Blog

Rance Allen On Working With Snoop Dogg

Bishop also told us how he came to record “Something About The Name, Jesus” with Kirk Franklin and blessed us by the singing of the song in the interview.

Sunday on HUR@HOME Inspiration, we were graced with an interview with Bishop Rance Allen. Bishop Allen a legendary Gospel singer and Pastor of the New Bethel Church in God in Christ in Toledo, Ohio. He began singing and preaching since the age of 5.

In the midst of the sickness and death caused by the coronavirus pandemic and the anger and protests over frequently fatal incidents of racial injustice protests, Bishop Allen believes that God will allow something good to come out of the turmoil and confusion. He prays that the protesting can be done in a peaceful manner.

Rance Allen was born in Monroe, Michigan, one of 12 children. He listened to Mahalia Jackson and the Rev. James Cleveland. He started the Rance Allen Group in 1968 with his brothers Tom and Steve.

The group won a contest in Detroit and gained the attention of Dave Clark and A Bell of Stax Records. Bishop talked about his days with Stax and how it nurtured the growth of his career. At Stax, the Rance Allen Group recorded the hits “Aint No Need of Crying,” I Belong To You”, and “Just My Imagination.” They recorded “Miracle Worker with Al Bell’s label, Bellmark Records. The Rance Allen Group’s current label is Tyscot.

Bishop also talked about how he came to record “Blessing Me Again” with Snoop Dogg. He said he is a witness that Snoop Dogg told him that he gave his life to Christ. Bishop also told us how he came to record “Something About The Name, Jesus” with Kirk Franklin and blessed us by the singing of the song in the interview.

DC Bracing for More Protests Tonight

Mayor Muriel Bowser says she’s not planning to impose a curfew, but is considering calling up the National Guard if necessary.

Washington, D.C. (Sunday, May 31, 2020) – DC Mayor Muriel Bower and Police Chief Peter Newsham have just wrapped up a press conference on last night’s protests and violence.  Mayor Bowser says while they anticipate more protests tonight, she is not planning to impose a curfew.  But holds open the option of calling up the National Guard for help.  11 DC police officers were injured last night, including one seriously.  17 arrests were made with over half of those in custody living outside of DC.  Chief Newsham says 29 DC police cars were damaged or spray painted, numerous buildings were vandalized or looted, and multiple fires were set across the city.  Much of the unrest was reported near the White House across the street in Lafayette Square and in the nearby business District.

“We certainly recognize and empathize with outrage that people feel  following the killing in Minneapolis last week.  We also recognize that we are proud of our city and we don’t want our city destroyed,” Bowser said.  Police say they will be out tonight keeping the city safe.  But Chief Newsham would not disclose any set plans.  “We will have sufficient Metropolitan Police Department resources to manage this,” said Newham.  “We are hoping for the best while preparing for the worst.”

A Killing in Minneapolis: The George Floyd Incident

An arrest in the killing of George Floyd.

It is the news a city in pain has waited for all week.  An arrest in the killing of George Floyd. Video of his death while in the custody of four Minneapolis police officers, sparking days of protests, rioting and destruction of more than 170 business.  We look at the many issues that tell the story of this American tragedy.

Nicky Mayo, President, Baltimore Association of Black Journalists
Dr. Greg Carr, Chair, Afro-American Studies Department, Howard University
Glen Ivey, Former Prince George’s County State’s Attorney

 

Trump Calls Minneapolis Protesters ‘Thugs,’ Vows Action

“During these times, we can condemn violence while also trying to listen, to understand, to know that there is deep frustration, rightfully so, in our country — that there has not been enough action on creating equality, opportunity, and in health care, and in a time of this COVID-19 epidemic, it’s laid bare all of that,” Kentucky’s Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear said.

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump on Friday threatened to take action to bring the city of Minneapolis “under control,” calling violent protesters outraged by the death of a black man in police custody “thugs” and saying that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

Trump tweeted after protesters torched a Minneapolis police station and destroyed other property, capping three days of violence over the death of George Floyd, who was captured on video pleading for air as a white police officer knelt on his neck.

Trump said he spoke to the state’s Democratic governor, Tim Walz, and “told him that the Military is with him all the way.”

“Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” he wrote.

Trump didn’t clarify what he meant — Walz has already activated the National Guard — but the tweet drew another warning from Twitter, which said he had violated rules about “glorifying violence.”

Slapping back, the White House reposted Trump’s “shooting starts” message on its official Twitter account Friday morning. And White House social media director Dan Scavino turned the tweets into an image that he tweeted out as well.

The move came a day after Trump signed an executive order challenging the site’s liability protections.

Trump, who has often remained silent in the aftermath of police-involved killings and has a long history of defending police, has been uncharacteristically vocal this time, saying earlier Thursday that he felt “very, very badly” about Floyd’s death and calling video capturing his struggle “a very shocking sight.”

But his language grew more aggressive as violence boiled over in Minneapolis on Thursday night. “These THUGS are dishonoring the memory of George Floyd, and I won’t let that happen,” he wrote shortly before 1 a.m.

Kentucky’s Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear, speaking on CNN Friday morning, called on Trump to retract the statement flagged by Twitter.

“During these times, we can condemn violence while also trying to listen, to understand, to know that there is deep frustration, rightfully so, in our country — that there has not been enough action on creating equality, opportunity, and in health care, and in a time of this COVID-19 epidemic, it’s laid bare all of that,” he said.

He added that elected officials “have a responsibility not just to maintain the peace, which is what we ought to be doing, but to also listen, to show empathy, and to try to find a way to move in the right direction, not the wrong one.”

Although Twitter added the warning to Trump’s tweet, the company did not remove it, saying it had determined the message might be in the public interest — something it does only for tweets by elected and government officials. Twitter explained that it took action “in the interest of preventing others from being inspired to commit violent acts” but “kept the Tweet on Twitter because it is important that the public still be able to see the Tweet given its relevance to ongoing matters of public importance.”

Earlier this week, Twitter fact checked two of Trump’s tweets about mail-in ballots, drawing his anger.

“It seems like they’re carrying out a vendetta against the president,” Republican Rep. Steve Scalise, the No. 2 GOP House leader, said on Fox News Friday.

Once more likely to hew to the “blue lives matter” mantra, Trump, his allies and Republicans in elected office across the nation have been questioning the conduct of the officer who pinned Floyd down and calling for justice. But some activists doubt that Trump has suddenly evolved on the issue of police brutality and instead see election year political calculations.

“This is the first race-tinged case that I’ve ever heard him address” as president, said the Rev. Al Sharpton, a civil rights activist and Trump critic who has known the president for decades. “I think the difference is a November election.”

Trump has been silent on a number of high-profile police-involved killings, including that of Stephon Clark, a black man shot by Sacramento, California, police in 2018. He never addressed the 2014 death of Eric Garner, who was placed in a chokehold by police trying to arrest him for selling loose cigarettes. Video of the encounter was viewed millions of times online, and Garner’s dying words, “I can’t breathe,” became a rallying cry for the Black Lives Matter movement. Trump has, however, invoked those words on several occasions to mock political rivals, even bringing his hands to his neck for dramatic effect.

And he has even appeared to advocate for the rougher treatment of people in police custody, speaking dismissively of the police practice of shielding the heads of handcuffed suspects as they are being placed in patrol cars.

But Trump and his allies have taken a different approach in response to Floyd, who can be heard and seen on tape pleading that he couldn’t breathe before he slowly stops talking and moving.

Trump “was very upset when he saw that video,” White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said Thursday. “He wants justice to be served.”

Even conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh, who once called Black Lives Matter a “terrorist group,” said Floyd’s death was totally “unjustified” and he was “so mad.”

The outpouring comes as the Trump campaign has sought to chip into the longstanding advantage Democrats have with black voters.

___

Associated Press writer Kat Stafford in Detroit contributed to this report.

How To Plan A Wedding During Pandemic, Up Close with Carla of the SHMS

Carla Ferrell of the Steve Harvey Morning Show joins me on this segment of HUR@Home Lifestyle. Plus, wedding planner extraordinaire Linnyette Richardson-Hall shares the lowdown on how to navigate wedding planning during the COVID pandemic.

Carla Ferrell of the Steve Harvey Morning Show joins me on this segment of HUR@Home Lifestyle. Plus, wedding planner extraordinaire Linnyette Richardson-Hall shares the lowdown on how to navigate wedding planning during the COVID pandemic. Can you be assessed fees for pushing back your wedding? And how to read between the lines of your contract, plus more. Good stuff!

3rd Night of Frustration Turns Violent In Minneapolis

Protestors take to the streets around the country demanding justice for George Floyd

(Friday, May 29, 2020) – Fire and smoke can be seen billowing across areas of Minneapolis this morning as protestors took to the streets last night demanding justice in the death of George Floyd.  Shouts of “no justice no peace” became a rallying call as hundreds packed the streets not far from where Floyd took his last breath.

Protestors stormed a police station and set it ablaze.  Meantime, Mayor Jacob Frey continued to call for peace.  “There is a lot of pain and anger right now in our city.  I understand that.  What we have seen over the past several hours and past couple of nights here in terms of looting is unacceptable.”

Floyd’s death, in police custody, has prompted calls for the four police officers seen in a viral video to be fired.  One officer is seen kneeling on Floyd’s neck as he pleads for air saying “I can’t breathe.” Those officers have been fired.  But protestors are demanding they should be charged and arrested. Thus far, prosecutors in the case have not moved to press any charges.

Protests have spilled over to other US cities like DC, New York, Louisville, Denver, and Columbus.  In Louisville, demonstrators are angry over the police shooting in March of Breanna Taylor.  She’s the black medical technician killed by police in her own home as they stormed her apartment looking for someone else.

 

Books for Kids, Child Safety Tips, WHUT Movies

WHUR’s Community’s Choice filled with lots of free events and assistance.

Free Books

Share the gift of free books. Prince George’s County Memorial Library System provides free books to youth monthly from birth to age five. Register at www.pgcmls.info


Child Safety

The American Academy of Pediatrics reminds you to protect children from common everyday dangers including backyard pools and firearms. Learn the facts. www.aap.org


WHUT Movies

Grab the popcorn and join WHUT-TV for its free Movie Theatre Thursdays every Thursday. www.whut.org


Know Your Power Contest

DC Public Library and Pepco invite local teens to participate in their “Know Your Power” Summer Challenge 2020 contest. The deadline is August 14th. www.dclibrary.org


Black Coalition Against COVID-19

The Black Coalition Against COVID-19 reminds you that contract tracing requires the help of the community to work. Do your part and help save lives. www.blackcoalitionagainstcovid.org


Free Plants

Prince George’s County provides free grab and grow plants every Wednesdays from noon to 3pm for youth at various recreation centers. 301-699-2255.


US Census

The US Census is underway. Do your part and respond. The COVID-19 crisis is just another reason to make sure our region receives federal assistance. www.2020census.gov


Opioid Addiction

Opioid addiction is a disease. But there is a treatment. Buprenorphine Byou-Prenor-feen can help. Contact the Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services for details. www.knowtherisksmc.org

Reopening Barber and Beauty Businesses after COVID-19 Shutdowns

How will person services businesses like barber shops and beauty salon’s survive in the COVID-19 new normal?

As small businesses become part of the re-opening process, barber shops and beauty salons are key parts.  But new rules in the new normal of the COVID-19 pandemic are complicated.  Are they so complex as to damage those business even as their door reopen? There are some concerns that some of the business may not be able to thrive.

Kym Lee, Celebrity Make-Up Artist, President, Wink ‘N Pout
Dr. Sharon Anderson, Esq., Management and Business Strategist
Marissa Robinson, Hairstylist

 

Lease Cancelled After Confrontation with Minneapolis Black Entrepreneurs

Minneapolis Venture Capitalist Loses Office Space After Video Accuses Him Of Racism

(Minneapolis, MN)  —  A Minneapolis business executive’s office lease has been terminated after he was accused of racial profiling on a controversial video that went viral.  In the video posted Tuesday night, Tim Austin, who is white, threatened to call 911 on a group of black entrepreneurs who were using the gym in the Mozaic East building in Uptown.  The owner of F2 Group mentioned yesterday that he handled the situation poorly.  The black men in the gym work for Top Figure, which is in the same building. The company released the video of the confrontation on social media.  It has already generated more than three thousand comments and more than 20 thousand likes.

Appeal for Peace in Minneapolis

Violent protests rocked Minneapolis for 2nd straight night.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey is calling for peace in the city following a night of violence, looting and fires as a reaction to the death of George Floyd, who died in the custody of Minneapolis police.  The protests that began late Wednesday and stretched into Thursday were the most destructive yet since the death of George Floyd. He was seen on video gasping for breath during an arrest in which an officer kneeled on his neck for almost eight minutes. In the footage, George pleads that he cannot breathe before he slowly stops talking and moving.

Get Fit During Quarantine!

Society is trying to begin to have things return to some sort of normalcy and summer is around the corner!  Let’s get fit together! We can do it!

Contributed by Diamond Sydnor

Being at home in quarantine has us all being very creative, trying new recipes we wouldn’t think of when the world was still moving at a fast pace.  Many of us would buy out or buy meal preps from others.  With this pandemic, those easier ways of eating have become a lot more complicated, which has forced us to get in the kitchen daily.

Covid-19 has caused many of us to be anxious while awaiting to hear the next steps of society.  Consistently feeling anxious is linked to snacking.  Many of us have been snacking on lots of sugary, sweet, salty, and savory things, which is linked to vast weight gain.  With gyms being closed, gaining the Covid-19 in pounds can have many of us frustrated.

Don’t worry! There are many ways to get moving, to stay in shape, and to shed some pounds while in quarantine, so we can have the summer bodies we want when this is over! Let’s discuss!

 

  1. Drink plenty of water!  Some of the weight gain can be water weight.  Did you know you can gain up to 6lbs in water weight? Let’s start drinking more water!

 

  1. Go for a walk for at least 30mins a day! Take your children and your pet. It will help in speeding up your heart rate which is connected to a fast metabolism. Most importantly it will help produce endorphins that help us to feel happy, in which will combat the anxious feelings!

 

  1. Choose healthier snacks! Snack on fruits, veggies, and protein throughout the day

 

  1. When at the grocery store park further from the door to get some steps in

 

  1. You don’t always have to go outside! Try yoga inside your home! You can search YouTube videos for yoga beginners! Yoga is linked to weight loss, improved respiration and energy, and increased muscle strength which helps us to tone.

 

  1. Choose one day out of the week to treat yourself with a meal or snack of your choice. It can be whatever you want it to be.

 

  1. Meal prep your own meals for the week! Many of us are still working hard from home and even home schooling our children! We’re in the kitchen, anyway, why not cook the healthy stuff! Your body will thank you for it!

 

  1. Lastly, GIVE YOURSELF GRACE! This pandemic has changed our lives drastically. While being healthy is important, life can get the best of us at times!  So, if you’re not having a good day and want a scoop of ice cream, have the scoop and get right back on track.  Whatever you do, DON’T QUIT!

 

Society is trying to begin to have things return to some sort of normalcy and summer is around the corner!  Let’s get fit together! We can do it!

Moco Accepting Applications for Rental Assistance Program

Help for tenants in Montgomery County in the face of COVID-19 pandemic.

Rockville, MD (Thursday, May 28, 2020) – Montgomery County will launch a COVID-19 Rental Assistance Program for tenants who meet eligibility requirements. The Housing Opportunities Commission of Montgomery County (HOC) will administer the program and accept applications and supporting documents from 10 a.m. on Monday, June 1, through 2 p.m. on Friday, June 5. Applications will be reviewed using a random selection method from the final pool of applications received by the deadline.

The COVID-19 Rental Assistance Program is intended to provide partial rent support to low-income County households that have experienced income loss due to the COVID-19 health crisis. An application for unemployment insurance is required, if eligible. Approved households may receive a maximum of $500 per month for three months, paid to their landlord. Households that apply must demonstrate the ability to maintain rent obligations using the rental assistance plus existing resources.

A fact sheet and sample application form are available now in English and Spanish at www.hocmc.org/extra/878-covid-rental-assistance-program.html.

To guide residents in gathering information needed to apply, the website includes more detail about program requirements and supporting documents for the application. Once the application process opens on June 1, applicants are strongly encouraged to submit their application online at www.hocmc.org/extra/878/-covid-rental-assistance-program.html.

Supporting eligibility documents may be submitted along with the application or separately – as long as applications and documents are received by 2 p.m. on June 5.

The application includes questions and requests for documents that apply to some, but not all, situations. As stated in the form, applicants are only required to provide information and submit documentation that applies to their situation. If an applicant is unsure of something, they may include an explanation with their application.

Those unable to complete the application online may pick up a paper application beginning Tuesday, May 26, and submit a completed paper application and required documents. Those applications must be dated and time-stamped, in the designated drop box outside one of four HOC locations. As with online applications, paper applications will be accepted from 10 a.m. on Monday, June 1, until 2 p.m. on Friday, June 5. The four locations with paper forms, time-stamp equipment and drop boxes are:

  • 10400 Detrick Ave. Kensington, MD 20895
  • 231 East Deer Park Dr., Gaithersburg, MD 20877
  • 101 Lakeforest Blvd, No. 200, Gaithersburg, MD 20877
  • 880 Bonifant St., Silver Spring, MD 20910

The County encourages potential applicants to consider program eligibility requirements for this and other programs and to seek assistance from programs matching their situation. The maximum allowable annual income for applications to the COVID-19 Rental Assistance program is listed below. Emergency funding from County and federal sources will provide support for a range of rental housing needs for low-income households.

 

Family Size 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Income Limit $55,750 $63,700 $71,650 $79,600 $86,000 $92,350 $98,750 $105,100

The COVID-19 Rental Assistance Program is funded through the CARES Act as a Community Development Block Grant to provide low-income households with assistance for up to three months to support meeting housing obligations and avoid eviction. Applicants must be U.S. citizens, permanent residents or other qualified aliens. (8 U.S.C. 1641).

Residents who have questions or require assistance with the COVID-19 Rental Assistance program are encouraged to contact HOC by calling 240-627-9606 or 240-627-9680 or sending email to CDBG_RAP@hocmc.org. Alternatively, specialists at the HOC Call Center are available to answer basic program questions at 240-627-9400 or by sending an email to help@hocmc.org.

Caring for Your Skin During the Pandemic Shutdown

What do you have to do to keep you skin healthy?

Wash you hands! Wipe down everything! Wear a Mask! These are just a few things that have become a part of our daily routine. Are you taking care of your skin? Have you seen some changes due to this new normal?  What do you have to do to keep you skin healthy?

Guest:

Dr. Melanye Maclin, M.D., Dermatologist

Attorney Benjamin Crump On The Steve Harvey Morning Show

Steve Harvey talks with Attorney Benjamin Crump tomorrow morning

Tune in to the Steve Harvey Morning Show tomorrow at 7:20am EST to hear Benjamin Crump, attorney for the family of George Floyd, the Minneapolis man who was killed by the police on Monday.

#JusticeForFloyd #ICantBreathe

 

George Floyd, Amy Cooper, Ahmaud Arbery

From Ahmaud Arbery to the Amy Cooper incident in Central Park… we hash out the current events involving African-Americans.

https://youtu.be/LSjy2VcLl2U

I sit down with with journalist and commentator Roland Martin about current events related to the state of African-Americans in America.

DC to Begin Phase One Reopening on Friday, May 29th

City-operated parks and recreation centers will open for passive recreation activities but contact sports such as football, soccer or basketball will not be allowed.

DC Mayor Muriel Bowser announced that DC will reopen non-essential businesses, barbershops and hair  salons on Friday.  Nail salons are not included in the Phase One reopening, neither is eyebrow threading. The Phase One includes restaurants that are permitted for outdoor dining, but no customers are not allowed inside.  City-operated parks and recreation centers will open for passive recreation activities but contact sports such as football, soccer or basketball will not be allowed.  Elective surgeries will continue and testing for anyone who wants it, regardless of symptoms will available.

Children and the Coronavirus

We take a look at how this disease is impacting out children.

 At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the lion’s share of victims were senior citizens.  They were considered the most vulnerable.  Now however, we’re seeing the very young, stricken with strange symptoms linked to the coronavirus.  Just last week, Maryland marked the death of its first child.  She was 15-years-old.  We take a look at how this disease is impacting out children.

Guests:

Dr. Charles Berul, Chief of Cardiology, Children’s National Hospital
Dr. Marilyn Corder, Adjunct Professor, Pediatrician, Howard University Hospital

 

 

Woman in Central Park Dog Dispute Fired

Dispute over dog in Central Park sparks racism accusations.

Amy Cooper, the white woman who was seen in a video of a verbal dispute with black man over an unleashed dog has been fired by her employer, asset management firm Franklin Templeton. The viral video of her walking her dog off a leash and a black man bird watching in Central Park is sparking accusations of racism. The cell phone recording by birdwatcher Christian Cooper shows Amy Cooper calling police to frantically report she was being threatened by “an African-American man.” The confrontation happened early Monday morning when Christian Cooper said he noticed Amy Cooper had let her dog off its leash against the rules in the Ramble, a secluded section of Central Park popular with birdwatchers. The widely watched video posted on social media resulted in an announcement by Amy Cooper’s employer that she was suspended from her job despite her public plea Tuesday for forgiveness.

Northern Virginia Enters Phase One on Friday

The state’s most populated region did not open like the rest of the state because of high COVID-19 infection and death rates.  

Virginia Governor Ralph Northam said today that the counties bordering Washington, D.C. will begin a Phase One reopening on Friday.  The state’s most populated region did not open like the rest of the state because of high COVID-19 infection and death rates.  The counties set to open on Friday include Fairfax, Loudoun, Arlington, Prince William as well as Alexandria.  The rest of the state opened on May 15th.

Searching For Justice: The Ahmaud Arbery & Breonna Taylor Killings

William “Roddie” Bryan, the man who took smartphone video of the killing of unarmed jogger Ahmaud Arbery back in February, has been arrested.  The Georgia Bureau of Investigation said Bryan is charged with murder and criminal attempt to commit false imprisonment.  Arbery was jogging through the neighborhood in the southeast Georgia town of Brunswick when he was accosted by Gregory and Travis McMichael and shot to death. We take another look at this case and the Louisville, Kentucky killing of Breonna Taylor.

Benjamin Crump, Esq., Attorney at Law

Dr. Valethia Watkins, Faculty, Howard University, Department of Afro-American Studies

Jagged Edge vs 112 – The Right Way

All eyes were glued to Instagram on Monday night for the R&B showdown on the very popular Verzuz series that featured Jagged Edge and 112. I like most were ready to hear some great songs that defined the 90’s and the early 2000’s but the Internet Gods were not on our side. Unlike the great WiFi reception that Beenie Man and Bounty Killer gave us just two-days prior from Jamaica the janky connection in Atlanta was questionable at best.

The songs that both groups have created over the years need to be heard in their essences and that’s clear and crisp. 112 and JE dominated an era when R&B male groups held a boot on the neck of the industry. So let’s all reminisce the right way and pay our respects to both legendary groups. Enjoy!

https://music.apple.com/us/playlist/jagged-edge-vs-112/pl.u-AkAmVxGsVmyAL3

Outdoor Cooking Tips for the Memorial Day Weekend

Grilling tips for the holiday weekend.

Memorial day weekend is the unofficial start of the summer. This summer will be like no other for us… but it will still include firing up the grill.  We have tips and suggestions for making sure your barbecue weekend is delicious and safe… no matter if you’ve been doing it for years or just starting out.

Resources:

Milk ‘N Honey Cafe

Chef Eric Marshall

Chef Eric Marshall

Chef Sammy Davis

Study: Hydroxychloroquine Still Problematic Drug

Large Study Concludes Hydroxychloroquine Treatments Linked To Risk Of Death, Heart Arrhythmia

A large study on the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID-19 patients is finding patients receiving the drug were more likely to die or develop dangerous heart arrhythmias.  President Trump has promoted the use of the anti-malaria drug and says he’s taking it himself.  Medical journal The Lancet reported today the study looked at data from 96-thousand patients from nearly 700 hospitals.  About 15-thousand were treated with the anti-malaria drugs and an antibiotic.  All four of the different treatments tried were linked to a higher risk of dying.  About one in eleven in the study did die.

Quarantine Hair Care Tips, Outrageous ‘Strawberry Letters’

Get quarantine hair care tips and get the scoop on some of the most outrageous Strawberry letters.

Lifestyle started off tonight with superstar syndicated radio personality, Shirley Strawberry, of The Steve Harvey Morning Show! You know I had to ask her about the craziest Strawberry letters they’ve received… Oh Goodness! Wait until you hear what she tells us. We talked about many things. Shirley shared how she’s fairing during this global pandemic, and offered comforting advice to us all. Her suggestion is to please stay safe, and remember to go easy on yourself. Don’t allow yourself to feel guilty if some days you just want to relax and simply do nothing.

Ms. Strawberry is a sweet, gracious person. She’s also a Boss! A Gracie Award winner, NAACP Image Award winner, syndicated radio personality and author. Be sure to purchase her book, The Strawberry Letter: Real Talk, Real Advice, Because Bitter Isn’t Sexy! Find Shirley Strawberry on IG @mygirlshirley

Our second guest was Synergi Salon owner, Karen Hill! She wowed everyone with her gorgeous mane and gave us great tips on hair care at home. She offers a line of hair care products that everyone in the comment section already knew about. I can’t wait to get mine. As you’ll see in this interview, Karen wants us all to fall in love with our own hair. No matter what the texture is, it’s yours and you should treat it with TLC. I’m all in, Karen! Connect with Karen Hill on IG @synergisalon

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by WHUR FM (@whurfm) on

Prince George’s County On Track to Open June 1st

County Executive Angela Alsbrooks says the county is on a downward trend of COVID-19 infections.

Largo, Maryland (Thursday, June 21, 2020) – Like many parts of the DMV, Prince George’s County is nearing a plan to reopen after months of residents having to stay put in the face of the coronavirus pandemic.  County Executive Angela Alsobrooks announced Thursday that if current data trends continue, the county is on track to move toward a modified reopening in 10 days.

Recent data shows the County on a downward trend in positivity, hospitalizations, and death rates.  Prince George’s leads the region and state in the number of COVID-19 cases with 12,830 persons infected as of Thursday night.  444 persons in Prince George’s County have died from complications of the virus.  COVID-19 is the leading cause of death in the county with 9 persons dying daily.

“After reviewing recent data, we are cautiously moving toward a modified phase one reopening by June 1,” said Alsobrooks. “While the data has improved, we are not out of the woods yet. I urge all Prince Georgians to exercise caution, use good judgement and observe the Stay-at-Home Order this holiday weekend so that we can stay on track to begin reopening by our target date.”

According to County data, the week of May 3 through May 9 was the highest number of COVID-19 hospitalizations with an average of 244 inpatients in County hospitals per day. The County began to see a decrease starting on May 10, with last week’s average being 208 patients. For this week, to date, County hospitals are averaging 184 patients, a 25% decrease from the peak.  COVID-19 is the leading cause of death in the county with an average of 9 persons dying daily.

In addition, preliminary data of tests collected last week have a 28% positivity rate, which is a decrease from a high of 41% the week of April 19. And finally, deaths have slowly decreased from a high of 72 during the week of April 19, to 66 the week of May 3. Preliminary data from the week of May 10 shows 59 deaths. While this is an improvement, COVID-19 continues to be the leading cause of death in the County since April, surpassing heart disease and cancer.

The County Executive will provide details on the modified reopening in the coming days.

Andre Harrell Tribute To Air Sunday

“I hope to God that you are all blessed to have someone in your life that loves you and believes in you like this man believed in me,” Diddy wrote on Instagram. “I’m going to miss him so much. I can’t even imagine life without Dre.”

NEW YORK (AP) — A tribute to Andre Harrell, the influential music executive who discovered Sean “Diddy” Combs and died earlier this month, will air Sunday.

The memorial broadcast dubbed “Mr. Champagne and Bubbles” — a nickname of Harrell’s — will feature tributes from Chris Rock, Mariah Carey, Jamie Foxx, Babyface, Naomi Campbell, Lee Daniels, Clarence Avant, Russell Simmons, Kimora Lee Simmons, Robin Thicke and more. It will air commercial free on BET, BET Jams, BET Soul and REVOLT TV, where Harrell served as vice chairman.

Harrell, who died at age 59, founded Uptown Records and shaped the sound of hip-hop and R&B in the late 1980s and ’90s with acts such as Mary J. Blige, Heavy D & the Boyz, Al B. Sure! and Guy, the R&B trio that also included megaproducer Teddy Riley, the leader of the New Jack Swing movement.

In the early ’90s, Diddy began interning for Uptown and quickly rose up the ranks after finding success with just-signed acts including R&B group Jodeci and Blige, who was dubbed the Queen of Hip-Hop Soul with the release of her 1992 debut, “What’s the 411?” Uptown also released Notorious B.I.G.’s first single, 1993’s “Party and Bull—-,” which was featured on a film soundtrack.

Diddy often credits Harrell with giving him the tools to find success in music and life, even saying Harrell was like a father figure to him. In 1993, Harrell let go of Diddy, who then launched his uber-successful Bad Boy Records.

Diddy posted multiple tributes to Harrell on social media following his death.

“I hope to God that you are all blessed to have someone in your life that loves you and believes in you like this man believed in me,” Diddy wrote on Instagram. “I’m going to miss him so much. I can’t even imagine life without Dre.”

 

DC Could Re-Open Next Week

The announcement came during a news conference that released some of the findings of the Reopen DC Advisory Group.

DC Mayor Muriel Bowser said the city could enter into a Phase One re-opening scenario on May 29th, one week from Friday.  The announcement came during a news conference that released some of the findings of the Reopen DC Advisory Group.  The advisory group, led by former National Security Advisor Susan Rice and former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, laid out a detailed plan for opening in the District, from phases one through four.

COVID-19 and the New Mental Health Crisis

Is America for a mental health crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic?

     Over the past two months… there have been growing concerns about a new pandemic… a mental health pandemic brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.  According to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll nearly half of Americans say the coronavirus crisis has damaged their mental and emotional health.  Will the new normal after the coronavirus pandemic be too much for the mental health of some Americans?

Resources:

Mental Health Hotline 888-997-3147

Dr. Jeff Menzise Facebook

Boris L. Henson Foundation

Debbie Morgan, Emmy Award-Winning Actress, Author
Dr. Jeff Menzise, Doctor of Psychology, Lead Consultant, Coach, Mind On The Matter

 

Understanding What You’re Legally Entitled To From Your Employer

The Legal Lunch Break, Zoom Meeting is tomorrow at 12noon

Join The Tree of Life Christian Ministries and Lawyers from Maryland Legal Aid to discuss issues regarding sick leave, unemployment benefits and more.  The Zoom Webinar is designed to answer your questions from experts in the field.

 

Could 25% of Maryland Restaurants Close?

One In Four Restaurants May Permanently Closure Due To Pandemic

The Restaurant Association of Maryland projects that 25-percent of restaurants may permanently close as a result of the COVID-19 crisis.  RAM President and CEO Marshall Weston says the crisis has gone on longer than anyone anticipated and businesses are running out of money. Weston says the pressures restaurants will face during the transition process will be immense and he hopes lawmakers will create restaurant-specific relief funds.  It’s estimated that 150-thousand restaurant industry employees are out of work in Maryland due to the pandemic.

Oprah Gives Grants To ‘Home’ Cities During Pandemic

She announced Wednesday that her Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation will donate money to organizations dedicated to helping underserved communities in Chicago; Baltimore; Nashville, Tennessee; Milwaukee; and Kosciusko, Mississippi, where she was born.

NEW YORK (AP) — Oprah Winfrey is giving grants to the cities she’s called home through her $12 million coronavirus relief fund.

She announced Wednesday that her Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation will donate money to organizations dedicated to helping underserved communities in Chicago; Baltimore; Nashville, Tennessee; Milwaukee; and Kosciusko, Mississippi, where she was born.

“The reason I’m talking about it is because there is going to be a need for people of means to step up,” Winfrey said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I mean, this thing is not going away. Even when the virus is gone, the devastation left by people not being able to work for months who were holding on paycheck to paycheck, who have used up their savings — people are going to be in need. So my thing is, look in your own neighborhood, in your own backyard to see how you can serve and where your service is most essential. That is the real essential work, I think, for people of means.”

After speaking with Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot and other leaders, Winfrey decided to give $5 million to Live Healthy Chicago, which provides immediate support to seniors and high-risk residents affected by the coronavirus.

In Nashville, where Winfrey lived with her father and started her media career, she is giving $2 million to NashvilleNurtures, a collaboration with Mount Zion Baptist Church and Tennessee State University, Winfrey’s alma mater. They plan to feed 10,000 families in and around the city.

In Milwaukee, where she lived with her mother, Winfrey is assisting those in need of housing and mental health care with a $100,000 donation to SaintA and The Nia Imani Family, Inc.

In Baltimore, where Winfrey also built her media career, she’s donating money to Living Classrooms Foundation and Center for Urban Families.

She will also give $115,000 to the Boys and Girls Club of East Mississippi.

“I’m not opposed to big organizations dispersing money, but I always like to do the on-the-ground grassroots stuff myself,” she said. “Look, I want to be able to reach people who have been incarcerated and are coming out of prison. I want to reach mothers of domestic violence. I want to reach people. I want to feed people. I want to help people get access to testing.”

Winfrey said she’s been homebound since March 11, four days after she wrapped her nine-city wellness tour that visited arenas like Barclays Center in Brooklyn and the Forum in Inglewood, California.

She announced her COVID-19 Relief Fund last month, initially giving $1 million to America’s Food Fund. She said Wednesday that she will also give grants to advocacy organization Global CitizenNew Mount Pilgrim Missionary Baptist Church in Chicago and Minnie’s Food Pantry in Plano, Texas, among other organizations.

Before giving out millions to others, Winfrey said she first helped the people closest to her.

“The first thing I did was start in my own family, people I knew who were going to be touched and were not going to have jobs. Then I moved out to people who I’ve worked with and known who maybe would be out of work. I started literally here, working my way out, and then into the community. So people who I hadn’t spoken to in years ended up getting checks from me like, ‘What is this?’” she said.

“All the cousins and some aunties — try to help your own family first,” she added. “I didn’t want an announcement about, ‘I’m going out into the world trying to help other people’ and then your own family saying, ‘Hey, I can’t pay my light bill. I can’t pay my rent.’”

Last week, Winfrey gave a commencement speech during Facebook’s virtual “Graduation 2020” event, and asked the graduates, “What will your essential service be?” She said she’s asked herself the same question.

“What this pandemic has done is made me think about giving differently. How I give and who’s on the receiving end of that, and how do you do that in such a way that sustains people? I’ve ultimately always believed that you teach people to fish … but sometimes people just need fish and a piece of bread,” she said. “Sometimes you need some fish, OK? Sometimes you don’t have time to learn to fish. I just need some fish today!”

Susan L. Taylor Talks National Cares Mentoring Movement

Susan Taylor discusses black women wellness and mentoring of black children.

https://youtu.be/1Meoh_F9Dz8

During this installment of HUR@Home, I sat down with Susan Taylor, Editor Emeritus of Essence Magazine, author, activist and thought-leader for black women.

National Cares Mentoring Movement

Maryland Expanding Coronavirus Testing Sites

Free COVID-19 testing open to all in Maryland without an appointment

Upper Marlboro, Maryland (Wednesday, May 20, 2020) – Coronavirus testing is now open in Maryland to anyone who wants to know their status.  Governor Larry Hogan Tuesday signed an executive order making free testing available at state sites without an appointment, a doctor’s notice, and even if you don’t have any symptoms.

Officials are hoping these new guidelines will allow the state to have a truer picture of the pandemic.  The move comes as Maryland’s number of infections has topped 41,000 with 1,963 deaths.  Montgomery and Prince George’s Counties continue to be hard hit by the crisis.  The new testing sites will be at emissions inspection sites in Hyattsville, Clinton, and Glen Burnie and at the Timonium Fairgrounds in Baltimore County.

Prince George’s County has the highest number of coronavirus cases in the state and county leaders have been critical of Governor Hogan, saying he has not done enough to place resources in the county.  Prince George’s has 12,240 cases as of Wednesday morning with 424 deaths.  Montgomery County has 8,950 infections and 465 COVID-19 related fatalities.

Your Rent and Mortgage During the Pandemic Shutdown

We discuss rent and mortgage payments during the COVID-19 shutdown.

     Two months ago, when governments issued stay-at-home orders and business began to close their door, jobs were lost.  That meant apartment rental and mortgage bills went unpaid.  Depending on where you live or who serviced your mortgage… you may have gotten a break because of temporary executive orders put in place or a little financial breathing room given by mortgage companies.  Those breaks could soon end as states begin to open up.  When that happens… what will that mean for you?  We discuss rent and mortgage payments during the COVID-19 shutdown.

Resources:

Fannie Mae

Freddie Mac

Eviction Lab

Kayla Williams, Esq., Staff Attorney, Community Legal Services of Prince George’s County (not pictured)

Muriel Garr, Co-Host, “Beyond the Bling”

 

Social Distancing Road Closures Proposed in DC

DC Mayor Muriel Bowser received a letter from Charles Allen, Mary Cheh and Brianne Nadeau making the request.

(Washington, DC)  —  Three DC lawmakers want the Department of Transportation to close narrow streets to promote social distancing efforts.  DC Mayor Muriel Bowser received a letter from Charles Allen, Mary Cheh and Brianne Nadeau making the request citing resident complaints that sidewalks are crowded.  Residents can submit a request with their Advisory Neighborhood Council to make changes on their street as long as more that 50-percent of the residents agree.

ESPN To Show Film About Game 6 Of 1998 NBA Finals

The Bulls defeated the Utah Jazz 87–86 as Michael Jordan hit the game-winning basket with 5.2 seconds remaining to cap their sixth championship in eight seasons.

The final episodes of “The Last Dance” have aired, yet ESPN has one more program to show about the Chicago Bulls’ sixth championship.

ESPN will show “Game 6: The Movie” on Wednesday night at 9 p.m. EDT, following a rebroadcast of episodes nine and 10 of “The Last Dance.” The episode will feature game footage captured by five NBA Entertainment cameras and marks the first time that the game has been available to watch in high-definition.

The Bulls defeated the Utah Jazz 87–86 as Michael Jordan hit the game-winning basket with 5.2 seconds remaining to cap their sixth championship in eight seasons.

Executive Producer Gregg Winik — who had the same title for NBA Entertainment during that Bulls championship season — said the brainstorming about Game 6 started by compiling the last 40 seconds of the game for the final episode of “The Last Dance”. After they were able to do that, it started to expand into a project of its own. Winik and his team then took the NBC telecast and started to lay in footage to get the complete product.

“If you would have told me six months ago if we could have done this, I would have said it was impossible,” Winik said. “It features a lot of dramatic imagery and the pictures jump off the screen.”

High definition was still in its infancy in 1998. In fact, the first major sports event to be broadcast in high definition didn’t happen until Super Bowl 34 in January 2000.

Connor Schell, ESPN’s executive vice president for content, said there were conversations about showing the original NBC broadcast, until discussions revolved around an enhanced presentation.

“It was timed out beautifully and how quick we were able to get it on the air,” Schell said. “To top off this project with this never-seen-before version of Game 6 is an incredible ending.”

The film will feature the original NBC commentary by Bob Costas, Isiah Thomas, Doug Collins, Ahmad Rashad and Jim Gray.

ESPN and Nielsen said that the final two episodes of ’The Last Dance” on Sunday averaged 5.6 million viewers.

Wendy Williams Pauses Talk Show Because Of Health Condition

Williams has has been experiencing fatigue because of symptoms from Graves’ disease, a spokesperson for “The Wendy Williams Show” said Monday.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Wendy Williams is taking a break from her daytime talk show to receive treatment for a previously announced health condition.

Williams has has been experiencing fatigue because of symptoms from Graves’ disease, a spokesperson for “The Wendy Williams Show” said Monday.

As a precautionary measure, the spokesperson said, Williams is taking time off from the show that she’s been taping remotely from her home in New York City during the pandemic.

“We look forward to welcoming Wendy back soon and continuing the Wendy@Home shows,” according to a statement from the show. No return date has been announced.

Reruns of Williams’ show will air during her absence.

In 2018, Williams announced that she had Graves’ disease, which leads to the overproduction of thyroid hormones and can cause wide-ranging symptoms and affect overall health.

Her show stopped production for several weeks at that time, and it was on hiatus again early last year as Williams dealt with the disorder and a shoulder injury.

In October 2017, Williams fainted on stage during her show, saying later she became overheated while wearing a bulky Halloween costume.

Surviving the Coronavirus

We hear details from a survivor of the coronavirus.

      For the past several months… we have heard the horror stories about COVID-19 infections.  The symptoms, the suffering of those who been infected and of course the deaths.  But we are hearing more and more about those who have survived COVID-19 infections.  They’re leaving hospitals with the applause of medical staff their wake.  We hear from a survivor of the coronavirus.  We find out what happened from the time she first felt ill early last month… until now.

Sharrarne Morton, COVID-19 Survivor, Co-Host & Producer, “The Small Business Report” SiriusXM Channel 141
Dr. Constance Mere, Chief of Nephrology, Howard University Hospital

 

 

Trump Taking Drug To Fight Off COVID-19, Despite Warnings

FDA says hydroxychloroquine should not be taken outside of a hospital setting. But Trump is taking it anyway.

Washington, D.C. (Monday, May 18, 2020) – President Donald Trump is setting aside scientific cautions and announced today he is taking to keep the coronavirus at bay.  Trump told reporters Monday he has been taking the drug for a couple of weeks and his doctor is aware of it.

Trump has been tested several times for COVID-19 and has tested negative.  Hydroxchloroquine, an anti-malaria drug, has been pushed for weeks by Trump against the cautionary advice of many of his own administration’s top medical professionals.  Experts have said the drug has the potential to cause significant side effects in some patients and has not been shown to combat the new coronavirus.

Trump said his doctor did not recommend the drug. But he started taking it.  Because I thinks it’s good.  I’ve heard a lot of good stories.  If it’s not good, I’ll tell you right.  I’m not gonna get hurt by it,” Trump said.

The Food and Drug Administration just last month issued a warning to health officials that the drug should not be used to treat COVID-19 outside of hospital or research settings, due to sometimes fatal side effects.

Fairfax County Is Home To 11 Fortune 500 Headquarters For First Time; SAIC Is Newest Local Entry

For the first time ever, 11 Fairfax County-based companies in a broad range of industries hold spots on the Fortune 500 list of the largest publicly traded companies in the United States. Fortune magazine published the 2020 list today.

FAIRFAX COUNTY, Va.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–May 18, 2020–

For the first time ever, 11 Fairfax County-based companies in a broad range of industries hold spots on the Fortune 500 list of the largest publicly traded companies in the United States. Fortune magazine published the 2020 list today.

Fairfax County has more Fortune 500 headquarters than 35 states and the District of Columbia, and is home to nearly two-thirds of the 17 companies based in the Washington, D.C., region. The others are in Arlington County, Va. (1), Washington, D.C. (2) and Montgomery County, Md. (3).

Fortune based its rankings on 2019 revenue. The new list includes these Fairfax County-based companies:

41. Freddie Mac, Tysons, financial services
83. General Dynamics, Reston, aerospace and defense
96. Northrop Grumman, Falls Church area, aerospace and defense
97. Capital One Financial, Tysons, financial services
155. DXC Technology, Tysons, information technology
289. Leidos Holdings, Reston, information technology
338. Hilton Worldwide Holdings, Tysons, hospitality
417. NVR, Reston, home construction
434. Beacon Roofing, Herndon, building materials
450. Booz Allen Hamilton, Tysons, management consulting
466. SAIC, Reston, information technology

Fairfax County had 10 companies on the 2019 list. It added its 11th headquarters thanks to SAIC, which entered the list at No. 466.

“Only a handful of communities can say they are home to 11 Fortune 500 companies. It sends a really strong message from the corporate world that this is a strong, stable, resilient location for headquarters operations,” said Victor Hoskins, president and CEO of the Fairfax County Economic Development Authority.

“The wide diversity of the industry sectors represented here also is striking, everything from our traditional strengths in IT, aerospace and defense to financial services, hospitality and construction, and that also speaks well for the stability and resiliency of our business base,” Hoskins said.

Other interesting information from the 2020 Fortune 500:

  • 11 of the 22 Virginia Fortune 500 companies have headquarters in Fairfax County, including the four largest Virginia companies.
  • Six additional Fairfax County-based companies are on the Fortune 1000 list: Parsons, Maximus, Park Hotels and Resorts, PAE, TEGNA and ManTech.

The Fairfax County Economic Development Authority promotes Fairfax County as a business and technology center. In addition to its headquarters in Tysons, Fairfax County’s largest business district, the FCEDA maintains business investment offices in six important global business centers: Bangalore/Mumbai, Berlin, London, Los Angeles, Seoul and Tel Aviv. Follow the FCEDA on FacebookInstagramLinkedInTwitter and YouTube.

The FCEDA is a member of the Northern Virginia Economic Development Alliance, which promotes and markets Northern Virginia outside the region and conducts activities and events to build the regional business community. Other members of NOVA EDA: Alexandria Economic Development Partnership, Arlington County, City of Fairfax, City of Falls Church, Fauquier County, Loudoun County, City of Manassas, City of Manassas Park and the Prince William County Department of Economic Development.

Transition To A Career In IT

HOPE Project is offering training for careers in the IT field . Information webinar is tomorrow evening at 6pm.

Jobs are being lost in almost every sector because of the pandemic this country finds itself in, however, there is still a demand for IT professionals.  Hope Project is offering training to anyone who may have found themselves out of work due to the Covid 19 Pandemic are looking for a change.

Register for COVID 19 – Transitioning to a Career in IT Sponsored By HOPE Project on May 19, 2020 6:00 PM EDT at:

https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/7416794574938149133

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

Michelle Obama Joined By Barack For Online Reading Series

Michelle Obama has been reading midday Monday for the past several weeks in support of families with small children at home during the coronavirus pandemic.

NEW YORK (AP) — Michelle Obama was joined by a famous fellow reader Monday on her popular online series “Mondays With Michelle Obama.”

The former first lady first read “The Giraffe Problem,” by Jory John and Lane Smith. Then she was joined by Barack Obama, seen over the weekend addressing the country’s high school graduating class, as they took turns — the former president even barked at one point — on Julia Sarcone-Roach’s “A Bear Ate Your Sandwich.”

Michelle Obama has been reading midday Monday for the past several weeks in support of families with small children at home during the coronavirus pandemic. Books she has featured include Julia Donaldson’s ”The Gruffalo” and Eric Carle’s “The Hungry Caterpillar.”

Next Monday, she will bring on a pair of non-readers — the family’s dogs, Bo and Sunny — for the canine-appropriate “Can I Be Your Dog?”, by Troy Cummings.

The series can be viewed on the Facebook and YouTube pages of PBS Kids and on the Facebook page of the Obamas’ publisher, Penguin Random House.

Steve Harvey Continues To Inspire and Mentor Our Youth

Mentoring Monday’s features special guests Kirk Franklin and Anthony Hamilton

Mentoring Mondays with Steve Harvey and special guest, Kirk Franklin and Anthony Hamilton.  Tune in tonight 4pm PST/ and 7pm EST on FB, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

Information at theharveyfoundation.org

 

Barr Doesn’t Expect Criminal Investigation Of Obama Or Biden

President Trump has loudly accused both Obama and Biden of being involved in a major crime, but he has offered no evidence to support the claim.

(Washington, DC)  —  Attorney General Bill Barr does not expect an ongoing review of the origins of the Russia investigation to lead to a criminal investigation of former President Obama or former Vice President Joe Biden.  He told a briefing that a probe of possible criminality is “focused on others.”  President Trump has loudly accused both Obama and Biden of being involved in a major crime, but he has offered no evidence to support the claim.  Meantime, Barr insisted that the Russia investigation advanced a “false and utterly baseless Russian collusion narrative” against Trump.  Biden is the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.

Dr. Jamal Bryant On Ahmaud Arbery Murder, Pastor Mike Jr. On “Big”

We were joined by the dynamic Dr. Jamal Harrison Bryant and Gospel singer Mike McClure, Jr. better known as Pastor Mike, Jr.  Both Pastor’s urged us to pray for God’s Will in our lives.

https://youtu.be/PCc0hsYkGWk

On the May 17th edition of HUR@HOME Inspiration we were joined by the dynamic Dr. Jamal Harrison Bryant and Gospel singer Mike McClure, Jr. better known as Pastor Mike, Jr.  Both Pastor’s urged us to pray for God’s Will in our lives.

Pastor Jamal Bryant is Senior Pastor of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Georgia. He is a powerful speaker and a social justice activist who earned his bachelor’s degree from Morehouse and Master of Divinity from Duke University. Before New Birth, he was the pastor of Empowerment Temple AME in Baltimore.

Dr. Bryant talked about New Birth’s efforts to serve its community by providing free COVID-19 testing to 2,000 people in one day in the church parking lot. Pastor Bryant and church members also provided groceries for 1,000 people last week. New Birth is helping smaller churches and Dr. Bryant stressed the importance of churches learning to grow technologically and strategically through the challenges presented by the pandemic. He launched a livestream series today titled, “Prospering through the pandemic.”

Dr. Bryant also let us know that he had every intention of joining hundreds of Georgians at a rally yesterday who demanded justice in the wake of the shooting of Ahmaud Arbery. However, the NAACP urged him to not come in person because of safety issues, but to protest online, which he did.

Mike McClure, Jr, better known as Pastor Mike, Jr. is Pastor of the Rock City Church in Birmingham, Alabama, and a five-time Stellar Award nominee. He talked about the origins of his hit song, “Big” which started as a sermon that got a million views online. He was urged by a record executive to record it as a song and it went big.

Pastor Mike talked about overcoming the challenges of releasing new music during the pandemic and gave a delightful account of marrying his childhood sweetheart. They have five children. Pastor Mike started his church with he was 25 years old and the church now draws 3,500 worshippers a week. Like Dr. Bryant, Pastor Mike is helping churches in his area that lack technological capacity make it through the pandemic.

Re-Opening America During the Pandemic? Yes or No?

Are you supporting the re-opening or closing of America during the COVID-19 pandemic?

Every state in the union is now in some stage re-opening in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic.  Some people are breathing a sigh of relief. Others are saying, not so fast.   We debate this one question.  Is it time to open up or is it just too soon?

Guests:

Raynard Jackson, Republican Strategist

 

Jamila Bey, Political Analyst

 

 

Howard University Expanding COVID-19 Testing In NE and SE

Howard University Faculty Practice Plan is increasing coronavirus testing from two days to four in hard hit areas of the District of Columbia.

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Friday, May 15, 2020)  – Coronavirus testing is being ramped up in the District’s Wards 7 and 8.  DC Mayor Muriel Bowser joined Howard University President Dr. Wayne A.I. Frederick today in making the announcement of expanding testing days at the new Benning Road COVID-19 Clinic, which is operated by Howard University Faculty Practice Plan.

Residents can now get tested at the clinic , with an appointment, four days a week instead of two. “The Howard University Faculty Practice Plans testing site has been met with overwhelming response from the D.C. communities of Ward 7 and Ward 8,” said Dr. Frederick. “That lets us know that we are in the right place and the expansion to four days a week will allow us to see patients sooner so they can know their status faster.”

As a show of community support, journalist Armstrong Williams, founder and sole owner of Howard Stirk Holdings Broadcast, and Capital Medical Supply, Inc., donated 30,000 masks to be used at the clinic for staff and patient safety.

We’d like to thank Mayor Bowser for her guidance to get our city through this pandemic, and special thanks to Mr. Armstrong Williams and Capital Medical Supply for this generous mask donation which will go a long to ensure the protection of our patients and staff,” added President Frederick.

“Howard University is an essential partner in our effort to build a more equitable health care system, and we are grateful that this testing site is delivering critical care and resources to our most vulnerable communities,” said Mayor Bowser. “We also appreciate the continued generosity of those like Armstrong Williams, and contributions like these go a long way toward supporting our front line workers.”

The Howard University Faculty Practice Plan began offering free coronavirus testing at its Benning Road Clinic (4414 Benning Road NE) on May 5 thanks to a $1 million grant from Bank of America. The grant will be used to improve access to COVID-19 testing in the diverse Washington, D.C. communities located east of the river. Beginning next week, testing will be available Tuesdays through Fridays, from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. D.C. Residents of Ward 7 and 8 may make an appointment by calling 202-865-2119, option 3. The team of physicians will see patients who are showing symptoms or who believe they are asymptomatic. Please bring your photo I.D. with you.

Countdown to Re-opening in Maryland

Hogan urges caution as the “safer-at-home-order” kicks in.

Parts of Maryland begin reopening this afternoon after Governor Larry Hogan recently gave them permission to reduce restrictions at 5 p.m. But Hogan urges caution as the “safer-at-home-order” kicks in. Retail stores are allowed open, but only at 50 percent capacity. Same goes with barbershops and hair salons. Counties hit hardest by the coronavirus, like Prince’s George’s and Montgomery, may open at their own pace.

Iconic Essence Mag Turns 50!

“To Succeed In This Climate, We Must Become Flexatarians!”

 

View this post on Instagram

 

WHUR Quiet Storm Host, Angela Stribling, talks with Essence Magazine Editor-At-Large, Mikki Taylor @angelastribling @iammikkitaylor

A post shared by WHUR FM (@whurfm) on

Essence Magazine turns 50 years old this year and Editor-At-Large, Mikki Taylor, has led the charge for over 30 of those years.

Ms. Taylor dropped all kinds of gems for us last night. No matter what it is you do for a living, or what your current life situation is, Mikki tells us how to elevate our lives and make it all make sense. You can find all kinds of inspiration in her book ‘Editor In Chic!’

She talks about the early days of being a Beauty and Cover Director at Essence. What that meant to her, as a black woman, to be able to share images and stories of Women of Color with the world. She was so right by saying it is a world conversation that Essence has with like minded people. Honestly, I can’t imagine being without my Essence Mag.

The conversation continues on this edition of HUR@Home ~ LIFESTYLES. Hope you enjoy it.

Please follow us on all platforms: @whurfm @angelastribling @iammikkitaylor