Quantcast
Channel: Black Entertainment, Money, Style and Beauty Blogs - Black Voices
Viewing all 4256 articles
Browse latest View live

Langston Hughes Film Festival Returns for Eighth Year

$
0
0

The Eighth Annual Langston Hughes Film Festival in Seattle kicks off on Saturday, April 30 at the Quincy Jones Theater with the premiere of 'Kinyarwanda,' a film based on true events from the Rwandan genocide and directed by Alrick Brown.

The festival's history dates back to 2004, but has already seen rapid growth. Originally a weekend series, this year's festival ends on May 8, and features over 9 days of films and activities. Nights are themed and tailored to particular interest, including a Ladies Night (May 7), which will feature the Seattle premiere of 'Nice & Rough' by filmmaker Sheila Hardy. The film documents the untold story of black women in rock and their contributions to the genre, and includes footage of Nona Hendryx, Joyce Kennedy, Betty Davis and others.

A non-film highlight will likely be the Black Filmmaker Brunch & Panel Discussion, happening on the morning of May 7. The discussion will bring together Brown - whose 'Kinyarwanda' received rave reviews at Sundance - with film festival organizer Alyce Emory, and filmmaker Aya DuVernay, whose quiet, independent drama, 'I Will Follow' has been making a splash in theaters across the United States. The panelists plan tol discuss, "the business of 'show' business," according to the festival's press release.

Check out trailers from some of the films being featured at the Langston Hughes Film Festival, including what is sure to be another festival highlight, 'Everyday Sunshine: The Story of Fishbone,' a documentary about the legendary punk rock/funk band Fishbone.

"Kinyarwanda" Trailer

"Nice And Rough" Trailer

"Everyday Sunshine: The Story of Fishbone Trailer"

"Everyday Sunshine: The Story of Fishbone" - documentary trailer from Tilapia Film on Vimeo.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments


Olivier Rousteing Has That Je Ne Sais Racial Quoi

$
0
0

Filed under:


Olivier Rousteing's appointment as the new designer at Balmain came as a bit of a letdown to fashion insiders. No one doubts that Rousteing, 25 years old, is qualified for the job, but he doesn't come with a big reputation and a glossy image.

In recent years, it's almost been a requirement that any designer tapped to run a major fashion house bring star power along with the resume. But perhaps those days are coming to a close. Rousteing, a veritable unknown, had been quietly laboring behind the scenes at Balmain since 2009 under its recently departed designer, Christophe Decarnin, who re-energized the house with his signature rock 'n' roll style. Before that, Rousteing spent five years working his way up to head of design for women's and men's collections for Roberto Cavalli-the Italian designer who makes Bacchus look restrained.

In reality, though, Rousteing brings something far more interesting than millions of Google hits: diversity.

Read more at The Daily Beast

Photo Courtesy of Balmian

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Wearing A High Bun

$
0
0

Filed under: , ,


In hot weather, all you really want to do is keep your hair off your neck. The best way to do that it is to put it up, of course, but you certainly don't have to wear a boring ponytail every time the weather heats up. From day to night, a high bun will give you a put together look in under five minutes.






All you need is a stiff brush, smoothing creme and a ponytail holder. You can always add a clip-on bun or hair piece to add thickness, and hair pins to secure flyways. These celebrities put their unique spins on the simple, yet elegant hairstyle.

Christina Milian



Nicole Richie



Ashanti


Lala Vasquez

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell Puts 'Birther Queen' in Her Place

$
0
0

Filed under: , , ,

 Chris O'Donnell and Orly Taitz

On Wednesday, MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell (pictured left) had Birther Movement member Orly Taitz (pictured) on his "The Last Word" show to admit that she was wrong about President Barack Obama's birth of origin and apologize for leading a dubious-yet-damaging campaign against the President with her false information.

O'Donnell: "There is now, no longer, not an inch of room for any sane doubt about the time and the place of Barack Obama's birth or his parentage or the fact that he is a natural born citizen of the United States of America.

"Are you ready to apologize for the crusade that you have mounted against these simple truths?"

But instead, Taitz, looking fresh off her Looney Tunes gig, presented yet another document, claiming that the President was a "liar" who was also telling falsehoods about his ... wait for it ... selective service certificate.

You can't make this stuff up!!!

O'Donnell, shaking his head in disbelief, loses it:

"I want you to talk about the birth certificate! The selective service has nothing to do with proving his citizenship. Yes or no! I want you to talk about the birth certificate that you saw for the first time in your life. Do you accept the veracity of the birth certificate that you saw for the first time in your life?"

With several bumbling stops and starts, Taitz finally asks whether O'Donnell will allow her to speak, but when O'Donnell replies, "No," she continues asking for close-ups of her shameful papers until O'Donnell kicks her off the show, saying:

"I invited a crazy person on the show to see if a crazy person faced with the thing that the crazy person was trying to get for two and a half years could say something responsive, something human, to the document that was released today, that she's never seen before in her life and she wants to play with all of her of other kids' toys and all of her other crazy documents. I did not expect this to go this way."

O'Donnell's interview is one of the best videos I've seen in a long time, but it's not just because he goes in on the crazy Birther lady. It's also because his interview reveals one key point: This entire Birther issue has never been about where President Obama was born. Instead, it has always been about racist delusional people trying to find something, anything, to discredit Obama as commander-in-chief.

Clearly, Taitz is so desperate to defame the President with her pulled-from-the-ass paperwork that she has thrown all remnants of sanity to the wind.

I'm just glad O'Donnell called her and the movement out and said everything that we've been hoping, wishing and praying to say since this bogus "movement" was started.

I'm team O'Donnell from this point on.

Watch the crazy Birther lady here:

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Building Communities & Embracing New Models

$
0
0

I have never been big on career strategizing. I tend to follow where my passion leads me and trust my gut instincts. After several years and endless meetings on a larger period film ($1.5m - larger in my world), I started to crave the idea of doing something contemporary on a really small scale with the minimal resources that I had immediate access to.

This idea was also sparked by my experience at the Binger Film Lab's Director's Coaching Program in Amsterdam, where I managed to shoot a 10 minute short film in 8 hours with a three-person crew and two actors. This short, 'Billy and Aaron,' part of the larger period film 'Day Dream,' premiered at Tribeca last year and has played 25 film festivals since then. It was a startling reminder of how little was actually needed to make a good film that you could be proud of.

Coming from a documentary background, where I was used to working as a one-man band, it felt very natural to be working this way and would be an asset to certain types of stories. With the experience of shooting the short fresh in my mind, I had been back in NYC for a couple of weeks in the summer of 2009 and was invited to a production of a play called 'The Happy Sad' by my friend Ken Urban. I had seen an earlier reading of the play at Playwrights Horizons and found it genuinely funny and profoundly moving, while also dealing with topics like open relationships, internet hook-ups and fear of commitment that I saw playing out around me in so many of my friend's lives (and my own).

These issues seemed so prevalent within my circle of friends, but were so rarely dealt with in films in any kind of realistic or meaningful way. I immediately saw its potential as a film and when I mentioned that to Ken, he told me he had already begun adapting it into a screenplay. After reviewing each draft and giving my feedback, the third draft really struck home and I knew I had to direct it. It would still need focusing and more revisions to fully transform from the stageplay into a film, but the essence of it was there.

With the finished screenplay in hand, it became time to think about how we would raise the necessary production funds to get the cameras rolling this summer. After a great info session hosted by Yancey Strickland at the Kickstarter headquarters, the idea of crowdfunding started to feel like a viable option. As I walked to the subway with a filmmaker friend, we discussed how difficult it can be to ask for the resources that you need to make work, and that for artists at a certain stage in our careers (beyond emerging, but not yet mid-career), we both had the feeling that we should be pretending that there was enough support from grants, foundations and traditional industry resources to make our films. We needed to get over the shame about the fact that these resources were not forthcoming and start pursuing different models.

I think for filmmakers of color who are not interested in doing genre material, but more focused on pushing aesthetic boundaries while still also being emotionally engaging, the deck is stacked even more against us. Instead of going to the same doors over and over again only to find them closed for the umpteenth time, I decided to utilize Kickstarter to reach the communities that tend to embrace my finished work and actually see it as a reflection of a personal experience that they rarely get to see on screen. In short, I was going where the love was.


A great source of inspiration over the past few months has been the distribution efforts launched by Ava Duverney with her first narrative feature, 'I Will Follow.' Here was a self-financed, microbudget feature with impeccable writing, acting and directing from an African-American filmmaker who decided to stop waiting for someone to give her permission to make a film.

The African-American Film Festival Releasing Movement or AFFRM is the distribution model Ava created with much success by pooling the resources and organizing power of the largest African-American film festivals in the country. It was great to witness the large turnout on her opening weekend to support an independent filmmaker's vision, all fueled by grassroots, inexpensive marketing techniques. It's a new successful, community-based model that works. It got me thinking about how so many of the sources and inspiration for the stories that I tell come from relationships and experiences that I see around me on a daily basis. How could those communities be brought into the filmmaking process to tell alternative and original stories?

With my microbudget feature 'The Happy Sad' centering on alternative, risk-embracing twenty- and thirty-somethings looking to expand "proper" notions of romantic relationships, it seemed like a no-brainer to incorporate these students into a collaborative filmmaking process since they showed similar traits and qualities in their own lives and artistic practice. It seemed like a natural extension of the dialogue that had begun in the classroom with students able to receive course credit for hands-on experience in feature filmmaking. It's a model that merges my roles as an educator and indie filmmaker while also providing students with their first foothold in the industry, working side by side with experienced professionals. It seems like the right production model for this film and exemplifies a lot of the ways that I have been rethinking the means and methods of filmmaking.

I used to pour all of my passion and energy into one project that I would focus on for many years until it got done. As I evolve, I have learned the value of not placing all of your eggs in one basket but having two or three different projects of different size and scope so that I can continue to make work under different circumstances. I think directing skills, like most other skills, atrophy when not put to use, so this is a way to stay nimble and keep exercising those muscles while providing opportunities for emerging film professionals as well.

It is now day 16 of our 30-day Kickstarter campaign and we are 30% of the way there. It's taken 3-4 hours of email outreach per day, plus the help of friends and supporters in spreading the word virally. My laptop and I are closer than ever before and we still have 14 more days to go! I see this effort as larger than myself, though, and it points the way towards more community-based models for filmmakers to use in order to get work produced and distributed.

I recently mentioned this new project to a filmmaker friend. His email response (posted below) made me feel less alone in my quest for new models in the face of an industry that has collapsed, but also never functioned as a support mechanism for our work in the first place:

"I think we came to similar moments, as I'm planning to shoot a lower budget film this summer also, and I just had to put the long simmering project on the side for the meantime. We are too old to wait around forever, and I think we have to be creative daily as filmmakers to figure out how to keep making films."

So here's to an adventurous summer of collaborative filmmaking. Nothing ventured, nothing gained.


To support the Kickstarter campaign for 'The Happy Sad,' click here.

The photo stills above are from the short 'Billy and Aaron,' copyright Rodney Evans.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Congo's Conflict Minerals: The Next Blood Diamonds

$
0
0

Actor Ryan Gosling recently traveled to Congo with friend John Prendergast, Co-founder of the Enough Project. There is a deadly, horrific war going on there. Gosling made this film, 'Raise Hope for Congo,' to bring attention to "a war which most people know nothing about, despite the fact that we're all directly connected to it."

Ryan Gosling: "Raise Hope for Congo" from Enough Project on Vimeo.

Read Ryan Gosling and John Prendergast's blog at The Huffington Post.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Q&A With Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter: Pension Crisis 'Should Stop Now'

$
0
0

Filed under:



By William Alden for The Huffington Post:
CHICAGO -- Just months after Michael Nutter became mayor of Philadelphia in January 2008, the national economy plunged into the worst downturn since the Great Depression and the city's budget buckled.

Since then, Nutter, a Democrat, has closed pools during the summer, taken some fire equipment out of service and stopped hiring police officers. These cuts and others, though unpopular, have helped stabilize the city's finances, the mayor said, so that Philadelphia is now "moving in the right direction." But there's one thing that's still on Nutter's agenda: trim the city's pension and health care liabilities.

Philadelphia's pension fund assets cover only 47 percent of what the city government has promised in pension payments, Nutter said. If the city does not address this unfunded liability, its plan will run out of money by 2015, concluded a study released last fall by finance professors Robert Novy-Marx and Joshua Rauh. Of 50 major municipal pension systems, Philadelphia's has the shortest life expectancy, the study said.

Like many public pension funds, Philadelphia's has traditionally featured a defined benefit plan, which means taxpayers owe workers a pre-determined amount of benefits, regardless of market conditions. In contrast, 401(k)-style defined contribution plans, common in the private sector, place more risk on workers and don't necessarily promise a set benefit.

Nutter talked with The Huffington Post on Thursday during a two-day summit in Chicago co-sponsored by the U.S. Conference of Mayors. During the discussion, he spoke about his efforts to incorporate elements of a defined contribution plan into Philadelphia's system. It's a reform that he says would help correct years of political procrastination.

If things are stabilizing, why push for a 401(k)-style pension plan now?

Because defined benefit plans are not sustainable. Because our pension plan is only 47 percent funded. It will take a long time to get it to a more appropriate funding level, which is 70, 80-plus percent funded. Public entities are about the last place where you can find a defined benefit plan. You can't sustain it anymore. We have more retirees now than we have current workers.

Read more at The Huffington Post.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Gallery: The Week's Best Celebrity Style

$
0
0

Filed under: ,

Rihanna; Kerry Washington, Iman

This week, Rihanna was honored for helping raise awareness for leukemia, Iman was pretty in pink, Kerry Washington and Lala Vasquez stunned at Time 100's gala, Pharrell Williams and John Legend suited up, Beyonce sported a vintage look in Paris and Zoe Kravitz had yet another winning boho chic look. See all the stars below.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments


Condoleeza Rice is Alec Baldwin's Ex

$
0
0

Filed under:


Former Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice is no comedian, nor is she an actress, but last night on a brand new episode of '30 Rock', the accomplished classical pianist moonlighted as both.

Alec Baldwin's character Jack Donaghy must pull some strings in order to free his wife Avery Jessup, who has been taken hostage while on assignment in North Korea by the country's leader Kim Jong II (impersonated). When Jack exhausts all his resources to help his wife, he must turn to the aid of his ex-girlfriend, Condoleeza Rice, who he broke up with via text in a message that read: "Me + You = :(".

When Jack finally meets with Condoleeza (or as she refers to herself, Dr. Rice), she makes Jack apologize to her for the way he broke up with her, as well as for going "drinking with Karl Rove on Valentine's Day," and challenges Jack to a battle of skills on their respective instruments: Condoleeza on piano, Jack on flute. The cameo is brief, and somewhat forced, but Condoleeza makes the most of her time with a couple of choice lines ("Oh we are doing this!").

Check out Condoleeza Rice and Alec Baldwin's Jack Donaghy going toe-to-toe:

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Why We Need a Ban on Menthol Cigarettes

$
0
0
By Joseph A. Califano Jr. and Louis W. Sullivan for The Washington Post: No action the Food and Drug Administration and the Obama administration could take would do more to save lives, reduce health-care costs and curb the tobacco industry's exploitation of children and minority teens than to ban menthol flavoring in cigarettes.

Consider these findings from a March report by an FDA panel:

l Eighty percent of adolescent African American smokers use menthol cigarettes.

l Most adolescent Hispanic American smokers use menthol cigarettes.

l Most Asian American middle-school smokers use menthol cigarettes.

l Almost half of 12- to 17-year-old smokers use menthol cigarettes (and, as other research has found, more than 90 percent of adult smokers are hooked as teens).

The Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, enacted in 2009, bans flavoring a cigarette with any herb or spice, or strawberry, grape, orange, clove, cinnamon, pineapple, vanilla, coconut, licorice, cocoa, chocolate, cherry or coffee flavor - except for menthol. Why was menthol flavoring not prohibited as we and many public health professionals urged when Congress considered the bill?

Here's what senior members of Congress told us: If the bill bans menthol flavoring, Philip Morris will withdraw its support and the legislation will not pass. After all, Philip Morris and the other tobacco companies have spent about $20 million a year lobbying for the past 12 years. The tobacco companies also sprinkle campaign contributions to legislators across party lines; last year alone, it gave $1.5 million to Republican members and $800,000 to Democratic members.

Read more at The Washington Post.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

How to Wear Cuffed Jeans

$
0
0

Filed under: ,

For the past few seasons, cuffed jeans have been all that. And we've come to learn that cuffing isn't just about your new pair of jeans being too long or preparing for rain in the forecast. You can roll up any old long pair or buy a pair of precuffed - straight, skinny or bootcut, the cuff adds a pop to your ankles and shows off your shoes.

Dressed Down
halle berry candid

Cuffed jeans are easy to wear with sneaker or flats. Halle Berry's boyfriend jeans work well cuffed since they're loose fitting and look casual and cool.

Dressed Up
zoe saldana

Try pairing cuffed jeans with heels for a dressier look. Boyfriend or skinny jeans work equally well, but give two different looks. A skinnier silhouette will better show off your figure, but looser fitting pants with heels, like Zoe Saldana wears here, create a nice contrast.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Obama Tours Alabama Storm Damage: "I've Never Seen Devastation Like This"

$
0
0

Filed under:


ABC News' Sunlen Miller reports: "I've never seen devastation like this. It is heart-breaking," President Obama said today standing amid the rubble left by the tornadoes' path in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

"What you're seeing here is the consequence of just a few minutes of this extraordinarily powerful storm sweeping through this community," the president said with the First Lady and state and local leaders by his side. "In addition to keeping all the families who've been affected in our thoughts and prayers, obviously the priority now is to help this community recover."

The president spent almost two hours on the ground surveying the damage and speaking with residents.

His motorcade rode through a hard-hit commercial area, with stores demolished along the main Boulevard, only remnants of signs left. The president got out and walked though the Alberta neighborhood, another hard hit residential community with leveled houses and residents digging for possessions amid the rubble.

The president spoke to local officials in the "Mobile Command Center" truck in parking lot where he shook hands with police and other workers. He also visited Holt Elementary School located just outside the city limits in Holt, Alabama. The school sustained severe damage from the storm, but sections are being used as a relief center for supply distribution and a first aid center.

So far 211 tornadoes have been reported from Mississippi to New York, the worst tornado outbreak since 1974 when a super tornado outbreak killed more than 300 people. The Southeastern United States, were some of the hardest hit. "It's a blessing you're here," Obama said to one resident whose home had been lost, but he had not been injured.

The president thanked the team helping with recovery, from the Mayor to FEMA director Craig Fugate, both of whom toured with the president today.

"I want to just make a commitment to the communities here that we are going to do everything we can to help these communities rebuild," Obama said, "property damage, which is obviously extensive, that's something that we can do something about."

Read more at ABC News.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

What to Do This Weekend: Wole Soyinka

$
0
0

On its final night, the Seventh Annual PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature is appropriately ending with a flourish. Nobel Prize winner Wole Soyinka will be delivering the Sixth Annual Arthur Miller Freedom To Write lecture.

Soyinka is one of the most decorated and respected writers in the world. Born in Nigeria in 1934, Soyinka became the first African to receive the Nobel Prize in literature. When given to Soyinka, the Nobel Prize committee said of the author, playwright and poet, "He possesses a prolific store of words and expressions which he exploits to the full in witty dialogue, in satire and grotesquery, in quiet poetry and essays of sparkling vitality." Upon acceptance of the prize, Soyinka gave a controversial Nobel Prize lecture, entitled "The Past Must Address Its Present" and dedicated to Nelson Mandela in the midst of South Africa Apartheid.

This year's festival will appropriately celebrate the "power of the writer's voice to revitalize public debate on world issues." Soyinka most recently has been one of the more outspoken critics against Nigeria's ongoing religious battle between Muslims and Christians. The PEN World Voices Festival is chaired by Salman Rushdie, and is an annual event that takes place in various venues across New York City. Over 100 writers from 40 nations began convening together on April 26, performing and sharing their work for audiences. Soyinka is delivering his lecture at the New York Public Library on Sunday, May 1 at 6 p.m.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Crown of Glory: Regal Hairstyles

$
0
0

Filed under: ,

angela bassett


Today British royalty Prince William and Katherine Middleton are officially wed. But you don't have to be royalty to look like a queen. Take Angela Bassett for instance, whose side swept hairstyle enhances her beauty and adds to her already quite regal presence. Try out these different updos to transform a simple hairstyle into a look that's fit for a queen.



Chignon
The bun is a classic choice to draw attention to your face and makeup. Thandie Newton's smooth, pulled back look made her beauty and attire the highlights of her ensemble.

thandie newton



Braided Bun
Before Rihanna was a redhead, she was a beautiful brunette. Here she wore this particular updo made with a number of fishtail braids pinned to the base of her head, adding a nice twist on a simple bun.
rihanna




Curled Bun
Keshia Knight Pulliam's hairstyle is beautiful because the curls are defined. The combination of her framing braid and bangs come together to create a funky elegance.
Keshia Knight Pulliam


High Ponytail
Beyonce's golden high ponytail is neatly tucked and pinned under to create an illuminating fullness, with strands of hair are wrapped around the base to mimic a ponytail holder.
beyonce

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Zoe's Very Good Year

$
0
0

Zoe Kravitz has been in the limelight since she was born, but in 2011, it may finally be her own. The daughter of famous parents - actress Lisa Bonet, singer/actor Lenny Kravitz - Zoe is finally making a pitch for her own type of recognition this year.

Things kicked off with a re-occurring guest role in the Showtime series, 'Californication,' in which she played, Pearl, a tough rocker-girl who entices Becca (one of the show's lead characters) to play in the fictional band, Queens of Dogtown. For Zoe, the role wasn't too much of a departure from her real life role as the lead-singer in the rock band, Elevator Flight.


Two upcoming films in which Zoe does do a 180 from who she is in real life, are also drastically different from one another. The first and better-known role will be in this summer's expected blockbuster, 'X-Men: First Class.' Zoe plays an insect winged mutant named Angel (she appears in the film's trailer at 0:54). The other role is as Sweetness O'Hara in the film, 'Yelling To The Sky.'

The film, which is currently making the run on the film festival circuit, tells the story of Sweetness, a young girl in high school being bullied by Latonya Williams (played by Gabourey Sidibe). Check out Zoe in trailers for both films below.

Zoe Kravitz in X-Men: First Class

Zoe Kravitz in Yelling To The Sky

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments


Community Center Empowers Local Youth, Celebrates 10th Anniversary

$
0
0

Filed under: ,



In 2001, the Southeast Tennis and Learning Center opened their doors to the youth of the 8th Ward in Washington, D.C. The result was a safe, educational learning space that any child with an interest could attend.

On Thursday, the center celebrated its 10th anniversary, with tennis powerhouses Venus and Serena Williams in attendance (pictured above with kids), of empowering more than 4,000 kids with a balanced dose of education and sports.

The center has served as a motivational enclave for students to get ahead, offering a technology lab, library and tennis court and also has an array of activities, such as sewing, a step team and a book club.

The mission of the center is to:
  • Improve the academic average of every child;
  • Increase understanding of technology and its role in today's society;
  • Increase understanding of the role of sports in promoting teamwork and understanding;
  • Provide recreation as an alternative to anti-social behavior
Founder of the Southeast Center and CEO of the Recreation Wish List Committee Cora Masters Barry talks with BlackVoices.com about the success of her center and how to make a real difference when it comes to our children.

BV: What made you decide to start this center?

CMB: The need in the community, knowing that the community needed something beyond what they have and believing that it would help them. You know vision, the holy spirit. There's a whole story about how the center got built, but just know that the community needed it and we would benefit from it if we could just work hard and make it happen.

BlackVoices.com: Talk about Southeast's anniversary.

Cora Masters Barry: Well, 10 years has gone in to our kids' lives in a way that has changed the trajectory of their lives in our community. I've seen kids who first got there at 5 years old -- they are in high school now, and some kids have graduated. We have over 30 kids who have attended college and gotten scholarships. It just means that the work has really made a difference in these children's lives. It's just amazing that it's already been 10 years. It's scary.

BV: What about the center has/is changing kids' lives?

CMB: The education, the tennis. The involvement of the children with the tutors, role models, helping them with their learning, giving them sports that can take them through life and transport them through college. There is just a plethora of programs and opportunities.

BV: What does your center offer?

CMB: We have a building that's built with the concept of tennis and education, so one portion of the school is called a "mini school," and there is tutoring, computers and all kind of programs and then there is the tennis which marries the two.

BV: What impact has the center had on the community?

CMB: The programs in the building itself is just amazing, and it makes everyone feel proud. It gives them a place to go; it gives them opportunities and exposure. I always call it a "transformative entity."

BV: What are the backgrounds of the kids who attend your center?

CMB: Ward 8 is like South Central, L.A.; it's an underserved community, so the center brings opportunities that ordinarily wouldn't be there. Our children are predominately African American.

BV: What would you say to someone who wants to help our children and community but doesn't know where to start?

CMB:
With me, it's very simple. Vision, passion, tenacity and determination equals success in anything you endeavor to do. So if there are children whose lives you want to affect, you have to believe in it and then you have to just stick with it because it's never easy.

BV: The media is always saying you can't help kids from urban areas. What would you say to that?

CMB: Again, vision, passion, tenacity and determination and getting beyond the criticism and roadblocks, and as you go down that road, people buy in. People always buy in to authentic passion. The need is there, but everyone doesn't know how to approach it, and a lot of people don't think it's going to work because so many things haven't, but if you look consistently and if you show results, even if it's baby steps, you begin to develop a very big group of supporters.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

President Obama's Got Jokes

$
0
0

Filed under:


The whole birther movement, prompted by Donald Trump's accusations that President Barack Obama still had not provided adequate proof he was born in the U.S., always seemed to us anyway, like a joke.

Even after President Obama went so far as to release his long-form birth certificate to the media, and took a serious tone with the press for giving the accusations so much weight, many citizens were laughing at the propensity of it all. This was a punchline, masked as serious business, and leave it to the President himself to unmask the issue, laying it bare for everyone to laugh at on Friday during the annual White House Correspondent's dinner.

Before he even spoke, President Obama had jokes. The President walked out to 'Real American,' the famed theme music of wrestler Hulk Hogan, along with a video montage of his long-form birth certificate against an American flag backdrop. When he appeared at the podium, President Obama wasted no time roasting his well-known critics and skeptics. Below, a list of those who were on the receiving end of some of President Obama's best jokes and the video of his very funny speech.

On Donald Trump: The night was practically open-season on Trump, and the President could have gone anywhere he wanted - the toupee, the failed marriages, years of squandering his wealth - but like a skilled politician, he stayed on message, taking digs at Trump's most recent shenanigans. "Now, I know that he's taken some flak lately, but no one is prouder to put this birth certificate matter to rest than The Donald," the President said.

"And that's because he can finally get back to focusing on the issues that matter, like, did we fake the moon landing? What really happened in Roswell? And where are Biggie and Tupac? All kidding aside, we all know about your credentials, and your breadth of experience. For example, on a recent episode of 'Celebrity Apprentice,' at the steakhouse, the men's cooking team did not impress the men from Omaha Steaks. There was lots of blame to go around, but you, Mr. Trump, recognized that the real problem was a lack of leadership. Ultimately, you didn't blame [rapper] Lil Jon or [singer] Meatloaf, you fired Gary Busey. These are the kinds of decisions that keep me up at night. Well handled, sir! Well handled."

On Matt Damon: During the publicity blitz for his most recent film, 'The Adjustment Bureau', actor Matt Damon, a known President Obama supporter, made an about-face and criticized the President's performance as Commander-in-Chief. "Matt Damon said he was disappointed in my performance...Well Matt, I just saw 'The Adjustment Bureau'. Right back at you, buddy!" ,Br />
On FOX News: The President mocked the house that Rupert Murdoch built, showing a satirical video of his birth with a clip from 'The Lion King'. "Tonight, for the first time I'm releasing my official birth video," the President said. The clip itself was funny, but his follow up line made for an even better laugh. "I want to make clear to the Fox News table, that was a joke. That was not my real birth video. That was a children's cartoon. Call Disney if you don't believe me. They have the original long-form version."

On Michelle Obama: "We made a terrific team at the Easter Egg roll this week. I'd give out bags of candy to the kids, and she snatched them right back out of their little hands." Even the President himself seemed to enjoy that one, as he laughed and repeated, "Snatched them!"

On some of his critics: "Some people now suggest that I'm too professorial, and I'd like to address that head on by assigning all of you some reading that will help you draw your own conclusions. Others say that I'm arrogant, but I've found a really great self-help tool for this...my poll numbers."

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Osama Bin Laden Is Dead

$
0
0

Filed under: , ,

 Osama Bin Laden Dead

THE PRESIDENT: Good evening. Tonight, I can report to the American people and to the world that the United States has conducted an operation that killed Osama bin Laden, the leader of al Qaeda, and a terrorist who's responsible for the murder of thousands of innocent men, women, and children.

It was nearly 10 years ago that a bright September day was darkened by the worst attack on the American people in our history. The images of 9/11 are seared into our national memory -- hijacked planes cutting through a cloudless September sky; the Twin Towers collapsing to the ground; black smoke billowing up from the Pentagon; the wreckage of Flight 93 in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, where the actions of heroic citizens saved even more heartbreak and destruction.

And yet we know that the worst images are those that were unseen to the world. The empty seat at the dinner table. Children who were forced to grow up without their mother or their father. Parents who would never know the feeling of their child's embrace. Nearly 3,000 citizens taken from us, leaving a gaping hole in our hearts.

On September 11, 2001, in our time of grief, the American people came together. We offered our neighbors a hand, and we offered the wounded our blood. We reaffirmed our ties to each other, and our love of community and country. On that day, no matter where we came from, what God we prayed to, or what race or ethnicity we were, we were united as one American family.

Watch the video of President Obama's speech here:





Read more at the Huffington Post.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Snapped: Raven Symone Sizzles at Erase MS Gala

'106 and Park': Meagan Good

$
0
0

Filed under:

106 and Park': Meagan Good

Meagan dropped by to discuss her latest project, as Producer and actor. "Video Girl" is the movie Meagan Good loved as a script and decided to produce it. The story is about a young girl who is captivated by the allure of Hollywood via being a sexy girl in music videos.

According to Meagan, producing was very difficult, beginning with casting and all the way through to the end. Meagan is also busy with several other ventures, her punk style band, and acting of course.


106 and Park Weeknights, 9PM on BET

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Viewing all 4256 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images