your lungs, then you already have the most valuable asset at your disposal. Time. Starting a new business is scary as hell but not scarier than wondering what might have been.



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How to Listen to More Podcasts

Struggling with a backlog of episodes from your favorite shows? These tips will help you listen not just to more, but the best episodes.

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The Oysters That Knew What Time It Was

Scientists long believed that biological clocks were predominantly driven by internal rhythms. Then came a fraught discovery—about mollusks and the moon.

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Can a Bubble Net Stop a Hurricane? Some Norwegians Think So

An idea to use underwater bubbles to cool oceans and deflate oncoming storms is the latest in a series of far-out schemes for controlling the weather.

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Covid-19 in Africa: Lockdown forces Ugandan teacher into street hawking

With schools closed, private school teachers don't get paid and need alternative incomes.

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