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Saturday, February 8, 2020

New theories at the intersection of algebra and geometry

As a self-described “classical type of mathematician,” Chenyang Xu eschews software for paper and pen, chalk and chalkboard. Walk by his office, and you might simply see him pacing about, deep in concentration.

Walking — across campus to get a cup of coffee, or from his apartment to his office — is an essential part of his process.

“The way I think about math, I do a lot of picturing in my brain,” he says. “If I need a more clear picture, I might draw something and do some calculations. And when I walk I think of these pictures.”

Those paces sometimes lead him to colleagues’ offices. “There are so many great minds here, and I interact with my colleagues in the department a lot,” says Xu, a recently tenured professor of mathematics at MIT.

Xu’s specialty is algebraic geometry, which applies the problem-solving methods of abstract algebra to the complex but concrete shapes, surfaces, spaces, and curves of geometry. His primary objects of study are algebraic varieties — geometric manifestations of sets of solutions of systems of polynomial equations. As he walks and talks with colleagues, Xu focuses on ways of classifying these algebraic varieties in higher dimensions, using the techniques of birational geometry.

“I like to talk with other mathematicians working in my subject,” Xu says. “We discuss a bit, then go back to think for ourselves, encounter new difficulties, then discuss again. Most of my papers are basically collaborations.”

Such a collaboration helped Xu take his research in a new direction toward developing the new theory of K-stability of Fano varieties. Eight years ago, he devoted some thought to a certain subject in his field known as K-stability, which he describes as “an algebraic definition invented for differential geometry studies.”

“I tried to develop an algebraic theory based on this K-stability as a background intuition, using algebraic geometry tools.” After a few years’ “gap,” he eventually came back to it because of conversations with his collaborator Chi Li, a professor of mathematics at Purdue University.

“He had more of a differential geometry background and translated that concept into algebraic geometry,” says Xu. “That’s when I realized this was important to study. Since then, we have done more than we expected four or five years ago.”

Together they published a highly cited paper in 2014 on the “K-stability of Fano varieties,” which put forward an entirely new theory in the field of birational algebraic geometry.

It was representative of his approach to mathematics, which involves advancing new theories before tackling specific problems.

“In my subject there are questions that everybody trying to solve, that have been open for 40 years,” Xu says. “I have those kinds of problems in my mind. My way of doing math is to go after the theory. Instead of working on one problem with techniques, we have to first develop the theory. We then see something in a new light. Every time I find some new theory, I test it on old classical problems to see if it works or not.”

The beauty of math

Growing up near Chengdu, in China’s Sichuan Province, Xu enjoyed math from a young age. “I attended some math Olympiads, and I did okay, but I wasn’t the gold medal winner,” he says with a laugh.

He was talented enough, however, to earn bachelor’s and master’s degrees at Peking University, as a part of the premier math program in China.

“After I got into college, I started to learn more advanced mathematics, and I found it very beautiful and very deep,” he says. “To me, a big chunk of mathematics is art more than science.”

Toward the end of his time at Peking, he concentrated increasingly on algebraic geometry. “I just like geometry a lot and wanted to study some subject related to geometry,” he says. “I found that I’m good at the techniques of algebra. So using those techniques to study geometry fit me very well.”

Xu then pursued a PhD at Princeton University, where his advisor, János Kollár, a leading algebraic geometer, had a “huge influence” on him.

“What I learned from him, aside from many techniques, of course, was more about what I could call ‘taste,’” says Xu. “What questions are important in mathematics? In general, graduate students or postdocs in the early stages of their career need some role model to follow. Doing math is a complicated thing, and at some point there are choices they need to make,” he says, that require balancing how difficult or interesting a particular problem might be with more practical concerns about its tractability.

In addition to Kollár’s mentorship, the unfamiliarity of his new surroundings also aided his research.

“I had never been outside China before that point, so there was a bit of culture shock,” he recalls. “I didn’t know much about U.S. culture at the time. But in some sense that made me even more concentrated on my work.”

After Xu received his doctorate in 2008, he spent three years as a postdoc and C.L.E. Moore Instructor at MIT. He then spent about six years as a professor at the Beijing International Center of Mathematical Research and then returned to MIT as a full professor of mathematics in 2018.

Throughout those years, Xu demonstrated a talent for finding important questions to pursue, becoming a leading thinker in his field and making a series of major advances in algebraic birational geometry.

In 2017, Xu won the inaugural Future Science Prize in Mathematics and Computer Science for his “fundamental contributions” to the field of birational geometry. Some of that field’s real-world applications include coding and robotics. For example, birational geometry techniques are used to help robots “see” by grouping a series of two-dimensional pictures together into something approximating a field of vision to navigate our three-dimensional world.

Xu’s work to advance the minimal model program (MMP) — a key theory in birational geometry that was first articulated in the early 1980s — and apply it to algebraic varieties won him the 2019 New Horizons Prize for early-career achievement in mathematics. He has since proved a series of conjectures related to the MMP, expanding it to previously untested varieties of certain conditions.

The theory of algebraic K-stability that he developed has proven to be fertile ground for new discoveries. “I’m still working on this topic, and it’s a particularly interesting question to me,” he says.

Xu has been making progress on proving other key conjectures related to K-stability rooted in the minimal model program. Recently, he drew on that prior work to prove the existence of moduli space for Fano algebraic varieties. Now he’s hard at work developing a solution for a specific property of that moduli space: its “compactness.”

“To solve that problem it will be very important,” he says. “I hope we can still solve the last piece of it. I’m pretty sure that would be my best work to date.”



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Kenya - where toilets have become a constitutional right

The state is obliged to provide toilets along the country's roads, Kenya's High Court rules.

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Amanda Edwards Says She’ll Be the Third Black Woman to Ever Hold a U.S. Senate Seat

Amanda Edwards

After serving her community as a Houston City Council member for four years, Amanda Edwards is now determined to make history.

The 37-year-old was elected in 2015 as one of Houston’s at-large council members and subsequently represented 2.3 million Texans and helped lead the city’s Hurricane Harvey recovery effort in 2017. However, rather than running for reelection, Edwards was tapped by the state’s Democratic Party to run for the U.S. Senate against Republican incumbent Sen. John Cornyn. As a result, she is currently campaigning against 11 other Democratic challengers in a primary that will be held March 3. Should she win the crowded primary race, she’ll then have to face off with Cornryn, a Trump loyalist who’s already raised $12 million towards his reelection campaign. In comparison, Edwards says her campaign has yet to raise a $1 million. Nevertheless, if she beats the odds and wins both elections, Edwards would become Lone Star state’s first black U.S. senator and just the third black woman to ever hold a U.S. Senate seat.

“Some people initially find it challenging to believe that a woman of color can be the next U.S. Senator from Texas because they make certain assumptions about the demographics of Texas and about me that are not based in reality,” she told BLACK ENTERPRISE. However, she remains hopeful due to the rapid pace at which Texas politics are changing. The deep red state saw a huge shift in 2018 when former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke almost beat Republican incumbent Sen. Ted Cruz during the U.S. midterm elections, reports Quartz.  Despite his defeat, O’Rourke managed to gain an impressive amount of support from Republican voters. He also galvanized scores of left-leaning young people and minorities to register to vote. Had more actually come out to vote, he would have won. According to Edwards, her pathway to victory relies on gaining support from moderates that O’Rourke won over in addition to getting more registered young people of color to actually show up how to the polls.

“What if you could have someone who was able to galvanize both those persuadable voters but also the same people of color, people under the age of 35?” she says. According to her, many newly registered voters didn’t turn out back in 2018 due to their distrust in government. “We know a number of those folks believe that democracy doesn’t work for them,” she said. As a result, her focus is to restore their faith in politics and help more people understand that “it can work and it can be different this time if you have someone like me, the messenger who has worked tirelessly in these communities.”

Her faith in her campaign is also steeped in the belief that Texas will eventually become a blue state in light of its urban expansion and growing LatinX community.  “Texas is one of the states that have been identified as those that could be flipped,” she said. “If we shift the balance of power — using Texas as what was once known to be the stronghold of the Republican Party or conservative voting — to actually be where that happens, that will be a tremendous paradigm shift.”

Since launching her campaign last year, Edwards has focused on expanding access to healthcare and economic opportunity.  “When I was 10 years old, my father was diagnosed with cancer and I learned what our U.S. healthcare system was by asking my father, ‘when his experimental treatments were going to be covered by the insurance company?’ So, in my dad’s case, because he had great insurance…he was able to stay around longer. He didn’t pass away until I was 17,” she said. “I remember asking my dad, ‘what happens if they say no to the coverage? What would happen next?’ And my dad explain[ed], ‘oh, we have to figure something else out.’ And that’s what if somebody can figure something else out? The truth is, for so many families, that is a life or death outcome. And we’ve got to have an urgency behind dealing with issues of healthcare access and also economic opportunity.”

When it comes to economic power, Edwards is fighting so that no one gets left behind in the technical revolution. “In light of the fact that the nature of the economy is evolving, automation is happening, all of the things that are happening, we’ve got to still create a space for people to exist in these economies, both today and tomorrow. And then we have to meet them where they are, not expecting everyone to become a computer coder because they’re not.”

The Texas native says empowering black businesses and stimulating economic growth in communities of color would also be part of her agenda.  “Minority-owned businesses are three times less likely to gain access to traditional forms of capital for their businesses than are their non-minority counterparts. I seek to place monetary incentives in place that facilitate the increased bank and CDFI lending to women and minority-owned businesses so that they may see an increase in accessing economic opportunity.  I will also support more resources for them via the [Small Business Administration].”

The Harvard law school graduate says she’s proud to have earned support from a Houston hometown favorite Tina Knowles-Lawson, the mother of Beyonce Knowles-Carter. “I was so grateful for Tina Knowles-Lawson and her support. She got behind me. She really connected with my story. And she believes and she has seen it. I mean, we’ve seen it through the legacy her children in that anything is possible,” she wrote on Instagram.

Nonetheless, even with the support of Beyonce, herself, O’Rourke still fell short in the midterm elections. In fact, Democrats haven’t won a statewide office since 1994. Edwards, however, is unabashed about her uphill battle to make history. “This race will be the embodiment of David and Goliath,” she said. Luckily, everyone loves an underdog.



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GM African American employee Network celebrates 14 years with Black History Month Awards

In celebration of Black History month, General Motors’ African American network (GMAAN) hosted its 14th annual awards dinner in downtown Detroit honoring men and women who are making a difference in the lives of Detroiters and African Americans across the nation.

The theme of this year’s event was “Driven By Culture, Defined By Innovation,” which recognized African Americans’ love of culture and innovation, highlighted the historical achievements of African Americans in science, technology, and design, while also shining a spotlight on current innovators.

Read More: Penn students protest barring of dining hall from commemorating Black History Month

The keynote speaker and recipient of the Trailblazer award was American inventor, Lonnie Johnson, Founder & CEO Johnson Research and Development. Johnson holds more than 120 patents and is known as the inventor of the Super Soaker water gun, which has been among the world’s bestselling toys every year since its release.

In his speech, Johnson recalls being very innovative and curious as a child, some of this curiosity coming at the expense of his family’s possessions. “I almost burned down his own house while making rocket fuel because I wanted to build a rocket. I was obsessed with it,” says Johnson. “At the time, I was the only black student in the school science fair at a time when African Americans did not have much presence in science. I created a robot and named “Linex”, which was a compressed-air powered robot and took home first prize. It was the beginning of my career in being an inventor.” Johnson then went on to attend college at Tuskegee University on a math scholarship. When he finished, he earned a B.S. in mechanical engineering and a master’s degree in nuclear engineering at Tuskegee University. 

Read More: Joe Biden kicks off new HBCU voter initiative

In speaking of Historically Black Colleges and Universities, GM’s Chevrolet team sponsors the Unexpected Journalism Fellowship which is headed into its fifth year. The fellowship awards six students attending HBCU’s a $10,000 scholarship, a $5,000 stipend and an opportunity to intern at African American-owned community newspapers. HBCU students have received nearly a half-million dollars in scholarships and stipends since the program’s inception in 2016. 

The post GM African American employee Network celebrates 14 years with Black History Month Awards appeared first on TheGrio.



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Fifa keen to investigate financial transactions carried out by Caf

Fifa is keen to investigate a host of financial transactions carried out by the Confederation of African Football following an audit into the continent's ruling body.

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Oprah gets emotional revealing that Gayle King is receiving death threats

Oprah Winfrey is speaking out in support of her long time friend Gayle King after the veteran journalist came under fire for bringing up Kobe Bryant’s rape case during an interview with WNBA star Lisa Leslie.

Sports fans and celebrities alike have been coming for King hard for what they believe to be attempting to smear Bryant’s legacy just one week after he died in a helicopter crash in Los Angeles, along with his daughter Gianna and seven others.

Read More: Report confirms Kobe Bryant’s helicopter engine did not fail

The late NBA icon was accused of sexually assaulting a hotel employee in Colorado in 2003. Bryant was charged with rape, but the case was dropped after the accuser declined to testify. She later filed a civil suit that was settled.

In an Instagram response video that went viral, Snoop Dogg issued a threat to King, saying “How dare you try to tarnish my motherf–king homeboy’s reputation, punk motherf–ker?” he ranted. “Respect the family and back off, bitch, before we come get you.”

And on that note, King is said to be depressed over the ongoing backlash to her interview with Leslie for CBS This Morning, so Winfrey hit up the Today show Friday and became visibly emotional while speaking with Hoda Kotb and Jenna Bush Hager about the controversy, Entertainment Tonight reports.

Winfrey said King is “not doing well” after she came under attack, and she’s even receiving death threats.

“May I say, she is not doing well. She is not doing well because she has, now, death threats and has to now travel with security and she’s feeling very much attacked,” Winfrey said.

Read More – Gayle King addresses the backlash she’s received from her interview with Lisa Leslie regarding the legacy of Kobe Bryant

She added, “She is not doing well and feels that she was put in a really terrible position because that interview had already run. And in the context of the interview, everyone seemed fine, including Lisa Leslie, and it was only because somebody at the network put up that clip. And I can see how people would obviously be very upset if you thought that Gayle was just trying to press to get an answer from Lisa Leslie. She obviously, all things pass, she will be OK, but she hasn’t slept in two days.”

Multiple people have accused both King and Winfrey of using their platforms to tear down Black men accused of sex crimes while ignoring similar crimes leveled against influential white males, such as Harvey Weinstein, Les Moonves, and Larry King. Even incarcerated star Bill Cosby tweeted Snoop Dogg from prison to thank him for ripping into King over the interview.

“Bill Cosby is… tweeting from jail and she’s not doing well and feels she was put in a really terrible position because that interview had already run and in the context of the interview, everyone seemed fine,” said Winfrey on Today. “It was only because somebody, at the network, put up that clip. And I can see how people would obviously be very upset if you thought that Gayle was trying to press to get an answer from Lisa Leslie.”

King previously responded to the fury against her via a video clip published on her social, in which she blames CBS for uploading an ‘out of context’ clip of her interview with Leslie.

The post Oprah gets emotional revealing that Gayle King is receiving death threats appeared first on TheGrio.



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Susan Rice slams Snoop Dogg for threatening Gayle King

Barack Obama’s former national security advisor, Susan Rice has clapped back at Snoop Dogg for threatening Gayle King over interview questions she asked about Kobe Bryant during an interview for CBS This Morning.

King has been hit hard with a wave of criticism for asking about Bryant’s 2003 rape case in an interview with WNBA star Lisa Leslie.

Read More: What the response to Gayle King’s Lisa Leslie interview reveals about “dragging culture”

Sports fans and celebrities such as Snoop Dogg, Ari Lennox, and Boosie Badazz wasted no time dragging the veteran journalist in the mud for attempting to smear Bryant’s legacy.

In an Instagram response video that went viral, the West Coast rapper appears to issue a threat to King, saying:

“Gayle King,” he said, shaking his head. “Out of pocket for that s–t. Way out of pocket. What do you gain from that? I swear to God, we’re the worst. We’re the f–king worst. We expect more from you, Gayle. Don’t you hang out with Oprah [Winfrey]? Why ya’ll attacking us? We your people. You ain’t coming after f–king [producer] Harvey Weinstein, asking them dumbass questions. I get sick of ya’ll.”

“How dare you try to tarnish my motherf–king homeboy’s reputation, punk motherf–ker?” he continued. “Respect the family and back off, bitch, before we come get you.”

United Nations Ambassador Susan Rice added her voice to the chorus of critics against Snoop’s threat against a woman, UJ City News reports.

Read More: WATCH: Ambassador Susan Rice reflects on impeaching Trump, raising a Republican son, and her new memoir, ‘Tough Love’

“This is despicable. Gayle King is one of the most principled, fair and tough journalists alive,” Rice wrote on Twitter. “Snoop, back the **** off. You come for @GayleKing, you come against an army. You will lose, and it won’t be pretty.”

King responded via a video clip published on her social media, in which she blames CBS for uploading an ‘out of context’ clip of her interview.

“I’ve been up reading the comments about the interview I did with Lisa Leslie about Kobe Bryant, and I know that if I had only seen the clip that you saw, I’d be extremely angry with me too,” King said in an Instagram video in response to the criticism. “I am mortified. I am embarrassed and I am very angry.”

She added,  “Unbeknownst to me, my network put up a clip from a very wide-ranging interview totally taken out of context, and when you see it that way, it’s very jarring. It’s jarring to me. I didn’t even know anything about it. I started getting calls. … I didn’t know what people were talking about.”

CBS acknowledged that the clip shared online “did not reflect the nature and tone of the full interview.”

“Gayle conducted a thoughtful, wide-ranging interview with Lisa Leslie about the legacy of Kobe Bryant. An excerpt was posted that did not reflect the nature and tone of the full interview. We are addressing the internal process that led to this and changes have already been made,” the network said in a statement obtained by Page Six.

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Chance the Rapper’s SocialWorks charity celebrates fifth anniversary

Chance the Rapper’s youth-empowering charity SocialWorks is celebrating its fifth anniversary this month.

The Grammy-award winning rapper and humanitarian co-founded the non-profit organization in his hometown Chicago in August 2016, with his pals Justin Cunningham, and Essence Smith.

SocialWorks aims to support Chicago Public Schools by raising money for social issues that affect the city’s most at-risk youth. According to the non-profit’s website, the rapper aims to empower students through education, homelessness, mental health support, as well as offering safe spaces to highlight Chicago’s artistic community.

Read More: Chance the Rapper drops new song — and Chicago kids link something for the gamers to it

Chance (born Chancelor Bennett) previously said that he founded SocialWorks with the intention of “giving back to his community.” The organization has so far raised $8 million, including $2 million donated by the rapper himself, ABC 7 Chicago reports.

In related news, Chance and his brother Taylor Bennett have been tapped by the NBA to serve as ambassadors for the 69th All-Star Game in Chicago next week.

The NBA All-Star Weekend will descend upon the Windy City on Feb. 14-16, attracting a slew of ballers, celebrities, and fans who will come together for the league’s most exciting event of the year.

Read More: Second-time ‘SNL’ host Chance the Rapper brings awareness to Chicago teachers

The NBA announced the official roster for the All-Star Celebrity Game on Wednesday, and the group includes local talent, basketball stars, and recording artists.

Chance the Rapper and Common are captains in the Feb. 14 game at Wintrust Arena and they will also perform at halftime at the United Center.

Here are the rosters for the Celebrity Game, via Chicago Tribune:

Team Stephen A. (Away)

  • Captain: Chance the Rapper (rapper)
  • Quavo (rapper)
  • Taylor Bennett (rapper)
  • LaRoyce Hawkins (actor, “Chicago P.D.”)
  • Anthony “Spice” Adams (former Bears defensive tackle)
  • Marc Lasry (Bucks co-owner)
  • Ronnie 2K (2K Sports marketing director)
  • Katelyn Ohashi (gymnast)
  • Lil Rel Howery (actor, comedian)
  • A’ja Wilson (WNBA player)
  • Darius Miles (former NBA player)

Team Wilbon (Home)

  • Captain: Common (rapper)
  • Bad Bunny (recording artist)
  • Hannibal Buress (actor, comedian)
  • Kane Brown (recording artist)
  • Jon Batiste (musician, “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” bandleader)
  • Alex Moffat (actor and comedian, “Saturday Night Live”)
  • Jose Andres (Chef)
  • Famous Los (comedian, social media influencer)
  • Jidenna (recording artist)
  • Chelsea Gray (WNBA player)
  • Quentin Richardson (former NBA, DePaul, and Young player)

The post Chance the Rapper’s SocialWorks charity celebrates fifth anniversary appeared first on TheGrio.



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Report confirms Kobe Bryant’s helicopter engine did not fail

According to a preliminary report released Friday from the National Transportation Safety Board, wreckage from the helicopter that crashed on Jan. 26, killing NBA legend Kobe Bryant, his daughter Gianna and seven others including the pilot did not show any evidence of engine failure.

Federal investigators are still trying to unravel the cause of the crash, but have so far concluded that “the engines were working and rotors turning at the time of impact,” writes 6abc.com.

Read more – Date set for Kobe Bryant and Gigi’s public memorial service at Staples Center

The report notes that the damage was consistent with “powered rotation,” according to a preliminary report by the National Transportation Safety Board.

“The entire fuselage/cabin and both engines were subjected to a postcrash fire. The cockpit was highly fragmented. The instrument panel was destroyed and most instruments were displaced from their panel mounts. Flight controls were fragmented and fire damaged,” the report said.

According to NTSB officials, the chopper, which was flying using only visual readings, slammed into a hillside amid extremely foggy conditions after departing John Wayne Airport in Orange County at 9:06 a.m. Jan. 26, according to publicly available flight records.

Read More: Sports Illustrated releases today a special edition 100-page book honoring Kobe Bryant

The helicopter — a Sikorsky S-76 chopper built-in 1991, was not equipped with the recommended terrain alarm system that could have warned the pilot he was approaching a hillside. An eyewitness reportedly saw the helicopter for about 1 to 2 seconds before it hit the hill.

“He said he began to hear the sound of a helicopter, which he described as appropriate for a helicopter flying while in a powered condition. He perceived the sound getting louder and saw a blue and white helicopter emerge from the clouds,” the report said.

“He judged it to be moving fast, traveling on a forward and descending trajectory. It started to roll to the left such that he caught a glimpse of its belly. He observed it for seconds 1 to 2 seconds before it impacted terrain about 50 feet below his position.”

A final report with further details about the crash could take over a year to be released.

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Jay-Z Talks About his Last Conversation With Kobe Bryant before the NBA star’s death [Video]

Jay-Z Kobe

Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter opened up about his final conversation with Kobe Bryant just weeks before the NBA legend’s untimely death.

While speaking at Columbia University on Tuesday, Carter revealed that he and Bryant celebrated New Year’s at the hip-hop mogul’s home.

“Kobe was a guy that looked up to me and we’ve hung out multiple times,” he said. “He was last at my house on New Year’s, and he was just in the greatest space that I’ve seen him in. One of the last things he said to me was, ‘You’ve got to see Gianna play basketball.’ And that was one of the most hurtful things because he was so proud.”

Weeks later, the 41-year-old NBA superstar and his 13-year-old daughter, Gianna, were among those killed in a tragic helicopter crash in Los Angeles on Jan. 26.

In addition to addressing his last conversation with Bryant, Carter also addressed public speculation about why he and his wife, Beyoncé, remained seated while Demi Lovato sang the national anthem at the Super Bowl on Sunday. Rather than sitting in protest, the business tycoon revealed that they were marveling at Lovato’s performance.

We were in “artist mode” and focused on elements like, “Did [the] mic start? Was it too low?,” he explained. He added that Beyoncé was explaining to him how Lovato was likely feeling at that moment. “The whole time we’re sitting there and we’re talking about the performance. And then right after that, Demi comes out, and we’re talking about how beautiful she looked and how she sound[ed], and what she’s going through in her life for her to be on the stage, and we’re so proud of her.”

The rapper-turned-billionaire went on to point out the diverse array of talent that he helped assemble for the Super Bowl halftime show, which included Jennifer Lopez and Shakira. “We were making the biggest, loudest protest of all. Given the context, I didn’t have to make a silent protest,” he said. Carter became a co-producer of the halftime show after his company, Roc Nation, partnered with the NFL last year.

Carter’s comments came during the launch of his new lecture series at Columbia University. The Shawn “JAY-Z” Carter Lecture Series was formed under the IVY league school’s African American and African Diaspora Studies Department (AAADS) to honor the Brooklyn-born rapper, entrepreneur, and philanthropist.

“The Carter Lecture Series, the first named and endowed program in our Department, sits at the heart of our mission to create and sustain an intellectual community bridging scholarship, teaching, and public life,” said Farah Jasmine Griffin, chair of AAADS Department, in a statement. “The annual series will bring to our campus, our neighboring community and the City of New York the most innovative thinkers, activists and artists who are making outstanding contributions to our understanding of, and appreciation for, the thought, arts and social movements of the black diaspora.”

She added, “This unique lecture series, named for one of our most important and influential cultural figures, helps to establish the African American and African Diaspora Studies Department at Columbia as a major intellectual and cultural center.”

 

 



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Four rare mountain gorillas 'die in Uganda lightning strike'

The four killed by suspected electrocution include a pregnant female, a conservation group says.

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Pro-Trump Trolls Flooded the Iowa Caucus Phone Lines

Google photo sharing, Wacom tracking, and more of the week's top security news.

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India's Data Protection Bill Threatens Global Cybersecurity

Banning re-identification discourages researchers from finding weaknesses, and encourages criminals to exploit them.

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'The Witcher' Might Get Better in Season 2

The show's second season provides Netflix an opportunity to expand some characters' stories.

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Odion Ighalo: Coronavirus fears mean Man Utd striker will miss training camp

Manchester United's Odion Ighalo will miss the club's training camp in Spain because of fears the coronavirus outbreak could lead to him being refused entry back into the UK.

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Gayle King Did What Every Good Journalist Is Supposed To Do: Her Job

journalist Gayle King

Gayle King is a journalist. This is not a defense; just a statement of fact.

If you are a journalist, and you aren’t prepared for people to hate you, even violently so, because of the questions you dare to ask, you are in the wrong profession. You also must be prepared for the organization that employs you (in King’s case, CBS), to market the questions you ask and responses they elicit with the goal of drawing maximum attention to the content it is dedicated to monetizing via the generation of ratings (or readership or web traffic) and ad revenue. Journalists rarely have input, less rarely have control, and almost never have final say, over where, when and how this is done, and in what context.

This life is not for those who need to be liked or popular. The best of my profession know that we have to be willing to put it on the line—and know that we will often pay a price (in some cases, our lives, and more often, our livelihoods) for doing so. We know that we will be targets of criticism and blame especially when we are wrong, but also, even when we are not.

 

This is what we sign up for when we accept work as a journalist. This is the job. Here are a few things that are not:

Avoiding the question out of “respect”

If you are a serious journalist, you cannot avoid the painful questions and topics. King’s interview with Lisa Leslie was about Kobe Bryant’s life and legacy; a good journalist knows you can’t just leave out the parts we don’t like. The charges he faced and the settlement are facts of his life, and far from minor ones. King was practicing journalism, not hosting a memoriam, tribute or eulogy for Bryant.

It is not the job of a journalist to make people (including family, friends and fans) feel good or avoid hurting their feelings.We cannot do our jobs if we only ask polite questions, and report only uplifting and flattering stories, with a nice bow on top. It is not our job to make people (including ourselves) look good.

It is our job to tell stories as accurately and thoroughly as possible, including the painful, ugly, upsetting, controversial, disputed and sad parts. That means asking the questions that most people can’t or won’t ask, may not want to answer or even want to think about. Once a journalist can no longer do this, it’s time to get out of the game.

Waiting for the “right time” to ask the question

There is virtually no such thing as “too soon” for a journalist to ask a question. (An exception: Allowing the interview subject to get comfortable with easier, lighter questions before introducing the difficult ones.) There is such a thing as too late, though—delayed questions too often never get asked, and therefore never get answered. It is not the job of journalist to leave the hard questions for  somebody else to ask at the “right time.”

Accepting the initial response to the question and moving on

Good journalists are trained to press beyond the initial response to a question, especially with respect to difficult and complex topics. This is another reason not to wait too long to ask the difficult questions; you need to leave time for follow-up questions. A journalist who accepts the first answer to every question is either inexperienced, afraid or lazy.

Somebody’s got to do it

With rare exception, journalists are either taken for granted, or hated. Very few people appreciate or even recognize good journalism, but almost everyone feels qualified to call out and judge a piece of journalism as “bad,” including those with hardly a layperson’s understanding of the profession.

My intention here is not to defend King or her career. She’s a grown woman; she can take care of herself. As I said, the heat she is taking—including veiled and not-so-veiled threats—is an occupational hazard of our profession. My purpose here is bringing light to the realities—and the real risks (as the reaction to King’s reporting illustrates)—of choosing journalism as a profession.

It is far easier and safer to be a journalism critic than it is to be a journalist. This is exactly why most people will not do this work, and precious few will dedicate their lives to it. However, somebody must. I thank God for those who will.

Alfred Edmond Jr. is a senior vice president and executive editor at Black Enterprise, with nearly four decades of experience as an award-winning journalist and editor, including 13 years as editor-in-chief of Black Enterprise magazine. He’s also taught journalism as an adjunct professor at his alma mater, Rutgers University, and served for five years as an instructor for the New York Association of Black Journalists High School Journalism Workshop at Long Island University’s Brooklyn campus.



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