
White Woman Charged After Racist Central Park Confrontation
Amy Cooper charged with falsely reporting.
Amy Cooper charged with falsely reporting.

The July 5th edition of HUR@Home Inspiration featured Anthony Maclin, Pastor of The Sanctuary at Kingdom Square in Prince George’s County and Gospel artist Brent Jones. Anthony Maclin became Pastor of The Sanctuary at Kingdom Square in 1986. Under his pastoral leadership, The Sanctuary has grown to more than 3,000 members with 75 active ministries. Gospel Today Magazine lists Pastor Maclin as a “Pastorpreneur” and he was recognized by the 100 Black Men of Washington, DC for Outstanding Leadership in Community Development.
Pastor Maclin talked about The Sanctuary’s drive-in Sunday church services that have been keeping the congregation safe during the COVID-19 pandemic. His Sunday morning sermon was entitled, “Teachable Moments” and used biblical references to how God is shifting his people into new seasons. He originally did not think that celebrating Juneteenth, that commemorates how slaves in Texas were delayed in finding out they were free, was a good idea. However, God revealed to him that the celebration is not in the delay, but in the freedom, just as we celebrate our freedom through God’s grace and not our delay in coming to Him.
Pastor Maclin is working to educate the residents of Price George’s County about an upcoming referendum around property taxes and he emphasized the importance of voting. Pastor Maclin talked with our next guest Brent Jones about preserving the impact of large choirs despite the challenges of COVID 19.
Brent Jones is a singer/songwriter/choir master extraordinaire that is working to release a new choir album in January. His group, Brent Jones and the T.P. Mobb made their recording debut in 1994. Brent also served in the music ministry of Ebenezer AME Church in Fort Washington, MD. He returned to his native state of California and contribute his song “Fear and Faith Can’t Live Together” to the DreamWorks blockbuster film, “Trolls World Tour.”
He also provided choral accompaniment for multiple tracks on Donald Glover’s Childish Gambino album “Awaken My Love.” His song “Open Your Mouth and Say Something” reached number three on the Billboard Gospel chart.
The minority owners of DC’s pro football team want to sell their stake in the team because they reportedly do not get along with majority owner Daniel Snyder.
Police are still searching for the killers of 11-year-old District boy.
Authorities say Davon McNeal was struck by a stray bullet as he was heading to his grandmother’s home Saturday night. The shooting happened in the 14-hundred block of Cedar Street in Southeast. Police say a group of about five men were shooting in the area.
Authorities have offered a 25-thousand dollar reward to anyone with information that leads to an arrest in the case.
The YMCA will be offering some great summer programs
The YMCA of Metropolitan Washington is beginning to open some of its location throughout the DMV. To learn what’s open and more about the different services offered by the Y’s. More information here:
Listen to this mornings segment here:
11-year-old boy shot and killed July 4th and is being called a great child with a great attitude. “Devon McNeal is everything you could want in a kid.”
Mayor Muriel Bowser tweeted about the incident last night calling on the community to help solve the case. “A mother lost her 11-year-old son to gunfire tonight. My thoughts and prayers go out to her and her family.”
Few details have surfaced about the shooting. But Police Chief Peter Newsham said several men opened fire and one of those bullets struck Davon. The motive for the shooting has not been released.
Davon, affectionately called Day Day by his family and friends, played football for a youth sports team called the Metro Bengals. Just this past December, the team went to Florida for the national championship game. Davon, who was a star running back and linebacker, scored the first touchdown in the game.
The President of the Metro Bengals told the Washington Post that Davon was a great child with a great attitude. Harold Redd said Davon was everything you could want in a kid.
“We need your help to find those responsible for Davon’s murder. Call 202-727-9099 or text 50411 if you have information about this tragedy, said Bowser.
President Frederick speaks with Kim Wells, Executive Director of the Executive Education and Career Center of Excellence in the School of Business at Howard University.
ABOUT
This time of year, students are preparing for internships and graduates are looking forward to their first day at work. Unfortunately, those plans have been put on hold. Students are gathering information on taking the proper steps for their future. Parents are also looking to support them in every way possible. One of Howard University’s Career Centers is here to guide students in the right direction. On this episode of “The Journey,” President Frederick speaks with Kim Wells, Executive Director of the Executive Education and Career Center of Excellence in the School of Business at Howard University.
Air Date: April 26, 2020
Redskins owner Dan Snyder makes a statement over calls for changing the team name.
“In light of recent events around our country and feedback from our community, the Washington Redskins are announcing the team will undergo a thorough review of the team’s name. This review formalizes the initial discussions the team has been having with the league in recent weeks.
Dan Snyder, Owner of the Washington Redskins, stated, “This process allows the team to take into account not only the proud tradition and history of the franchise, but also input from our alumni, the organization, sponsors, the National Football League and the local community it is proud to represent on and off the field.”
Ron Rivera, Head Coach of the Washington Redskins, remarked, “This issue is of personal importance to me and I look forward to working closely with Dan Snyder to make sure we continue the mission of honoring and supporting Native Americans and our Military.”
We believe this review can and will be conducted with the best interest of all in mind.
A heart to heart with powerful, singer, songwriter, LEDISI
View this post on Instagram
Twelve time grammy award nominee, powerhouse singer, songwriter, author, publisher, BOSS, Ledisi, spent quality time with us from her home to ours. We talked about life as an artist during this pandemic. She told us about some of her challenges in the music and acting arenas. Especially for melanin blessed women. Her story is so inspiring as she revealed how she is making her own way. Carving her own path when there is none. Ledisi even serenaded us, to keep us all lifted as we go through this pandemic and social unrest together. We are loving her latest single, Anything For You, and can’t wait to purchase her new album, which drops August 28th. Press play to check out the interview. Thanks! xo
@Ledisi @angelastribling @whurfm
The pressure is building for Dan Snyder to change the name of his football team
FedEx has naming rights to the stadium, located in Prince George’s County, Maryland, through the year 2025.
The FedEx statement comes as nearly 100 investment firms and shareholders asked FedEx, Nike, and Pepsi to end their relationship with the football team. Meantime, Nike has apparently removed all of the Washington Redskins’ apparel and merchandise off its website.
No comment as yet from team owner Dan Snyder who in the past has said he would not change the team’s name.
NFL will play “Lift Every Voice and Sing” during first week of the season.
The season opener is set for September 10th.
Molette Green shares some tips on being a new dog owner and how the puppy love can happen so quickly.
With so many families forced to discover engaging things to do at home in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, shelters and breeders are being flooded with calls from families looking to expand their households.
Our very own Molette Green and her hubby purchased a new puppy last month and she admits she has fallen in love already. Molette shares a few tips on being a new dog owner for the very first time in this week’s edition of Talk Around Town. Click the link to watch the video. <iframe width=”560″ height=”315″ src=”https://www.youtube.com/embed/MzbBENr19Eg” frameborder=”0″ allow=”accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture” allowfullscreen></iframe>https://youtu.be/MzbBENr19Eg
Amazon set to open two facilities in Prince George’s County, one in Upper Marlboro and the other in Lanham.
“We are so excited for what Amazon and its last mile facilities will bring to the County, along with the employment and entrepreneurship opportunities they will provide,” said Alsobrooks. “When this coronavirus leaves our community, and it will, we want to make certain we have done everything we can to continue to attract diverse businesses and opportunities for our residents, as we work to grow our commercial tax base, and ensure that our economy recovers stronger than ever.”
County officials estimate the facilities will create hundreds of full-time and part-time jobs paying a minimum of $15 per hour plus benefits. These delivery stations also offer entrepreneurs the opportunity to build their own business delivering Amazon packages, as well as independent contractors the flexibility to create their own schedule for delivering for Amazon Flex.
Amazon’s goal is to locate its last mile facilities in areas with a high demand, which is why the company is opening two facilities in Prince George’s County to meet the volume and demand of the residents.
Also last month, Amazon announced that it is bringing its Amazon Future Engineer program, to 132 Prince George’s County Public Schools. The computer science program is expected to benefit more than 49,000 PGCPS students.
Navigating the risks of social gatherings during the coronavirus pandemic.


Minister Louis Farrakhan will make his first public appearance since February with a special 4th of July message on race relations and the COVID-19 pandemic.
Trump plans huge July 4th fireworks show despite DC’s concerns.

Borgata president one of few Black women to run a US casino

Meghan is seeking damages from the Mail on Sunday’s publisher for alleged misuse of private information, breach of privacy and copyright infringement. The publisher, Associated Newspapers, denies her claims.
LONDON (AP) — Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, felt “unprotected by the institution” of Britain’s monarchy and was “prohibited from defending herself” against negative media coverage when she was pregnant, U.K. news outlets agency reported Thursday, citing court documents.
The documents reviewed by the Press Association and the BBC were prepared as part of Meghan’s lawsuit against the publisher of the Mail on Sunday newspaper and MailOnline website over articles that reproduced parts of a letter the duchess wrote to her father a few months after her 2018 marriage to Prince Harry.
Meghan is seeking damages from the Mail on Sunday’s publisher for alleged misuse of private information, breach of privacy and copyright infringement. The publisher, Associated Newspapers, denies her claims.
In court papers reportedly filed after the publisher’s lawyers requested further information, Meghan’s lawyers described how her relationship with the British media had deteriorated by the time excerpts of the letter appeared in print and online in 2019.
“The claimant had become the subject of a large number of false and damaging articles by the U.K. tabloid media, specifically by the defendant, which caused tremendous emotional distress and damage to her mental health,” they wrote.
Referring to interviews that five of Meghan’s friends gave to People magazine last year, the duchess’s lawyers added: “As her friends had never seen her in this state before, they were rightly concerned for her welfare, specifically as she was pregnant, unprotected by the Institution, and prohibited from defending herself.”
In the People article, published in February 2019, the friends spoke out against the bullying the royal said she faced.
Following a preliminary hearing in London in May, a judge struck out parts of Meghan’s claim against Associated Newspapers, including allegations that it acted “dishonestly” by leaving out certain parts of her letter to her father, Thomas Markle.
The judge also struck out allegations that the publisher deliberately stirred up issues between Meghan and her father and that it had an agenda in publishing intrusive articles about her.
In a statement Wednesday, the rap mogul’s Roc Nation company said it plans to produce the popular festival in 2021.
NEW YORK (AP) — Jay-Z’s annual festival in Philadelphia, Made in America, won’t take place Labor Day weekend due to the coronavirus pandemic.
In a statement Wednesday, the rap mogul’s Roc Nation company said it plans to produce the popular festival in 2021.
“2020 is a year like no other. We are in a pivotal time in this nation’s history. Collectively, we are fighting parallel pandemics, COVID-19, systematic racism and police brutality. Now is the time to protect the health of our artists, fans, partners and community as well as focus on our support for organizations and individuals fighting for social justice and equality in our country. Therefore, the Made In America festival will be rescheduled for Labor Day Weekend 2021,” Roc Nation said in a statement.
This year’s Made In America festival was set to take place Sept. 5-6 at the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.
Roc Nation said tickets for the 2020 event will be valid in 2021. Ticketholders seeking refunds should look out for an email from Live Nation explaining how to get their money back.
“If anyone would prefer a refund, an email will be sent to request one. For any further ticket inquiries, please reach out to the point of purchase,” the statement read.
“I feel like it’s important more than ever to give our next generation the tools to succeed in life,” the rapper in a statement.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Rapper 21 Savage will be launching a free online financial literacy education program for youth sheltered at home during the coronavirus pandemic.
The Grammy winner announced his new Bank Account At Home nationwide initiative on Wednesday. His efforts will include a partnership with Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms to provide free WiFi and tablets for undeserved students in the city.
“I feel like it’s important more than ever to give our next generation the tools to succeed in life,” the rapper in a statement.
21 Savage said he wants to empower youth to manage their money. His program will work with mobile banking service provider Chime and EverFi, an education technology platform. The rapper launched his Bank Account program in 2018 to teach financial literacy to teenage students across the United States.
The rapper’s single “A Lot” won a Grammy for best rap song earlier this year.
Press play to hear our candid, fun conversation. She even gave helpful tips for a delicious, vegan 4th of July celebration.
Actress, comedienne, Tik Tok, and IG Sensation, vegan foodie influencer, Tabitha Brown is a ray of sunshine. Her down home charm, and easy recipes garnered her 4 million followers on tik tok and over 2.4 million on Instagram in just 30 days! She tells us the story of how she decided to become vegan and teach the world how to do it. Tabitha is also teaching us to be our own glorious selves… Whoever you are, be that. God made us all perfect. Press play to hear our candid, fun conversation. She even gave helpful tips for a delicious, vegan 4th of July celebration.
@iamtabithabrown @angelastribling @whurfm
The League of Women Voters and The HBCUAA are hosting the “Fire Up the Vote Virtual Cookout”
The National Historically Black Colleges and Universities Alumni Alliance, Inc. (HBCUAA) of Washington, DC, Atlanta, GA and Chicago, IL are proud to announce a planned “Fire Up the Vote” virtual cookout to be held Saturday, July 4th at 3pm ET. The cookout will be hosted of Facebook and will feature top DJ talent, HBCUAA representatives as well as voting rights experts from the League of Women Voters information here: and here:
Listen to this mornings segment here:
Finding your emotional independence for yourself and loved ones.


Convention will be virtual in August.

Richmond mayor orders prompt removal of Confederate statues

“I am deeply committed to our goals of creating a more diverse, inclusive and equitable company,” Parkin, a board member, said in a statement. “While we have made progress in many areas, there is much more work to be done. However, it has become clear to me that to unify the organization it would be better for me to retire and pave the way for change.”
NEW YORK (AP) — The head of global human resources at sports apparel and shoe company Adidas resigned Tuesday following criticism from employees of what they see as the company’s failure to diversify its workforce.
Karen Parkin’s resignation comes after a group of Black employees called on Adidas’ supervisory board to investigate her and her strategy for addressing racial issues in the workplace. The employees are also pressing the company based in Herzogenaurach, Germany, to create an anonymous public channel to submit any problems about racism.
The demands from Black employees were reported by The Wall Street Journal in mid- June.
“I am deeply committed to our goals of creating a more diverse, inclusive and equitable company,” Parkin, a board member, said in a statement. “While we have made progress in many areas, there is much more work to be done. However, it has become clear to me that to unify the organization it would be better for me to retire and pave the way for change.”
Igor Landau, chairman of Adidas AG’s supervisory board, said in a statement that Parkin’s decision to leave the company reflects her belief that a new HR leader will “best drive forward the pace of change that Adidas needs at this time.”
In the wake of protests over police brutality sparked by the death of George Floyd, for which four former Minneapolis police officers have been charged, Adidas, like many other brands, took to social media in support of racial equality. But employees at Adidas and other companies like Amazon accused them of hypocrisy, saying their own workforces lacked diversity.
Following the criticism, Adidas said that it would invest $120 million toward U.S. initiatives focused on ending racial injustice and supporting Black communities through 2025. Among other initiatives, it promised that a minimum of 30% of all new positions — internal and external — will be filled with Black and Latino talent.
Adidas employs about 59,000 people around the world.
Adidas said its CEO Kasper Rorsted will assume responsibility for global human resources on an interim basis until a successor is appointed.
Parkin first joined Adidas in 1997 as sales director for Adidas UK. Since that time, she has held a number of positions of increasing responsibility at the company across customer service, business development, supply chain and human resources, culminating in heading up global human resources division over the past 5 1/2 years. She was appointed to the company’s executive board in 2017.
_________
A love affair between Kenny Lattimore and the DMV
View this post on Instagram
DC’s favorite son, Kenny Lattimore, charmed us all with stories about his life as a newlywed during this coronavirus pandemic. He’s now married to his best friend, TV Host, Judge Faith Nelson. We talked music, his writing style, and his love for Original The Quiet Storm on WHURfm. His told us a little about a new clothing line collaboration, and he hinted around about a possible new television show. My favorite part of the night was when he serenaded us with a gorgeous a capella rendition of his single, “Built To Last” from his Anatomy of a Love Song CD. https://youtu.be/NZbnXKQ16fk Press play to check out the interview!
@whurfm @angelastribling @kennylattimore
The couple has two adult children, 23-year-old son Truice and 19-year-old daughter Truly.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Nicole Young, Dr. Dre’s wife of 24 years, has filed for divorce.
Young filed documents seeking to end her marriage with Dr. Dre — the producer, rapper and music mogul whose real name is Andre Young — on Monday in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
Nicole Young, 50, cited irreconcilable differences as the reason for the split, and she is seeking spousal support from the 55-year-old Dr. Dre, who has amassed a major fortune in his time as an N.W.A. member, solo rapper, producer, co-owner of Death Row Records and founder and CEO of Aftermath Entertainment and Beats Electronics.
The couple has two adult children, 23-year-old son Truice and 19-year-old daughter Truly.
Dr. Dre has four children from previous relationships.
The two married in 1996. It was the first marriage for Dr. Dre. Young was previously married to NBA player Sedale Threatt.
An email to Dr. Dre’s publicist seeking comment on the divorce filing was not immediately returned.
We’re talking to Alexsis Rodgers, a civic leader, former president of the Virginia Young Democrats and mayoral candidate for Richmond, Virginia.
“Obviously that is something that is of concern. I’m not sure what went into that decision making,” Dr. Anthony Fauci told a Senate panel. “I think in the confines of an airplane that becomes even more problematic.”
The government’s top experts in infectious diseases on Tuesday criticized American Airlines’ decision to pack flights full while the coronavirus outbreak continues to grow across much of the United States.
“Obviously that is something that is of concern. I’m not sure what went into that decision making,” Dr. Anthony Fauci told a Senate panel. “I think in the confines of an airplane that becomes even more problematic.”
Several U.S. airlines say they are limiting capacity on planes to between 60% and 67% of all seats. However, United Airlines never promised to leave seats empty, and American said last week that starting Wednesday it would drop its effort to keep half of all middle seats empty.
“When they announced that the other day obviously there was substantial disappointment with American Airlines,” said Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “I can say this is under critical review by us at CDC. We don’t think it’s the right message.”

Fauci, the top infectious disease expert at the National Institutes of Health, and Redfield made the comments in response to questioning by Sen. Bernie Sanders during a Senate health committee hearing. Sanders, an independent from Vermont, pressed the officials on how full flights square with the message from public health experts that people should stay six feet apart to prevent transmission of the virus that causes COVID-19.
American Airlines spokesman Ross Feinstein said the airline has “multiple layers of protection in place for those who fly with us, including required face coverings, enhanced cleaning procedures, and a pre-flight COVID-19 symptom checklist.” He said American was also giving customers the option of changing their ticket if their flight might be full.
The CEOs of American and United have said that even with middle seats empty, it is impossible to follow 6-foot social-distancing on a plane, so airlines rely on masks, deep cleaning and air-filtration systems on planes to prevent spreading the virus.
“It’s less about social distancing and it’s more about the air and quality of air on board the airplane that makes people safe,” said United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby, who added he had not seen the health officials’ comments.
Airlines are desperate to increase revenue as they try to survive a plunge in air travel that reached 95% during April.
Many airline flights were nearly empty in the early weeks of the outbreak, with the average dipping to about 10 passengers, according to industry figures. Some days, there were fewer than 100,000 people flying in the United States, a level not seen since the 1950s, except in the days following the September 2001 terror attacks.
Air travel has increased slowly since mid-April — although it’s still down 75% from normal — and some flights have been packed.
American, which is based in Fort Worth, Texas, plans to increase flights by nearly 60% starting July 7 compared with June, which could help avoid full planes.
Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue Airways and Alaska Airlines say they will continue to limit capacity, in some cases through September. Budget carrier Spirit Airlines does not.
___
David Koenig reported from Dallas. Ricardo Alfonso-Zaldivar reported from Washington.
It’s a principle that the country seems to have taken to heart in the past month in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death. People have taken to the streets and to Twitter to call attention to injustices. They have publicly called out employers for conscious and unconscious bias. And not only are they being heard, but their concerns are being taken seriously and resulting in swift and unprecedented change.
Getting into “good trouble” is a guiding principle for John Lewis. It’s not only OK, but necessary to enact and inspire meaningful change. And it’s not just rhetoric, either. The 80-year-old congressman has the receipts to prove it. He has been arrested 45 times, five of which happened while he was a sitting representative. In the new documentary “ John Lewis: Good Trouble,” he couldn’t be prouder of that fact because it’s all been in service of his lifelong fight for civil rights. He even predicts that he’ll add to that tally.
It’s a principle that the country seems to have taken to heart in the past month in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death. People have taken to the streets and to Twitter to call attention to injustices. They have publicly called out employers for conscious and unconscious bias. And not only are they being heard, but their concerns are being taken seriously and resulting in swift and unprecedented change.
Who better to check in with than John Lewis as the country undergoes this seismic shift? But of course, “John Lewis: Good Trouble” was filmed before the past month. And thus, through no fault of its own, this historic moment makes Dawn Porter’s film feel both immensely timely and like a time capsule. At the very least it probably could have used and benefited from a postscript about what is happening right now.
Porter uses a mass of incredible archival footage to flesh out the life of this “boy from Troy” (which Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called him), who “read everything” growing up, became a Freedom Rider, spoke at the March on Washington, crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge (where his skull was fractured) and went on to get elected to the House of Representatives where he is currently serving his 17th term.
The film, which is largely celebratory, relies heavily on talking head interviews from the late Elijah Cummings (to whom the film is dedicated), his family, Hillary Clinton and younger representatives like Ayanna Pressley, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, and Ilhan Omar, who try to contextualize his importance.
But it stays oddly surface level, despite having what looks like a lot of access to him and his family as he goes about his business around D.C. attending speaking engagements. It opens with Lewis watching protest footage from the 1960s, which is itself a powerful image, but doesn’t lead to anything else: Reflection, introspection or even anecdotes.
The focus returns often to the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which was weakened by the 2013 Supreme Court decision Shelby County v. Holder. This remains a key topic going into the 2020 election and clearly seemed like the most important thing to focus on in depicting the John Lewis of now, before the pandemic and the protests.
Still, it is somewhat telling that one of the most memorable parts of the documentary comes not from Lewis but from Cummings, who said he was often mistaken for his peer.
“I have gotten a lot of pictures with people thinking I’m John Lewis,” Cummings said. He never wanted to embarrass anyone by correcting them, he explained.
Perhaps the most striking aspect of the film is how prophetic it is. Although it doesn’t offer any reflection on the current moment, it also won’t come as a surprise how we got here.
Georgia politician Stacey Abrams says that Lewis, “Reminds us that our past is not past.”
Lewis’s greatest fear, he says, is that he will wake up and democracy will be gone.
But, reassuringly, he’s not done yet.
“As long as I have breath in my body, I will do what I can,” he says.
“John Lewis: Good Trouble,” a Magnolia Pictures release, is rated PG by the Motion Picture Association of America for “for thematic material including some racial epithets/violence, and for smoking.” Running time: 96 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.
___
Financially Fit DC: A series of workshops to get Black Families financially fit.
Getting African American families financially fit today and beyond. The Mayor’s Office On African American Affairs is hosting a series of workshops designed to do just that. My guest is Ashley Emerson – Director of the Mayor’s Office On African American Affairs
The Mayor’s Office on African American Affairs presents Financially Fit DC: A workshop series on Black Generational Wealth. Helping to close the racial wealth gap and increase financial literacy in the African American community. Workshops will be July 21st and August 11th. More information here:
Listen to this mornings segment here:

Owner of Fish Market in Prince George’s County is accused of numerous racist incidents and patrons say enough is enough.
Restaurant owner Ricky Giovanni is being blasted for what protesters call a pattern of racist comments spanning years. The latest one has many customers fueling. Last weekend, Darryl Collins, who was a first time customer, was initially denied entrance to the Fish Market because he was wearing a “I Can’t Breathe” t-shirt. “I was shocked and saddened that in this racially sensitive
time we are living in that he would say that to me,” said Collins.
“The owner came over to me asking why do I have that shirt on and that I could not come in his restaurant with it on.” The “I Can’t Breathe” statement has become a rallying cry for protesters across the country because it was among the last words George Floyd uttered before he died under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer.
The co-owner of the Fish Market issued an apology on Facebook. Sherry Giovanni said she was shocked and embarrassed by her husband’s behavior. She went on to blame mental illness and alcohol. But several frequent patrons and workers say racist comments are not new for Ricky Giovanni. The Fish Market has been a popular spot for decades in Prince George’s County. Walter Cosby has been one of the full-time musicians at the Fish Market. “I’ve worked their since 2006 and I have heard Ricky make numerous racist, homophobic, and other remarks that would be offensive to women,” said Cosby. “We often just brushed it off by saying that’s just Ricky. But in this new environment people can no longer ignore it.” Cosby says he’s now decided to quit the Fish Market.
Protesters want the restaurant to close permanently. They are promising to keep coming back and calling on other customers to boycott the restaurant. One of the organizers, Carla McClinton says efforts are underway to even purchase the restaurant, but at the very least to force the owners out of business. “We are saying enough is enough. We are not going to take those racist comments anymore,” added McClinton.
WHUR tried to get a direct comment from Ricky Giovanni of the Fish Market. We made several phone calls. But there was no answer and the restaurant’s voicemail was full.
Montgomery County rolling out a list of things for the kids to do this summer virtually.
Programs and activities are tailored to a variety of interests, skill levels and ages. Summer programs include arts, sports, dance, exercise and wellness and much more. In addition, week-long virtual summer experiences are available for children ages six to 12.
To view available programs, visit Montgomery County Recreation’s virtual Rec Room at www.mocorec.com/recroom.
Questions can be emailed to recreation.customerservice@montgomerycountymd.gov.
For more information on Montgomery County Recreation, go to www.mocorec.com or follow on Twitter @MoCoRec or Facebook at @montgomerycountyrecreation.
For the latest COVID-19 updates, visit the County’s COVID-19 website and follow Montgomery County on Facebook @MontgomeryCountyInfo and Twitter @MontgomeryCoMD.
Biden hammers Trump for handling of COVID-19 pandemic.

Fauci said areas seeing recent outbreaks are putting the entire nation at risk, including areas that have made progress in reducing COVID-19 cases.

“We are now having 40-plus-thousand new cases a day. I would not be surprised if we go up to to 100,000 a day if this does not turn around, and so I am very concerned,” said Fauci, infectious disease chief at the National Institutes of Health.
Fauci said areas seeing recent outbreaks are putting the entire nation at risk, including areas that have made progress in reducing COVID-19 cases. He cited recent video footage of people socializing in crowds, often without masks, and otherwise ignoring safety guidelines.
The list is to be updated every 14 days, with new countries being added or dropped off depending on whether they are keeping the pandemic under control.
BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union announced Tuesday that it will reopen its borders to travelers from 14 countries, and possibly China soon, but most Americans have been refused entry for at least another two weeks due to soaring coronavirus infections in the U.S.
Travelers from other big countries like Russia, Brazil and India will also miss out.
As Europe’s economies reel from the impact of the coronavirus, southern EU countries like Greece, Italy and Spain are desperate to entice back sun-loving visitors and breathe life into their damaged tourism industries. American tourists make up a big slice of the EU market and the summer holiday season is a key time.
Citizens from the following countries will be allowed into the EU’s 27 members and four other nations in Europe’s visa-free Schengen travel zone: Algeria, Australia, Canada, Georgia, Japan, Montenegro, Morocco, New Zealand, Rwanda, Serbia, South Korea, Thailand, Tunisia and Uruguay.
The EU said China is “subject to confirmation of reciprocity,” meaning it should lift all restrictions on European citizens entering China before European countries will allow Chinese citizens back in.
The list is to be updated every 14 days, with new countries being added or dropped off depending on whether they are keeping the pandemic under control.
U.S. tourists made 27 million trips to Europe in 2016 while some 10 million Europeans head across the Atlantic each year.
Still, many people both inside and outside of Europe remain wary about traveling in the coronavirus era, given the unpredictability of the pandemic and the possibility of second waves of infection that could affect flights and hotel bookings. Tens of thousands of travelers had a frantic, chaotic scramble in March to get home as the pandemic swept across the world and borders slammed shut.
The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the United States has surged over the past week, and President Donald Trump also suspended the entry of all people from Europe’s ID check-free travel zone in a decree in March, making it extremely difficult for the EU to include the U.S. on their safe travel list for now.
In contrast, aside from a recent outbreak tied to a slaughterhouse in western Germany, the spread of the virus has generally stabilized across much of continental Europe.
To qualify for the list, EU headquarters said Tuesday that countries should have a comparable per capita number of COVID-19 cases to those in the 31 European countries over the last 14 days and have a stable or decreasing trend in the number of infections.
The Europeans are also taking into account those countries’ standards on virus testing, surveillance, contact tracing and treatment and the general reliability of their virus data.
According to European Commission figures, the United States is the EU’s biggest in-bound long-haul tourism market in terms of arrivals and tourist spending. In 2014, U.S. tourists accounted for 18% of the total nights spent in the EU by visitors from outside, followed by Russia at 14.9%. Tourists from China, Japan and Brazil each accounted for less than 5% of nights.
Tuesday’s decision will not go down well with all Europeans.
On the deserted Saint-Louis island in Paris, at the heart of the French capital, businesses were mourning the loss of American tourists.
“Americans were 50% of my clientele,” said Paola Pellizzari, president of the local business association and owner of a Venetian mask and jewelry shop. “We can’t substitute that clientele with another.”
European Union countries hastily slapped restrictions on who could cross their borders in February as the virus spread rapidly in Italy. Then in mid-March, the Europeans limited all non-essential travel to the 27 EU member states plus Liechtenstein, Iceland, Norway and Switzerland.
Non-EU citizens who are already living in Europe are not included in the ban.
The EU on Tuesday also recommended that restrictions be lifted on all people wanting to enter who are European citizens and their family members, long-term EU residents who are not citizens of the bloc, and travelers with “an essential function or need,” regardless of whether their country is on the safe list or not. That would allow in people like American medical experts, for example.
The EU list does not apply to travel into Britain, which left the EU in January. Britain now requires all incoming travelers — bar a few exceptions like truck drivers — to go into a self-imposed 14-day quarantine, although the measure is under review and is likely to ease in the coming weeks. The requirement also applies to U.K. citizens.
___
“She’s OK, She’s OK,” Sandra Lovaina, tells two arriving officers. “It’s OK. I’m the midwife. She is going to have a baby.”
MARGATE, Fla. (AP) — This was not one of those delivery videos that some pregnant moms plan for.
A Florida birthing center says an expectant mother was a few steps from entering the building but her baby couldn’t wait. She gave birth while standing up outside, with a midwife catching the baby and a doorbell camera catching all the action.
The Miami Herald reports that Susan Anderson already felt the need to push as her husband drove them to the Natural Birthworks center in Margate. The RING video, shared on Facebook, shows what happened next.
Anderson stands in a T-shirt, maternity shorts and flip-flops, with her husband supporting her and the midwife crouching just behind.
“She’s OK, She’s OK,” Sandra Lovaina, tells two arriving officers. “It’s OK. I’m the midwife. She is going to have a baby.”
And then a moment later, out she comes — a baby girl that Lovaina catches and passes between the legs to the mom. She cradles the girl they’ve named Julia against her chest, and says “sorry” before gasping in tears and smiles.
“This momma had a super fast labor,” the center said on June 23. It said the video was being shared with permission, and both baby and mother are doing fine.
The company said in a statement Saturday that it “has decided to remove the words white/whitening, fair/fairness, light/lightening from all its skin evening products.”
PARIS (AP) — French cosmetics giant L’Oreal said Saturday that it will remove words like “whitening” from its skin care products, a move that comes amid global protests against racism sparked by the death of George Floyd in the United States.
The company said in a statement Saturday that it “has decided to remove the words white/whitening, fair/fairness, light/lightening from all its skin evening products.”
L’Oreal’s decision follows a similar move by Anglo-Dutch firm Unilever on Thursday. It is among a number of companies that have been the target of criticism in the wake of Floyd’s death following his arrest in Minneapolis.
Earlier this month, L’Oreal tweeted that that it “stands in solidarity with the Black community and against injustice of any kind. … Speaking out is worth it.” The post drew a negative reaction from people who see the company’s business model and advertising as focused on white consumers.
English model Munroe Bergdorf notably accused the beauty brand of hypocrisy for having fired her three years ago. Bergdorf was sacked as L’Oreal UK’s first openly transgender model in 2017 for decrying “the racial violence of white people.”
Flying can increase your risk of exposure to infection, but airlines are taking some precautions and you can too.
How risky is flying during the coronavirus pandemic?
Flying can increase your risk of exposure to infection, but airlines are taking some precautions and you can too.
Air travel means spending time in security lines and airport terminals, which puts you into close contact with other people. As travel slowly recovers, planes are becoming more crowded, which means you will likely sit close to other people, often for hours, which raises your risk.
Once on a plane, most viruses and other germs don’t spread easily because of the way air circulates, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Airlines also say they are focusing on sanitizing the hard surfaces that passengers commonly touch.
Some airlines like Alaska, Delta, JetBlue and Southwest are blocking middle seats or limiting capacity. But even if every middle seat is empty you will likely be closer than the recommended distance of 6 feet to another passenger now that planes are getting fuller.
American, United and Spirit are now booking flights to full capacity when they can. All leading U.S. airlines require passengers to wear masks. Lauren Ancel Meyers, an expert in disease outbreaks at the University of Texas, says that can help limit risk.
For air travel, and all other types of transportation, the CDC recommends washing your hands, maintaining social distancing and wearing face coverings.
Several airlines announced Monday that they will ask passengers about possible COVID-19 symptoms and whether they have been in contact with someone who tested positive for the virus in the previous two weeks.
Still, Meyers said you still might consider whether you need to be on that plane. “We should all be in the mindset of ‘only if necessary’ and always taking the most precautions we can to protect ourselves and others,” she said.
___
The AP is answering your questions about the coronavirus in this series. Submit them at: FactCheck@AP.org.
Read previous Viral Questions:
Who would be the first to get a COVID-19 vaccine?
Is it safe to form a COVID-19 “support bubble” with friends?
The show won 11 Tony Awards, including best new musical, best book and best score. The cast album has been a blockbuster and the show has toured to packed houses.
The revolution is finally being televised, thank goodness.
The long-awaited live-capture of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s shake-the-rafters musical “Hamilton” comes out Friday on Disney+, a chance to celebrate America’s independence with some of its Founding Fathers.
The timing seems ideal. Or, given all that’s shook this nation in the past few months, could it not be quite revolutionary enough?
The show features the original Broadway cast — who Miranda has called “an incredible ’28 Yankees of actors” — and was filmed in the summer of 2016 at The Richard Rodgers Theatre in front of a raucous crowd. RadicalMedia, which taped the last night of “Rent,” recorded two performances of “Hamilton” and asked actors on their days off to come back and do close-ups.
The show won 11 Tony Awards, including best new musical, best book and best score. The cast album has been a blockbuster and the show has toured to packed houses. But only in this filmed version is the original cast once again married with Andy Blankenbuehler’s choreography and Howell Binkley’s lighting design. These were all the seeds of world-conquering greatness.
Thomas Kail, who helmed the successful “Grease: Live” on Fox and won a Tony for directing “Hamilton,” directed the filmed version. Kail’s camera captures actors’ intimate faces during key moments in a way impossible for theater-goers and incorporates audience reaction to create an electric filmed version.
The musical charts the rise and fall of statesman Alexander Hamilton and stresses his orphan, immigrant roots — “Immigrants. We get the job done!” is one line that gets huge applause — as well as his almost Greek tragedy of a fall, fed by ambition.

It’s hard to underestimate how fresh “Hamilton” was just a few years ago: A reclaiming of America’s founding story by a multicultural cast using modern music, language and themes. Based on a biography by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Ron-Chernow and developed during the presidency of the first Black president, the show was optimistic and ambitious, tweaking Broadway traditions but respecting them, too. What other show would pit two Founding Fathers in a rap battle over whether to aid France?
Many in the brilliant cast were relatively unknown to the wider world when they hit the stage: Daveed Diggs, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Jonathan Groff, Christopher Jackson, Leslie Odom Jr., Okieriete Onaodowan, Anthony Ramos and Phillipa Soo. Even Miranda, who plays Hamilton and wrote the musical’s songs and story, wasn’t yet a brand name.
The music mixes R&B, hip-hop and show tunes. There are shards of songs by Gilbert & Sullivan, Grandmaster Flash, Rodgers & Hammerstein, Jason Robert Brown, DMX and the Notorious B.I.G. It riffs on Shakespeare and the Bible. It could only come from a mind as brilliant and hungry as Miranda’s.
This version reminds us of that talent but also its absence: Broadway kept being Broadway after “Hamilton” for the most part, returning often to dusty or safe shows. It turns out Miranda’s audacious step wasn’t the sharp end of the spear — it was just a glorious one-off. “Hamilton” dangled the possibility of a brilliant future and, now five years after its debut, Broadway has clearly wasted its shot.
So with theaters idle due to the pandemic, the film version’s fast-tracked streaming arrival — it was slated to hit movie theaters in October 2021 — is welcome. But a second societal spasm — the confrontation with racial injustice — makes “Hamilton” a problematic choice in the wake of George Floyd’s death.
The nation seems different from a few years ago, ready for another revolution, this time from the streets, not from the drawing rooms where it happened in the 1700s. We are reexamining our dark history and who it really holds dear. Statues are toppling, old heroes are being interrogated and past indiscretion brought into the light.
“Hamilton” — for all its progressiveness — is not immune to this reexamination. It looked at America’s past and raised its own statues. But it skirted the nation’s white supremacist origins, despite three minority actors playing white, slave-owning current or future presidents.
Thomas Jefferson is represented as the one bad Founding Father who did participate in slavery. “Your debts are paid ’cuz you don’t pay for labor,” Hamilton teases Jefferson in a cabinet rap battle. “We know who’s really doing the planting.”
Yet George Washington’s ownership of slaves isn’t mentioned at all and Hamilton’s role as a slave owner has been whitewashed. “Hamilton” in 2020 crashes into Black Lives Matter and comes off less powerful, less revolutionary.
In the show, Miranda’s line: “Who lives, who dies, who tells your story?” was a plea to put Hamilton back into the history books, to reclaim this lost Founding Father. The genius of “Hamilton” is unchanged — how history remembers and changes.
But in 2020, the question of how we tell stories has shifted in meaning. Who tells our story? That would be white people — and the show’s lens might scramble the deck but it’s still about elite, white males. “Hamilton” once asked us to look again at the birth of America, but it’s hard not to think that it may soon face its own kind of reckoning.
It didn’t do all the work.
“Hamilton,” a Disney Plus release, is rated PG-13 for gun violence and adult themes. Running time: 161 minutes. Four stars out of four.
___
MPAA Definition of PG-13: Parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.
___
Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits
Prince George’s County is hosting their “100 Events of Summer” Series
Prince George’s County Office of Community Relations will host 100 Events of Summer, a series of fun, family friendly community events designed to engage and connect with the community. Many of the events will be virtual as well as pop-up giveaways events throughout the summer. More information here:
Listen to this mornings segment here:
Is the University of Maryland Medical Systems prepared in the event of a COVID-19 surge?


The Reeves Center in DC will soon be the new home of the NAACP.
DC Mayor Muriel Bowser announced today that she’s signed a letter of intent to bring the NAACP to the city. The Reeves Center is the home to a variety of city government agencies. No word yet on exactly when the move will happen.
Netflix series to dramatize Kaepernick’s path to activism


Former police officers set to go on trial March 8th for killing George Floyd
State flag in Mississippi is getting a new design without the Confederate emblem
A commission will design a new flag that will not include the confederate symbol and must have the words “In God We Trust.” Voters will get a chance to weigh-in on November 3rd.
Henry had also voiced the Latin maid named Consuela on the series.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — “Family Guy” voice actor Mike Henry said Friday he is stepping down from the role of Cleveland Brown on the Fox animated series.
Henry wrote on Twitter that he will stop playing the show’s main African American character because “persons of color should play characters of color.” The 54-year-old voice actor, who is a white man, has voiced the character since the series’ debut in 1999.
Henry had also voiced the Latin maid named Consuela on the series.
His decision comes after voice actors Jenny Slate and Kristen Bell — who are white — pulled out of their roles to recast their biracial characters with someone of color. Slate played the mixed-raced Missy on Netflix’s “Big Mouth” and Bell was voiced as Molly on Apple TV Plus’s “Central Park.”
Slate said she initially reasoned that she could play her character, because Molly’s mother is Jewish and white, just like her mom. But now, she understands that her initial thoughts were wrong.
“I acknowledge how my original reasoning was flawed,” Slate said. “That it existed as an example of white privilege and unjust allowances made within a system of societal white supremacy, and that in me playing Missy, I was engaging in an act of erasure of Black people.”