Translate

Pages

Pages

Pages

Intro Video

Saturday, September 12, 2020

Toots Hibbert, beloved reggae star, dead at 77

News of the five-time Grammy nominee’s ill-health comes just weeks after his last known performance for Jamaica’s Independence celebrations

NEW YORK (AP) — Toots Hibbert, one of reggae’s founders and most beloved stars who gave the music its name and later helped make it an international movement through such classics as “Pressure Drop,” “Monkey Man” and “Funky Kingston,” has died. He was 77.

Hibbert, frontman of Toots & the Maytals, had been in a medically-induced coma at a hospital in Kingston since earlier this month. He was admitted in intensive care after complaints of having breathing difficulties according to his publicist. It was revealed in local media that the singer was awaiting results from a COVID-19 test after showing symptoms.

News of the five-time Grammy nominee’s ill-health came just weeks after his last known performance, on a national live-stream during Jamaica’s Emancipation and Independence celebrations in August.

A family statement said Hibbert died Friday at University Hospital of the West Indies in Kingston, Jamaica, surrounded by family.

In this July 13, 2019 file photo, Toots Hibbert performs with the Maytals in Grass Valley, Calif. In a statement from a family member Hibbert died on Friday, Sept. 11, 2020. (Elias Funez/The Union via AP)

Ziggy Marley, son of Bob Marley, tweeted about the death saying he spoke with Hibbert a few weeks ago and, “told him how much i loved him we laughed & shared our mutual respect,” adding, “He was a father figure to me.”

A muscular ex-boxer, Hibbert was a bandleader, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and showman whose concerts sometimes ended with dozens of audience members dancing with him on stage. He was also, in the opinion of many, reggae’s greatest singer, so deeply spiritual he could transform “Do re mi fa so la ti do” into a hymn. His raspy tenor, uncommonly warm and rough, was likened to the voice of Otis Redding and made him more accessible to American listeners than many reggae artists. Original songs such as “Funky Kingston” and “54-46 That’s My Number” had the emotion and call and response arrangements known to soul and gospel fans. Hibbert even recorded an album of American hits, “Toots In Memphis,” which came out in 1988.

READ MORE: Kool & the Gang member and co-founder Ronald ‘Khalis’ Bell dead at 68

Never as immersed in politics as his friend and great contemporary Bob Marley, Hibbert did invoke heavenly justice in “Pressure Drop,” preach peace in “Revolution,” righteousness in “Bam Bam” and scorn his 1960s drug arrest and imprisonment in “54-46 That’s My Number.” He also captured, like few others, everyday life in Jamaica in the years following its independence from Britain in 1962, whether telling of wedding jitters (“Sweet and Dandy”) or of trying to pay the rent (“Time Tough”). One of his most popular and surprising songs was his reworking of John Denver’s nostalgic “(Take Me Home) Country Roads,” with the setting changed from West Virginia to a world Hibbert knew so well.

___

Almost heaven, West Jamaica

True ridge mountains

Shining down the river

All my friends there

Older than those ridge

Younger than the mountains

Blowin’ like a breeze

___

Frederick “Toots” Hibbert of Toots and the Maytals performs on the Coachella Stage during Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival at Empire Polo Club on April 16, 2017 in Indio, California. (Photo by Katie Stratton/Getty Images for Coachella)

As with other reggae stars, Hibbert’s following soared after the release of the landmark 1972 film, The Harder They Come, which starred Jimmy Cliff as a poor Jamaican who moves to Kingston and dreams of a career in music. The Jamaican production was a word of mouth hit in the U.S. and the soundtrack, often ranked among the greatest in movie history, included the Maytals’ “Pressure Drop” and “Sweet and Dandy.” Hibbert also appeared in the film, as himself, recording “Sweet and Dandy” in the studio while Cliff’s character looks on with awe. Around the same time, the Maytals signed with Island Records and released the acclaimed album “Funky Kingston,” which the critic Lester Bangs called “the most exciting and diversified set of reggae tunes by a single artist yet released.” (The album would eventually come out in two different versions).

By the mid-1970s, Keith Richards, John Lennon, Eric Clapton and countless other rock stars had become reggae fans and Hibbert would eventually record with some of them. A tribute album from 2004, the Grammy-winning “True Love,” included cameos by Richards, Bonnie Raitt, Ryan Adams and Jeff Beck. Hibbert also was the subject of a 2011 BBC documentary, Reggae Got Soul, with Clapton, Richards and Willie Nelson among the commentators.

A guest appearance on “Saturday Night Live” in 2004 brought Hibbert an unexpected admirer, the show’s guest host, Donald Trump, who in his book “Think Like a Billionaire” recalled hearing the Maytals rehearse: “My daughter Ivanka had told me how great they were, and she was right. The music relaxed me, and surprisingly, I was not nervous.”

The Maytals originally were a vocal trio featuring Hibbert, Henry “Raleigh” Gordon and Nathaniel “Jerry” Mathias, with the group later adding such instrumentalists as bassist Jackie Jackson and drummer Paul Douglas. They broke up in the early 1980s, but the following decade Hibbert began working with a new lineup of Maytals.

Hibbert’s career was halted in 2013 after he sustained a head injury from a vodka bottle thrown during a concert in Richmond, Virginia, and suffered from headaches and depression. But by the end of the decade he was performing again and in 2020 he released another album, “Got To Be Tough,” which included contributions from Ziggy Marley and Ringo Starr, whose son, Zak Starkey, served as co-producer.

READ MORE: Former WWE wrestler James ‘Kamala’ Harris dead at 70

Grammy nominations for Hibbert included best reggae album of 2012 for “Reggae Got Soul” and best reggae album of 2007 for “Light Your Light.” Hibbert was ranked No. 71 on a Rolling Stone list, compiled in 2008, of the 100 greatest contemporary singers. In 2012, he received the Order of Distinction by the government of Jamaica for outstanding contribution to the country’s music.

Toots Hibbert attends The Rolling Stone Relaunch on July 26, 2018 in New York City. (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images)

Married to his wife, Doreen, for nearly 40 years, Hibbert had eight children, including the reggae performers Junior Hibbert and Leba Hibbert.

Frederick Nathaniel Hibbert (“Toots” was a childhood nickname) was born in May Pen, Parish of Clarendon. He was the son of Seventh-day Adventist ministers and would remember miles-long walks along dirt roads to schools, hours of singing in church and private moments listening to such American stars on the radio as Ray Charles and Elvis Presley.

By adolescence, his parents had died and he had moved to Trench Town in Kingston, where the local music scene was thriving, moving from street parties to recording studios and drawing such future stars as Bob Marley and Desmond Dekker. He formed the Maytals, named for his hometown, with fellow singers Matthias and Gordon, started working with Jamaican record producer Coxsone Dodd and quickly became the star of the national festival competition that started in 1966. The Maytals (eventually renamed Toots & the Maytals) won in the inaugural year with “Bam Bam,” prevailed in 1969 with “Sweet and Dandy” and 1972 with “Pomp and Pride.” Hibbert would joke that he thought it best to start skipping the festival because winning came so easily, although he returned in 2020 with the bright, inspirational “Rise Up Jamaica.”

The Maytals began when ska was the most popular music, continued to rise during the transition to the slowed down rocksteady and were at the very forefront of the faster, more danceable sound of the late ’60s. Their uptempo chant “Do the Reggay” is widely recognized as the song which gave reggae its name, even if the honor was unintended.

“If a girl didn’t look so nice or she wasn’t dressed properly, we used to say she was streggay. I was playing one day and I don’t know why but I started singing: ‘Do the reggay, do the reggay’ — it just stuck,” he told the Daily Star in 2012. “I might have stuck with calling it streggay if I’d thought longer. That’d be something — everyone dancing to streggay music.”

___

Sharlene Hendricks contributed from Jamaica.

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

The post Toots Hibbert, beloved reggae star, dead at 77 appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3iqnZFJ
via Gabe's Musing's

Starbucks Has Officially Abandoned Plastic Straws For Iced Beverages

Starbucks

Starbucks is following up on its commitment to get rid of plastic straws and is bringing in its long-awaited “sippy cup” lids for iced beverages.

The coffee giant announced in July 2018 it would begin phasing out plastic straws from all its stores by 2020, the modified plastic lid with a drinking spout is now making its official debut.

However, blended beverages, including frappuccinos, and other drinks with whipped cream will still come with a domed lid. In places where plastic straws are prohibited by local law, straws with alternative materials will be used.

The straw-free lids will be fully adopted in company-operated and licensed Starbucks stores in both the United States and Canada by the end of the month. The new lids contain 9% less plastic than Starbucks previous flat lid and straw combination. The lids are also made of polypropylene, a commonly accepted recyclable plastic.

“Recyclable, strawless lids for customers across the US and Canada is another step in our journey to reduce our environmental footprint,” Michael Kobori, Starbucks’ chief sustainability officer told CNN. “As we move closer toward our 2030 target of a 50 percent reduction in waste sent to landfills, the long-standing history of innovation within Starbucks, partnership across the industry and changing consumer behavior remain fundamental to our purpose and our prosperity as an organization.”

Plastic straws have been known to increase ocean pollution and microplastics can harm marine wildlife. Starbucks say it’s trying to eliminate more than one billion plastic straws per year.

Miami Beach, Florida; Monmouth Beach, New Jersey, Oakland and Berkeley, California, have all banned the use of disposable plastic straws.

A 2020 study by the academic journal Science Advances said that as of 2015, only 9% of plastics are being recycled, 12% is incinerated and the other 79% ends up in the environment.



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/3mjJZ7E
via Gabe's Musing's

8 Best Portable Grills (2020): Charcoal, Propane, Electric, Infrared

We barbecued for weeks to find the right charcoal and propane gas grills for your home or that you can lug to the beach, park, or campsite.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2JqSP0r
via Gabe's Musing's

Hackers Target Porn Site Visitors Using Flash and Internet Explorer

Plus: Ransomware holds up schools, Zoom adds two-factor, and more of the week's top security news.

from Wired https://ift.tt/3mnRKcL
via Gabe's Musing's

Mom and Daughter Make History, Open Black-Owned Shell Gas Station in Florida

lashawn flowers gas station

Meet 51-year old Lashawn Flowers and her 35-year old daughter, Shanita Vickers, the new owners of the only Black-owned gas station in Hollywood, Florida, and possibly the only Black-owned gas station in all of South Florida. As Shell franchisees, they are making history as women entrepreneurs and causing quite a stir on social media.

Lashawn and her daughter, who both grew up in Deerfield Beach, Florida, began their roots in entrepreneurship as the owners of a local hair and nail salon called Girlz Collectionz and later a local bar and nightclub called Groove City Bar & Lounge, which is currently closed because of the pandemic. Having to pivot sparked the idea of purchasing a gas station.

“We actually purchased two Shell gas stations,” says Lashawn. “We were able to negotiate a two-for-one deal.”

She says the process of purchasing two franchises was not hard, but it was a fairly tedious process. After completing a credit application, she had to prove that financially she really did have the capital to complete the purchase. The whole process, however, took just three weeks.

Keeping it in the family

Lashawn says that she and her daughter are partners in this business, and are partners in their other businesses as well.

“I really value having a family-owned business because family is who you can trust,” she says. “My daughter, Shanita, is a wonderful mom of two beautiful children and also a phenomenal entrepreneur who is awesome to work with. We work well together because we understand each other.”


Hard work pays off

But having her daughter at her side doesn’t mean that she underestimates the value of hard work. “I don’t believe in failing in anything I do,” Lashawn adds. “If you don’t work your business, it won’t be a success. You absolutely must put in the hard work.”

Their work ethic is already paying off because they are already receiving on-air shout outs from the likes of Rickey Smiley, not to mention that their story has already gone viral on social media which has sparked a huge influx of new customers.

Their Shell gas station is located at 2501 North University Drive, Hollywood, FL 33034, and they are already planning to open their second gas station in early 2021 possibly in West Palm Beach.



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/32nKwNK
via Gabe's Musing's

Asbestos Removal Is a Hard Job, but Covid-19 Makes It Harder

Getting rid of asbestos is good for public health, but it’s risky for abatement workers, whose occupational risks make them vulnerable to Covid-19 complications.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2ZNlvKn
via Gabe's Musing's

What to Expect From Tuesday's Apple Event

Apple Watches, iPads, some secret surprises, and a reel of slickly produced videos to drive it all home. Just like old times … sort of.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2GMai5Q
via Gabe's Musing's

14 Best Weekend Deals: Computer Peripherals, Audio Gear, and More

With sales on monitors, headphones, and surround-sound speakers, we've rounded up gadgets that can help you hibernate inside until spring.

from Wired https://ift.tt/3hj9X7m
via Gabe's Musing's

The 20-Year Hunt for the Man Behind the Love Bug Virus

For two decades, Onel de Guzman has been suspected of unleashing the groundbreaking virus. But he's never confessed to anything—until now.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2FnF1G7
via Gabe's Musing's

Friday, September 11, 2020

Netflix acquires Halle Berry’s directorial debut, ‘Bruised,’ in 8-figure deal

The script for the MMA drama was originally written for a 25-year-old Irish Catholic girl.

Netflix has secured worldwide rights to Halle Berry’s directorial debut, Bruised.  

The drama is screening at the Toronto Film Festival, where Netflix closed up a sale for $20 million ahead of the film’s premiere on Saturday, per Deadline

The Oscar-winning actress also stars in this tale of a washed-up MMA fighter on a path of redemption amid a bitter custody battle. According to Variety, Berry cracked two ribs while shooting the film. But she wasn’t going to let the pain of her injury derail her dream of directing, theGRIO previously reported. 

Read More: Halle Berry on directorial debut, Oscar ‘curse’

“I didn’t want to stop because I had prepared for so long. We had rehearsed; we were ready. So my mind, my director’s mind, was just — keep going. And I compartmentalized that, and I just kept going: ‘I’m not going to stop. I’ve come too far. I’m going to act as if this isn’t hurting. I’m going to will myself through it.’ And so we did.”

The script for Bruised came to Berry three years ago, and was originally written for a 25-year-old Irish Catholic girl.

“I knew as written it could not be me, but what I loved about the story is it was classic fight film,” Berry said. “I loved the fractured brokenness of this character, and I love to see a film that’s about redemption. I want to see the human spirit soar, I want to see someone rise above obstacles and still be standing at the end of the day.”

Berry then set out to “convince the producers, who had the rights to the movie, [that they] should let me reimagine it for a middle-aged Black woman.” 

The producers agreed. 

Berry said a conversation with her friend, producer Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas, prompted her decision to step behind the camera for her directorial debut. 

“I said to her, ‘No one understands what’s in my head, and she said, ‘Why don’t you do it?'” Berry recalled “I slept on it overnight and I woke up thinking ‘Yes, I can.’ I knew I’d worked harder than I ever worked in my entire life on a character, and the last thing I wanted was for all of that work to be for naught and mistakenly fall into the hands of a visionary who didn’t see it quite the way I saw it.”

A Netflix release date for Bruised has yet to be announced.

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

The post Netflix acquires Halle Berry’s directorial debut, ‘Bruised,’ in 8-figure deal appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3iuv3kM
via Gabe's Musing's

NY man finds escaped inmate hiding under sheet in living room

‘I’ve been here for fifteen years and nothing like this has ever happened.’

A 19-year-old federal inmate in Brooklyn is back in custody after police found him hiding under a sheet in a man’s living room following a daring escape. 

Police say Jhonny Soto was arrested in Queens on Monday for possessing an illegal firearm that had the manufacturer’s serial number removed. FBI agents were transporting him to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn on Wednesday when he managed to give them the slip, setting off an hours-long manhunt, ABC7 reports.

Law enforcement put the neighborhood near Fourth Avenue in Sunset Park on alert to keep an eye out for Soto.  

Read More: R. Kelly allegedly attacked by inmate inside Chicago jail

Local resident Stephanie Tatsis told reporters that when she spotted the fugitive with his hands still shackled in her mother-in-law’s back yard, she chased him off with a meat cleaver and called 911.

“He was already on our porch, so I grabbed the meat cleaver and I chased him off the house,” Stefanie Tatsis said, CBS New York reports. “He jumped over and he started doing his jumping over each yard to try to find his escape.”

Tatsis added, “He definitely looked like he was up to no good.”

Hours later, 62-year-old Terry Pierson noticed an “odd lump” underneath a sheet over his weaving loom. 

“I grabbed my flashlight, moved the sheet and there’s a face looking back at me. He’s been sitting behind my chair for three hours,” Pierson told reporters. “I went running that way for the police that I knew were in the backyard, hollering, ‘He’s in there, he’s in there.’”

Police rushed in and apprehended Soto.

The FBI confirmed that he is back in custody.

Pierson believes Soto gained access to his home by breaking a screen door in the back of the house. 

“I’ve been here for fifteen years and nothing like this has ever happened,” he said.

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

The post NY man finds escaped inmate hiding under sheet in living room appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3bQEhoF
via Gabe's Musing's

Louis Vuitton charging nearly $1,000 for designer face shield

While stylish, the full face shield is not an effective source of protection against the coronavirus.

Louis Vuitton has unveiled a light sensitive face shield that will go on sale in late October for nearly $1,000.

The full face mask is part of the label’s 2021 Cruise Collection, and is described as “an eye-catching headpiece, both stylish and protective,” according to a news release, per Vanity Fair.

The LV Shield is photochromatic, allowing it to transform from clear to dark when in direct sunlight. The shield can also be flipped up and turned into a hat, USA Today reports.

Read More: Naomi Osaka wears Trayvon Martin mask at US Open: ‘Things have to change’

Louis Vuitton has denied that pricing is listed at $961, noting that no price has been announced yet, according to Business Insider

The face shield features monogram-trim, gold studs and an elastic head-strap engraved with the brand’s signature logo. While stylish, the LV full face shield is not an effective source of protection against the coronavirus.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) does not recommend the use of face shields amid the pandemic, as they are primarily used for “eye protection for the person wearing it.”

“At this time, it is not known what level of protection a face shield provides to people nearby from the spray of respiratory droplets from the wearer,” the CDC said. “There is currently not enough evidence to support the effectiveness of face shields for source control.”

According to Dr. David Edwards of Harvard University, plastic face coverings are “particularly effective” at blocking airborne respiratory particles, as they don’t completely cover the face.

“With smaller particles, they don’t travel like bullets, they hover in the air and below that face shield you’re still breathing in that air,” Edwards told PEOPLE.

Twitter

While there are some “pros” to wearing shields, the CDC recommends wearing masks to prevent the spread of the potentially deadly COVID-19 contagion. 

“From a purely scientific point of view, if you asked me, a surgical grade mask versus a shield, I would wear a mask,” said Edwards. 

The CDC says “face shield wearers should wash their hands before and after removing the face shield and avoid touching their eyes, nose and mouth when removing it.”

Louis Vuitton is the latest luxury brand offering high-end face coverings. Burberry announced its $120 face masks last month.

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

The post Louis Vuitton charging nearly $1,000 for designer face shield appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3hnU3bV
via Gabe's Musing's

DMX on having multiple personalities: ‘I wouldn’t want anybody to know anything about those people’

DMX opens up about struggling with multiple personalities on BET’s ‘Ruff Ryders Chronicles

On the latest episode of Ruff Ryders Chronicles airing on BET, DMX opens up about having multiple personalities. In an interview for the series, a vulnerable DMX can be heard saying, “there are a few people in me.”

Ruff Ryder Chronicles tells the story of the rapper’s career and the rise of the Ruff Ryders hip-hop crew that included producer Swizz Beatz, and rappers Eve, Drag-on, and The LOX, among others. DMX, whose real name is Earl Simmons, divulges that although he has multiple personalities, he doesn’t want people to know about them.

DMX 2000s Ruff Ryders
Rapper DMX walks on Main Street during the 2004 Sundance Film Festival January 19, 2004 in Park City, Utah. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

Read More: DMX reached 14,000 while reading Bible verses on Instagram Live to get through pandemic

In a clip from the show being circulated around social media, DMX can be heard saying “There are a few people in me that get me through life. I wouldn’t want you to know anything about those people.”

In the same clip, a colleague of the rapper confirms he has experienced his multiple personalities and at any given time you can be dealing with Earl, DMX the rapper, or X, who he calls, “the unknown.”

In the 90s and 2000s, DMX was one of the highest-selling rappers of the era. But in recent years, after a tumultuous divorce with his first wife, Tashera, he’s made headlines for his struggles with drug addiction, has been in and out of jail, and found love again with his new fiancée.

Ruff Ryders Chronicles features interviews from the people in his life who know him best, like his ex-wife and fellow Ruff Ryders rapper Eve, who also makes an appearance in the series.

Read More: ‘X Is Coming’: DMX to play detective in crime thriller

By the clip alone, it is unclear whether or not the artist was diagnosed with dissociative identity disorder, also known as multiple personality disorder, by a professional or if his condition is self-diagnosed.

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

The post DMX on having multiple personalities: ‘I wouldn’t want anybody to know anything about those people’ appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2Zx584f
via Gabe's Musing's

A New York nurse denied bail after fatally stabbing her husband remains on Rikers Island

New York nurse Tracy McCarter says after stabbing her husband, she rendered first aid to save him

Authorities say New York nurse who is accused of fatally stabbing her intoxicated husband in her apartment is now claiming she merely acted in self-defense.

Read More: Colorado mom of 4 killed by boyfriend in murder-suicide

According to The Gothamist, Tracy McCarter’s attorney is arguing that his client’s estranged husband, James Murray, was incredibly “intoxicated” and “attacking her” when she stabbed him in the chest.

The 44-year-old, who is a nurse at Weill Cornell Medical Center, maintains that she’d split from her husband “some time ago” before he showed up unannounced on March 2 at the Upper West Side apartment they once shared.

“This is a strong case of self-defense,” the defendant’s attorney, Frank Rothman said in Manhattan Criminal Court.

He also added that the victim had a “long history of violent behavior and alcohol abuse” and had been drunk and disruptively ringing doorbells for several apartments in his client’s building before she ultimately relented and let him in. Murray, who was white, had been to rehab five times, The Gothamist reported.

McCarter, a mother of four, said upon entering the apartment her husband then became abusive and demanded money. When he tried to grab her purse, she stabbed him and then called 911. Murray died shortly afterward.

McCarter was denied bail and has remained at Rikers for the past six months, during a time where New York City’s jail complex has seen an explosion in COVID-19 cases.

“You just feel so helpless,” McCarter said during a call from the infamous jail, in which she expressed her frustration that she couldn’t use her nursing skills during the pandemic. “You know one more person would make a difference.”

“We’re a really vulnerable population and don’t have the power to say, ‘Don’t come near me without a mask,’” she noted.

Although there were allegations of domestic abuse on both sides, McCarter’s lawyers released a statement to The Gothamist, urging that McCarter be released on bail.

“The prosecutors in this case have been presented with independent, corroborated evidence from multiple sources that Tracy is a victim of repeated instances of domestic violence at the hands of the decedent, always during occasions when he was drunk, as he was on the night he died,” Sean Hecker of Kaplan Hecker & Fink LLP, Jacob Buchdahl of Susan Godfrey, and Jeffrey Brown of Dechert, wrote.

“This is not a murder case and Ms. McCarter does not belong at Rikers.”

Read More: Georgia man, 25, killed by friend in argument over $5

A Change.org petition has been created by a fellow health care professional to advocate for McCarter’s release. It’s already generated over 500 signatures.

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

The post A New York nurse denied bail after fatally stabbing her husband remains on Rikers Island appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2ZvPRAL
via Gabe's Musing's

This Mother-Daughter Duo Came Together To Start Their Own Cosmetics Brand

Danielle and Samiah Pasha of The Beat House Cosmetics

For many entrepreneurs, it is important to teach their children important lessons that they will be able to use one day in creating businesses to secure financial independence. For one Black woman entrepreneur, creating a new business was one way to create new opportunities for her daughter through their shared love of cosmetics.

Danielle and Samiah Pasha are the founders of The Beat House Cosmetics company that opened on Juneteenth earlier this year. The beauty brand offers an assorted collection of color eye shadow palettes, lipsticks, false eyelashes, and more. While Danielle serves as the brainchild and founder of the company, she enlisted the help of her 14-year-old daughter, Samiah, to work as the interim CEO while she was deployed in Afghanistan for three years.

“I am so blown away by all of the positive feedback I have received from everyone, it’s so surreal,” says Danielle in an interview with Black News. “I remember Facetiming my daughter, giving her instructions and tasks to help me out with the business in my absence and now we are partners!”

Samiah says while the job was hard, she was happy to have a chance to work with her mother, who also has a love for makeup, on her brand. “Most teenagers are irritated by their parents and wouldn’t dare want to work with them—I’m still irritated at times,” says Samiah in an interview with Black News. “But I remember missing my mom and not knowing when I would see her again, so I enjoy every second we get to spend together. Besides, I absolutely love makeup.”

 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

The 2020 Palette is now available❗😝🎨👑🥊 www.thebeathousecosmetics.com

A post shared by The Beat House Cosmetics (@the_beat_house_cosmetics) on



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/2ZsZZKJ
via Gabe's Musing's

Biden says he’s ready to debate Trump: ‘I know how to handle bullies’

‘I hope I don’t get baited into getting into a brawl with this guy,’ Biden told attendees of a campaign fundraiser. ‘It’s going to be hard,’ he said.

Election Day 2020 is rapidly approaching. The first presidential debate is just over two weeks away in Cleveland, where Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said Thursday he is “looking forward” to going one-on-one against President Donald Trump.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden talks with journalists Wednesday before departing the Detroit metro area. He had been campaigning in Michigan, which President Donald Trump won in 2016 by less than 11,000 votes, the narrowest margin of victory in state’s presidential election history. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

He said their Sept. 29 face-off, a 90-minute session moderated by Fox News Sunday anchor Chris Wallace, will allow him to hold Trump “accountable.” 

“I think I know how to handle bullies,” Biden told attendees of a campaign fundraiser Tuesday. “We’ll find out.”

He said his strategy that night includes appealing directly to voters, pointing out promises Trump failed to keep. 

Read More: Trump says he doesn’t feel the need to understand Black pain ‘at all’

“I hope I don’t get baited into getting into a brawl with this guy,” Biden said. He said that he wants to avoid a shouting match, but contended that “it’s going to be hard because I predict he’s going to be shouting.” 

Part of Trump’s approach since 2016 has been labeling competitors with derogatory nicknames to attract voters. Trump has repeatedly referred to Biden as “Sleepy Joe,” or “Slow Joe.” His campaign has also tried to cast doubt on the former vice president’s mental acuity. 

Biden told The Columbus Dispatch in March that his age and mental acuity should not be a concern for voters. “I’m in better shape than most people,” he said. 

Read More: Trump to resign, request pardon if he loses election: Cohen

Biden, who overcame a severe stutter as a child, highlighted the challenges he previously had with giving speeches during the Democratic National Convention when 13-year-old Brayden Harrington explained how the vice president helped him with his stutter. The moment was one of the most emotional of the four-night event. 

On Oct. 7, eight days after Biden and Trump exchange their arguments, Vice President Mike Pence is due to debate Sen. Kamala Harris in Salt Lake City, an event for which the Democratic vice presidential nominee said she has been preparing.

“I am looking forward to being able to talk with him and the American people,” Harris said at the campaign fundraiser, “and make our case about what we see as the right path forward for our country.” 

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

The post Biden says he’s ready to debate Trump: ‘I know how to handle bullies’ appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3mbgPap
via Gabe's Musing's

Vintage Electric Roadster Review: An Ebike That Offers Pure Joy

This café-racer-inspired ebike is an incredible ride, but it’s more than a touch expensive for these trying times.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2RgZmiK
via Gabe's Musing's

The Apocalypse Doesn’t Need an Instagram Filter

Plus: Kevin Systrom’s app inspiration, the characteristics of successful CEOs, and Colorado’s disconcerting forecast.

from Wired https://ift.tt/3ixLOew
via Gabe's Musing's

The Best Privacy-Friendly Alternatives to Google Maps

Google Maps is arguably the easiest mapping service to use, but that doesn't mean it's the most secure.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2ZqNgbc
via Gabe's Musing's

A Simple Way to Increase Your Income and Build Wealth in the Stock Market

stock dividends

Many high-achieving professionals and entrepreneurs accumulate over $1 million in lifetime  earnings before they reach 40. Unfortunately, those earnings do not automatically translate into a higher net worth within the African American community.

According to “The Road to Zero Wealthreport published by Prosperity Now and the Institute for Policy Studies, the median wealth of Black Americans will fall to zero by 2053 if current trends continue. One way to reverse that net worth trend is to move from everyday consumer to strategic investing in the stock market. 

There are multiple ways to invest in the stock market, but if you’re looking to earn an extra stream of income, you should harness the power of dividends. In my book, Dividends Are a Queen’s Best Friend, I describe dividends as the “money that a company gives you as a reward for investing in them.” It’s typically much better than the rewards you get for shopping at some of your favorite stores. Not only do you get “rewards points” when you purchase dividend-paying stocks, but you can gain a piece of ownership in the company.

Dividends are a great way to generate passive income in the stock market and start earning an extra stream of income from the world’s top companies. You can reinvest your earnings and gain access to more dividend income in the future due to the power of compounding. If you’re strategic, consistent, and committed to learning as much as you can, you can create a dividend portfolio that allows you to fund your future lifestyle and pay your bills every month! 

Are you ready to get started on your dividend journey? Here are three things you should consider as you seek to build an extra stream of income from your investments.

1.) Stock dividends don’t discriminate 

Many asset-building strategies have come with decades of discrimination that have made it more difficult for African Americans to generate wealth. This isn’t the case with dividends. It doesn’t matter if you are Black or White, you can get access to dividends as long as you invest in dividend-paying assets. No credit check is required and you don’t need thousands of dollars to start your dividend journey. The amount of dividend income you can make is based on your participation in the stock market. If you want to increase your dividend income, all you have to do is buy more shares of a company stock.

2.) You can get an automatic pay raise 

Before investing in any company, it’s important to do your research and due diligence. You want to make sure that the companies you invest in align with the goals you have. If you have a goal of expanding your dividend portfolio every year without being heavily involved in the process, you might want to look into dividend growth companies. These are companies that increase their annual dividend amount frequently. 

Let’s say you have 1,000 shares of a stock and a company pays an annual dividend of $4 per share. You would earn $4,000 in dividend income. Next year, the company increases the annual dividend to $4.25 per share. You would earn $4,250 in dividend income without lifting a finger. That means you just earned an automatic pay raise in your account! If you’re interested in dividend growth companies, you can start by researching companies that have paid dividends for over 10, 25, and even 50 consecutive years. 

3.) Dividends come with special tax benefits 

While many are solely looking at income opportunities to build wealth, you can’t neglect the impact managing your expenses can have on your wealth building goals. Taxes are the single largest expense most people have. If you can allocate your money in a way that allows you to reduce your tax bill, you can achieve your wealth building goals at a faster rate. 

Did you know that you can pay less taxes for dividend income than earned income from salaries and wages? The U.S. tax system rewards investors with special tax incentives that are not available to those who only have one source of income from a job. Depending on the type of dividends you have and how long you’ve had them in your portfolio, you are eligible for reduced tax rates. Speak to your CPA or tax adviser about long-term capital gains rates and how you can structure your dividend portfolio to reduce your tax liability. 

If you want to start your wealth-building journey in a stress-free way, dividend investing is a simple way to get started. Plan your future success right now and prepare to earn an extra stream of income for a lifetime.



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/35vCKmT
via Gabe's Musing's

Celebrity Therapist Jeff Rocker On Black Men Dealing With Anxiety And Depression Amid COVID-19

Jeff Rocker

For Mental Health Awareness weekBLACK ENTERPRISE is interviewing numerous individuals within the wellness community to talk about the racial disparities that affect the Black community in the hopes of creating a safe place to talk about mental health. 

According to the U.S. Department Office of Minority Health, suicide became the second-leading cause of death for African Americans between the ages of 15-24 in 2017. In the same year, data showed that the rate for African American men who died by suicide was four times greater than African American women.

Celebrity therapist and licensed mental health counselor Jeff Rocker sees the effects it has on his clients and has created a platform for black men to talk about the mental health issues they may be facing.

In an interview with BLACK ENTERPRISE, Rocker discusses the stigma around discussions about mental health among black men and how the COVID-19 has contributed to increasing the number of people who say they are suffering mental health issues due to the fallout from the health crisis.

What has the COVID-19 pandemic contributed to mental health ailments amongst Black men?

The coronavirus disease has adversely affected the mental health of Black men in a myriad of ways. 2020 has brought a lot of frustration to many Black men that have heightened their anxiety to new levels to the point where they find themselves constantly worrying about the safety of their families, financial stability, and reevaluating their short term and long goals.

Sadly enough, research reveals that 44% of African Americans have experienced pay cuts or job loss. In comparison, 73% lacked emergency financial reserves to cater to their three-month expenses due to the epidemic. As you can see, the significant decrease in household income imposes a substantial financial burden on Black men as they try to provide for their families.

To make matters worse, African Americans have recorded the highest COVID-19 hospitalizations and death rates. This devastating situation attributes to increased chronic health conditions, poverty, and racial discrimination that endanger their well-being. In other words, “It’s tough being a Black man in today’s society, but they don’t have to deal with their issues on their own.”

What are some of the things keeping Black men from seeking out help?

Black men refrain from pursuing professional help due to various reasons such as finding therapists who are knowledgeable about Black culture, false representations, or hostile generalizations of therapy, fear of being judged, and being misdiagnosed.

For example, some mental health professionals have developed biased and negative perceptions, which influence them to misdiagnose Black men with mental illnesses such as schizophrenia, while diagnosing White males with similar symptoms as experiencing mild mood disorders. Culturally unskilled therapists discourage Black men from enrolling in counseling sessions due to fear that clinicians may incorrectly diagnose them with mental illness that they do not have in reality.

Additionally, fear of judgment hampers African American males from finding help. The conventional masculinity beliefs that force men to endure challenges, as well as the fear of their families identifying them as crazy due to their mental health diagnoses, elevates their resistance to psychological assistance. The negative depiction of counseling sessions in movies or television impedes Black men from seeking help because filmmakers portray mental health patients as unpredictably violent while depicting counselors as unethical or unhelpful. Hence, these factors hinder Black men from pursuing professional assistance.

Do you think attitudes toward mental health among Black men are changing? Why or why not?

I believe that Black men’s attitude toward mental health is heading in the right direction. More African American therapists have received commendations from the public for helping their communities through innovative therapeutic approaches.

Since the death of George Floyd, mental health agencies have been forced to hire more Black therapists to deal with the vicarious trauma experienced in the Black community. There has been a huge need for Black mental health professionals for many years, and now it feels like something is being done about it. The confessions of Black celebrities such as Trevor Noah, Taraji P. Henson, and LeBron James ailing from mental disorder has encouraged African American men to change their attitude toward mental health. Unlike in the past, where African Americans viewed dialogues regarding mental health as an embarrassment, Black families have currently started discussing psychological well-being issues.

As a celebrity therapist, this is why I focus the majority of my time discussing mental health issues that are prevalent in the Black community and coping skills to overcome them. We need to continue to have these conversations amongst each other to promote mental health awareness.

It’s National Suicide Prevention Month, and recent studies have shown an increase in the number of young Black boys committing suicide. What are some factors causing these numbers to increase?

Suicide rates among Black youths continue to increase exponentially due to various reasons. First and foremost, traumatic experiences instigated by massive killings of African American men by police officers has impacted the suicide rates in young Black males.

From 1991 to 2017, incidences of suicide among Black adolescents have increased by 73% due to exposure to racial discrimination and violence, which bolsters stress and depression. Besides, the integration of masculinity and racial norms, which mandate Black men to develop emotional resilience, triggers suicidal thoughts, especially when they fail to withhold their feelings.

The lack of social relations or emotional support from peers has impacted suicide rates drastically in young Black teens. At the same time, the lack of health insurance and high treatment expenditures hampers Black families from enrolling their children in counseling sessions. Therefore, there needs to be more resources and programs in place to offset these issues that contribute to the inflating cases of suicide among Black adolescents.



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/3k8TNPL
via Gabe's Musing's

Lidar Is Finally Becoming a Real Business

The success of lidar companies was unclear until this summer, when three leading makers offered glimpses of their finances.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2Fp22rR
via Gabe's Musing's

Stop Yelling About a Rushed Vaccine, and Start Planning for It

Public health experts should spend less time criticizing emergency authorization and more time discussing how to ensure the process works.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2RdlLgZ
via Gabe's Musing's

We’re All Working (Out) From Home

This week, we look at the latest gear from Peloton and discuss whether we’re ever going back to the gym.

from Wired https://ift.tt/3kaGaQi
via Gabe's Musing's

What Is the Internet of Things? A WIRED Guide

What you need to know about the promise (and peril) of networked lightbulbs, ovens, cameras, speakers and, well … everything.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2SqUHe4
via Gabe's Musing's

How to Watch WIRED25

Tune in starting Wednesday, September 16, for conversations with Reed Hastings, Brie Larson, and more.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2DQ6rUp
via Gabe's Musing's

Blood Centers Are Barely Meeting Convalescent Plasma Demand

Despite a lack of scientific studies on its efficacy for Covid-19, interest in the treatment has surged alongside case numbers.

from Wired https://ift.tt/32jtPmp
via Gabe's Musing's

'I now support Semenya who once I thought was a cheat'

Australian runner Madeleine Pape - once a rival of Caster Semenya who thought the South African should not be allowed to compete - now defends her.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/3ilO60u
via Gabe's Musing's

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Monitoring sleep positions for a healthy rest

MIT researchers have developed a wireless, private way to monitor a person’s sleep postures — whether snoozing on their back, stomach, or sides — using reflected radio signals from a small device mounted on a bedroom wall.

The device, called BodyCompass, is the first home-ready, radio-frequency-based system to provide accurate sleep data without cameras or sensors attached to the body, according to Shichao Yue, who will introduce the system in a presentation at the UbiComp 2020 conference on Sept. 15. The PhD student has used wireless sensing to study sleep stages and insomnia for several years.

“We thought sleep posture could be another impactful application of our system” for medical monitoring, says Yue, who worked on the project under the supervision of Professor Dina Katabi in the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. Studies show that stomach sleeping increases the risk of sudden death in people with epilepsy, he notes, and sleep posture could also be used to measure the progression of Parkinson’s disease as the condition robs a person of the ability to turn over in bed.

In the future, people might also use BodyCompass to keep track of their own sleep habits or to monitor infant sleeping, Yue says: “It can be either a medical device or a consumer product, depending on needs.”

Other authors on the conference paper, published in the Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive, Mobile, Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies, include graduate students Yuzhe Yang and Hao Wang, and Katabi Lab affiliate Hariharan Rahul. Katabi is the Andrew and Erna Viterbi Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT.

Restful reflections

BodyCompass works by analyzing the reflection of radio signals as they bounce off objects in a room, including the human body. Similar to a Wi-Fi router attached to the bedroom wall, the device sends and collects these signals as they return through multiple paths. The researchers then map the paths of these signals, working backward from the reflections to determine the body’s posture.

For this to work, however, the scientists needed a way to figure out which of the signals were bouncing off the sleeper’s body, and not bouncing off the mattress or a nightstand or an overhead fan. Yue and his colleagues realized that their past work in deciphering breathing patterns from radio signals could solve the problem.

Signals that bounce off a person’s chest and belly are uniquely modulated by breathing, they concluded. Once that breathing signal was identified as a way to “tag” reflections coming from the body, the researchers could analyze those reflections compared to the position of the device to determine how the person was lying in bed. (If a person was lying on her back, for instance, strong radio waves bouncing off her chest would be directed at the ceiling and then to the device on the wall.) “Identifying breathing as coding helped us to separate signals from the body from environmental reflections, allowing us to track where informative reflections are,” Yue says.

Reflections from the body are then analyzed by a customized neural network to infer how the body is angled in sleep. Because the neural network defines sleep postures according to angles, the device can distinguish between a sleeper lying on the right side from one who has merely tilted slightly to the right. This kind of fine-grained analysis would be especially important for epilepsy patients for whom sleeping in a prone position is correlated with sudden unexpected death, Yue says.

BodyCompass has some advantages over other ways of monitoring sleep posture, such as installing cameras in a person’s bedroom or attaching sensors directly to the person or their bed. Sensors can be uncomfortable to sleep with, and cameras reduce a person’s privacy, Yue notes. “Since we will only record essential information for detecting sleep posture, such as a person’s breathing signal during sleep,” he says, “it is nearly impossible for someone to infer other activities of the user from this data.”

An accurate compass

The research team tested BodyCompass’ accuracy over 200 hours of sleep data from 26 healthy people sleeping in their own bedrooms. At the start of the study, the subjects wore two accelerometers (sensors that detect movement) taped to their chest and stomach, to train the device’s neural network with “ground truth” data on their sleeping postures.

BodyCompass was most accurate — predicting the correct body posture 94 percent of the time — when the device was trained on a week’s worth of data. One night’s worth of training data yielded accurate results 87 percent of the time. BodyCompass could achieve 84 percent accuracy with just 16 minutes’ worth of data collected, when sleepers were asked to hold a few usual sleeping postures in front of the wireless sensor.

Along with epilepsy and Parkinson’s disease, BodyCompass could prove useful in treating patients vulnerable to bedsores and sleep apnea, since both conditions can be alleviated by changes in sleeping posture. Yue has his own interest as well: He suffers from migraines that seem to be affected by how he sleeps. “I sleep on my right side to avoid headache the next day,” he says, “but I’m not sure if there really is any correlation between sleep posture and migraines. Maybe this can help me find out if there is any relationship.”

For now, BodyCompass is a monitoring tool, but it may be paired someday with an alert that can prod sleepers to change their posture. “Researchers are working on mattresses that can slowly turn a patient to avoid dangerous sleep positions,” Yue says. “Future work may combine our sleep posture detector with such mattresses to move an epilepsy patient to a safer position if needed.”



from MIT News https://ift.tt/32iJv9G
via Gabe's Musing's

Issa Rae jokes about mannequin sex on ‘Insecure’ after TV clip goes viral

A viewer shared footage on TikTok of the latex human-doll being used during a kissing scene with actor Lawrence Saint-Victor.

Producers of The Bold and The Beautiful are taking quite a creepy approach to filming intimate scenes while following safety protocols amid the ongoing coronavirus crisis.  

A viewer shared footage on TikTok of a mannequin used in place of actress Kiara Barnes during a kissing scene with actor Lawrence Saint-Victor.

“The Bold and The Beautiful got their cast making out with mannequins during Covid,” the user wrote.

Read More: Issa Rae, HBO partner for Black TV history documentary

Once the clip went viral, many Twitter users mocked the scene and had plenty of jokes, including Insecure creator/star Issa Rae. She retweeted the video with the caption, “Can’t wait to f—- some mannequins this season.”

Watch the scene via the clip below:

Barnes replied to Rae’s comment, writing, “Yoooo let me tell you how awkward this was to film.”

Bradley Bell, an executive producer on the show told the New York Times, “At first, we took out the love scenes, and the show was falling a little flat because we’re all about romance and family interactions,” he said. “One of the first ideas we had was to bring in mannequins for the intimate scenes and hospital scenes, and it’s working quite well — we’re shooting it from a great distance or in a way you can’t see the form is inanimate.”

According to reports, The Bold and the Beautiful have been shooting intimate scenes with mannequins since early this summer. 

In related news, Rae is set to make appearances during the Primetime Emmys awards show later this month. She joins already confirmed stars Anthony Anderson, America Ferrera, Gabrielle Union, J.J. Watt, Lena Waithe and Oprah Winfrey on the Sept. 20 show.

The 72nd Emmy Awards will be hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, will  broadcast at 5 p.m. PT/8 p.m. ET on Sept. 20 on ABC.

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

The post Issa Rae jokes about mannequin sex on ‘Insecure’ after TV clip goes viral appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/35rJT7B
via Gabe's Musing's

Janet Hubert joins Will Smith, ‘Fresh Prince’ cast for HBO Max reunion

The stars had an ‘a candid conversation’ for the first time in 27 years.

Will Smith reunited with his Fresh Prince of Bel-Air castmates on Thursday for a HBO Max special celebrating the TV show’s 30th anniversary.

Smith, Daphne Maxwell Reid, DJ Jazzy Jeff, Joseph Marcelli, Karyn Parsons, Alfonso Ribiero, and Tatyana Ali gathered on Sept. 10, to tape the show exactly 30 years since the beloved comedy first aired in the US. 

Smith shared a photo on his Instagram of the cast reunited on the set of the show, promising a “real Banks Family Reunion”. He added: “RIP James.”

James Avery, who played uncle Phil, died in 2013.

Read More: ‘Fresh Prince of Bel-Air’ drama reboot to stream on Peacock

Smith also had an “emotional reunion and a candid conversation,” with Janet Hubert for the first time in 27 years. The actress played his Aunt Viv on Fresh Prince before she was replaced by Reid.

Smith and Hubert had not spoken in decades, and over the years she has used her social media platform to take shots at the actor, as well as Ribeiro, who played her son Carlton on the series.

Hubert apparently blames Smith for spreading a rumor that she was fired from the hit show after three seasons. 

Back in 2018, she addressed Smith directly in a video, alleging she was blackballed in the industry after her stint on Fresh Prince. 

“My life when you banished me and when you tainted me and when you put your poison in, you poisoned my entire world…Every time I try to have a meeting … every time I try to call Oprah for help, Oprah’s people would say, ‘No she’s friends with will and Janet will never be on the show … we can’t promote her on the show because she has a very deep, profound friendship with Will,” she said.

Adding, “Well, if somebody said your mama’s a hoe and then that reputation follows you and follows you and follows you and follows you, your mama becomes a hoe.”

Fresh Prince thegrio.com
Fresh Prince

At one point, Hubert said, “I’m just a woman who played a s—y role on a sitcom which, dear God, I wish I hadn’t. The one thing I do regret in my life was ever taking that role to have to have worked with someone like you.” 

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air ran for six seasons on NBC from 1990-1996. As theGrio reported, it was announced earlier this year that the reboot, a darker, more dramatic take on the original, would happen. Smith and the show’s original creators, Andy and Susan Borowitz, along with its original producers, Quincy Jones, and Benny Medina will be on board.

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

[jwp-video n=”1″

The post Janet Hubert joins Will Smith, ‘Fresh Prince’ cast for HBO Max reunion appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/32jGsyc
via Gabe's Musing's