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Monday, June 3, 2019

FIRST LOOK: Check out Beyonce as Nala in ‘The Lion King’

Disney just dropped the first trailer for The Lion King that shows Beyonce voicing Nala.

The film that hits theaters on July 19 also stars Donald Glover as the voice of Simba along with a star-studded lineup of talent.

Jame Earl Jones will reprise his role from the animated original, voicing Mufasa in the live-action adaptation. Chiwetel Ejiofor will voice Scar, Seth Rogen will play Pumbaa and Billy Eichner will play Timon.  JD Mccrory will voice Young Simba and Us star, Shahadi Wright Joseph will voice Young Nala while Keegan-Michael Key plays Kamari.

‘Homecoming: A Film By Beyoncé’ brings Bey’s brilliance and Blackness to Netflix

The film, directed by Jon Favreau (The Jungle Book), journeys to the African savanna where a future king is born. Simba idolizes his father, King Mufasa, and takes to heart his own royal destiny. But not everyone in the kingdom celebrates the new cub’s arrival. Scar, Mufasa’s brother—and former heir to the throne—has plans of his own. The battle for Pride Rock is ravaged with betrayal, tragedy and drama, ultimately resulting in Simba’s exile. With help from a curious pair of newfound friends, Simba will have to figure out how to grow up and take back what is rightfully his.

According to the press release, The Lion King tells the story of what happens when after the murder of his father, a young lion prince flees his kingdom only to learn the true meaning of responsibility and bravery.

PHOTOS: Beyoncé, Kelly Rowland, Michelle Williams and more stars stun at WACO Wearable Art Gala

Considering how Beyonce slayed in her Lion King-inspired ensemble at the third annual WACo Wearable Art Gala over the weekend, we can’t wait to see (or rather, hear) her turn as Nala when the movie hits theaters on July 19.

Check out the trailer:

The post FIRST LOOK: Check out Beyonce as Nala in ‘The Lion King’ appeared first on theGrio.



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Serena Williams makes history as first athlete ever to make Forbes’ list of World’s Richest Self-Made Women

Serena Williams just made history…again. 

The superstar athlete with 23 Grand Slam titles under her belt is the first athlete ever to make Forbes‘ coveted list of the World’s Richest Self-Made Women.

According to the magazine, she’s sitting on an estimated $225 million fortune, thanks in large part to her business savvy.

Celebs like Jay-Z, Serena Williams, Jaden Smith invest $300 million in plant-based Impossible Foods

While she’s arguably the best female athlete on the planet, she’s also a super smart business woman who has quietly invested in 34 startups over the past five years. In April, she announced the launch of her investment entity, Serena Ventures, which will focus on funding companies founded by women and minorities.

“I learned you can’t overspend, but I also learned that I love seed investing,” she told Forbes.“It’s fun to get in there. I don’t gamble. I don’t jump off buildings…I’m the most non-taking-a-chance kind of a person, but I felt like seed was where we wanted to be.”

Serena Williams slays French Open in outfit emblazoned with female empowerment themes

Aside form her investments, she also has multiple clothing lines and endorsement deals bringing in major money.

“I want to be in the infrastructure. I want to be the brand, instead of just being the face.”

Serena Williams discusses sister’s murder during inaugural episode of digital series, DiversiTea

Williams’ husband, Alexis Ohanian, weighed in on his wife’s inspiring vision.

“Firms know Serena is a hugely valuable strategic investor,” he told Forbes. “I think it is the best of all opportunities, and she can essentially cherry-pick from the top VC firms on deals that are interesting that come her way and at the same time she still has her own deal flow from folks who want her to invest.”

 

The post Serena Williams makes history as first athlete ever to make Forbes’ list of World’s Richest Self-Made Women appeared first on theGrio.



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Cardi B, Lil NAS X, Lizzo, H.E.R. and more stars set to perform at BET Awards

BET just announced an impressive list of performers set to take the stage at the 19th annual BET Awards. Cardi B, DJ Khaled, Migos, H.E.R., Lil Nas X, Lizzo,  City Girls’ Yung Miami, and Kiana Ledé are just a few of the stars who will perform at the annual event hosted by Regina Hall.

“The BET Awards stage has become synonymous with powerful and groundbreaking performances that are authentic and bold, celebrating the influence and power of black culture,” said Connie Orlando, Executive Vice-President, Head of Programming at BET. “We are thrilled to have been and continue to be the launch pad and home for some of today’s most talented and inspiring voices, as BET continues to showcase the impact of established and up-and-coming artists, providing them a global stage to share their art and creativity.”

Cardi B, Drake, Beyonce lead 2019 BET Awards nominations + full list

Aside from the all-star lineup of performers, several other stars will be on deck to present award to the best and brightest stars across music, television, film, sports, and philanthropy..

Taraji P. Henson, Lena Waithe, Morris Chestnut, Yara Shahidi, and Marsai Martin are among the first presenters the network has announced.

When it comes to this year’s nominees, Cardi B leads the pack with seven nods including ‘Best Female Hip Hop Artist,’ two separate nods in both the ‘Best Collaboration’ and ‘Video of the Year’ categories, ‘Album of the Year’ and the ‘Coca-Cola® Viewers’ Choice Award.’

Riding into the Money: 5 fascinating facts about Lil Nas X

Drake follows with five nominations including one for ‘Best Male Hip Hop Artist,’ ‘Video of the Year,’ ‘Best Collaboration’ and the ‘Coca-Cola® Viewers’ Choice Award.’ Beyoncé, Travis Scott and J. Cole all scored four nominations each, while Bruno Mars, 21 Savage, Childish Gambino, H.E.R. and Ella Mai each scored three nominations.

The late, Nipsey Hussle is up for Best Male Hip Hop Artist and Queen Bey will face off against her own protégées, Chloe x Halle in the Best Group category, where she’s nominated with her husband, Jay-Z as The Carters.

The BET Awards 2019 will air LIVE on Sunday, June 23rd at 8 pm ET from the Microsoft Theatre in Los Angeles, CA on BET.

The post Cardi B, Lil NAS X, Lizzo, H.E.R. and more stars set to perform at BET Awards appeared first on theGrio.



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A 3-D printer powered by machine vision and artificial intelligence

Objects made with 3-D printing can be lighter, stronger, and more complex than those produced through traditional manufacturing methods. But several technical challenges must be overcome before 3-D printing transforms the production of most devices.

Commercially available printers generally offer only high speed, high precision, or high-quality materials. Rarely do they offer all three, limiting their usefulness as a manufacturing tool. Today, 3-D printing is used mainly for prototyping and low-volume production of specialized parts.

Now Inkbit, a startup out of MIT, is working to bring all of the benefits of 3-D printing to a slew of products that have never been printed before — and it’s aiming to do so at volumes that would radically disrupt production processes in a variety of industries.

The company is accomplishing this by pairing its multimaterial inkjet 3-D printer with machine-vision and machine-learning systems. The vision system comprehensively scans each layer of the object as it’s being printed to correct errors in real-time, while the machine-learning system uses that information to predict the warping behavior of materials and make more accurate final products.

“The company was born out of the idea of endowing a 3-D printer with eyes and brains,” says Inkbit co-founder and CEO Davide Marini PhD ’03.

That idea unlocks a range of applications for Inkbit’s machine. The company says it can print more flexible materials much more accurately than other printers. If an object, including a computer chip or other electronic component, is placed on the print area, the machine can precisely print materials around it. And when an object is complete, the machine keeps a digital replica that can be used for quality assurance.

Inkbit is still an early-stage company. It currently has one operational production-grade printer. But it will begin selling printed products later this year, starting with a pilot with Johnson and Johnson, before selling its printers next year. If Inkbit can leverage current interest from companies that sell medical devices, consumer products, and automotive components, its machines will be playing a leading production role in a host of multi-billion-dollar markets in the next few years, from dental aligners to industrial tooling and sleep apnea masks.

“Everyone knows the advantages of 3-D printing are enormous,” Marini says. “But most people are experiencing problems adopting it. The technology just isn’t there yet. Our machine is the first one that can learn the properties of a material and predict its behavior. I believe it will be transformative, because it will enable anyone to go from an idea to a usable product extremely quickly. It opens up business opportunities for everyone.”

A printer with potential

Some of the hardest materials to print today are also the most commonly used in current manufacturing processes. That includes rubber-like materials such as silicone, and high-temperature materials such as epoxy, which are often used for insulating electronics and in a variety of consumer, health, and industrial products.

These materials are usually difficult to print, leading to uneven distribution and print process failures like clogging. They also tend to shrink or round at the edges over time. Inkbit co-founders Wojciech Matusik, an associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science, Javier Ramos BS ’12 SM ’14, Wenshou Wang, and Kiril Vidimče SM ’14 have been working on these problems for years in Matusik’s Computational Fabrications Group within the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL).

In 2015, the co-founders were among a group of researchers that created a relatively low-cost, precise 3-D printer that could print a record 10 materials at once by leveraging machine vision. The feat got the attention of many large companies interested in transitioning production to 3-D printing, and the following year the four engineers received support from the Deshpande Center to commercialize their idea of joining machine vision with 3-D printing.

At MIT, Matusik’s research group used a simple 3-D scanner to track its machine’s progress. For Inkbit’s first printer, the founders wanted to dramatically improve “the eyes” of their machine. They decided to use an optical coherence tomography (OCT) scanner, which uses long wavelengths of light to see through the surface of materials and scan layers of material at a resolution the fraction of the width of a human hair.

Because OCT scanners are traditionally only used by ophthalmologists to examine below the surface of patients’ eyes, the only ones available were far too slow to scan each layer of a 3-D printed part — so Inkbit’s team “bit the bullet,” as Marini describes it, and built a custom OCT scanner he says is 100 times faster than anything else on the market today.

When a layer is printed and scanned, the company’s proprietary machine-vision and machine-learning systems automatically correct any errors in real-time and proactively compensate for the warping and shrinkage behavior of a fickle material. Those processes further expand the range of materials the company is able to print with by removing the rollers and scrapers used by some other printers to ensure precision, which tend to jam when used with difficult-to-print materials.

The system is designed to allow users to prototype and manufacture new objects on the same machine. Inkbit’s current industrial printer has 16 print heads to create multimaterial parts and a print block big enough to produce hundreds of thousands of fist-sized products each year (or smaller numbers of larger products). The machine’s contactless inkjet design means increasing the size of later iterations will be as simple as expanding the print block.

“Before, people could make prototypes with multimaterial printers, but they couldn’t really manufacture final parts,” Matusik says, noting that the postprocessing of Inkbit’s parts can be fully automated. “This is something that’s not possible using any other manufacturing methods.”

Inkbit's 3-D printer can produce multimaterial objects (like the pinch valve shown above) at high volumes. Courtesy of Inkbit

The novel capabilities of Inkbit’s machine mean that some of the materials the founders want to print with are not available, so the company has created some of its own chemistries to push the performance of their products to the limit. A proprietary system for mixing two materials just before printing will be available on the printers Inkbit ships next year. The two-part chemistry mixing system will allow the company to print a broader range of engineering-grade materials.

Johnson and Johnson, a strategic partner of Inkbit, is in the process of acquiring one of the first printers. The MIT Startup Exchange Accelerator (STEX25) has also been instrumental in exposing Inkbit to leading corporations such as Amgen, Asics, BAE Systems, Bosch, Chanel, Lockheed Martin, Medtronic, Novartis, and others.

Today, the founders spend a lot of their time educating product design teams that have never been able to 3-D print their products before — let alone incorporate electronic components into 3-D-printed parts.

It may be a while before designers and inventors take full advantage of the possibilities unlocked by integrated, multimaterial 3-D printing. But for now, Inkbit is working to ensure that, when that future comes, the most imaginative people will have a machine to work with.

“Some of this is so far ahead of its time,” Matusik says. “I think it will be really fascinating to see how people are going to use it for final products.”



from MIT News http://bit.ly/2Z6TI4M
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Lala Anthony joins ‘90210’ revival: ‘I’m Glad They Are Bringing Some Color’

READY TO LAUGH? Tracy Morgan will host the 2019 ESPYs

Tracy Morgan has signed on to host the 2019 ESPYS Presented by Capital One. The  acclaimed actor and comedian who currently stars on The Last O.G. will be joined by top celebrities from sports and entertainment to commemorate the past year in sports by recognizing major sports achievements, reliving unforgettable moments, and saluting the leading performers and performances.

The Last O.G. renewed with Tiffany Haddish and Tracy Morgan

“I am very excited to be hosting The ESPYS,” Morgan said in a statement. “I hope my Uncle Sidney Poitier is there with my biological father Tony Dorsett and my second cousin Herschel Walker. And Bo Jackson I want my two dollars back!”

The actor also shared the goodness on social media.

 

Tracy Morgan received an Emmy Nomination for his work on 30 Rock and is a nine-time NAACP Image Award nominee. Morgan also received an Emmy nomination for his triumphant return to Saturday Night Live, where he had previously starred for seven seasons.

Tracy Morgan says Jordan Peele’s humor helped him recover from accident in 2014

“Tracy is effortlessly funny and deeply passionate about sports,” said ESPYS executive producer Maura Mandt. “He’s a natural choice to host The ESPYS and we’re thrilled to have him. Few people can own a room like Tracy Morgan, and I can’t wait to see what he has in store for the show.”

The ESPYS helps to raise awareness and funds for the V Foundation for Cancer Research, the charity founded by ESPN and the late basketball coach Jim Valvano at the first ESPYS back in 1993. ESPN has helped raise close to $97 million for the V Foundation over the past 26 years. Tickets are available for public purchase at AXS.com. The ESPYS are executive produced by Maura Mandt and co-produced by Maggievision Productions.

Tracy Morgan takes jabs at Jussie Smollett on ‘The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon’

The ESPYS will be broadcast live on ABC on Wednesday, July 10, at 8 p.m. ET from Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles.

The post READY TO LAUGH? Tracy Morgan will host the 2019 ESPYs appeared first on theGrio.



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The One Free Press Coalition Spotlights Journalists Under Attack

Jamal Khashoggi, the murdered columnist for *The Washington Post*, remains atop the list, as does independent Tanzanian journalist Azory Gwanda.

from Wired http://bit.ly/2KqGNXk
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Black Enterprise 2009 Woman of Power Legacy Award Honoree Leah Chase Passes Away

Chef, entrepreneur, and civil rights icon Leah Chase passed away on Saturday at 96-years-old. Chase was executive chef of Dooky Chase’s—a New Orleans landmark restaurant where many black leaders including Thurgood Marshall, Martin Luther King Jr., Hank Aaron, Ernest Gaines, Quincy Jones, and Barack Obama dined, and strategized during the Civil Rights era.

The restaurant opened its doors in 1941, founded by Emily and Dooky Chase, Sr. Their son, Edgar Dooky Chase, Jr. married Leah Lange Chase in 1946. Leah Chase helped propel the restaurant into the national spotlight with her Creole cuisine cooking and emphasis on showcasing black art and music in the establishment.

Dooky Chase’s was shuttered for two years in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. After a rebuild and assistance from the community, the restaurant re-opened and emerged even stronger.

Several notable black celebrities took to social media to pay respects to Chase. Chef Marcus Samuelsson called her a “true mentor, friend and inspiration” in a post on Facebook:

 

 

 

In 2009, Chase was honored as a BLACK ENTERPRISE Woman of Power Legacy Award. In an interview with BE she said, “My father taught us to live by three rules: Pray, work, and do for others.” Watch the entire video interview with Leah Chase below:

 

 



from Black Enterprise http://bit.ly/2wAKn8U
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Asma Elbadawi: The hijabi basketballer who changed the rules

Basketballer Asma Elbadawi battled the sport's governing body to allow hijabs on-court.

from BBC News - Africa https://bbc.in/2Xp3wXd
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The Best Way for a Mouse to Escape a Cat, According to Math

A mouse is stuck swimming in a pool while a cat paces, ready to strike. Here's how to calculate that mouse's optimal strategy.

from Wired http://bit.ly/2wzDa9m
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Lenovo Smart Clock With Google Assistant Review: Timely Talker

This cute little alarm clock has Google Assistant inside.

from Wired http://bit.ly/2Z45Nra
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Tired: Eating Bugs. Wired: Eating Bug Meat Grown in a Lab

According to a group of researchers, culturing insect cells could be easier and more efficient than culturing cow cells.

from Wired http://bit.ly/2wAAQPg
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Star Wars News: Meet the New New Class of 'The Rise of Skywalker'

The next film in the franchise is all about millennials. Kinda.

from Wired http://bit.ly/2IcA3cG
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How President Obama received a hero’s welcome and upstaged Drake at NBA Finals

On Sunday, the former commander-in-chief, Barack Obama, was hailed like a hero with a standing ovation during Game 2 of the NBA Finals in Toronto, Canada.

Drake gets in his feelings and trash talks Draymond Green during Game one of NBA Finals

Trying to be covert doesn’t come easy for the beloved basketball fanatic and our forever POTUS but he was front and center to watch the Raptors take on the Golden State Warriors.

And while the Warriors ultimately tied the series with the night’s 109-104 win, the real MVP of the night was Obama who received an enthusiastic welcome from the crowd as they chanted “MVP” to remind him that he is and will remain the GOAT.

Take that tacky Trump!

POTUS was looking cool and casual wearing a black leather jacket as he sat courtside and chopped it up with celebrities and later ESPN sports presenter Michael Wilson, The Daily Mail reports.

And of course, the court-jester Drake couldn’t be outdone and made sure he shook hands and got a hug with the former president as the crazed Raptors fans fanned the flames of his antics.

Drake wore a “Home Alone” movie hoodie with McCaulay Culkin’s character Kevin McAllister on the back with the infamous hands on his face pose followed by a bunch of question marks as a knock to Kevin Durant who has been sidelined with a right calf strain.

Victim’s mom says Kim Kardashian is misinformed about Kevin Cooper

As a clapback, the real Culkin hit Drake, tweeting:

“Hey @Drake I’m right here, bro. DM me. See you at the BBQ.”

The post How President Obama received a hero’s welcome and upstaged Drake at NBA Finals appeared first on theGrio.



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Sephora to close all 400 stores for inclusion workshops after SZA is racially profiled by security

Sephora is launching a day of “inclusion workshops” and closing all 400 of its stores June 5 to teach employees about how not to be racist after the singer SZA claimed she was racially profiled in its Calabasas store.

SZA says ‘Sandy Sephora’ racially profiled her while she was shopping for Fenty

The platinum-selling artist reportedly was trying to buy some Fenty beauty products in peace when she was targeted by a woman she renamed as “Sandy Sephora.”

When the 28-year-old chart-topper was looking for cosmetics from Rihanna’s Fenty line, she said she was confronted by mall security. She was then informed that a store employee had accused her of theft and called authorities to detain her.

In April, SZA wrote about her experience: “Lmao Sandy Sephora location 614 Calabasas called security to make sure I wasn’t stealing,” the singer wrote on Twitter. Adding, “Can a b***h cop her fenty in peace er whut.”

After the troubling incident, Rihanna surprised SZA with a Fenty Beauty gift card and posted a supportive message on Instagram.

“Go buy yo Fenty Beauty in peace sis!” wrote Rihanna, who launched the cosmetics brand in 2017.

“Tanks queen!” SZA replied.

In response to the makeup debacle, Sephora posted on social media of their intent to close their locations and asked their customers to join in their efforts to build a more inclusive beauty community, The Daily Mail reports.

“Sephora believes in championing all beauty, living with courage, and standing fearlessly together to celebrate our difference,” the beauty company wrote.

“We will never stop building a community where diversity is expected, self-expression is honored, all are welcomed, and you are included.”

The brand also included a link to its We Belong to Something Beautiful campaign.

Victim’s mom says Kim Kardashian is misinformed about Kevin Cooper

“These values have always been at the heart of Sephora, and we’re excited to welcome everyone when we reopen.”

Time will tell if Sephora employees truly change the tide on the store’s culture.

The post Sephora to close all 400 stores for inclusion workshops after SZA is racially profiled by security appeared first on theGrio.



from theGrio https://on.thegrio.com/2EM6aPl
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Another MacOS Bug Lets Hackers Invisibly Click Security Prompts

Yet again, a bug in Apple's safeguards against "synthetic clicks" allows hackers to slip past Mojave's security restrictions on apps.

from Wired http://bit.ly/2KnJCbx
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Cardi B goes naked in photos for new single ‘Press’

Cardi B went full bare-naked lady for the visuals for the highly anticipated release of her single, “Press.”

Cardi B blings out her baby Kulture with $80k worth of jewels

Cardi seems to always be charged with something – whether making an outrageous confession that she used to be about that life robbing men for their dividends to being blamed for ordering her bodyguards to attack women in a strip club – so her artwork for
“Press” is perfect given that her life events are always making headlines.

The 26-year-old appears to be surrounded by paparazzi and members of the press in one shot while she’s being escorted naked with her hands behind her back, seemingly handcuffed as two bars obscure her breasts and her lady parts perfectly. And all the men in the visual, for some reason, are white men who look like old farts with mob ties.

Cardi also appears to look like she’s in court in another shot, giving a flagrant middle finger while wearing a leopard catsuit with a big bouffant hairdo. In another she’s styled the same way while giving a Mick Jagger type snarl to the camera while in handcuffs.

That pose actually was a nod to serial killer Aileen Wuornos infamous mugshot, after being found guilty and ultimately executed in 2002 after killing seven men, PEOPLE reports.

Cardi’s body looks great in the artwork, given that she’s now had to take a backseat and rest after post-baby plastic surgery complications.

Georgia still has no hate crimes law despite many tries

The Money rapper recently revealed that she was losing lots of cash after her doctors ordered her to take some time off to heal after plastic surgery following the birth of her baby Kulture.

“You know, I hate canceling shows because I love money,” Card said. “But like, health is wealth, so I have to do what I have to do.”

“My job as an entertainer is a 24-hour job, bro. So, no, I don’t have time to work out,” she continued. “And I wanted specific things that I know that no matter how much I work out, is not going to get fixed. Like my boobs, no matter how much I work out, they’re not going to lift themselves. So yeah, I have to get f— surgery. That’s right. All right? My breasts gotta f— heal, and it is what it is.”

The post Cardi B goes naked in photos for new single ‘Press’ appeared first on theGrio.



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2020 hopeful Cory Booker rolls out Iowa steering committee

Democratic White House hopeful Cory Booker is rolling out his Iowa steering committee, a team of activists and operatives that features party powerbroker Jerry Crawford, who played a key role in each of Bill and Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaigns in the state.
Crawford, a Des Moines-area attorney who also played leading roles on Al Gore and John Kerry’s campaigns, said he’s been courted by multiple campaigns but told The Associated Press in an interview he’s backing Booker because of the New Jersey U.S. senator’s positive message.

“I’m very much drawn to his passion for civility and his determination to pursue healing,” Crawford said.

Crawford is among 10 Iowa activists, operatives and elected officials who plan to provide strategic advice and operational support to Booker’s campaign as part of his Iowa steering committee, being rolled out Monday. The group includes four other previously unannounced endorsers: former Iowa state House minority leader Rep. Mark Smith and city councilmembers Dale Todd, of Cedar Rapids, and Mazahir Salih and Bruce Teague, both of Iowa City. Booker’s campaign said it hopes all three will help organize African American support for him in their respective cities.

The other five steering committee members are state Reps. Amy Nielsen and Jennifer Konfrst; Iowa Democratic Party central committee members Landra Jo Reece and Melinda Jones; and former American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees political director Marcia Nichols, all of whom previously expressed their support for Booker.

“From local activists to council members and state representatives, these individuals have been on the forefront of standing up for their communities,” Booker said in a statement.
Crawford, whose weekend conversation with the AP was interrupted by a call from Booker, said he plans to be in touch with the Booker campaign multiple times a week and has already begun efforts to convince other major Iowa political players to get on board with the campaign. Besides gathering support for the candidate over the next nine months, Booker’s team sees the members of his steering committee as key forces on caucus night, the kind of voices who could win over persuadable caucus-goers in key precincts.

With at least 50 staffers on the ground, Booker’s Iowa team is widely seen inside the state as one of the strongest and most seasoned, behind only Massachusetts U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s in numbers. But thus far, Booker’s staffing strength hasn’t translated to support in the polls: Booker still draws only low single-digit support in nationwide and state surveys.

Booker’s staff and advisers dismiss the polls as too early to be predictive and argue that the senator is running more of a slow burn-style campaign that will ensure he has the operation in place to harness any momentum in the fall if he does catch fire — and enough resources to sustain it through the caucuses and beyond.

“This is a horrible time to be one of the front-runners,” Crawford said, noting that early Iowa front-runners “don’t do very well, historically speaking.”

Crawford said he expects to see Booker surge around Thanksgiving, but right now, “Cory’s exactly where you want to be.”

The post 2020 hopeful Cory Booker rolls out Iowa steering committee appeared first on theGrio.



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Kids have long road to heal after police shooting of Black family ‘Emotionally, they’re not OK’

Asia Jacobs, affectionately known as “Mama’s little helper,” struggles to fill that role since police officers opened fire on her mother’s pickup truck outside an Oklahoma food bank and wounded the girl and two of her siblings.

A bullet pierced the left frontal lobe of 4-year-old Asia’s brain. She no longer helps her mother keep her younger brother and sister in line because she has a hard time sitting still herself. The shooting has left her anxious. Doctor visits and seizure medicine fill her days — a life upended through no fault of her own.

Even as a prosecutor looks into the April shooting to determine whether to charge the officers, details have been scant. This much is clear, though: The children are expected to face a long and hard recovery.

“Emotionally, they’re not OK. Physically, they’re here,” their mother, 24-year-old Olivia Hill, told The Associated Press in an interview. “But there’s a lot that we’re going to have to go through in order for everything to be even close to OK.”

Hill left Asia and her three other children inside her teal 1993 Chevrolet Silverado on April 26 while she picked up vegetables at a food bank in Hugo. Two detectives looking for a suspect in a robbery that happened two weeks earlier showed up and began shooting at the truck. Police later said William Devaughn Smith, a friend of Hill’s who was in the vehicle with the children, was the man they were seeking in the April 11 holdup of a Pizza Hut, where a manager was forced to turn over $398 at gunpoint.

Smith, 21, said he was sitting in the front seat but facing backward to fix a juice container for Hill’s 1-year-old daughter when the detectives approached the truck.

“Before I could even turn back all the way around in the vehicle, I was shot once,” Smith told the AP last week during a brief phone interview from the Choctaw County jail in Hugo, where he’s being held on a robbery charge after being treated at a hospital and released. “And after that I laid across the seat and gunshots were still being fired.”

The detectives fired at least 26 shots, said Damario Solomon-Simmons, a Tulsa civil rights attorney representing Hill.

Gunfire punctured the part of Asia’s brain that controls some movement and behavior, medical records show. Asia’s 5-year-old brother suffered a skull fracture and her 1-year-old sister was left with deep cuts on her face from gunfire or shattered window glass. Asia’s 2-year-old brother was not hit.

Police in Hugo, a town of about 5,200 people near the Texas state line, have not described the shooting in detail. But the mayor, Richard Higginbotham, gave a statement to the local newspaper a week after the shooting that revealed the detectives were in an “undercover” vehicle and followed Hill’s truck to the food bank. He said once they were there, they got out of their vehicle and tried to walk up to the truck.

The driver of the pickup put it in reverse and struck one of the detectives, the mayor said. The detectives, who were in plain clothes and not uniforms, then opened fire, he said.
The detectives did not see the children when opening fire and only realized they were in the back seat when approaching the truck, Higginbotham said.

Smith denied hitting either detective.

“No, sir, I did not,” he told the AP. “The vehicle was in park.”

An attorney hired by town officials since the shooting, Scott Wood, said detectives Billy Jenkins and Chad Allen both fired their Police Department-issued 9 mm handguns. He said they remain on paid leave.

A review of the shooting, which the AP obtained through a public records request, shows that a panel consisting of five Hugo police officers and the Choctaw County sheriff found last week that neither detective violated department policy.

Hugo’s use of force policy states that officers should move out of the way of an approaching vehicle rather than shoot at it. The policy adds that officers should only shoot at a moving vehicle or its occupants “when the officer reasonably believes there are no other reasonable means available to avert the threat of the vehicle, or if deadly force other than the vehicle is directed at the officer or others.”

Wood said Jenkins suffered a “slight ankle sprain” when he “scrambled” to get out of the way of the truck but was not injured when the vehicle “sideswiped” him while moving backward.

No gun was found in the pickup, Wood said.

The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, which was called in for an outside probe, says it has submitted a report to local prosecutors. A group of Hugo residents wrote to the prosecutor handling the case, asking him to release the bureau’s report after he decides whether to charge Jenkins and Allen.

District Attorney Mark Matloff told the AP he’s prohibited by law from releasing the report and will follow the same procedure in this case that he does in any other.

“If there’s wrongdoing then I’m going to file charges,” he said.

Solomon-Simmons said Hill is considering federal and state lawsuits. He said the number of shots fired shows the officers’ disregard for not only the children but for people inside the food bank.

He said he has heard Hill’s children ask why they were shot.

“They’ll tell you what happened, and it’s just devastating to hear a 4-year-old say, ‘I was shot, and I was bleeding all over me, and it hurt,'” Solomon-Simmons said.

Beyond physical injuries, violent incidents and post-traumatic stress can cause developmental backsliding, said Julie Kaplow, chief of psychology and director of the Trauma and Grief Center at Texas Children’s Hospital. The effects of an early trauma can stalk kids into their later years without proper treatment, she said.

Hill’s truck has been impounded as evidence, which initially meant family or friends had to help drive her and her kids from Hugo to the hospital in Tulsa, 180 miles (290 kilometers) to the north. A few weeks after the shooting, a group in Tulsa that helps people buy affordable cars donated a minivan to her.

But the mother is still worried about finances. She works in home health but hasn’t been able to return to the job since the children were hurt.

She already received her first bill linked to the kids’ medical care. Each child was flown in a separate medical helicopter to a hospital in Tulsa the day of the shooting. An invoice their mother received in the mail for just one child’s ride listed a cost of almost $75,000.

“I just don’t really think anyone knows exactly how hard it is to deal with what I’m dealing with,” Hill said. “You know, one day things are fine and the next day it’s like my whole life has changed.”

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Georgia still has no hate crimes law despite many tries

A Georgia man convicted of throwing scalding water on a sleeping same-sex couple told one of them to “get out of my house with all that gay,” a victim testified, yet he couldn’t be charged with a hate crime because the state has no such law.

Victim Anthony Gooden said in a recent interview that he still can’t use his left arm, which was severely burned in the 2016 attack, and wears a brace. He can’t tie his shoelaces or work. Martin Blackwell was sentenced to 40 years in prison for the crime.

“Forty years is not enough to have your skin turn different shades of colors and peel off,” said Fani Willis, who prosecuted the case and said she would have considered using a hate crimes charge. “Those young boys were burned because of their sexuality. We have to acknowledge that it was a hateful reason.”

Georgia is one of only four states — along with South Carolina, Wyoming and Arkansas — without an official hate crimes law. The state Supreme Court overturned a previous law in 2004 and bills that would have brought Georgia in line with federal law failed to pass over the past two legislative sessions.

Advocates, including district attorneys, say a hate crimes law is important to send a message of validation to victims and intolerance to perpetrators. Gooden’s case is just one in which Georgia prosecutors might have considered using a hate crimes law.

In late 2016, an admitted member of the Aryan Brotherhood was in a passenger seat of a truck when he shot at a black driver’s car and then yelled racial slurs in the presence of police. In 2015, a couple interrupted an African American child’s birthday party with Confederate flags, racial slurs and armed threats. That same year, a former fire captain pointed a pistol at an African American couple while yelling racial slurs at them outside an Applebee’s.

Those cases resulted in lengthy prison sentences, but a hate crimes law could have extended their terms.

The most recent Georgia bill would have added penalties for those convicted of targeting victims based on race, color, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, and mental or physical disability. Any hate crime tied to a misdemeanor offense would result in up to one additional year in prison; a hate crime tied to a felony would mean at least two additional years.

States have been passing hate crimes laws since the 1980s, but they vary. A 2009 expansion of the federal hate crimes statute enacted under former President Barack Obama included sexual orientation and gender identity as protected categories, but 16 states with a hate crimes law do not explicitly protect either group, according to the Human Rights Campaign, a national LGBTQ advocacy group.

LGBTQ protections have becoming a sticking point for from some Republicans and their religious base.

“We do find it troubling when terms such as ‘sexual orientation’ or ‘gender identity’ become a higher standard of prosecution for certain crimes,” said Mike Griffin, a spokesman for the Georgia Baptist Mission Board, which represents more than 3,500 churches. Griffin added that no one should be mistreated or physically abused because of their sexuality.

The most recent Georgia bill, sponsored by a Republican, got stuck in a Senate committee after passing the House. Senate Judiciary Chairman Jesse Stone, a Republican from Waynesboro, did not respond to phone calls requesting comment on why the bill was not heard in his committee. Stone previously said he believes victims should have an equal chance at justice and isn’t sure increased penalties for crimes against certain people is the best way to go, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Some states have passed hate crime laws that prosecutors say are too vague to be enforced.

In April, Indiana’s governor signed a hate crimes law that did not explicitly cover age, sex or gender identity. “It’s going to be ruled unconstitutional because it doesn’t have specific provisions,” said Shelley Rose, deputy regional director of the Atlanta chapter of the Anti-Defamation League, which advocates for robust hate crimes laws. “It’s exactly what happened here in Georgia.”

In 2004, the Georgia Supreme Court struck down a 2000 hate crimes law, saying it was “unconstitutionally vague” and so broad that it would even apply to a rabid sports fan picking on somebody wearing a rival team’s cap.

The 2000 measure was about to fail in Georgia’s legislature when Republican Rep. Dan Ponder gave a personal speech reflecting on his conservative Southern upbringing and his ancestors owning slaves that led to a standing ovation. The bill passed on a 116-49 vote.
Ponder said in a recent interview that he was disappointed that, almost two decades later, Georgia still has no hate crimes law.

“I think, amazingly, in 2019, this is still somewhat related to the gay issue,” Ponder said. “It’s about the impact it will have on the Republican base.”

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