LINK:
Our guest –

April Reign – Co-Founder, We Still Rise

Sophia Nelson – Journalist and Author of The Woman Code: 20 Powerful Keys to Unlock Your Life
African American women and their mental health.
LINK:
Our guest –

April Reign – Co-Founder, We Still Rise

Sophia Nelson – Journalist and Author of The Woman Code: 20 Powerful Keys to Unlock Your Life
“That was like his dream dream dream. We gotta try to make that happen,” said Swizz. “That’s where he wanted to end up. He wanted to end up in the spiritual zone with his music.”
What do you think of a DMX Gospel album? Do you think DMX would’ve taken the Kanye route if he was still alive?
Referring to the line, “I’m the King of Zamunda, uh, King of the Summer/ Come be my Kardashian, Queen of the Come Up,” fans took offense to the line, especially members of the Beyhive.
“Jay Z on DMX’s Bath Salts track: come be my Kardashian queen of the come up…Solange is waiting in the elevator my guy (round 2 fight) #DMX,” tweeted one fan.
Many people felt the line was lackluster and Nas “ate Jay” on the song. Other fans said the line was “shade” toward the “Keeping Up With The Kardashians” star as JAY-Z was calling the Kardashian clan opportunists with the verse.
What do you think of JAY-Z’s verse on Exodus?
“As one of the most influential artists and dynamic live performers of the 21st century, he continues Drai’s trajectory of delivering arena-level performers in an unparalleled nightlife atmosphere,” said vice president of entertainment and marketing for Drai’s Beachclub Nightclub, Dustin Drai.
Ross has been busy promoting his investments in Wingstop, Checkers, and Rallys on his social media pages.
Tickets for Rick Ross’ Vegas shows are on sale at Draisgroup.com.
Are you down for a Rick Ross Vegas-style concert?
The “Queen of Comedy” asked that women “honor their beauty” by not dressing like they just woke up in public. She doubled down on her words three days after her initial video.
Mo’Nique says she is “okay with you being in your feelings” about her words and doesn’t understand why women would want to “block your beauty.”
“So I am unapologetic about what I said because I said it with nothing but love and I said it with no judgment,” said Mo’Nique. “For the sisters that got it, I’m glad. For the ones that didn’t, I’ll wait.”
Critics on social media called Mo’Nique’s comments a “generational thing” with the older generation thinking respect comes from looking a certain way, while Millenials believe respect should be had no matter what you’re wearing, which philosophy do you agree with?
The “Black Male Power and the Talk” virtual town hall is this Sunday at 3pm
“Black Male Power and the Talk” is Sunday June 6th a 3pm. It’s a virtual town hall via Zoom with Superhero Fathers.
Tune in to Taking it to the Streets, weekday mornings at 6:15, 7:08 and 8:40 on the Steve Harvey Morning Show on 96.3 WHUR.
Follow me on facebook and twitter at @bobbygailes for updates and to stay connected.
Listen to this mornings segment here:
Montgomery County’s States Attorney says a new study will report on any bias or discrimination in the states attorney’s office.
The man accused fof shooting into several cars in the District has been identified.
A discussion on the Tusla Massacre which took place 100 years ago this week.
Joining our conversation:
LINK:
DeNeen Brown – Reporter, Washington Post

Nkechi Taifia – Member, National African American Reparations Commission

@AnessaRossii explained her encounter with Kanye while doing her makeup. “He didn’t order anything to drink, he just got water on the rocks and proceeded to tell me all of his beliefs, where we descended from, and how he believed that a true descendant of his creator.”
“His conversation went on with me for about three or four hours and he told me at the end of the night, thank you for my time, gave me $15,000 and said he felt he was called to do this and left. That’s the last time I’ve ever seen him,” said Anessa.
Have you had an encounter with a celebrity? Share your story.
Osaka withdrew from the French Open citing mental health and depression. The tournament fined her $15,000 for not speaking to the media following Sunday’s match, per her contract.
Although Naomi did break her contractual obligations by not speaking to the media, big businesses such as Nike, Tag Hauer, and Mastercard all voiced their support of Osaka.
“Our thoughts are with Naomi. We support her and recognize her courage in sharing her own mental health experience,” Nike said in a statement. Overseas companies Nissin Foods, Nissan, and Nippon Airways which Osaka is either an ambassador or an investor of, also supported Naomi’s decision to pull out of the tournament.
What does it mean to you when big business supports such matters as mental health? Do you think Naomi Osaka should be obligated to talk with the media while her mental health may be unstable?
Studio Theatre presents it’s virtual production of “Flow”
FLOW now streaming virtually at Studio Theatre through June 12th. The Flow is a look at one urban community and its seven storytellers showing off their neighborhood thru stories from trivial to tragic. For more information go here:
Tune in to Taking it to the Streets, weekday mornings at 6:15, 7:08 and 8:40 on the Steve Harvey Morning Show on 96.3 WHUR.
Follow me on facebook and twitter at @bobbygailes for updates and to stay connected.
Listen to this mornings segment here:
Several DC schools will host vaccination sites.
President Biden speaks on the anniversity of the Tulsa massacre.
TULSA, Okla. (AP) — An emotional President Joe Biden marked the 100th anniversary of the massacre that destroyed a thriving Black community in Tulsa, declaring Tuesday that he had “come to fill the silence” about one of the nation’s darkest — and long suppressed — moments of racial violence.
“Some injustices are so heinous, so horrific, so grievous, they cannot be buried, no matter how hard people try,” Biden said. “Only with truth can come healing.”
Biden’s commemoration of the deaths of hundreds of Black people killed by a white mob a century ago came amid the current national reckoning on racial justice.
“We can’t just choose what we want to know, and not what we should know,” said Biden. “I come here to help fill the silence, because in silence wounds deepen.”
After Biden left, there was a spontaneous singing by some audience members of a famous civil rights march song, “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around.”
The events on Tuesday stood in stark contrast to then-President Donald Trump’s trip to Tulsa last June, which was greeted by protests. Or the former president’s decision, one year ago, to clear Lafayette Square near the White House of demonstrators who gathered to protest the death of George Floyd, a Black man, under the knee of a white Minneapolis police officer.
In 1921 — on May 31 and June 1 — a white mob, including some people hastily deputized by authorities, looted and burned Tulsa’s Greenwood district, which was known as “Black Wall Street.”
On Tuesday, the president, joined by top Black advisers, met privately with three surviving members of the Greenwood community who lived through the violence, the White House said. Viola “Mother” Fletcher, Hughes “Uncle Red” Van Ellis and Lessie “Mother Randle” Benningfield Randle are all between the ages of 101 and 107.
Biden said their experience had been “a story seen in the mirror dimly.”
“But no longer,” the president told the survivors. “Now your story will be known in full view.”
Outside, Latasha Sanders, 33, of Tulsa, brought her five children and a nephew in hopes of spotting Biden.
“It’s been 100 years, and this is the first we’ve heard from any U.S. president,” she said. “I brought my kids here today just so they could be a part of history and not just hear about it, and so they can teach generations to come.”
As many as 300 Black Tulsans were killed, and thousands of survivors were forced for a time into internment camps overseen by the National Guard. Burned bricks and a fragment of a church basement are about all that survive today of the more than 30-block historically Black district.
Several hundred people milled around Greenwood Avenue in front of the historic Vernon African Methodist Episcopal Church awaiting Biden’s arrival at the nearby Greenwood Cultural Center. Some vendors were selling memorabilia, including Black Lives Matter hats, shirts and flags under a bridge of the interstate that cuts through the district.
The names and pictures of Black men killed by police hung on a chain-link fence next to the church, including Eric Harris and Terrence Crutcher in Tulsa.
Biden briefly toured an exhibit at the center, at times stepping closer to peer at framed historic photographs, before he was escorted into a private meeting with the three survivors.
America’s continuing struggle over race will continue to test Biden, whose presidency would have been impossible without overwhelming support from Black voters, both in the Democratic primaries and the general election.
He announced Tuesday that he was appointing Vice President Kamala Harris to lead efforts on voting rights as the GOP carries out efforts to pass laws restricting access to the ballot. Republicans portray such legislation as aimed at preventing fraudulent voting, but many critics believe it is designed to limit the voting of minorities.
Biden has pledged to help combat racism in policing and other areas following nationwide protests after F loyd’s death a year ago that reignited a national conversation about race.
Biden called on Congress to act swiftly to address policing reform. But he has also long projected himself as an ally of police, who are struggling with criticism about long-used tactics and training methods and difficulties in recruitment.
The Tulsa massacre has only recently entered the national discourse — and the presidential visit put an even brighter spotlight on the event.
Biden, who was joined by Housing Secretary Marcia Fudge and senior advisers Susan Rice and Cedric Richmond, also announced new measures to help narrow the wealth gap between Blacks and whites and reinvest in underserved communities by expanding access to homeownership and small-business ownership.
The White House said the administration will take steps to address disparities that result in Black-owned homes being appraised at tens of thousands of dollars less than comparable homes owned by whites as well as issue new federal rules to fight housing discrimination. The administration is also setting a goal of increasing the share of federal contracts awarded to small disadvantaged businesses by 50% by 2026, funneling an estimated additional $100 billion to such businesses over the five-year period, according to the White House.
Historians say the massacre in Tulsa began after a local newspaper drummed up a furor over a Black man accused of stepping on a white girl’s foot. When Black Tulsans showed up with guns to prevent the man’s lynching, white residents responded with overwhelming force.
Reparations for Black Americans whose ancestors were enslaved and for other racial discrimination have been debated in the U.S. since slavery ended in 1865. Now they are being discussed by colleges and universities with ties to slavery and by local governments looking to make cash payments to Black residents.
Biden, who was vice president to the nation’s first Black president and who chose a Black woman as his own vice president, backs a study of reparations, both in Tulsa and more broadly, but has not committed to supporting payments.
Trump visited Tulsa last year under vastly different circumstances.
After suspending his campaign rallies because of the coronavirus pandemic, Trump, a Republican, chose Tulsa as the place to mark his return. But his decision to schedule the rally on June 19, the holiday known as Juneteenth that commemorates the end of slavery in the United States, was met with such fierce criticism that he postponed the event by a day. The rally was still marked by protests outside and empty seats inside an arena downtown.
Join in the fight against gun violence in Prince George’s County, tonight from 5:30pm – 7:30pm
Tune in to Taking it to the Streets, weekday mornings at 6:15, 7:08 and 8:40 on the Steve Harvey Morning Show on 96.3 WHUR.
Follow me on facebook and twitter at @bobbygailes for updates and to stay connected.
Listen to this mornings segments here:
Part 1:
Part 2:
In celebration of Patrick Ellis’ birthday, this is a special rebroadcast of “The Journey.” Dr. Wayne Frederick talks with WHUR Senior Producer and Host Patrick Ellis.

ABOUT
For more than 40 years, WHUR Host Patrick Ellis was one of the most inspirational voices on behalf of gospel music in commercial radio. On this episode of The Journey, Dr. Wayne Frederick talks with Senior Producer and Host Patrick Ellis about his decades of experiences broadcasting to generations of Washingtonians.
Air Date: February 26, 2017
Grilling tips, recipes and safety information.

ALBUM OF THE YEAR
AFTER HOURS – THE WEEKND
BLAME IT ON BABY – DABABY
GOOD NEWS – MEGAN THEE STALLION
HEAUX TALES – JAZMINE SULLIVAN
KING’S DISEASE – NAS
UNGODLY HOUR – CHLOE X HALLE
BEST COLLABORATION
CARDI B FT. MEGAN THEE STALLION – WAP
DABABY FT. RODDY RICCH – ROCKSTAR
DJ KHALED FT. DRAKE – POPSTAR
JACK HARLOW FT. DABABY, TORY LANEZ & LIL WAYNE – WHATS POPPIN (REMIX)
MEGAN THEE STALLION FT. DABABY – CRY BABY
POP SMOKE FT. LIL BABY & DABABY – FOR THE NIGHT
BEST FEMALE R&B / POP ARTIST
BEYONCÉ
H.E.R.
JAZMINE SULLIVAN
JHENÉ AIKO
SUMMER WALKER
SZA
BEST MALE R&B / POP ARTIST
6LACK
ANDERSON .PAAK
CHRIS BROWN
GIVEON
TANK
THE WEEKND
BEST NEW ARTIST
COI LERAY
FLO MILLI
GIVEON
JACK HARLOW
LATTO
POOH SHIESTY
BEST GROUP
21 SAVAGE & METRO BOOMIN
CHLOE X HALLE
CHRIS BROWN & YOUNG THUG
CITY GIRLS
MIGOS
SILK SONIC
BEST FEMALE HIP HOP ARTIST
CARDI B
COI LERAY
DOJA CAT
MEGAN THEE STALLION
LATTO
SAWEETIE
BEST MALE HIP HOP ARTIST
DABABY
DRAKE
J. COLE
JACK HARLOW
LIL BABY
POP SMOKE
DR. BOBBY JONES BEST GOSPEL/INSPIRATIONAL AWARD
BEBE WINANS – IN JESUS NAME
CECE WINANS – NEVER LOST
H.E.R. – HOLD US TOGETHER
KIRK FRANKLIN – STRONG GOD
MARVIN SAPP – THANK YOU FOR IT ALL
TAMELA MANN – TOUCH FROM YOU
BET HER AWARD
ALICIA KEYS FT. KHALID – SO DONE
BRANDY FT. CHANCE THE RAPPER – BABY MAMA
BRI STEVES – ANTI QUEEN
CHLOE X HALLE – BABY GIRL
CIARA FT. ESTER DEAN – ROOTED
SZA – GOOD DAYS
BEST INTERNATIONAL ACT
AYA NAKAMURA (FRANCE)
BURNA BOY (NIGERIA)
DIAMOND PLATNUMZ (TANZANIA)
EMICIDA (BRAZIL)
HEADIE ONE (UK)
WIZKID (NIGERIA)
YOUNG T & BUGSEY (UK)
YOUSSOUPHA (FRANCE)
VIEWER’S CHOICE AWARD
CARDI B FT. MEGAN THEE STALLION – WAP
CHRIS BROWN & YOUNG THUG – GO CRAZY
DABABY FT. RODDY RICCH – ROCKSTAR
DJ KHALED FT. DRAKE – POPSTAR
DRAKE FT. LIL DURK – LAUGH NOW CRY LATER
LIL BABY – THE BIGGER PICTURE
MEGAN THEE STALLION FT. BEYONCÉ – SAVAGE (REMIX)
SILK SONIC – LEAVE THE DOOR OPEN
VIDEO OF THE YEAR
CARDI B – UP
CARDI B FT. MEGAN THEE STALLION – WAP
CHLOE X HALLE – DO IT
CHRIS BROWN & YOUNG THUG – GO CRAZY
DRAKE FT. LIL DURK – LAUGH NOW CRY LATER
SILK SONIC – LEAVE THE DOOR OPEN
VIDEO DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR
BENNY BOOM
BRUNO MARS AND FLORENT DÉCHARD
COLE BENNETT
COLIN TILLEY
DAVE MEYERS
HYPE WILLIAMS
BEST MOVIE
COMING 2 AMERICA
JUDAS AND THE BLACK MESSIAH
MA RAINEY’S BLACK BOTTOM
ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI
SOUL
THE UNITED STATES VS. BILLIE HOLIDAY
BEST ACTRESS
ANDRA DAY
ANGELA BASSETT
ISSA RAE
JURNEE SMOLLETT
VIOLA DAVIS
ZENDAYA
BEST ACTOR
ALDIS HODGE
CHADWICK BOSEMAN
DAMSON IDRIS
DANIEL KALUUYA
EDDIE MURPHY
LAKEITH STANFIELD
YOUNGSTARS AWARD
ALEX R. HIBBERT
ETHAN HUTCHISON
LONNIE CHAVIS
MARSAI MARTIN
MICHAEL EPPS
STORM REID
SPORTSWOMAN OF THE YEAR AWARD
A’JA WILSON
CANDACE PARKER
CLARESSA SHIELDS
NAOMI OSAKA
SERENA WILLIAMS
SKYLAR DIGGINS-SMITH
SPORTSMAN OF THE YEAR AWARD
KYRIE IRVING
LEBRON JAMES
PATRICK MAHOMES
RUSSELL WESTBROOK
RUSSELL WILSON
STEPHEN CURRY
Featuring heavy hitters such as JAY-Z and Nas, who feature on the same song, Lil Wayne, Alicia Keys, Moneybagg Yo, Bono, Snoop Dogg, The Lox, and collaborator and producer, Swizz Beatz.
The 13-track album was recorded with Swizz in Memphis, Tennessee. Swizz says DMX was excited about “Exodus” and was ready, “for his fans all around the world to hear and show just how much he valued each and every single person that has supported him unconditionally.”
Have you heard “Exodus?” What song is your favorite so far?
Three police officers have been charged in the death of a Washington state man who reportedly ignored his complaints that he couldn’t breathe.
Tacoma police officers Christopher Burbank and Matthew Collins on Thursday were charged with second-degree murder, while Officer Timothy Rankine was charged with first-degree manslaughter, according to Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson.
The charges stem from a March 2020 incident in which 33-year-old Manuel Ellis was Tased, hogtied and fitted with a spit hood in what witnesses described as an unprovoked attack by the officers. They also reported seeing Rankine apply pressure to Ellis’ back after he complained that he couldn’t breathe. “Ellis was not fighting back,” reads a probable cause statement. “All three civilian witnesses at the intersection state that they never saw Ellis strike at the officers.”
Would it have taken more than year to file charges if the suspects weren’t police officers?
The “STEAM In The Game” Gaming and eSport Summer Camp is this June 19th and 20th
For more information go here:
Tune in to Taking it to the Streets, weekday mornings at 6:15, 7:08 and 8:40 on the Steve Harvey Morning Show on 96.3 WHUR.
Follow me on facebook and twitter at @bobbygailes for updates and to stay connected.
Listen to this mornings segment here:
What can you do for an inexpensive day trip or overnight?


I’m a better artist because I’ve been through some things.
It was so good to catch up with Grammy Award winning, multi platinum singer, songwriter, producer, record label owner, Anthony Hamilton. We talked about everything from raising his 6 boys the old school way. To Charlene. To his latest single “You Made A Fool Of Me.” Produced by longtime friend and collaborator, Jermaine Dupri.
Anthony said that’s the first single from this new album he’s working on and the album is his best to this date. Because he’s lived through so many things.. Including having a serious case of COVID 19 in December 2020. He said he kept that information low profile, because he didn’t want people to worry. He only wanted the positive vibes around him. With the Grace of God, he pulled through that, and is in a really good place in his life.
Mr. Hamilton has a lot to be grateful for these days. Including his new label, “My Music Box” where he partnered with BMG. He’s ready to give his listeners what we’ve all been waiting for. Anthony Hamilton in concert. Let’s go!!!
Season Ticket Revocation, Arena Ban For Fan Who Dumped Popcorn On Westbrook

Arena Stage, the RISE Demonstration Center, U-D-C, and the Convention Center locations will all close in late June.

A new bill has been introduced to help historically black colleges and universities(HBCUs) renovate and repair many of their facilities and buildings.
“For over 150 years, HBCUs have been agents of equity, access and excellence in education, despite being ignored and marginalized by federal and state governments. This historic bipartisan bill changes that,” said Democratic North Carolina Rep. Alma Adams, one of the lead sponsors of the bill, said last week.
Named the Institutional Grants for New Infrastructure, Technology, and Education (IGNITE) for HBCU Excellence Act, the bill emerged as a result of a June 2018 Government Accountability Office (GAO) that identified “extensive and diverse” capital project needs at HBCUs.
Also 42 surveyed HBCUs said 11 percent of their buildings are historic, but the U.S. Department of the Interior says the schools do not have the resources to do the maintenance. Both public and private Black colleges have deferred maintenance backlogs of $67 million and $17 respectively reported BET via their website.
“As a former community banker and a former chamber chairman in metro Little Rock, I know the academic and economic power and strength of these HBCUs, not only for the benefit of those students, but for the benefit of the greater Little Rock workforce,” Republican representative French Hill said, according to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. “This bill will, in my view, give them the tools and conditions and infrastructure they need for the campus in the future and the students of the future.”
“Happy Birthday to our little Angel 5-23-21 and may God keep and cover you for the rest of your days!” she wrote via instagram.
She wrote that she chose to surround her baby girl, named Keziah London Taylor, with elephants because they represent “patience, strength, power and remembrance.”
View this post on Instagram
“Just a few of the qualities that her presence has brought into our lives and this world. We were patient waiting on you to enter this world and we will always remember the strength that it took for me and @salute1st to create something as powerful as your life itself,” she continued.
Her husband also took to instagram to welcome the newborn as well as his first child with Fantasia.
“Today I experienced something that rewrote my personal definition of a Black Woman,” he wrote on Sunday under a photo of pregnant Barrino draped in sheer white fabric reported Page Six. “To observe my Queen @tasiasword bring my little Angel @keziahlondontaylor into this world elevated my understanding and sense of pride, respect and admiration for black women.”
View this post on Instagram
A gun violence prevention rally takes place Tuesday June 1st.
The Office of the State’s Attorney for Prince George’s County presents Our Streets Our Future, a public Safety and Gun Violence Prevention Community Call to Action Rally Tuesday, June 1st from 5:30pm to 7:30pm at City of Praise Family Ministries @ 8502 Jericho City Drive in Landover. WHUR will be on hand playing the music for this community event. For information go here:
Tune in to Taking it to the Streets, weekday mornings at 6:15, 7:08 and 8:40 on the Steve Harvey Morning Show on 96.3 WHUR.
Follow me on facebook and twitter at @bobbygailes for updates and to stay connected.
Listen to this mornings segments here:
Part 1:
Part 2: