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15 Years Later, Walmart To Launch Its Answer To Amazon Prime

Called Walmart+, it will cost $98 a year, or $12.95 a month, and give members same-day delivery on 160,000 items, a fuel discount at certain gas stations and a chance to check out at Walmart stores without having to wait at a register.

NEW YORK (AP) — Walmart is launching a new membership service that it hopes can compete with Amazon Prime.

Called Walmart+, it will cost $98 a year, or $12.95 a month, and give members same-day delivery on 160,000 items, a fuel discount at certain gas stations and a chance to check out at Walmart stores without having to wait at a register.

Walmart has a long way to go to catch up with Amazon Prime. Launched in 2005, Prime has more than 150 million members worldwide who pay $119 a year, or $12.99 a month, for faster shipping and other perks, such as discounts at Amazon’s Whole Foods supermarkets and access to its video streaming site.

Walmart’s online sales are growing rapidly, especially during the pandemic, when more people have turned to the company to order groceries online and pick them up at a store. But the world’s biggest retailer is still a distant second online to Amazon. Walmart is expected to take 6% of all online sales in the U.S. this year, compared to Amazon’s 38%, according to market research firm eMarketer.

Last week, Walmart emerged as a possible suitor for the U.S. business of TikTok, the fast-growing video app with more than 100 million users. Analysts have said the bid with tech company Microsoft could be a way for Walmart to grow its online shopping business and connect with millions of young shoppers.

Janey Whiteside, Walmart’s chief customer officer, said it wasn’t launching Walmart+ to compete with any other shopping membership.

“We’re launching it to meet the needs of our customers,” she said. “And it really was designed to make their busy lives easier.”

Walmart+ members will still have to spend at least $35 online to qualify for free same-day delivery. Items are delivered from stores, which typically costs as much as $9.95 for non-members. The 160,000 items that qualify include groceries, toys, electronics and household items, such as toilet paper and soap.

Members will get a discount of up to 5 cents a gallon at Murphy gas stations or at the 2,000 Walmart locations that have gas pumps. The company said it’s working to add more gas-station chains to its list.

At its stores, members can unlock an app to scan items as they shop and pay without having to stop at a cashier.

The Bentonville, Arkansas-based company said Walmart+ will launch Sept. 15.

 

Niecy Nash Surprises With Wedding To Singer Jessica Betts

Nash’s divorce from husband Jayson Tucker was finalized in March.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Actor and comedian Niecy Nash surprised fans with her weekend wedding to singer Jessica Betts.

Nash and Betts posted Twitter and Instagramphotos Monday of their outdoor marriage ceremony in a lush garden setting.

Nash, whose legal first name is Carol, captioned the photo “Mrs. Carol Denise Betts,” adding a rainbow emoji and the hashtag #LoveWins.”

“I got a whole Wife,” Betts wrote in her own caption.

The couple had kept their relationship under wraps, and the revelation of the ceremony also served as a coming out for Nash, who had not publicly been in a relationship with a woman before.

“#PlotTwist,” she wrote in another Instagram post with a photo of herself and Betts, along with a rainbow emoji.

Nash’s divorce from husband Jayson Tucker was finalized in March.

Nash, 50, is known for her roles on the television series “Reno 911,” “Never Have I Ever” and “Claws.”

R&B Singer Akon Moves Ahead With ‘Akon City’ In Senegal

Akon, who first announced his idea for the utopian city back in 2018, has described it as a “real-life Wakanda,” comparing it to the technologically advanced fictional African place portrayed in the blockbuster film “Black Panther.”

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — American R&B singer Akon is moving ahead with plans to create a futuristic pan-African city, announcing Monday that construction will begin next year on the $6 billion project despite global tourism’s uncertain future.

Akon, who first announced his idea for the utopian city back in 2018, has described it as a “real-life Wakanda,” comparing it to the technologically advanced fictional African place portrayed in the blockbuster film “Black Panther.”

On Monday, Akon said he hoped his project would provide much needed jobs for Senegalese and also serve as a “home back home” for Black Americans and others facing racial injustices.

A hotel within the city plans to feature rooms decorated for each of the 54 nations of Africa. However, the project was designed by a Dubai-based architect because Akon said he couldn’t find a suitable one in Africa fast enough. It’s also unclear what percentage of the building materials and construction teams will be sourced locally.

Akon City is promising a bit of everything: a seaside resort, a tech hub, recording studios and even a zone dubbed “Senewood” that developers hope will help develop Senegal’s film industry.

The singer acknowledged the comparisons made between Akon City and the utopian society in “Black Panther,” calling it an “honor.”

Plans eventually call for Akon City to have its own hospital, police station and even its own cryptocurrency already named AKoin. Without giving specifics, the singer also said he’s considering franchising the concept to other countries on the continent.

Akon rose to R&B fame after his 2004 debut album, but has increasingly focused on development projects in Africa in recent years.

In 2014, he started Akon Lighting Africa, which backs solar energy projects in rural area. For him the inspiration was deeply personal: he found his grandmother was still using candles in Senegal to light her home.

“It just doesn’t make sense how 20 years can pass by and the condition doesn’t change,” he said back in 2016.

In Mbodienne, hopes are high that this project will change lives even if two-thirds of the funding needed has yet to be secured.

“We have a lot of hope. Many promised us projects, but we saw nothing,” village chief Michel Diom said.

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Associated Press writer Babacar Dione contributed.

Check Out John Legend’s Stylish Beverly Hills Home!

The couple have listed their beautiful home at $23.95 million.

John Legend and Chrissy Teigen are making room for their new bundle of joy and have placed their luxurious Beverly Hills home up for sale. The couple have listed their beautiful home at $23.95 million.

TopTenRealEstateDeals.com describes the estate —

Their current home includes seven bedrooms and eight baths and over 8,200 square feet and the high drama of the home’s entry with 33-foot ceilings, curving stairwell leading to a second-floor catwalk and purple grand piano. It leads into a large living room with a floor-to-ceiling glass wall with views over the canyon. The chef’s kitchen is the ideal venue for a chef-author to test sumptuous recipes and leads into a spacious family room. The master suite has a brass, concrete and clay fireplace, a balcony with far-reaching views and his-and-her dressing room and walk-in closets that are more like fashion showrooms and Italian-inspired “Glam Room.” All seven bedrooms are ensuite and have balconies. Also included is a gym and comfy home theater. Special finishes and decor include mandala-patterned ceilings from Thailand, ebonized cerused oak floors, clay-and-steel-rolled walls, onyx sinks and Italian quartz countertops.

Outside, the entertainment area includes fabulous canyon views from the pool terrace, which has a heated saltwater pool, jacuzzi, chef’s grill and wood-fired oven. A grapevine-shaded pergola is perfect for alfresco dining.

Supporting Howard University Students

Howard University and L’Oreal presents “Brukwine for Bison”

Howard University and L’Oreal Dark & Lovely are teaming up for a back to school campaign to support HU students.  My guest is Melissa Hughes – Direct of Marketing for L’Oreal Dark & Lovely.

Howard University and L’Oreal Dark & Lovely are hosting a virtual fundraiser September 2nd @ 6pm to support HU students via the Howard University Emergency Fund.

 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:

Mayor And Police Chief Say Agitators Infiltrating DC Protests

Mayor Bowser says the federal government needs to do more to prosecute agitators that are infiltrating peaceful protests in the District.

DC police took around 70 people into custody over the weekend as protesters took to the streets in DC.   Mayor Bowser says the violence in those protests was the work of outside agitators. Some have been arrested and identified, but the mayor says more help needs to come from the federal government.  10 officers were hurt during the weekend protests. Police chief Peter Newshum says the reactions of officers is understandable when they are hit with bricks, glass and bags of urine.  Newshum says most of the people arrested at the protests don’t live in DC.

Schools Reopen With Virtual Learning

School began virtually for DC schools and the largest school district in Maryland, along with other jurisdictions in the region.

Schools begin today for several local jurisdiction.  And online learning is the model for DC schools and Prince George’s, Montgomery, Charles, Frederick and St. Mary’s counties in Maryland.    In Prince George’s there is a new hotline for parents to help them navigate the virtual classroom system with several schools serving as help centers for parents.  In Virginia, Stafford and Manassas City schools began virtually, today, as well.

DC Toddler Abducted By Dad Found Safe

The little DC girl who police say was kidnapped by her father has been found safe, according to police.

The 3-year-old District girl abducted by her father has been found safe. Police say McKenzie Washington was forcibly taken from a Southeast DC home by Tavonte Robinson Sunday morning.  Police are searching for Robinson, who is wanted for burglary and parental kidnapping.

Former Georgetown University Coach John Thompson Dies

John Thompson, the longtime former coach at Georgetown University has passed away.

John Thompson, the legendary basketball coach at Georgetown University, has died.  An iconic figure in the DMV and college basketball, Thompson led the Hoyas to the 1984 men’s NCAA basketball title, becoming the first African American head coach to do so. The Hall of Famer also lead the Hoyas to the NCAA title game in 1982 and 1985.  In 1989 before a game against Boston College, Thompson walked off the Capital Centre court to protest Proposition 48, an NCAA measure that would ban academically ineligible freshmen from receiving scholarships. Thompson said he protested because he believed the proposition aimed to limit opportunities for minority students. 97 percent of his players that remained at Georgetown University for four years graduated.   A native of Washington, DC, Thompson starred for Archbishop Carroll High School.  At Providence College he lead his team to the 1963 NIT championship.  He was captain in the school’s first NCAA tournament team in 1964. He played in the NBA for two years with the Boston Celtics, backing up Bill Russell.  Thompson coached at Georgetown for 27 years.  No cause of death has been released.

Former Georgetown Coach John Thompson Dies at Age 78

Coach John Thompson, a champion for his players.

We have lost a legend and history maker, former Georgetown Basketball coach John Thompson. Thompson who coach at Georgetown from 1972-1999 led the Hoyas to the NCAA title in 1984 and became the first African-American coach to win a major college Championship.  We are forever thankful for his contribution to College Basketball and his dedication to the students he coached.  RIP

Chadwick Boseman Didn’t Just Play Icons. He Was One.

“We all know what it’s like to be told that there is not a place for you to be featured — yet you are young, gifted and black,” Boseman said, accepting the film’s Screen Actors Guild Award for best ensemble. “We know what it’s like to be told there’s not a screen for you to be featured on, a stage for you to be featured on.”

The image that keeps replaying in my head since the death of Chadwick Boseman is from early 2018. It was just days before “Black Panther” would open in theaters and the exhilaration aroused by this long-in-coming cultural event was everywhere around Boseman. Flocked by fans, he repeatedly paused for pictures until he was handed a months-old Black child whom he gently held, beaming.

Boseman’s family said that the actor, who died Friday at the age of 43, was first diagnosed with colon cancer in 2016. Did he know when he held that baby that he might not live long enough to see a child of his own raised? Did he know that in playing Jackie Robinson, James Brown, Thurgood Marshall and T’Challa — in so gracefully filling the screen with the dignity of Black lives — that he was helping to cradle another generation?

In a tragically brief but historically sweeping life as an actor, Boseman played men of public life and private pain. Before Friday, we didn’t know he, too, was bearing such a burden. That has only magnified his accomplishment, bringing him closer to the great figures whose shoes he wore on film. He played men who advanced a people’s progress, a trail he helped blaze himself. He played icons, and died one, too.

“There’s a lot to learn from Jackie Robinson. There’s a lot to learn from James Brown. There’s a lot to learn from Thurgood Marshall,” Boseman said that day two and a half years ago. “I would like to say that some of those qualities have infused themselves into me at this point.”

Boseman started out as a playwright. He was raised in the manufacturing town of Anderson, South Carolina, the youngest of three boys. As a junior in high school, he wrote and staged a play inspired by the shooting death of a basketball teammate. Before he was a Hollywood star, he penned numerous hip-hop-infused plays: “Hieroglyphic Graffiti,” “Rhyme Deferred,” “Deep Azure” — and directed others. In New York, he performed with the National Shakespeare Company.

He compared his alma mater, Howard University, to his own personal Wakanda.

“If you have a blanketed idea of what it means to be of African descent and you go to Howard University, you’re meeting people from all over the diaspora — from the Caribbean, any country in Africa, in Europe,” Boseman said. “So you’re seeing people from all walks of life that look like you but they sound different.”

That early development of an expansive, historical understanding of African American identity surely fed the grace and humility of Boseman’s most famous roles. It wasn’t until he was in his mid-30s, after a handful of brief television appearances, that he landed his first leading role as Robinson in “42.” He was, from the start, a self-evident movie star with a rare, effortless charisma. Rachel Robinson, the Hall of Famer’s widow, said it was like seeing her husband again.

In the hours of shock since the news of Boseman’s death, the story of how Denzel Washington paid for Boseman and other Howard students to attend a summer theater program at the University of Oxford has been much retold. It’s especially fitting because it, as if by fate, links Boseman with Washington. Like his long-ago benefactor, Boseman exuded strength and self-possession. When he played Robinson and Brown (in “Get on Up”) and Marshall (in “Marshall”), Boseman’s power wasn’t asked for or worked up to. It was innate. It was there already. “When I hit the stage, people better be ready,” he says in “Get on Up.” “Especially the white folk.”

Many would have, after playing Robinson and Brown, turned a blind eye to biopics. But by playing a young version of the Supreme Court justice in “Marshall” (which he co-produced) Boseman confirmed the ongoing nature of his project, one that would reach a staggering climax in “Black Panther.” Boseman first made his debut as King T’Challa in “Captain America: Civil War” in 2016, the same year he was diagnosed with colon cancer.

After playing a string of pioneers, Boseman led the “Black Panther” revolution.

“We all know what it’s like to be told that there is not a place for you to be featured — yet you are young, gifted and black,” Boseman said, accepting the film’s Screen Actors Guild Award for best ensemble. “We know what it’s like to be told there’s not a screen for you to be featured on, a stage for you to be featured on.”

It’s mind-boggling what Boseman was able to accomplish, facing down an industry’s historical prejudice while suffering through cancer treatments. But it’s equally hard to measure what lay in front of him. In less than a decade, Boseman changed the movies. His more recent films suggest the next decade was going to be at least as interesting. In last year’s “21 Bridges,” a film he also produced, Boseman plays an NYPD detective whose cop-killer case uncovers the department’s own persistent corruption. Boseman’s very presence reorients the story.

During the filming of “Black Panther,” Boseman said he was communicating with two boys who had terminal cancer. They were hoping to make it long enough to see the film. “I realized they anticipated something great,” Boseman said in a SiriusXM interview. The kids, Boseman said through tears, didn’t make it. But in his unjustly short career, Boseman held in his hands a world, illuminated on screen like never before.

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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

Chadwick Boseman’s Death Leaves Saddening Mark On Rough 2020

“These are pillars in our community,” Rev. Al Sharpton said. “In times of instability, you depend on pillars. It’s bad enough when there’s a storm outside and you hear the lightning and thunder. It gets worse when the pillars that you’re building and standing on (are) shaking. It’s like they’re chipping away at our foundation. The very building is shaking down, because the things that undergird and protect us from the storms are being removed.”

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Kobe Bryant. Rep. John Lewis. And now, Chadwick Boseman.

So far, 2020 has been marred with bad news and tragedy with the deaths of several popular Black icons including Bryant, Lewis and recently Boseman, who died Friday. All three were viewed as leaders in their respective fields of sports, politics and film — places where people, particularly in the Black community, have often looked for inspiration during a year of racial tension and protests against the police brutality of unarmed Black people.

But for many, the loss of another major figure such as Boseman is taking a toll. The actor, who starred in the blockbuster superhero Marvel film “Black Panther,” shockingly died at the age of 43 in his home in Los Angeles after he privately battled colon cancer for four years.

“These are pillars in our community,” Rev. Al Sharpton said. “In times of instability, you depend on pillars. It’s bad enough when there’s a storm outside and you hear the lightning and thunder. It gets worse when the pillars that you’re building and standing on (are) shaking. It’s like they’re chipping away at our foundation. The very building is shaking down, because the things that undergird and protect us from the storms are being removed.”

Sharpton called Boseman an important pillar that humanized several Black historical trailblazers in his roles — including color-line breaking baseball star Jackie Robinson, legendary singer James Brown and the first African American U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. Boseman’s family said he endured “countless surgeries and chemotherapy” while portraying King T’Challa of Wakanda in the Oscar-nominated “Black Panther,” a film that proved a person of color could lead in a successful superhero film.

“For him to pass at this time when we are disproportionately affected by COVID and have all of these attacks by law enforcement, and him being the symbol bringing us to Wakanda, it’s just a blow,” Sharpton said. “To hear that our superhero who projected a positive light was now gone, it was a gut blow.”

Boseman was elevated to a stage that many Black actors don’t get the chance to occupy, said Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James. And his ability to be “transcendent” on that stage brought a comic book character to life for many in the Black community.

“Even though we knew that it was like a fictional story, it actually felt real. It actually felt like we finally had our Black superhero and nobody could touch us. So to lose that, it’s sad in our community,” James said, lamenting on the loss of “the Black Panther and the Black Mamba in the same year.”

In January, Bryant died in a helicopter crash involving eight others including his 13-year-old daughter, Gianna. Lewis died in July after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer last year.

Other notable deaths this year include actress Naya Rivera, civil rights leader C.T. Vivian and music executive Andre Harrell.

“The year 2020 has been up and down for everybody,” Milwaukee Bucks player Giannis Antetokounmpo said, adding that Boseman left “so much behind.”

“It’s a lot to unpack,” said Oklahoma City Thunder guard Chris Paul. “Chadwick was a special guy. I think everyone took it hard, especially the Black community. That was one of our black superheroes. I think ‘Black Panther’ was something so powerful, for myself along with my kids to see a superhero that looks like them and the way that he played it with such class and elegance. That was tough.”

Activist Martin Luther King III called Boseman’s death another “great loss.” But he encourages people not to lose hope even in a year of tumult.

“We could easily say ‘Oh my God. This is the most terrible year that existed.’ But I choose not to say that,” said the son of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. “Our ancestors had to go through so, so much. And yet, we’re still here. We are nowhere where we need to be, but we are always making progress and moving ahead.”

Gil Robertson, the co-founder and president of the African American Film Critics Association, said Black people are at a critical crossroads of their survival in America.

“We’re getting it from all sides of the fort,” Robertson said. “We’re losing these strong men. These men who operated with a level of integrity. A level of authenticity. I find all of this alarming. I hope that our community can really come together. … Not just for one cause. Just to make a consistent effort to rehabilitate our community.”

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AP Sports Writer Brian Mahoney contributed to this report from Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

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Follow AP Entertainment Writer Jonathan Landrum Jr. on Twitter: http://twitter.com/MrLandrum31

ABC To Air ‘Black Panther’ As Tribute To Chadwick Boseman

“Black Panther” won three Oscars, was nominated for best picture and grossed more than $1.3 billion worldwide.

NEW YORK (AP) — ABC will air “Black Panther” commercial-free Sunday as a prime-time tribute to Chadwick Boseman.

The film will be followed by an ABC News Special, “Chadwick Boseman: A Tribute for a King.” Disney said the special “will celebrate Boseman’s storied life, legacy and career” and “shine a light on the medical condition he privately battled.”

Boseman died Friday after a four-year battle with colon cancer. He was 43.

Walt Disney Co., which owns ABC, released “Black Panther” as well as the other three Marvel movies Boseman appeared in. The film will be broadcast at 8 p.m. EDT, with the special following at 10:20 p.m. EDT.

“Black Panther” won three Oscars, was nominated for best picture and grossed more than $1.3 billion worldwide.

Sunday’s airing will make the film widely watchable at the same time in several regions and could a collective place to celebrate and grieve Boseman. He is the latest major Black figure to die in 2020, which has already seen the loss of civil rights legend John Lewis and retired NBA star Kobe Bryant.

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This story has been corrected to fix spelling of Boseman’s name in the title of the ABC News special.

MTV VMAs Honor Chadwick Boseman: ‘His Impact Lives Forever’

Palmer said Boseman was “a true hero, not just on screen but in everything he did.” On screen, Boseman played Black icons like Jackie Robinson, James Brown and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.

NEW YORK (AP) — “Black Panther” star Chadwick Boseman, whose death from colon cancer shocked fans, was honored at the MTV Video Music Awards as a hero in real life, not just on the big screen.

Host Keke Palmer said the Sunday night awards show was dedicated to Boseman, who died at the age of 43 on Friday .

Boseman had previously been honored by the MTV Movie & TV Awards in 2018 for his role as the Marvel Comics superhero.

Palmer said Boseman was “a true hero, not just on screen but in everything he did.” On screen, Boseman played Black icons like Jackie Robinson, James Brown and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.

“His impact lives forever,” Palmer noted.

Later on Boseman was included during an in memoriam segment alongside other artists like Juice WRLD and Little Richard who died in the past year. And after Black Eyed Peas wrapped the show with their performance of “I Gotta Feeling,” singer Will.I.Am shouted out “Wakanda Forever,” a reference to the fictional kingdom the Black Panther rules in the film and comic series.

It’s was the second channel to recognize the impact of the actor that night. ABC aired “Black Panther” commercial-free Sunday as a prime-time tribute to the actor, followed by an ABC News Special, “Chadwick Boseman: A Tribute for a King.”

 

List Of Winners: 2020 MTV Video Music Awards

Winners of the 2020 MTV Video Music Awards, held Sunday night at various locations throughout New York City.

Winners of the 2020 MTV Video Music Awards, held Sunday night at various locations throughout New York City.

— Video of the year: The Weeknd, “Blinding Lights”

— Artist of the year: Lady Gaga

— Song of the year: Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande, “Rain on Me”

— Push best new artist: Doja Cat

— Best collaboration: Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande, “Rain on Me”

— Best group: BTS

— Best quarantine performance: CNCO, “MTV Unplugged at Home”

— Best music video from home: Ariana Grande and Justin Bieber, “Stuck with U”

— Best pop: BTS, “On”

— Best hip-hop: Megan Thee Stallion, “Savage”

— Best R&B: The Weeknd, “Blinding Lights”

— Best Latin: Maluma featuring J Balvin, “Qué Pena”

— Best rock: Coldplay, “Orphans”

— Best alternative: Machine Gun Kelly, “Bloody Valentine”

— Best K-pop: BTS, “On”

— Song of summer: BLACKPINK, “How You Like That”

— Video for good: H.E.R., “I Can’t Breathe”

— Best direction: Taylor Swift, “The Man”

— Best editing: Miley Cyrus, “Mother’s Daughter”

— Best choreography: BTS, “On”

— Best cinematography: Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande, “Rain on Me”

— Best visual effects: Dua Lipa, “Physical”

— Best art direction: Miley Cyrus, “Mother’s Daughter”

— MTV Tricon award: Lady Gaga

Supporting Black Businesses

Spotlighting Black Business as we close out the month of August, National Black Business Month

We are closing out National Black Business Month with a reminder that supporting Black Businesses should be a year round commitment.  My guest this morning is Brittany Jefferson – Owner of Messy Treatz at the National Harbor

August is National Black Business Month and The Waterfront District at National Harbor is proud to welcome two new African-American owned businesses. Messy Treatz opened Saturday, Aug. 22 and The Furlough Cheesecake opened a few weeks ago. Both shops are being operated by African-American women entrepreneurs and they join other African-American owned shops in the Waterfront District including Miguel Wilson, House of JonLei Atelier, New York New York, A Beautiful Closet, ZAAF and BrookieGirl. Also in the Waterfront District is The Brass Tap, an African-American owned craft beer bar with more than 150 craft beers from around the world.

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:

Brandy vs Monica Pre-Game Playlist

Is it Monday night yet? Over the past few days, weeks and months we all have been struggling to get a grasp on what’s going on in the world. The Verzuz sessions have been a good source of escapism for us all to just reflect fall in love with songs, artists and music that take us back to places and times when things were a little simpler.

Monday night we will have the opportunity to listen and watch two dynamic women who blessed us with their voices since they were teenagers. So here is a little refresher course in case you need to be reminded of the talents of Monica and Brandy. Enjoy!

 

Follow on Instagram @StretchG

Look Your Best, Mask And All!

The eyes HAVE IT!

He’s done every celebrity’s makeup from from Beyonce, Chaka Khan, Pattie LaBelle to Michelle Obama and Oprah.  Celebrity MUA Derrick Rutledge is a regular on HUR@Home and is teaching us how to stand out, even while wearing a mask. Derrick gave us a wealth of information about beauty, health and wellness.

Check out Derrick’s new company perfectingyourpresence.com

Follow on IG @Derrick4mkup @angelastribling @WHURfm

Addressing The U.S. Postal Service Crisis

What’s behind the U.S. Mail delays and what are postal workers saying about it?

We’re talking about the controversy continuing to swirl around the U.S. Postal Service and what workers are saying.  My guest is Ray Robinson, Executive Vice President of the American Postal Workers Union, Local #140.

 

BET ‘In Your Ear’ Host Brett Walker Talks His All-Time Favorite Interviews

Former BET Host of “In Your Ear” Brett Walker

“In Your Ear” was a show on BET in the 90s that shined the spotlight on up and coming artists. We took a walk down memory lane as host Brett Walker told us about some of his most challenging and favorite interviews. He described moments when he sat down with Biggie, Maxwell, Lil Kim and Seal.

Moco Free COVID-19 Testing Sites

Montgomery County announces free coronavirus testing clinics for the week of August 30th.

Rockville, Maryland (Saturday, August 29, 2020) – Montgomery County health officials will provide free walk-in and drive-thru COVID-19 testing at multiple sites during the week of August 30th. Testing clinics are free, no doctor’s order is required, and no appointments are needed. Residents with symptoms should call the Testing Helpline at 240-777-1755 for assistance with testing. The County’s home-based testing and human services screening is available for eligible residents. Find more information on the home-based testing and eligibility on the testing website.

The self-administered nasal swab tests provided at the testing clinics are from CIAN Diagnostic Laboratories in Frederick, under a contract with the Maryland Department of Health.  These tests are anterior nares swab molecular tests. Also called a PCR test, this diagnostic test detects genetic material of the COVID-19 virus using a lab technique called polymerase chain reaction (PCR).

Monday, Aug. 31

PlumGar Community Recreation Center
19561 Scenery Drive, Germantown
9 a.m. – 1 p.m.

Wheaton Library & Community Recreation Center
11701 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring
9 a.m. – 1 p.m.

Silver Spring Civic Building
One Veterans Plaza, Silver Spring
1 p.m. – 7 p.m.

Tuesday, Sept. 1

White Oak Community Recreation Center
1700 April Lane, Silver Spring
9 a.m. – 1 p.m.

Wednesday, Sept. 2

Wheaton Library & Community Recreation Center
11701 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring
9 a.m. – 1 p.m.

CDC Mobile Trailer Lakeforest Mall
Outdoor drive-up clinic; walk-ups welcome Parking lot near
food court entrance, directly in front of Ride On transfer station
701 Russell Avenue, Gaithersburg
9 a.m. – 1 p.m.

Thursday, Sept. 3

White Oak Community Recreation Center
1700 April Lane, Silver Spring
9 a.m. – 1 p.m.

Silver Spring Civic Building
One Veterans Plaza, Silver Spring
1 p.m. – 7 p.m.

Friday, Sept. 4

PlumGar Community Recreation Center
19561 Scenery Drive, Germantown
9 a.m. – 1 p.m.

CDC Mobile Testing Trailer
Outdoor drive-up clinic; walk-ups welcome
Recreation Department Administrative Building
4010 Randolph Road, Silver Spring
9 a.m. – 1 p.m.

Find out more about free testing clinics for COVID-19 at www.MoCoCOVIDTesting.org.

DC Basketball Court In Memory of Dr. King

Ward 8 basketball court renovated with Dr. King’s “I Have A Dream” message.

Washington, D.C. (Saturday, August 29, 2020)  –  Just in time to mark the 57th Anniversary of the historic March on Washington, officials in the District of Columbia yesterday unveiled a newly renovated basketball court in memory of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

The administration of Mayor Muriel Bowser  and the DC Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR), in conjunction with the Steve Francis Foundation, revealed the new courts  at Oxon Run Park in Ward 8.

“We graciously accept this gift for the community and thank Steve Francis for giving back, through the sport he loves, in a way that encourages and inspires, said DPR Director Delano Hunter.  “It is sure to be a new destination for lovers of basketball and art in the DC area.”  

Steve Francis, former NBA All-Star and founder of the Steve Francis Foundation, dedicated the mural to honor the anniversary of the “March on Washington.”  The mural was painted on the two basketball courts located on the corner of Wheeler Road and Valley Ave. SE in Oxon Run Park.

The “I Have a Dream” mural was designed, painted and installed to raise awareness of voting rights, civil and racial equity by using his platform and standing in solidarity with other professional athletes calling racial justice. New hoops and nets were also added to the outdoor amenity.

The Steve Francis Foundation partnered on this donation with Venice Ball, who managed the renovation project and assembled the muralists and painters.

Taking part in the ribbon-cutting were DPR Director Hunter, Ward 8 Councilmember Trayon White, Steve Francis and a small group of community leaders and residents.

HU Community Mourns the Loss of Chadwick Boseman

Howard University President Dr. Wayne Frederick releases statement about the passing of HU alumnus Chadwick Boseman.

Washington, D.C. (August 29, 2020) – Howard University President Dr. Wayne Frederick released the following statement today about the passing of Chadwick Boseman.

It is with profound sadness that we mourn the loss of alumnus Chadwick Boseman who passed away last night after a long private battle with colon cancer. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends during this difficult time.

We were honored to have Boseman return to campus to serve as our commencement speaker in 2018. The campus was electric as our own native son took the stage fresh off the blockbuster hit of Black Panther. In a sense, the real T’Challa had returned home to the real Wakanda – The Mecca.

During his remarks, Boseman shared his journey of challenges and successes in navigating the Hollywood entertainment industry. He described how he chose to speak out when asked to play characters that belittled the image of the Black man. He intentionally chose roles that reflected the vision of his people that he wanted to see on screen. Boseman spoke fondly of his days at Howard, calling it “a magical place” and saying, “when you have reached the Hilltop and you are deciding on next steps, you would rather find purpose than a career. Purpose is an essential element of you that crosses disciplines.”

It was Boseman’s desire to see the students of Howard achieve greatness. Together, he and I shared many conversations preparing plans for a project that would bring him back to campus, which was very close to being ready to announce. Although now he will not be here to witness the harvest of the seeds he planted, we will continue to water and cultivate them in his memory.

Boseman was a man of grace and humility. A deep thinker who had a deep passion for writing and uplifting his people. A staunch supporter of social justice, he did not shy away from using his voice in service to those without one.  We now know he was in a fight for his life yet continued creating magic for all of us without missing a beat.  He lived a full life by the magnitude of his example.  That reality buoys my spirits even in this time of sadness. One of the last times I saw him was at dinner with his mentor, fellow alumna and former board of trustee member, Phylicia Rashad. That interplay captured the essence of Howard University and our truth and service. He always appreciated the opportunity she made possible for him and she remained a source of support!

A native of South Carolina, Boseman graduated from Howard University and attended the British American Dramatic Academy at Oxford, after which he began his career as an actor, director and writer. His breakout performance came in 2013 when he received rave reviews for his portrayal of the legendary Jackie Robinson in Warner Bros’ “42” opposite Harrison Ford.  Boseman received the 2014 CinemaCon Male Star of Tomorrow Award, was named one of the Top 10 Best Movie Performances of 2014 by Time Magazine and was awarded a Virtuous Award from the Santa Barbara International Film Festival for his portrayal of James Brown in Universal Pictures’ “Get on Up.”

Boseman famously starred as T’Challa/Black Panther in the worldwide phenomenon Marvel Studios’ “Black Panther.” He made his debut in the Marvel Cinematic Universe as the African superhero in Marvel Studios’ “Captain America: Civil War,” in May 2016. He reprised the role again for Marvel Studios’ “Avengers: Infinity War” in 2018.

He previously starred in the title role of Open Road Films’ “Marshall” alongside Josh Gad. The film tells the story of Thurgood Marshall, the first African American Supreme Court Justice, as he battles through one of his career-defining cases as the Chief Counsel to the NAACP. His other feature film credits include: the revenge thriller “Message from the King,” Summit Entertainment’s “Draft Day” opposite Kevin Costner, independent psychological post-war drama “The Kill Hole” and Gary Fleders’ drama “The Express.”

Although he was only 43, Boseman leaves to us a remarkable body of work portraying Black men of honor, purpose and dignity: Jackie Robinson, Thurgood Marshall (Law ’33), and James Brown. This young man’s incredible talent will forever be immortalized in those performances and through his own personal journey from student to superhero!

Love is Life and he had an abundance of both. Boseman reminds us that the quality of life is not measured in time, but rather it is measured in how well we live it and what we prioritized. He prioritized his wife, his family, his friends, his craft, and loving others. The characters he portrayed will be celebrated but his greatest gift to us was himself.

Rest in Power, Chadwick!

Excellence in Truth and Service,

Wayne A. I. Frederick, M.D., MBA

President

 

Chadwick Boseman Dies of Cancer at 43

Boseman was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2016, his family said in a statement. 

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Actor Chadwick Boseman, who played Black icons Jackie Robinson and James Brown before finding fame as the regal Black Panther in the Marvel movies, has died of cancer. His representative says Boseman died Friday in Los Angeles after a four-year battle with colon cancer. He was 43. Boseman died at his home in the Los Angeles area with his wife and family by his side, his publicist Nicki Fioravante told The Associated Press.

 

Boseman was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2016, his family said in a statement. Boseman graduated from Howard University in 2000.  He was the commencement speaker for the graduating class of 2018.  See below.

Chadwick Boseman to Speak at Howard University (2018)

‘Black Panther’ Star Chadwick Boseman Dies Of Cancer At 43

Boseman died at his home in the Los Angeles area with his wife and family by his side, his publicist Nicki Fioravante told The Associated Press.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Actor Chadwick Boseman, who played Black icons Jackie Robinson and James Brown before finding fame as the regal Black Panther in the Marvel movies, has died of cancer. His representative says Boseman died Friday in Los Angeles after a four-year battle with colon cancer. He was 43. Boseman died at his home in the Los Angeles area with his wife and family by his side, his publicist Nicki Fioravante told The Associated Press. Boseman was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2016, his family said in a statement.

 

Reporters’ Roundtable

We talk about the march and some of the other stories impacting African-Americans this week.

George Floyd’s family is urging civil rights protesters to “be his legacy.”  Family members told thousands at today’s commitment march for racial equality in DC they have to be the voice and the change.  The rally was called “Get your knee off our necks” – a reference to Floyd’s police death in may.  It commemorated the 1963 march on Washington where the iconic “I have a dream” speech was made by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  We talk about the march and some of the other stories impacting African-Americans this week.

Erica Savage Wilson, Political Analyst

Dr. Greg Carr, Chair, Afro-American Studies, Howard University

@FrankSkiInspirationalVitamin: SPEAK LIFE

Proverbs 18:21 ESV
Death and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love it will eat its fruits.

Frank Ski’s Inspirational Vitamin is his positive daily spiritual note to keep you going! 

Be sure to follow @FrankSki, @peninabrown, @FrankSkiInspirationalVitamin & @FrankSkiShow for more inspiration and encouragement on @WHURFM. #AMEN #beblessed #God #Declaration #Love#frankski#inspirationalvitamin #96.3WHUR ✝️🙏🏽✝️

Severe Storms for Midwest, South, East Coast Into Weekend

Saturday the threat moves to the East Coast, the Weather Channel reports.

Strong storms and some heavy rain over a wide area in the Midwest to Great Lakes happened overnight. Saturday the threat moves to the East Coast, the Weather Channel reports.

Republican Convention Ends With Trump White House Speech

The Republican National Convention wrapped up with President Trump accepting the Republican re-nomination for president.

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump blasted Joe Biden as a hapless career politician who will endanger Americans’ safety as he accepted his party’s renomination on the South Lawn of the White House. While the coronavirus kills 1,000 Americans each day, Trump defied his own administration’s pandemic guidelines to speak for more than an hour to a tightly packed, largely maskless crowd.

Facing a moment fraught with racial turmoil, economic collapse and a national health emergency, Trump delivered a triumphant, optimistic vision of America’s future Thursday. But he said that brighter horizon could only be secured if he defeated his Democratic foe, who currently has an advantage in most national and battleground state polls.

When Trump finished, a massive fireworks display went off by the Washington Monument, complete with explosions that spelled out “Trump 2020.”

His acceptance speech kicked off the final stretch of the campaign, a race now fully joined and, despite the pandemic, soon to begin crisscrossing the country. Trump’s pace of travel will pick up to a near daily pace while Biden, who has largely weathered the pandemic from this Delaware home, announced Thursday that he will soon resume campaign travel.

Teasing once more that a vaccine could arrive soon, the president promised victory over the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more than 180,000 people in the United States, left millions unemployed and rewritten the rules of society. And, in the setting for his speech, Trump sought to project a sense of normalcy by throwing caution about the coronavirus aside.

All week long, Republicans at the nonconvention convention tried to create the illusion that the pandemic is largely a thing of the past. The rows of chairs on the South Lawn were inches apart. Protective masks were not required, and COVID-19 tests were not administered to everyone.

As his speech brought the scaled-back Republican National Convention to a close, Trump’s incendiary rhetoric risked inflaming a divided nation reeling from a series of calamities, including the pandemic, a major hurricane that slammed into the Gulf Coast and nights of protest after Jacob Blake, a Black man, was shot by a white Wisconsin police officer. Prosecutors charged a white, 17-year-old police admirer with the fatal shooting of two protesters and wounding of a third.

Trying to run as an insurgent as well as incumbent, Trump rarely includes calls for unity, even in a time of national uncertainty. Presenting himself as the last barrier protecting an American way of life under siege from radical forces, Trump has repeatedly, if not always effectively, tried to portray Biden — who is considered a moderate Democrat — as a tool of extreme leftists.

He mocked his opponent’s record and famous empathy, suggesting that “laid-off workers in Michigan, Ohio, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania” don’t “want Joe Biden’s hollow words of empathy, they wanted their jobs back.”

In a week of racial tumult, Republicans have claimed that the violence that has erupted in Kenosha, Wisconsin, and some other American cities is to be blamed on Democratic governors and mayors and would only grow worse under a Biden administration. That drew a stern rebuke from Biden.

“Every example of violence Donald Trump decries has happened on his watch. Under his leadership. During his presidency,” Biden tweeted. He has accused Trump of “rooting for more violence” to benefit him politically.

Both parties are watching with uncertainty the developments in Wisconsin and cities across the nation with Republicans leaning hard on support for law and order — with no words offered for Black victims of police violence — while falsely claiming that Biden has not condemned the lawlessness.

Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal attorney and New York City’s former mayor, declared that Democrats’ “silence was so deafening that it reveals an acceptance of this violence because they will accept anything they hope will defeat President Donald Trump.”

Though some of the speakers, unlike on previous nights, offered notes of sympathy to the families of Black men killed by police, Giuliani also took aim at the Black Lives Matter movement, suggesting that it, along with antifa, was part of the extremist voices pushing Biden to “execute their pro-criminal, anti-police policies” and had “hijacked the protests into vicious, brutal riots.”

Along with Biden, running mate Kamala Harris offered counter-programming for Trump’s prime-time speech. She delivered a speech a half-mile from the White House, declaring, “Donald Trump has failed at the most basic and important job of a president of the United States: He failed to protect the American people, plain and simple.”

Some demonstrators took to Washington’s streets Thursday night, ahead of a march planned for Friday. New fencing was set up along the White House perimeter to keep the protesters at bay, but some of their shouts and car horns were clearly audible on the South Lawn, where more than 1,500 people gathered. Soon after Trump began talking, the horns and sirens — which came through occasionally to the millions watching at home — caused some people in the last row to turn around and look for the source of the disturbance.

After the convention concluded, there were skirmishes as protesters yelled and threw water bottles at police at the historic St. John’s Church near Black Lives Matter Plaza. There were some arrests.

Trump, who has defended his handling of the pandemic, touted an expansion of rapid coronavirus testing. The White House announced Thursday that it had struck a $750 million deal to acquire 150 million tests from Abbott Laboratories to be deployed in nursing homes, schools and other areas with populations at high risk.

Most of the convention has been aimed at former Trump supporters or nonvoters, and has tried to drive up negative impressions of Biden so that some of his possible backers stay home. Many of the messages were aimed squarely at seniors and suburban women.

Four years ago, Trump declared in his acceptance speech that “I alone can fix” the nation’s woes, but he has found himself asking voters for another term at the nadir of his presidency, amid the devastating pandemic, crushing unemployment and real uncertainties about schools and businesses reopening.

Another one million Americans filed for unemployment benefits last week, in numbers released Thursday. And the U.S. economy shrank at an alarming annual rate of 31.7% during the April-June quarter as it struggled under the weight of the viral pandemic. It was sharpest quarterly drop on record.

Commitment March On The National Mall

Activism on display on the National Mall as people rallied for racial and social justice and police reform.

Justice, equality and police reform the themes today from the National Mall as thousands have gathered for the Commitment March.

Participants marched to the Martin Luther King memorial and then settled at the Lincoln Memorial where speakers  include Al Sharpton, Martin Luther King III and those whose family members died in police involved incidents.

Due to COVID-19 concerns, attendees are required to wear face coverings and are encouraged to wear gloves and practice social distancing.  There will be temperature checks.  Any buses bringing people in from high risk coronavirus areas in the U.S. will be turned away.  WHUR’s Harold Fisher is on site offering live reports.

Today marks the 57th anniversary of the March on Washington where Martin Luther King, Jr delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech.

Thousands Expected At March On Washington Commemorations

Thousands are expected at the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, where the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his historic “I Have A Dream” address, a vision of racial equality that remains elusive for millions of Americans.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Civil rights advocates will on Friday highlight the scourge of police and vigilante violence against Black Americans at a commemoration of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Thousands are expected at the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, where the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his historic “I Have A Dream” address, a vision of racial equality that remains elusive for millions of Americans. But turnout will be lighter than initially intended due to city-imposed coronavirus pandemic restrictions that limit out-of-state visitors to the nation’s capital. Satellite march events have been planned in a handful of states, including South Carolina, Florida and Nevada.

 

WHUR Voters’ Guide. Vote… Your Life Depends On It

Voters’ guide to get you prepared for one of the most historic Elections of our lifetime. NO EXCUSES. Get Registered and VOTE. YOUR VOTE MATTERS!!!

Washington, D.C (Friday, August 28th 2020) – There are many important dates to mark on your calendar as we prepare for the 2020 General Election.  WHUR has put together a quick guide for the DMV to make sure you’re ready.  Vote Like Your Life Depends On It… Because It Does.

What you need to know to vote in the District of Columbia

For the 2020 Presidential General Election:

You can register by mail to vote in The District of Columbia by printing a voter registration form, filling it out, and mailing it to your local election office. You can also register to vote in person if you prefer.

Deadlines and Dates:

  • Election day is Tuesday, November 3, 2020.
  • The deadline for registering by mail to vote is (received by) Tuesday, October 13, 2020.
  • The deadline to register in person to vote is Tuesday, October 13, 2020.
  • You can also register and vote on Election Day.
  • Vote Centers for the November 3 General Election will open Tuesday, October 27, 2020, through Monday, November 2, 2020, from 8:30 am – 7:00 pm.
  • November 3, 2020 (Election Day), Vote Centers will open from 7:00 am – 8:00 pm.
  • You may drop off your voted mail ballot in ANY Ballot Drop Box at ANY time, before 8:00 pm on Election Day, November 3, 2020.

For more details click here: https://www.dcboe.org/Elections/2020-Elections

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

What you need to know to vote in Maryland.

For the 2020 Presidential General Election:

Maryland offers online voter registration. You can register by mail to vote in Maryland by printing a voter registration form, filling it out, and mailing it to your local election office. You can also register to vote in person if you prefer.

Deadlines and Dates:

  • Election day is Tuesday, November 3, 2020.
  • The deadline to register online to vote is Tuesday, October 13, 2020.
  • The deadline for registering by mail to vote is (postmarked by) Tuesday, October 13, 2020.
  • The deadline to register in person to vote is Tuesday, October 13, 2020.
  • The deadline to request a ballot by mail is (received by) Tuesday, October 20, 2020.
  • The early voting period runs from Monday, October 26, 2020 to Monday, November 2, 2020, but dates and hours may vary based on where you live.
  • You can also register and vote on Election Day.

For more details click here: https://elections.maryland.gov/voting/index.html

 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

 What you need to know to vote in the Commonwealth of Virginia

For the 2020 Presidential General Election

Virginia offers online voter registration. You can register by mail to vote in Virginia by printing a voter registration form, filling it out, and mailing it to your local election office. You can also register to vote in person if you prefer.

Deadlines and Dates:

  • Deadline to register to vote, or update an existing registration, is Tuesday, October 13, 2020.
  • Deadline to request an absentee ballot to be mailed to you isFriday, October 23, 2020. Your request must be received by your Registrar by 5:00 p.m.
  • October 31st last day to apply in person for an absentee ballot. Application must be completed at the GR office.
  • Starting 45 days before Election Day, visit your local registrar’s office or a satellite voting location in your county or city to vote early. Remember, the Saturday before Election Day is the last day to vote early.
  • In person voting begins September 18th
  • September 19th Absentee voting begins
  • You do not have to have a reason or fill out an application to vote early.
  • At the registrar’s office or satellite voting location, you must provide your name and address and show an acceptable form of ID or sign an ID Confirmation Statement.

For more details, click here: https://www.elections.virginia.gov/index.html

 

 

Looking For Students Interested In Music

FAME is holding auditions for it’s Jazz Band Program

The Foundation for the Advancement of Music and Education or FAME is now accepting application for its Jazz Band Program.  My guests will be Ms.  Toni Lewis – Founder and Executive Director and Langston Hughes, II – Graduate from the FAME Jazz Band Program

FAME applications are open thru September 18th.  Auditions will be Saturday, September 26th.  For all middle and high school students who live and or attend school in Prince George’s County.  Applicants must be committed to playing their musical instrument and performing and exceling in jazz music. For information call 301-805-5358 or 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:

RNC Wraps Up, What Can We Expect?

Protesters will try to drown out President Trump as he delivers his speech from the south lawn of The White House. 

In just a few hours… President Trump will close out the Republican National Convention It’s expected that he will continue the law and order theme he birthed in 2016.  But this convention is different.  There’s been push back from his Democratic challengers.  Protesters will try to drown him out as he delivers his speech from the south lawn of The White House.  What is expected from the RNC’s biggest night?

Catherine Saunders, Progressive Political Analyst (not pictured)

Melik Abdul, Republican Strategist

 

Conversations with Ice Cube on The Frank Ski Show

Politicians are being asked to sign the pledge in return for black voting support. The manifesto seeks to “redress past wrongs systematically imposed on Black Americans economically throughout many generations that has resulted in a “wealth gap” where the average White family has 10x the wealth of a Black Family.”

 Hip Hop Icon Ice Cube stopped by The Frank Ski Show with Nina Brown, to talk about our vote and the importance of not giving it away.   Check out the full audio below to see what Ice Cube had to say!

Sending a Big “Thank You” to Ice Cube for stopping by The @FrankSkiShow with @PENinaBrown.  To find out more about Ice Cube and everything they talked about during the interview.. click here IceCube.com.

Be sure to follow Ice Cube on all social media!

IG – @icecube

Twitter – @icecube

Facebook – IceCube

4 deaths tied to Hurricane Laura

Hotel rooms are needed because conventional communal shelters pose a risk for spreading the coronavirus.

LAKE CHARLES, La. — Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards said state officials now know of four deaths tied to Hurricane Laura.
The deaths were all caused by trees falling on residences, Edwards said. None were on the coast, having happened in Vernon, Jackson and Acadia parishes. One death in Jackson in north Louisiana demonstrated the power of the storm, which made landfall as a Category 4 storm early Thursday, and traveled farther inland.
Edwards said the current priority is search and rescue, followed by efforts to find hotel or motel rooms for those who have lost their homes.


Hotel rooms are needed because conventional communal shelters pose a risk for spreading the coronavirus, he said.
Edwards said storm surge was measured in the range of 9 feet to 12 feet bad but far less than the 20 feet that had been forecast. He said that has led him to hope that there will be less water damage to homes close to the coast, and that damaged homes can be made habitable more quickly.

Harris Condemns Police Shooting In Wisconsin

She also condemned any violence at protests and called for meaningful police reforms.

(Washington, DC) — Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris is condemning the police shooting of an African American man in Kenosha, Wisconsin. She called it sickening to watch and all too familiar and said such occurrences “must end.” Jacob Blake survived the shooting, but is in very serious condition and may never walk again. Harris said people have a right to be angry and to engage in protests about racial injustice. She also condemned any violence at protests and called for meaningful police reforms.

Sports Leagues And Teams React To Blake Shooting

Washington’s professional team will skip a scrimmage to talk about social unrest in the U.S.

The Washington Football team says it will meet today to talk about the social unrest in the country instead of holding a team scrimmage.  The NBA says it will resume its playoff games but has not announced when that will be. NBA games, and those of major league baseball and soccer were postponed yesterday in reaction to the police shooting of Joseph Blake.

———————–

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) — NBA players didn’t come to Disney solely for a restart. They also wanted social reform.

The Milwaukee Bucks showed how far they’re willing to go to get it by opting not to play in their playoff game Wednesday. Two more games were postponed later in the day, the second time this season NBA basketball came to an immediate halt.

Other sports followed, just as they did in March when the season was suspended four months because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Later Thursday, the NBA’s board of governors will meet and likely address whether the playoff games scheduled for the night will be played. The players also will meet separately to decide how long the stoppage lasts.

“The biggest thing that we all understand is if we’re not playing, what are we doing? What are we doing to show and to help what’s going on outside this bubble?” Boston Celtics forward Grant Williams said, shortly before the Bucks were scheduled to tip off their game against the Orlando Magic.

While players and teams from baseball, the WNBA, MLS and tennis sat out their competitions Wednesday night, NBA players and coaches met for nearly three hours in a Disney hotel to determine next steps, including whether the season should continue. They did not come to a consensus, a person with knowledge of the meeting told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because details weren’t revealed publicly.

The Western & Southern Open won’t be played Thursday, with the U.S. Tennis Association, along with the ATP and WTA Tours, announcing play would be paused after two-time Grand Slam women’s champion Naomi Osaka had already said she wouldn’t play her semifinal match.

“I don’t expect anything drastic to happen with me not playing, but if I can get a conversation started in a majority white sport I consider that a step in the right direction,” Osaka tweeted. “Watching the continued genocide of Black people at the hand of the police is honestly making me sick to my stomach.”

Before coming to Disney, many NBA players wrestled for weeks about whether it was even right to play, fearing that a return to games would take attention off the deaths of, among others, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd in recent months.

They ultimately decided coming to the bubble and playing televised games would give them the largest platform, though now at least some are wondering if that’s still true. Toronto coach Nick Nurse said he’s heard some players on his team say they were thinking about going home.

Clippers coach Doc Rivers hopes they won’t.

His players considered boycotting a playoff game in 2014 after audio tapes featuring former owner Donald Sterling were revealed. He said this time is different because it’s the whole league, rather than one team, weighing the decision.

“I think every team has to decide what they want to do and honestly I hope everyone plays,” Rivers said. “I just think showing the excellence in doing your job, there’s nothing wrong with that, but also fighting for what’s right is important as well.”

It certainly is for the Bucks, who play about 40 miles from Kenosha. Sterling Brown, one of the players to read the statement, has a federal lawsuit pending against the city of Milwaukee alleging he was targeted because he was Black and that his civil rights were violated in January 2018 when officers used a stun gun on him after a parking violation.

And it is for the Raptors, whose team president, Masai Ujiri, had an altercation with an Oracle Arena security guard after Game 6 of last year’s NBA Finals. A video of it released recently appears to show an Alameda County sheriff’s deputy initially shoved Ujiri, who is Black, twice.

They are scheduled to open the second round Thursday against Boston, but Nurse said his players were already having discussions about not playing.

“Boycotting the game has come up for them and again, as a way to try to demand a little more action and I think that’s really what they want,” Nurse said.

“I think there’s enough attention and there’s not quite enough action and I think that’s what I can sense from the discussion. Their disappointment of man, how can we get something to change?”

It probably starts with actions like the Bucks took. Rivers and LeBron James had passionately described the emotions the NBA community felt after seeing the video of Blake’s shooting.

But it’s going to take more than players sitting out NBA games.

“It’s going to take all our institutions to stand up for our values,” former President Barack Obama tweeted, commending the NBA and WNBA players while posting a link to Rivers’ comments from earlier this week.

Hurricane Laura Touches Down

Hurricane Laura hit Louisiana overnight. Heavy rains, winds and flash flooding occur.

LAKE CHARLES, La. — Early reports emerging in the wake of Hurricane Laura show less damage than what was feared.

The eye passed directly over Lake Charles, where drone video shows roofs ripped off, exposing living rooms to the elements; trees downed and water overflowing the banks of coastal properties.

But FEMA Administrator Peter Gaynor says the damage seems to be less than what they feared with Laura hitting the coast as a potentially catastrophic Category 4 hurricane early Thursday.

Gaynor told ABC’s “Good Morning America” that the surge turned out to be less than what was forecasted, but he expects significant wind damage to buildings once they do proper surveys of the disaster area.

Louisiana State Police Maj. Doug Cain said they received a report that the Isle of Capri’s riverboat casino broke from its mooring and was stuck against the Interstate 10 bridge in Lake Charles. The casino says its Grand Palais riverboat houses 34 table games and more than 1,175 slot machines.

The governors of Louisiana and Texas say search and rescue teams are still looking, but they’ve found no reports so far of widespread fatalities.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is crediting the evacuations of thousands of people for preventing deaths in Texas. Edwards says they are only beginning to assess the damage.

Both governors say the storm surge appears to have been not as bad as they feared.

Abbott said the hurricane’s storm surge hit the east Texas communities of Port Arthur, Beaumont and Orange “pretty hard” overnight and the eye of the hurricane has continued to move about 100 miles north along the Texas-Louisiana state line.

——————————–

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Hurricane Laura is headed toward Arkansas, where an unusual tropical storm warning has been issued for much of the state.

The storm is hitting during the state’s first week back at public school since March. Many schools in the southern half of Arkansas opted to cancel classes Thursday or dismiss early because of the storm.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson declared an emergency and set aside $250,000 for the state to prepare for the hurricane’s impact. Hutchinson said the state will have search and rescue teams on standby.

Laura is now a Category 1 hurricane but still blowing hard enough to be deadly. The first reported death, of a girl whose house was hit by a tree, was in Leesburg, more than 100 miles inland from the coast.

 

Supporting Businesses In Prince George’s County

The coronavirus pandemic is forcing many of the county’s businesses to close their doors…here’s how you can help.

Businesses need customers now more than ever and there’s a campaign underway in Prince George’s County to urge people to “Buy Prince George’s.”  The coronavirus pandemic certainly has impacted just about every business you can think of.  Tell us about the impact in Prince George’s County.  My guest this morning is David Iannucci, President/CEO of Prince George’s County Economic Development Corporation

We know that many businesses have been forced to closed their doors and gone out of business.   “Buy Prince George’s” is a program to help support county businesses and encourage resident to patronize those businesses.  More information 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:

The Commitment March: Why We Protest

Preview of the March on Washington Commitment March

In two days, thousands are expected to come to the nation’s capital to commemorate the 1963 March on Washington.  57-years ago, it was a march for jobs and freedom.
Now, for The Commitment March, there are so many issues facing a divided America. This is especially true for people of color.  Among those issues is the name of Jacob Blake.  Added to the list of unarmed black men shot by police. We talk about the issues and preview the commitment march.

Resources:

Dr. Malik Shabbazz, Attorney

Tylik McMillan, National Action Network-DC, Policy Advisor (not pictured)

Malik Shabazz, Esq., Activist and Civil Rights Attorney

 

Bucks Boycott Playoff Game Over Racial Injustice

Players had been discussing boycotting games in the bubble after
the shooting of Jacob Blake.

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) NBA players made their strongest
statement yet against racial injustice Wednesday when the Milwaukee
Bucks didn’t take the floor for their playoff game against the
Orlando Magic.

The teams were set to begin Game 5 of their series shortly after 4
p.m., with the Bucks needing a win to advance to the second round.

Players had been discussing boycotting games in the bubble after
the shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man, by police in Kenosha,
Wisconsin. More discussions were expected Wednesday, but even
before that the Bucks apparently they would act.

Magic player and referees were on the floor for the game but
Milwaukee never took the floor. Eventually everyone else left and
the arena staff soon took the balls, towels and tags that go on
player chairs back inside.

@FrankSkiInspirationalVitamin: Validation

Galatians 1:10 ESV
For am I now seeking the approval of man, or of God? Or am I trying to please man? If I were still trying to please man, I would not be a servant of Christ.

Frank Ski’s Inspirational Vitamin is his positive daily spiritual note to keep you going! 

Be sure to follow @FrankSki, @peninabrown, @FrankSkiInspirationalVitamin & @FrankSkiShow for more inspiration and encouragement on @WHURFM. #AMEN #beblessed #God #Declaration #Love#frankski#inspirationalvitamin #96.3WHUR ✝️🙏🏽✝️

 

Hurricane Laura is at Category 4

Laura is expected to strike Wednesday night into Thursday morning along the Louisiana-Texas border.

GALVESTON, Texas — Hurricane Laura strengthened Wednesday into “an extremely dangerous Category 4 hurricane,” The National Hurricane Center said.

Laura is expected to strike Wednesday night into Thursday morning along the Louisiana-Texas border. Forecasters warn of “catastrophic storm surge, extreme winds and flash flooding” and 20 feet of storm surge.

Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards is urging southwest residents to flee their homes. In a press conference today, Edwards implored residents to seek safety as Hurricane Laura is expected to bring an unheard-of level of storm surge to Cameron Parish.

Tropical storm winds Wednesday afternoon reached the coast of Louisiana where water levels started to rise. An observing site at Eugene Island measured sustained winds of 39 mph and a gust of 64 mph.

Laura’s well-formed eye was 200 miles south southeast of Lake Charles, Louisiana and Port Arthur, Texas, early Wednesday afternoon.

Laura is predicted to reach at least 145 mph winds, but may weaken ever so slightly before landfall.

Teen Arrested In Deadly Kenosha Shooting

Two people were killed Tuesday night in an attack.

KENOSHA, Wis. (AP) — A white, 17-year-old police admirer has been arrested after the killing of two people during a third night of protests in Kenosha over the police shooting of a Black man, Jacob Blake. Kyle Rittenhouse, of Antioch, Illinois, was taken into custody Wednesday in Illinois on suspicion of first-degree intentional homicide. Antioch is about 15 miles from Kenosha. Two people were killed Tuesday night in an attack carried out by a young white man who was caught on cellphone video opening fire in the middle of the street with a semi-automatic rifle.

Helping Children and Their Families Cope During The Covid-19 Pandemic

Child Fund International is addressing issues that the pandemic is causing .

Providing children and their families a lifeline amid the COVID-19 pandemic.  ChildFund International is stepping up to get those in need the services necessary to stay a float.  My guest is  Anne Lynam Goddard – President and CEO of ChildFund International.

ChildFund International, a child focused international development organization, has undertaken urgent efforts to protect children in need amid the crises caused by the coronavirus pandemic.  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:

The Shooting of Jacob Blake

Community protests and unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin

For the past two nights, protests and vandalism have scarred the streets of Kenosha, Wisconsin.  It’s reaction to the shooting of Jacob Blake, an unarmed black man by white police officers.  The viral video adding fuel to Black Lives Matter protest and the debate about the police in black communities.  We listen to a few of the voices from people on the front lines of this issue.

Mikel Holt, Associate Publisher, Columnist, The Milwaukee Community Journal
Wendell Harris, President, NAACP State Conference, Wisconsin

 

@FrankSkiInspirationalVitamin: So Prosperous

Psalms 35:7 NKJV
Let them shout for joy and be glad, Who favor my righteous cause; And let them say continually, “Let the LORD be magnified, Who has pleasure in the prosperity of His servant.”

Frank Ski’s Inspirational Vitamin is his positive daily spiritual note to keep you going! 

Be sure to follow @FrankSki, @peninabrown, @FrankSkiInspirationalVitamin & @FrankSkiShow for more inspiration and encouragement on @WHURFM. #AMEN #beblessed #God #Declaration #Love #frankski#inspirationalvitamin #96.3WHUR ✝️🙏🏽✝️

Prosecutors: Don’t Drop Charges Against Minn. Cop

Prosecutors depict ex-officer as complicit in Floyd’s death

Prosecutors have urged a Minnesota judge not to dismiss the charges against one of four ex-Minneapolis police officers charged in the death of George Floyd. They say Tou Thao pushed back bystanders and prevented them from intervening as the other officers pinned Floyd to the ground. The attorney general’s office said in a filing Monday that there’s “more than sufficient” evidence to support aiding and abetting murder and manslaughter charges against Thao. A motions hearing is set for Sept. 11. The four were fired after Floyd’s May 25 death, which sparked protests against racial injustice and police brutality worldwide.