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Monday, April 20, 2020

Vanessa Bryant honors Kobe on 19th wedding anniversary

On Friday, Gianna Bryant and her three teammates were posthumously honored and named as WNBA draftees. The next day, her mother Vanessa Bryant honored her late husband Kobe with a loving Instagram tribute on their 19th wedding anniversary.

“My king, my heart, my best friend,” wrote Bryant, a 37-year-old mother of three. “Happy 19th wedding anniversary baby. I miss you so much. I wish you were here to hold me in your arms. I love you.”

READ MORE: WNBA unveils new advocacy award in the name of Kobe, Gianna Bryant

The Bryants met in 1999 on the set of a music video and married on April 18, 2001.

While this is the couple’s first wedding anniversary after All-Star Lakers’ tragic death in January from a helicopter crash, Vanessa received a gift of beautiful red roses from Kobe’s former teammate, Pau Gausol and his wife, Catherine McDonnell.

 

Vanessa also shared a video clip from a 2001 MTV interview of Kobe where he praised his wife and explained how he knew she was “the one.”

 

View this post on Instagram

 

My LOVE ❤️My HEART

A post shared by Vanessa Bryant 🦋 (@vanessabryant) on

 Vanessa, she’s very strong. She’s very strong-willed,” he added, noting that in the future he saw them as being “two cool a** parents.”

READ MORE: Vanessa Bryant, daughter Natalia react to Kobe’s Hall of Fame induction

The Bryants went on to have four daughters, Natalia (17), Bianka (3), Capri (9) months, and Gianna who died in the tragic helicopter crash alongside her father on January 26.

The post Vanessa Bryant honors Kobe on 19th wedding anniversary appeared first on TheGrio.



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Barack Obama given an ‘unusual’ title in Michael Jordan doc

The long-awaited documentary about the legendary Michael Jordan premiered yesterday on ESPN. The series, which focuses on the 1997-98 Chicago Bulls season, is expected to be 10 episodes of basketball greatness. 

READ MORE: Michael Jordan documentary premieres Sunday night on ESPN amid high anticipation

The series will debut on ESPN weekly, with a release to Netflix the day after airing. The Last Dance was originally scheduled to be released in June of 2020 after the NBA finals, but due to the coronavirus pandemic, Netflix pushed the date up releasing this statement: “As society navigates this time without live sports, viewers are still looking to the sports world to escape and enjoy a collective experience.”

And what a collective experience it is. The first two episodes aired last night and Twitter lit up with excitement. Many sports fans and influencers were interviewed for the special, including one of the Bulls’ biggest fans.

During his interview, Barack Obama, the 44th President of the United States, was listed as “former Chicago resident” in his title card.

Many wondered why our Forever POTUS would be listed as just a “former Chicago resident.”

One viewer was extremely offended and reprimanded the production saying, “Put some respect on my president!”


Director Jason Hehir explained the interesting chyron choice to The Athletic

“I was pretty adamant that we don’t have people in here who don’t have an organic connection to the story. I think the temptation is because Michael was super famous, let’s get as many super famous people in here as possible.”

Hehir explains that he didn’t want to include famous people just because they were famous. Instead, he included them for their direct connection to the story. So, Obama was not President when Jordan played his final season with the Bulls, but he was a Chicago resident and that was his connection to the story. 

READ MORE: Viral LeBron James and Michael Jordan photo has fans searching for video footage

Bill Clinton was also listed as “former Arkansas governor,” because during the time he was being interviewed about he wasn’t the 42nd President of the United States. He was the Governor of Arkansas when Scottie Pippen played at the University of Central Arkansas. 

While we get and respect the artistry of director Hehir, still that’s our President. We agree with the folk, put some respect on his name. 

 The Last Dance airs weekly on Sunday nights on ESPN and the next day on Netflix. 

The post Barack Obama given an ‘unusual’ title in Michael Jordan doc appeared first on TheGrio.



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Coronavirus & the New American Economy: Predictions From a Black Private Equity Investor

Solomon Ali economy

The face of the American economy is forever changed by this coronavirus pandemic. In three weeks’ time we’ve witnessed financially viable companies go into rapid free fall by the millions, starting with employees and trickling rapidly. Small to mid-sized businesses are laying off in record numbers, and there is no clear end in sight. With the spread of the coronavirus, people are being asked to choose between their livelihoods and their very lives. Businesses are pairing down to “skeleton crews,” keeping just enough workers on board to get by and doubling remaining employees’ duties. Never before have we realized just how interconnected we all are in our quest for survival.

Although so many are in the same boat, businesses that prided themselves on having a good credit standing will now find it more difficult to negotiate lines of credit or to have contracts and lines of credit re-instated once things begin to normalize, save for some debt forgiveness programs and financial incentives being granted through the federal government’s CARE Act.

The late Jack Welch, who held the position of chairman and CEO of General Electric, worked hard to eliminate bureaucracy and increase growth for General Electric. He was known for firing unproductive managers and eliminating whole divisions within his company, and then acquiring other companies and driving them to better management and increased profits—a true master of corporate structuring. Warren Buffett, as chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, has built his fortune not investing in companies, but investing in management teams.

Welch was once quoted as saying, “This whole game of business revolves around one thing. You build the best team, you win.”

This quote may sound overly simplistic during such uncertain times, but I can break down how it applies to all of us, the future of our financial health, and our economy. The America we once knew is forever changed. I believe hundreds of thousands of businesses will be lost throughout the United States. I further believe and estimate that certain industries will become obsolete, however, new ones will be created.

There are certain industries that thrive in tough times, perhaps due to some of the foils of human nature. Let’s first take note of these. Companies that will thrive during this pandemic will most likely be within real estate (investors and would-be investors love a buyer’s market), liquor and tobacco sales, firearms sales, streaming entertainment, sectors of law that deal in financial hardship (think bankruptcies and foreclosures), virtual meeting software, healthcare, and banking.

The last one may shock you. You might be wondering, “If people can’t make their payments, how can banks thrive?” As someone who has built a career on obtaining capital for businesses and bringing businesses public, overseeing mergers and acquisitions, and investing as a private equity investor in many companies, I can tell you that, much like casinos, “the house always wins.” Banks come out on top because they are brilliant at transmuting and consolidating, and when all else fails either calling in loans or bundling and selling them to Wall Street. In the coming six months to a year, you will see banks call the loans that appear to be weaker bets and extend new loans to much stronger companies. Therefore, companies with weaker margins will find it harder to survive in the climate that is to come, but companies with solid margins and strong infrastructure will grow in strength at the end of the coronavirus bell curve.

Conversely, industries like travel, hospitality, brick and mortar retail, brick and mortar consumer services, locally driven services that require face-to-face social interaction, and manufacturing will suffer the most during this time. Apart from necessities like food, medication, and certain sundries, consumers are now buying less goods and services as their financial insecurity and anxiety grow along with massive loss of income.

As of April 2, a record 6.6 million Americans filed for unemployment—an unprecedented figure. This a fertile ground for private equity investors, hedge funds, and venture capitalists to reap the benefits of undervalued assets. This can create a huge opportunity for private equity investors, venture capitalist firms, and hedge funds. They can boost the economy by investing their monies into struggling and failing businesses and gaining a substantial stake in new and emerging industries.

Many businesses that rely on self-financing or “self-funding” will begin to falter as personal financing dries up. In addition, many Americans will be scaling down the brands they have always used. Chain stores and large franchise stores will have a better chance of making it through this storm. We are going to be looking at a new world and a new economy in a way that our country has not experienced since the 1930s.

The good news is, we will witness the birth and growth of emerging industries, as this decade and century progress, much like the horse and buggy gave way to an automotive industry. Companies will be able to work more efficiently due to A.I. and robot technology. There will be a significant streamlining of support staff, while mathematic, scientific, and maintenance staff will be needed to service artificial intelligence and robotics-based devices.

China’s economy has also impacted our world in ways that the average American is not directly aware of. We owe China what seems like an insurmountable debt, a byproduct of the Great Recession of the late 2000s. During this time, China bought up a great deal of American debt. I do think, because of the coronavirus outbreak, our federal government stands to renegotiate its debt with China. Our leverage point is that the United States economy cannot collapse, because we are the largest economy in the world and every other economy is dependent upon it.

HOW WE BRACE FOR FINANCIAL IMPACT AND MINIMIZE THE FALLOUT

Communicate with Your Creditors and Debtors
Explain where your company is at, discuss options, and renegotiate terms if you can. Inquire about extensions on payment terms, and request waivers of late fees and penalties. The good news is that you are not alone. Tens of millions of people are currently in the same boat and your creditors know that. In many ways, this puts you in the driver’s seat to renegotiate payment terms and obtain some forgiveness on penalties that would normally be imposed. At the same time, communicate with your company’s debtors and diligently collect monies owed to you. Be prepared to negotiate with customers and accounts who owe you money.

Reach out to the current customers you do business with to gauge where they are at. Offer discounts and other payment incentives to get whatever liquid money you can up front. For example, if a customer owes an outstanding balance of $1,000, make them an offer to pay you $700 now to settle the account. This will give you much needed cash in hand. Regarding new sales, companies should be all about solving customers’ pain points right now.

Identify Pain Points and Solve Them
Identify your customer or client “pain points” during this time and strategize ways to solve them in a way that could potentially make you indispensable during a time when most products and services will be cut from the equation. Whether that is free delivery, discount packages, future incentive packages, extra services, or penalty-free rescheduling, the old playbook no longer applies. Become flexible in your approach. If you are able, extend more favorable payment terms to gain more market share within your industry.

Form Strategic Alliances
Companies should also look to industries that are thriving and communicate their desire to align and/or partner with other companies to leverage profitability, innovation, and market share. Seek out companies that offer complementary products or services and reach out to see how you can help one another. We are living through times where people are more emotionally receptive because no matter what industry you are currently in, we are all feeling vulnerable right now. Entering into a strategic partnership with another company could mean selling a part of your company or even acquiring part of another company. A partner may have the ability to loan you capital in exchange for equity in your company. It could mean extending a sweetheart deal on something that you usually don’t offer such favorable terms on. These ideas should be discussed with a mutual respect and understanding of your respective industries, needs, and goals and the current marketplace in which you are operating.

A few types of partnerships:

  • Joint Venture – If you decide to merge with another business in your industry to combine assets and resources, you are going to need to consolidate and cut costs. For example, Company A may have a stronger sales team, but Company B has a better administrative team. You would consolidate those resources, keeping Company A’s sales force and Company B’s administrative team. We cut costs down because we are working together and trimmed the fat. One of the most strategic partnerships that need to take place right now.
  • Equity Investment – A private equity investor comes in and either loans you capital or invests capital into your company. This means that you are loaned money in exchange for equity in your company. A private equity investor may extend you a line of credit to help you survive this climate. You don’t pay back an equity investment in traditional terms, but you will find your ownership stake shrinking, perhaps considerably. The good news is that the equity investment would likely outweigh the loss. One thing to consider during economic downturns is that private equity investors will look for terms that favor their investment. This is because the higher the risk for the investor, the more that investor is exposed financially, the more the terms will be slanted to cover that risk.
  • Acquisition – Getting acquired by a larger business that has the financial wherewithal to support your business and keep operations afloat during this period of time places a strong bandage on the current uncertain marketplace. This means you will not be in such dire need of immediate profits to stay alive or to plan the future trajectory of your business. You can also maintain your marketing and advertising efforts and continue to grow your market share without immediate profits, but with the future projection of profits.

Streamline Efforts with Technology and Outsourcing
Can I have my workforce work remotely? Can I outsource my marketing and advertising team? Can I streamline my administrative tasks with technology or keep my workforce intact but teach them how to be more efficient with the use of technology? These are some of the questions to ask yourself during this time. You may find out through an efficiency audit of your business that 20% of your workforce is doing 80% of the work. With that information, you can pivot your efforts and infrastructure accordingly. This is an opportunity to become more efficient and more profitable in the long run.

Keep Your Eye on Fall 2020
Companies can use the spring and summer months to position themselves for an autumn boom, if they take the right strategic steps.

The financial effects of coronavirus will be felt long after the pandemic is under control. We will feel ripples and aftershocks well into 2021 and perhaps throughout this decade. This means that business as usual is a losing proposition. Our economy will recover, albeit with a different spin than before. We will see a rise in consciousness about the way humans treat and consume animals, and we will begin to shift toward more of a cause and effect mentality. This means that industries that exploit animals for profit will begin to recede. Virtual networking and virtual meetings will become more and more commonplace, and the traditional sales meeting or boardroom meeting will happen less. We will also come back together and socialize in slightly different yet distinctive ways, with a return to more community-based activities. Local parks, places of worship, board games, and general fellowship with one another will be newly discovered and offer a newfound charm.

Employers will also become more accommodating of remote workers and flexible schedules, and will be more accommodating to sick leave and other dispensations that support employees’ health and well-being.

People will continue to seek out financing, but banks will be less inclined to offer loans for things like payroll, and more eager to finance investments in robotics, A.I., and other technology-related ventures. New industries will be born and created, and we will see a massive acceleration of A.I. and automation across most industries.


Solomon RC Ali scales profitable companies across healthcare, technology, and energy sectors through the acquisition of funding and management consulting. Mr. Ali and his team of consultants have collectively managed and successfully closed more than 140 mergers and acquisitions and arranged more than $250 million in structured investment capital and financing. 

In addition, Mr. Ali is CEO of NDR Energy Group, one of the largest minority-owned energy companies in the United States, and CEO of Revolutionary Concepts, which owns multiple technology patents, licensed by smart home companies including Ring (owned by Amazon) and SkyBell.

Mr. Ali is currently host of the podcast, MBA: Minority Business Access. Visit SolomonRCAli.info.



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Beauty Industry Workers Risk House Calls, Defy Social Distancing Guidelines To Survive Coronavirus Shutdown

beauty barbers

Many states have shut down non-essential businesses in an effort stop the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus, but many beauty industry workers said they can’t afford to comply. Some of them are risking their health to make it through this crisis.

Barbers, beauticians, nail techs and personal trainers detailed how they’ve had to adjust to the world’s new normal in an article published by The Washington Post.

From placing ads on Craigslist and making house calls to having to clients and themselves wear protective N95 face masks, these workers are doing what they can to stay afloat. Some are motivated by a desire to help their clients attain some level of sanity as America’s coronavirus cases continue to escalate.

“With nails, of course it’s not the end of the world if you don’t have it,” Raleigh nail tech Stephanie Mooij told the Post. Mooij started doing house calls after her salon was shut down. “But if they don’t look good and they’re not kept up, it’s kind of like mental health status, you know? You look down and it’s like, ‘Everything’s falling apart, and my nails are falling apart.’”

Barber Rene Guemps was a travel barber before the pandemic. But now he said he can see the fear his clients have when he shows up. He takes extra precautions to try and keep them both safe.

“Some of them, they panic and stay away,” Guemps told the Post. “It’s almost like, ‘Doesn’t this guy know he’s going to have to get close to me at some point?’ I had one guy a couple days ago … I’m standing at the door and he’s all the way across the living room, talking and telling me what to do.”

After reading the struggles of the beauty workers highlighted in the Post, Moguldom asked a beauty industry worker in Miami how they were surviving amid the pandemic.

Shalawn Brownlee is the owner and CEO of Manicure Bar in Miami’s Cutler Bay neighborhood. In contrast to some of her aforementioned counterparts, she decided to obey Miami-Dade’s stay-at-home order once her salon was ordered closed.

“I’m just trusting in God. That’s how I’m surviving through coronavirus,” Brownlee told Moguldom. “I’m not worrying about trying to go out there to get sick and die. Life over money. That’s what I believe in.

This article was written by written by Isheka N. Harrison for The Moguldom Nation.



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The US and China Want a Divorce, but Neither Can Afford One

For all the talk of moving production and supply chains out of China, governments and companies lack the trillions that would be needed as they battle the pandemic.

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12 Everyday Products Made of Recycled Materials (2020)

You want shoes, eh? How about shoes made from recycled plastic? These ordinary products are upcycled from a variety of eco-friendly, recycled materials.

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The Covid-19 Newsletter That's By Doctors for Doctors

A team of critical care specialists has a side project debunking questionable coronavirus theories for other medical professionals.

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Coronavirus Eliminates 10 Years Of Job Growth In One Month

job growth

It took 10 years for the U.S. to create 20 million jobs after the housing crisis and recession. It took just one month for the coronavirus pandemic to destroy that job growth.

According to MarketWatch, more than 5 million citizens have filed for unemployment benefits for a third week in a row, bringing the total jobless claims in the past month to 22 million. The run of layoffs has broken the job market, closely matching all the employment gains since the end of the great recession from December 2007 to June 2009.

“In four weeks, all of the job gains from the decade-long recovery following the Great Recession have been erased,” senior economist Daniel Zhao of Glassdoor told MarketWatch.

However, the job growth equation is not a direct correlation. For starters about 900,000 new jobless claims would have been filed in the past month even if there wasn’t a coronavirus crisis. Meaning fresh job losses tied to the pandemic are probably closer to 21 million.

The number may be higher still as many states have had issues processing unemployment claims and may have rejected people who were eligible for the federal bailout package. Therefore, states could be low-balling the number of claims.

“There is some evidence that people are falling through the cracks,” said Neil Dutta, head of economics at Renaissance Macro Research.

The Huffington Post reported that former Florida Gov. Rick Scott made filing for unemployment almost impossible intentionally to keep unemployment numbers down. As a result, Florida residents have had significant issues filing for benefits.

Even if the numbers are not an exact match, the number of unemployment claims will likely exceed the number of jobs created after the recession.

Also, new jobless claims are expected to rise by several million in each of the next few weeks and drive the total during the pandemic to 25 million or higher.

“While the claims numbers should decelerate, they could remain incredibly high for the next few weeks,” said Joel Naroff of Naroff Economic Advisers.

The jobless numbers also doesn’t include Americans who are still being paid by their employers but not working. Additionally, the government is subsidizing many companies such as large airlines and small businesses to keep employees on payrolls in exchange for federal loans and grants.

As for when 22 million Americans will be employed once again, economists at Oxford University believe the job market will not return to pre-coronavirus levels until 2022.



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Acer ConceptD 7 Review: Unbeatable Performance, But $3,000 Is Steep

Everything about Acer's super-juiced laptop is bananas—including the price.

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The National Emergency Library and Its Discontents

How did a plan to "aid those that are forced to learn at home” with e-books manage to lose the moral high ground?

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Today's Cartoon: Selfie Service

Remember dining out?

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Want to Ditch Zoom? Jitsi Offers an Open-Source Alternative

As we spend more time on videoconferences, concerns mount about trust. Emil Ivov says you shouldn't have to trust anyone.

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‘Covid Near You’ Crowdsources Data to Predict New Hot Spots 

The site relies on people to anonymously report their symptoms. That information could offer early warnings to where the disease is spreading.

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To Run My Best Marathon at Age 44, I Had to Outrun My Past

After 20 years of long-distance competition, I ran my fastest. All it took was tech, training, and a new understanding of my life.

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Fruit labourers: 'If you don't want to work like a slave, you're out'

The BBC investigates allegations of exploitation in Spain's fruit and vegetable growing region Almeria.

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Sunday, April 19, 2020

Taking a new look at ancient books

At one point in Ovid’s “Tristia,” a series of elegies about the poet’s exile from Rome at the hands of the Emperor Augustus, he deploys an unusual literary device: A book written by Ovid becomes the narrator, representing Ovid’s own hopes for a lasting return to Roman public life.

First the book goes to a “high and shining temple” — Augustus’ own library — but is ordered to leave. The book tries to enter another library and is barred as well. Then it visits a third, without luck.

However, the book reflects, “since a public resting-place is closed to me, may it be granted me to lie hidden in some private spot” — a private book collection, where Ovid’s work might live on. “You too, hands of the people, receive, if you may, our verses dismayed by the shame of their rejection.”

A strong grasp of Ovid’s imaginative flight in the “Tristia” requires both literary analysis and knowledge of the material culture of Roman writing. Indeed, it helps to have the background of MIT literature professor and classicist Stephanie Frampton. Over the last decade, Frampton has become a leading global expert on the interplay between physical forms of writing and the generation of literature and learning in ancient times.

Knowing the history of the Roman book, for starters, can help with understanding the “Tristia.” When Ovid was writing it, around 10 C.E., there were three “public” libraries in Rome — not open to everyone, but places where books could circulate. Those books, incidentally, were usually papyrus scrolls, whose physical existence was tenuous, depending on those scrolls being copied and recopied over time.

Even in less fraught circumstances, then, “authors in antiquity were incredibly sensitive to the fact that their survival was dependent on the maintenance of their works in physical form,” as Frampton writes in her 2019 book “Empire of Letters,” a close study of materiality and writing in the Roman world.

But as Frampton also shows, Ovid’s tale contains a twist, involving his hope, expressed in the poems, that his words might live on as inscriptions in stone. And not only has the “Tristia” survived in book form, but lines from the “Tristia” have been found as inscriptions from modern Bulgaria to the Gulf of Naples. An existing epitaph on a tomb in Rome also draws heavily on Ovid.

“It is in this material record — the visible, physical traces of the ancient world — that perhaps we can come closest to our exiled author, and certainly to his everyday readers,” Frampton writes.

Certainly Frampton’s interest in that material record also underscores the innovative, interdisciplinary nature of her scholarly method. Her work draws upon not only literary analysis and book and manuscript studies, but linguistics, philology, papyrology (the study of papyrus scrolls), and eipgraphy (the study of inscriptions).

Frampton is now working on her next book, with the working title, “Cicero’s Library: The Roman Book and the Making of the Classics.” In this project, which Frampton describes as “the history of classics as seen through book collections,” she explores the advent of the personal library in Rome, as both a status symbol and a collecting practice that helped shaped a new literary canon. (Cicero, who was the first to use the Latin word for “book collection,” is one focal point).   

“The question of the book is, what were the classics of the ancient world and how did they come to be?” Frampton says.

She is currently focused on the new book project during the 2019-20 academic year as the recipient of the Frances A. Yates Long-Term Fellowship at the Warburg Institute in London, a leading center for the study of cultural and intellectual history. For her scholarship and teaching, Frampton was awarded tenure at MIT in 2019.

Frampton’s scholarly interest in studying the classics has many sources, one of which loops back to MIT. Her father, John Frampton, was a mathematician at Northeastern University in Boston who made a midcareer move into linguistics, often working with MIT scholars in the field.

“He was a regular in the linguistics department at MIT through my entire childhood,” Frampton recounts, adding: “Dinner conversation was always: Can you say, ‘Mary the ball did kick?’ or do you have to say, ‘Mary did kick the ball?’ … That was the environment in which I grew up, and that was really important to me.”

That interest in languages prompted Frampton to take Latin while a secondary-school student — her first sustained exposure to ancient writing. At the same time, Frampton recounts, “I was always a reader and always loved literature.” At the University of Chicago, she majored in comparative literature and wrote a senior thesis examining magical realism in the works of Ovid and in Latin American fiction of the 1960s.

Frampton moved to Harvard University’s PhD program in comparative literature, where some of her courses heightened her interest in the material culture of writing.

She earned her PhD in 2011, after completing her dissertation, “Toward a Media History of Writing in Ancient Italy,” which consisted of four discrete studies situating writing in the physical world. Some of this material became integral to “Empire of Letters.” For instance, the poet Lucretius’ “On the Nature of Things,” from around 55 B.C.E., makes the case for atomism, the notion that the world and cosmos were made up from tiny pieces of matter, not four essential elements.

By analogy, Lucretius suggested to readers, atoms were like letters of the alphabet. In Latin the word “elementa” means both atoms and letters, and likely comes from the alphabet’s “L,M,N” sequence. Copying out letters and syllables, Lucretius proposed, helped students understand how both letters and elements could be combined into varying forms. In this and many other historical cases, the substance of ancient thought was virtually embedded in its physical forms.

Frampton joined the MIT faculty in 2012, and has since gained further recognition for her work, including the prestigious Rome Prize, for study at the American Academy in Rome during the 2013-14 academic year. She also received a Loeb Classical Library Foundation fellowship and the Margo Tytus fellowship from the University of Cincinnati in 2013. Additionally, Frampton helped found the Mellon Society of Fellows in Critical Bibliography, housed at the Rare Book School of the University of Virginia, where she has been a senior fellow.

Frampton has also thrown herself into her teaching at MIT, serving as co-chair of the Program in Ancient and Medieval Studies with historian Eric Goldberg. While an introductory Latin class was already offered before she arrived, Frampton introduced an ancient Greek course, and has started teaching advanced classes in both languages, as well as offering courses in classical literatures, translation, media history, and the introductory course to ancient and medieval studies.

“Students [at MIT] are extremely self-directed and motivated by the purest of intellectual interests, which is their own enrichment,” Frampton says.

Frampton has also received support from MIT’s Alumni Class Funds for a project, “Exploring the History and the Future of the Book at MIT,” that aims to develop new learning experiences and resources for students. Part of the program could add new materials and resources that complement MIT’s noted course 21H.343 (Making Books), in which students make books using Renaissance-era methods. Frampton hopes to extend such projects to ancient technologies, so that students might, as a final project, construct, for instance, papyrus scrolls.

It may have taken Ovid’s imagination to think of books as having inner lives, but 2,000 years later, in an MIT classroom, ancient book-making itself may come to life.



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Michelle Obama to host online children’s book reading series amid COVID-19 pandemic

The Obama administration may have ended in 2017, but Michelle Obama continues to serve her country at a high level to this day.

The former First Lady plans to provide much-needed education assistance amid the coronavirus pandemic with the launch of a new online children’s book reading series called “Mondays with Michelle Obama,” according to CNN.

The weekly reading series will begin streaming live on Monday, April 20th, and run four episodes. Obama partnered with children’s programmer PBS Kids and book publisher Penguin Random House on the virtual reading program, which will be carried on the two brands’ respective Facebook pages. PBS Kids will also carry the Monday readings on its YouTube channel.

The series will be a part of PBS Kids’ “Read-Along” and Penguin Random House’s “Read Together, Be Together” literacy initiatives.

READ MORE: Michelle Obama calls on Trump administration to make voting easier and more accessible

One motivating factor for the reading series is to help the countless number of parents and children who are locked inside due to school closures, business shutdowns and stay-at-home orders across the country to combat coronavirus. Obama, whose daughters with husband and former President Barack Obama are now in college, expects to give kids something to look forward to and a “much-needed break to the parents.”

“As a little kid, I loved to read aloud. And when I became a parent, I found such joy in sharing the magic of storytelling with my own children—and then later, as First Lady, with kids everywhere,” she said in a statement.

Obama also made an appearance during the “Global Citizen Together at Home” television music special on Saturday. Obama, along with fellow former first lady Laura Bush, addressed the audience with some inspiring words of hope and patience during this pandemic, according to CNN.

“The spirit and courage of the American people is most evident in times of crisis,” she said, “and during this period of physical separation, we’ve never been closer.”

READ MORE: Michelle Obama gets real about life after the White House

Here’s the schedule for “Mondays with Michelle Obama”:

  • April 20: “The Gruffalo” by Julia Donaldson, illustrated by Axel Scheffler
  • April 27: “There’s a Dragon in Your Book” by Tom Fletcher, illustrated by Greg Abbott
  • May 4: “Miss Maple’s Seeds” by Eliza Wheeler
  • May 11: “The Very Hungry Caterpillar” by Eric Carle

The post Michelle Obama to host online children’s book reading series amid COVID-19 pandemic appeared first on TheGrio.



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Teddy Riley and Babyface set an IG Live record. Then their music battle was postponed, again

One of the bright spots during the coronavirus quarantine has been the “Verzuz” music battles on Instagram Live.

When Teddy Riley announced he would go song for song with KennyBabyface” Edmonds, anticipation was high, but, sadly, fans will have to keep waiting.

This proved disappointing since the battle generated a record-breaking viewership on the social media app.

The legendary producers were scheduled to share the digital stage Saturday night and spin hits in their discographies. More than 400,000 viewers tuned in to the session, however, they heard more silence than melodies. The recording artists played just a handful of songs as the event was marred by technical difficulties on Riley’s end, CNN reported. There was too much audio feedback, causing echoes and muffled sounds from his feed.

READ MORE: Instagram live battles; Who should face off next?

Scheduled to start at 9 p.m. EST, the two went offline to rectify the situation, telling fans to tune back in at 10:30 p.m. Unfortunately, shortly after 10:30 p.m., Babyface posted a video stating that they chose to postpone the IG battle for another time. A new date is to be determined.

“I think that it’s only right that we postpone this thing and do it at a time when there aren’t any technical difficulties and everybody can hear the music the way it needs to be heard,” Babyface, an 11-time Grammy winner, said in an Instagram video.

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Thank you everyone for being there for us

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Before things shut down, Riley played Doug E. Fresh’s “The Show,” Guy’s “Groove Me,” and Hi-Five’s “I Like The Way (The Kissing).” Babyface played The Deele’s “Two Occasions,” and two Bobby Brown hits “Don’t Be Cruel,” and “Every Little Step.”

READ MORE: Babyface reveals he and family tested positive for COVID-19

This will be the second time this IG battle has been postponed after it was initially penciled in for April 5th. It was later revealed that Babyface had tested positive for coronavirus and was still recovering at the time.

Verzuz was created by music producers Timbaland and Swizz Beatz. Over the past month, they’ve curated eight live IG beat battles, including one that pit the two producers against one another, Ne-Yo against Johnta Austin, T-Pain vs. Lil Jon and RZA vs. DJ Premier.

The battle between Babyface and Riley, two fixtures in the R&B and new jack swing genres, is expected to be full of mega-hits from the 1980s and 1990s.

The post Teddy Riley and Babyface set an IG Live record. Then their music battle was postponed, again appeared first on TheGrio.



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Kansas City Is Seeing A Surge In African American Coronavirus Diagnoses

Kansas City under quarantine

Since the start of COVID-19, also known as the coronavirus outbreak, many cities have been struggling to provide healthcare to their most vulnerable communities. Over the past couple of weeks, many major cities such as Milwaukee and Chicago have seen a spike in cases among their African American population. In viral epicenters of New Orleans, black residents account for 70% of new cases. Now Kansas City is the latest city experiencing a surge in new coronavirus cases.

Officials in the health department of Kansas City, Missouri, are saying black residents now make up 50% of new cases despite only comprising 30% of the city’s population. In Johnson County, 13% of the people testing positive are black, while only about 5% of the population is black, according to local health officials. In Wyandotte County, the coronavirus has already ravaged predominantly black church congregations causing many to be hospitalized.

“African Americans are overrepresented in low-wage, front-line jobs,” Gwen Grant, CEO and president of the Urban League of Greater Kansas City told the Kansas City Star. “Our people are disproportionately struggling with chronic illnesses that place them at greater risk of contracting, and dying from, the coronavirus.”

A big reason for the spike in new cases is the lack of trust in the community toward the medical field along with conspiracy theories that had floated around the internet. “Some didn’t believe it was a serious threat,” said the Rev. Emanuel Cleaver III, senior pastor at St. James United Methodist Church, one of the area’s largest predominantly black churches.

Kansas City’s mayor Quinton Lucas believes what is happening is a culmination of things that all contributed to the disparities. “What we are seeing is a representation of every inequality that we have in our community,” Lucas said. “In this situation I fear that as time goes on this crisis seems to have impacted a number of communities including communities of color and we wouldn’t have the health infrastructure to support them.”



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Why You Should Buy a Cheap Gaming Mouse

Using a mouse or a trackpad for a long period of time is going to give you carpal tunnel or mouse shoulder. Why not invest in gamer-approved peripherals?

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