
House Speak Wants Confederate Portraits Down
Pelosi orders removal of Confederate portraits from Capitol
Pelosi orders removal of Confederate portraits from Capitol

DC’s Dress for Success is now launching a Virtual Career Center
DC Dress for Success is launching a new Virtual Career Center and is offering financial management, health and wellness, work life balance, professional etiquette, leadership and community action training. They are even adding, “Suiting into a Box” for clients who need free professional clothing. For more information go here:
Listen to this mornings segment here:
How do you de-stress and decompress during the rough ride of 2020?

There is a move to redirect funds away from police departments and towards community based programs. How and should that take place? It is a topic being debated across the country.
In part one we heard from the men and women in blue whose charge is to serve and protect.
Tonight, we hear from elected officials who make the laws and who represent the community.
Are new laws needed? And if so, what should they look like and would they make a difference? Just a few of the questions we’ll tackle.
AUDIO:
Our guests:
Will Jawando – Member of the Montgomery County Council
Phil Mendelson – Chairman of the DC Council
Local African American business owners share their tips to running a small business during the pandemic.
Tonight, we will be joined by two black business owners who will share their experiences of trying to run a successful and thriving business during the pandemic.
AUDIO:
Our guest:
Karin Sellers – Owner, Here’s The Scoop
Charles “Shorty Corleone” Garris – Co-Owner, DCity Wings & Shorty’s
Prosecutors say officers stood on Rayshard Brooks’ back and shoulders after shooting him.
Brooks was shot twice in the back last Friday after a scuffle with police in which he was able to break flee with one of the officer’s stun guns.
Garrett Rolfe who has been fired from the police force is also accused of kicking Brooks while he lay on the ground and the other officer Davin Brosnan stood on Brooks’ shoulders as the father of 4 struggled for life, said Attorney Paul Howard at a Wednesday press conference.
The Brooks shooting has touched off even more protests in Georgia, which has already been on edge from demonstrations in the George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis.
Brooks was shot last Friday in a Wendy’s parking after police were called to the area over complaints of a car blocking the drive-thru lane. An officer found brooks sleep behind the wheel and called for another officer to do field sobriety testing. Police body cam video shows Brooks and the officers talking for nearly 40 minutes before they tried to handcuff him and that’s when things turned sour.
Brooks’ widow and family attorney attended today’s announcement of the charges.
Brosnan is charged with aggravated assault and other crimes. He has been placed on administrative leave.
A separate $6.5 million fund has been established for its network of 16 affiliate chapters.

Mayor Bowser says the District is trending in the right direction for Phase 2
The District has a total of 9,847 persons who have tested positive for COVID-19 with 523 fatalities.
Iconic figure is being replaced from packaging in a move toward racial equality.
Parent Company PepsiCo told Adweek that the new name for the syrup and other products will be revealed at a later date. In the meantime, starting in the 4th quarter, the Black figure will no longer be seen on the packaging.
The brand was formed in 1889 and the character on the box was inspired by a Black storyteller and cook named Nancy Green. The character has evolved over the years. According to the company website, Aunt Jemima was said to have been born into slavery. Quaker Oats purchased the brand in 1926 and switched out Aunt Jemima’s original red bandana in 1989 for a Black woman with pearls and curly black hair.
We’re talking about the issue that everyone is concerned about these days… the loss of black men while in the custody of law enforcement. This issue hits home for Levert.
Tonight we have the honor of sitting down with Eddie Levert of the O’Jays. But we’re not talking about music. We’re talking about the issue that everyone is concerned about these days… the loss of black men while in the custody of law enforcement. This issue hits home for Levert. He lost one of his sons in a similar manner.
The Black Fathers Matters Project is asking for a show of love and support for Black Fathers this Sunday
DC BLACK FATHERS MATTERS PROJECT is asking DC residents to show their solidarity by displaying a black balloon or a black ribbon in front of their home, from their balcony, on a tree, on their car or any visible location. The committee is also asking residents to create banners, yards signs or other displays to show support for BLACK FATHERS MATTER AND BLACK LIVES MATTER and display them as early as Sunday, June 14. Balloons and ribbons should be displayed on Father’s Day, Sunday, June 21. (202) 421-8608 or blackfathersmatter2020@gmail.com.
Listen to this mornings segment here:

“Here’s the Scoop,” a black owned ice cream parlor in the District of Columbia in partnership with WHUR, sought to put some smiles on the faces of those graduates. Here’s the Scoop dished out free ice cream today to the Class of 2020. Using social distancing guidelines, owner Karin Sellers packed up dozens of individual cups of ice cream and handed them out to students as they drove by.
“It’s our small way of letting them know we are proud of them and we wanted to give back to the community even in the midst of this pandemic,” said Sellers. Dressed in their school colors and with cars decked out in school spirit, dozens of youth and their parents took advantage of the free treats. “I love ice cream and I especially love it even more when it’s free,” said one student.
WHUR was happy to be on the scene to play music and make the giveaway fun and festive for all. Congratulations to the Class of 2020. You DID IT!!!
We speak with the anti-racism activist who is still teaching lessons about prejudice and racism.
Guest:

If you or someone you know is suffering from anxiety or a mental illness please seek professional help. This is not medical advice, this is from personal experience.
Experiencing anxiety right now during a pandemic is more common than you may think. That’s right! Calm down! You are not alone. Anxiety is a feeling of worry, nervousness, or unease, typically about an event or an uncertain outcome. Anxiety disorder is the constant experience of anxiety on a heightened level. Anxiety symptoms include irritability, restlessness, sweating, excessive worry, lack of concentration, and unwanted thoughts. More heightened symptoms include nausea, palpitations, trembling, feelings of impending doom and fear. Anxiety affects 40 million people in the U.S. each year.
The Covid-19 pandemic has had a serious impact on the mental health of citizens everywhere. It is completely normal to experience it during this time, especially with the state of the world. Some states and countries are moving into different phases in order to reopen the economy however, the symptoms of anxiety may still linger due to the number of cases steadily increasing while more and more economies are constantly reopening.

If not carefully handled anxiety can cause other severe health issues. Before it gets to that, let’s discuss ways to carefully deal with anxiety during a pandemic:
Anxiety can control you or you can control it. Let’s work together to conquer it!
If you or someone you know is suffering from anxiety or a mental illness please seek professional help. This is not medical advice, this is from personal experience.
Pharrell Williams joins Governor Northam calling to make Juneteenth a state holiday.
Williams said he called Northam this past weekend to talk about the potential for making Juneteenth a state holiday. Using his executive power, Northam gave executive branch state employees this Friday, June 19th the day off with pay.
Juneteenth commemorates the emancipation of enslaved people in the U.S. The holiday was first celebrated in Texas, where on that date in 1865, slaves were declared free under the terms of the 1862 Emancipation Proclamation. “We are changing what we honor in Virginia,” said Northam.
This is a big display of progress and I’m grateful for Virginia and us leading the way,” added Williams.
The order is aimed at encouraging best practices and tracking officers with excessive use of force complaints.

Beyoncé, Minaj, Brown, Lizzo and DaBaby earned four nominations each.
NEW YORK (AP) — Drake is the leading nominee at the 2020 BET Awards, which will celebrate its 20th anniversary later this month.
BET announced Monday that Drake is nominated for six honors, including video of the year and best male hip-hop artist. For both best collaboration and the viewer’s choice award, Drake is nominated twice thanks to the hits “No Guidance” with Chris Brown and “Life Is Good” with Future.
The 2020 BET Awards will air live on June 28 across ViacomCBS networks, including CBS for the first time. The show, which will be a virtual celebration because of the coronavirus pandemic, will also air on BET and BET HER.
Breakthrough rappers Megan Thee Stallion and Roddy Ricch follow Drake with five nominations each. Megan Thee Stallion, who recently topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart with her Beyoncé-assisted “Savage” remix, is nominated for video of the year, best female hip-hop artist, best collaboration, the viewer’s choice award and album of the year for “Fever.”
Ricch, who won his first Grammy Award earlier this year, also topped the pop charts with his upbeat hit “The Box.” The video for that song is nominated for video of the year alongside DaBaby’s “Bop,” DJ Khaled, Nipsey Hussle and John Legend’s “Higher,” Doja Cat’s “Say So,” Megan The Stallion’s “Hot Girl Summer” and Chris Brown and Drake’s “No Guidance.”
Beyoncé, Minaj, Brown, Lizzo and DaBaby earned four nominations each.
Kanye West, who released a gospel album last year, is nominated for the Dr. Bobby Jones best gospel/inspirational award. He will compete with Kirk Franklin, the Clark Sisters, Fred Hammond, John P. Kee and PJ Morton.
“I believe I can be a voice for other athlete activists and those who have dedicated their lives to changing legislation, policies and reforms for human equality,” Jenkins said, touting his experience addressing “the inequalities of our criminal justice system, educational system and disparate wealth in our marginalized communities” during his 11-year NFL career.
ATLANTA (AP) — New Orleans Saints safety Malcolm Jenkins will join CNN as a contributor focusing on racial and social justice, the network announced Monday.
“I believe I can be a voice for other athlete activists and those who have dedicated their lives to changing legislation, policies and reforms for human equality,” Jenkins said, touting his experience addressing “the inequalities of our criminal justice system, educational system and disparate wealth in our marginalized communities” during his 11-year NFL career.
With protesters amassing in cities nationwide in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd last month in Minneapolis, Jenkins has actively engaged in recent discussions about police brutality and police funding on social and in mainstream media, as well as at rallies. Jenkins was among Drew Brees’ harshest critics when the Saints quarterback re-stated his long-held opposition to protesting during the national anthem. Brees has since apologized for his comments, saying he now recognizes the protests were not about the flag or the anthem, and that he wants to help promote equality.
“As we move forward from these moments, journalists must not make the grave mistake of allowing the world to go back to sleep,” Jenkins said. “The ground swell of energy that has been injected into all of us must continue when the protests stop, and that includes responsible reporting.”
Jenkins was drafted by New Orleans out of Ohio State in 2009 and won a Super Bowl with the Saints his rookie season. He spent the past six seasons with Philadelphia, winning a second Super Bowl in the 2017 season, before returning to New Orleans as a free agent this offseason.
In 2017, Jenkins and retired wide receiver Anquan Boldin created the Players Coalition, a charity that advocates for racial and social equality.
The Malcolm Jenkins Foundation, launched in 2010, focuses on improving educational and other opportunities for students with limited financial resources in New Orleans, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
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More AP NFL: https://apnews.com/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL
“I am often reminded of the words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. — ‘There is a fierce urgency of now in our communities,’” the mayor said.
“It is clear that we do not have another day, another minute, another hour to waste,” she said.
ATLANTA (AP) — Atlanta’s mayor is vowing to change police use-of-force policies and require that officers receive continuous training in how to deescalate situations before the consequences become fatal.
Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced her plans after the police killing of another black man, Rayshard Brooks, outside a fast-food restaurant on Friday touched off more large protests in the city.
“I am often reminded of the words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. — ‘There is a fierce urgency of now in our communities,’” the mayor said.
“It is clear that we do not have another day, another minute, another hour to waste,” she said.
The mayor said she’ll also require officers to intervene if they see a colleague using excessive force, saying “they are duty-bound to intercede.”
“It’s very clear that our police officers are to be guardians and not warriors within our communities,” the mayor said.
Other cities nationwide are taking similar steps, and police reform proposals are emerging in Congress. Republicans plan a bill with restrictions on police chokeholds and other practices, while a Democratic proposal would limit legal protections for police, create a national database of excessive-force encounters and ban chokeholds. The White House plans to announce executive actions Tuesday.
Pleading through tears on Monday, Brooks’ relatives demanded changes in the criminal justice system and called on protesters to refrain from violence as tensions remain high across the U.S. three weeks after George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis.
An autopsy found that Brooks, 27, was shot twice in the back. Two white officers had responded to calls about a man who was asleep at the wheel in a Wendy’s drive-thru lane. Police video showed him cooperating until a breath test determined his blood-alcohol level was over the legal limit and one of the officers moved to handcuff him. The officers took him to the ground. Brooks broke free and took off with a stun gun; a white officer shot him as he tried to run away.
“When does it stop? We’re not only pleading for justice. We’re pleading for change,” said Chassidy Evans, Brooks’ niece.
Relatives described Brooks as a loving father of three daughters and a stepson who had a bright smile and a big heart and loved to dance. Evans said there was no reason for him “to be shot and killed like trash in the street for falling asleep in a drive-thru.”
Floyd’s death on May 25 after a white Minneapolis officer pressed his knee into the black man’s neck touched off demonstrations and scattered violence across the U.S., and Brooks’ killing rekindled those protests in Atlanta. The Wendy’s restaurant where Brooks was shot was burned down over the weekend.
Several Democratic lawmakers joined the protests and called for Georgia to repeal its citizen’s arrest and stand-your-ground laws, among a slate of other proposed reforms. State Republicans have pushed back against swift action on most of the Democratic agenda.
Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard said he hopes to decide by midweek whether to bring charges in the Brooks case. Officer Garrett Rolfe, who fired the shots that killed Brooks, was fired, and the other officer at the scene, Devin Brosnan, was put on desk duty. Police Chief Erika Shields resigned.
Officials nationwide are responding to calls for reform while protests persist. The New York City Police Department is disbanding the type of plainclothes anti-crime units that were involved in the 2014 chokehold death of Eric Garner and have long been criticized for aggressive tactics, Commissioner Dermot Shea said Monday.
In Chicago, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said a panel of residents, activists and one police official will review the Police Department’s policy on when officers can use force. Albuquerque, New Mexico, Mayor Tim Keller said he wants a new department of social workers and civilian professionals to provide another option when someone calls 911.
New Jersey’s attorney general ordered police to begin divulging names of officers who commit serious disciplinary violations.
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Associated Press contributors include Russ Bynum in Savannah, and Ben Nadler in Atlanta.
The Black Coalition Against Covid has created the “I Mask 4 DC” campaign.
Black Coalition Against COVID is sponsoring the #iMask4DC Video Festival and Competition. The goal is to prevent the spread of COVID-19 to the community by promoting mask-wearing during this pandemic. The deadline to submit for the competition is June 20th. For details, go here:
Listen to this mornings segment here:
How publicity about deadly encounters between police and black men are impacting mental health.
`When does it stop?’ Slain man’s family makes tearful plea.

Byron Cage is a multiple Stellar award-winning Gospel artist who is the Minister of Music at Ebenezer AME in Fort Washington, Maryland. Byron’s song, “Broken, But I’m Healed” was sung as the family walked into the sanctuary at George Floyd’s funeral in Houston.
On this edition of HUR@HOME Inspiration we talked with two anointed men of God who are inspiring millions of believers around the world. Bishop Walter Scott Thomas, Sr. is known as “Pastor’s Pastor,” and is the Senior Pastor of New Psalmist Baptist Church in Baltimore, Maryland. He served as the past president of the Hampton University Minister’s Conference and received his Master of Divinity from the Howard University School of Religion.
Bishop talked about how George Floyd’s death birthed a racial awakening in this country. African Americans who are privileged with wealth and status are forced to recognize that they are still members of the oppressed race. He said that non-Black allies to the cause of ending racial injustice need to do more than just “understand.” They need to be pro-active. Bishop Thomas talked about how New Psalmist Baptist in Baltimore is providing food and COVID-19 testing to its community and he announced the upcoming Medical Town Hall.
Byron Cage is a multiple Stellar award-winning Gospel artist who is the Minister of Music at Ebenezer AME in Fort Washington, Maryland. Byron’s song, “Broken, But I’m Healed” was sung as the family walked into the sanctuary at George Floyd’s funeral in Houston.
Byron told the story of how Bishop Walter Thomas gave him the inspiration he needed to leave Bishop Eddie Long’s church as minister of music. He said it was one of the best decisions he had ever made. Byron talked about his new song is called, “Oh How Good It Is” and his new book that chronicles his 30 years as a Minister of Music and how to maximize the role of Music Ministers in churches today.
Free walk-up coronavirus testing now available at more DC firehouses
Over the past two weeks, two firehouses have been open each evening, Monday through Friday, for free COVID-19 testing. So far, more than 2,300 people have been tested at a firehouse. The testing at these sites is done by personnel from the DC Fire and EMS Department, the Public Health Lab, and the Department of Health.
The new firehouse testing schedule is below:
Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, 4:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Thursday and Friday, 4:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m., and Saturday from 12:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
The firehouse testing sites are in addition to the many free testing sites across DC, including the walk-up testing site at F Street, NW between 4th and 5th Streets, NW and the drive-thru and walk-up testing sites at 2241 Martin Luther King Jr Avenue SE in Ward 8 and at the UDC-CC Bertie Backus campus in Ward 5.
Residents are still encouraged to access testing through their health care providers so that they are connected to health care. However, anyone who needs a test can get a test at the testing locations listed above.
Find a full list of testing locations at coronavirus.dc.gov/testing.
For more information on the District’s COVID-19 response, visit coronavirus.dc.gov.
White officer who shot and killed black man outside Wendy’s could face murder charges.
Brooks is the latest black man, whose death at the hands of police, has touched off protests in the streets of Atlanta and elsewhere. Brooks was shot Friday night outside a Wendy’s after being approached by officers for sleeping inside his car at the fast food. Much of the incident was caught on video. It shows, as officers tried to place Brooks under arrest for suspected driving under the influence, some kind of scuffle occurred. The camera also shows Brooks getting hold of one of the officer’s tasers and may have fired the taser at the officers as he ran away.
One officer then fatally shot the 27-year-old father of four. The officer, Garrett Rolfe, has been fired. A second officer, Devin Brosnan, has been placed on administrative leave. Rolf, the officer who fatally shot Brooks, could face murder charges. GBI has launched an investigation.
The shooting has touched off more protests in and around Atlanta. The Wendy’s where the shooting took place was set on-fire Saturday. Meantime, the police chief of Atlanta, Erika Shields, has stepped down in the midst of the
President Frederick speaks with Marie Johns, a Trustee at Howard University, as well as the Chairwoman of the Student Life Committee and Ambrose Lane Jr., Co-Founder of the Black Coalition Against COVID and Chair of the Health Alliance Network.
ABOUT
Many community leaders are lending a helping hand for those who have been impacted by the Coronavirus pandemic. In the District of Columbia, there is a new coalition with a strong initiative to stop the spread and to keep the African American communities informed. On today’s episode of “The Journey,” President Frederick speaks with Marie Johns, a Trustee at Howard University, as well as the Chairwoman of the Student Life Committee and Ambrose Lane Jr., Co-Founder of the Black Coalition Against COVID and Chair of the Health Alliance Network.
Air Date: June 14, 2020
The mother of a 22-year-old killed by DC police is suing the District and its police department for millions.
This week the DC Council unanimously approved reforms to the city’s police department, which included changes to how the public can access police body cam video.
Joe Biden’s potential running mate list has narrowed to six, according to Democratic officials.
Democrats with knowledge of the process said the former vice-president’s search committee has whittled the choices down to as few as six serious contenders after initial interviews. Those still in the hunt include African Americans Senator Kamala Harris, Susan Rice, who served as President Barack Obama’s national security adviser, Florida representative Val Demings and Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms. New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, a Latina, is also a candidate along with Senator Elizabeth Warren.
Williams, a recording artist and producer who’s from the city, proposed the tribute in an Instagram post this week, adding a photo of what the message would look like along Virginia Beach’s boardwalk with the caption “VB let’s make it happen.”
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) — Virginia Beach is considering painting Black Lives Matter down its oceanfront boardwalk after Grammy-winning musician Pharrell Williams supported the idea on social media.
Williams, a recording artist and producer who’s from the city, proposed the tribute in an Instagram post this week, adding a photo of what the message would look like along Virginia Beach’s boardwalk with the caption “VB let’s make it happen.”
An Instagram page called Oceanfront9 had first posted the photo, The Virginian-Pilot reported.
Last week, the same words were painted in giant yellow letters down the Washington street that leads to the White House. Mayor Muriel Bowser said the painting was intended to send a message of support and solidarity to Americans outraged over the killing of George Floyd by police in Minneapolis.
More than 136,000 people had liked Williams’ post as of Thursday morning and Virginia Beach Mayor Bobby Dyer said Wednesday that he and city staff planned to discuss whether the artwork could happen.
“Obviously, it would involve (a city) council decision and also working with the community,” The Virginian-Pilot quoted Dyer as saying. “We’re going to be looking at multiple ways of addressing the concerns of African American people.”
Williams went to high school in Virginia Beach and has since been involved in a number of causes in the city, including organizing the multi-day “Something in the Water” music festival and penning a new song for a tourism advertisement campaign.
The show had been pulled temporarily from the air in late May, when protests aimed at police over the death of George Floyd began to gain momentum. That move was made permanent Tuesday.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — After 33 seasons on the air, “Cops” has been dropped by the Paramount Network as protests against police proliferate around the world.
“Cops is not on the Paramount Network and we don’t have any current or future plans for it to return,” a spokesperson for the cable channel said in a statement Tuesday.
The show had been pulled temporarily from the air in late May, when protests aimed at police over the death of George Floyd began to gain momentum. That move was made permanent Tuesday.
It’s not clear whether the company that makes the show, Langley Productions, would try to find a new home for it. A voicemail at a company phone number was not accepting messages.
The reality show, with its widely known reggae theme song “Bad Boys,” allowed viewers to ride along with police officers on patrol in various cities.
It ran on the Fox network for 25 years until 2013, when Viacom-owned Spike TV picked it up. The show remained on the air after Spike was re-branded as the Paramount Network in 2018.
A free app that can send your vitals directly to your Doctor in real time
My guest this morning is Walter Kirkland – Founding President of the 100 Blackmen of Prince George’s County
Listen to this mornings segment here:
Confederate names should come off Naval Academy buildings, according to a Maryland congressman.
Rep. C.A Dutch Ruppersberger, a Maryland Democrat, said the Pentagon should consider removing Confederate names from all military bases as people across the country protest against racial inequality and police brutality.
“There has been discussion of renaming these buildings since at least 2017,” Ruppersberger said in a statement. “As the new Chairman, the time for discussion is over. It’s time for action. Midshipmen who have earned the privilege to study in one of our nation’s most prestigious institutions should not have to walk around campus and see buildings named for men who fought to uphold slavery and promote white supremacy.”
The academy superintendent’s residence is named after Franklin Buchanan, the academy’s first superintendent who left to join the Confederate Navy at the start of the Civil War. The academy’s Weapons and Systems Engineering division is house in Maury Hall. It’s named after Matthew Fontaine Maury, who was a leader in the fields of naval meteorology and navigation. He headed the coast, harbor and river defenses for the Confederate Navy.
“This isn’t about erasing history,” Ruppersberger said. “We simply shouldn’t lift up traitors who fought against American values like equality and tolerance.”
The congressman said he would bring up the issue at the board’s next meeting. The board is similar to a board of trustees at a civilian college and includes members of Congress. He also said he would offer an amendment to appropriations measures in Congress to require the academy to rename the two buildings.
“We are working hard to attract minority applicants to our service academies and all of our service branches,” Ruppersberger said. “We must send a strong and unequivocal message to all potential minority applicants that we stand united in opposing the glorification of leaders who defended slavery.”
President Donald Trump on Wednesday said his administration will “not even consider” changing the name of any of the 10 Army bases that are named for Confederate Army officers. Two days earlier, Defense Secretary Mark Esper indicated he was open to a broad discussion of such changes.
Supporters of disassociating military bases from Confederate Army officers argue they represent the racism and divisiveness of the Civil War era and glorify men who fought against the United States.
Prince George’s County school board to revisit the issue of police in county schools.
The Prince George’s County school board postponed a vote on whether the school system will continue to have police resource officers in county schools. The board was set to take a vote Thursday night, but have rescheduled the vote for September 14. Supporters of taking police out of county schools want the over 3 million dollars used for police resource officers to be used to hire guidance and mental health counselors and implement educational programs.
This edition of HUR@Home Lifestyle was particularly informative and inspiring. Let me begin with Celebrity Make-Up Artist, Derrick Rutledge:
Long time celebrity MUA, Derrick Rutledge, has been enhancing faces since the 80’s and 90’s. He’s credited for bringing out the best looks for countless celebrities, including Chaka Khan, Yolanda Adams, Patti LaBelle, Michele Obama, and for over the last decade, Oprah Winfrey.
We’re fortunate to have him give us much needed advice monthly, here on HUR@Home. This time, we focused on our current circumstances. Many of us are still social distancing and not planning to go to salons for beauty services any time soon. He addressed the fact that most of us are sleep deprived, and stressed about the Covid-19 pandemic. Along with the state of the world, as we continue to fight systemic racism and oppression. Watch and you’ll also get great ideas about how to wear your mask, without enduring the dreaded “mask lines” imprinted on your face.
Next, I had the chance to speak with a very young, accomplished NASCAR driver. At 17 years old, Rajah Caruth was the first, of only six members, to be selected for the 2020 NASCAR Drive For Diversity Development Program. He was selected based on his skills in iRacing. Did you know that NASCAR is one of the largest spectator sports in the US? The largest NASCAR arena holds 190, 000 spectators…and in television is falls just behind the NFL as the most watched televised sporting event. This sport is still a very new environment for African Americans. Watch this interview and let’s follow Rajah Caruth on this amazing journey.
I have no words to describe the wonderful a capella surprise she dropped on all of us.
View this post on Instagram
Grammy award winner, Shanice, has been singing since she was 7 months old. It’s true. One can easily conclude that Shanice was born to sing. And with her 5 octave vocal range, she’s a musical force to be reckoned with. We all fell in love with her “Smile” and bubbly personality back in the day. Well, get ready to keep the love going as you watch this warm, candid conversation that went from her musical journey, to working through the Coronavirus pandemic, to what she and hubby Flex tell their children about racial injustices. I have no words to describe the wonderful a capella surprise she dropped on all of us. Watch the video to get your blessing. Follow at @shaniceonline @angelastribling
In a tweet yesterday, the company said the practice of locking up the products was in place in a dozen of its stores nationwide. “We serve millions of customers every day from diverse backgrounds. We have made the decision to discontinue placing multicultural hair care and beauty products in locked cases,” the tweet said.
The move comes after a television station in Denver showed that some hair products catering mainly to black women were locked in a case, while those targeting white women were freely open on store shelves.
LeBron James encourages African Americans to get registered and cast their ballots as the November elections draw near.
James says the new group, which will include other current and former basketball greats, will work to protect African American voting rights.
In an interview with the New York Times, James said he will use his high profile platform on social media to combat voter suppression and be vocal about drawing attention to any attempts to restrict the franchise of racial minorities.
Coronavirus numbers on the rise as many states enter Phase 2
Johns Hopkins University says that number is likely underestimated because of different testing and reporting standards. Meantime, the U.S. death toll has pushed beyond 115-thousand with 847 new deaths yesterday. Health experts say another 100k people will likely die from COVID-19 by September.
There will be a special tribute this Sunday for those who died from the coronavirus.
A remembrance and tribute will be held Sunday, June 14thfrom 11am to 12noon to remember and honor those who have lost their lives due to COVID-19. The tribute will air on WHUR and our sister station WHUT, along with WPFW Sunday, June 14, 2020, 11am –noon. For details, go here:
Listen to this mornings segment here:
Merriam-Webster is expanding the definition of racism to include systematic
22-year-old Kennedy Mitchum emailed Merriam-Webster last month to inform the dictionary publisher that its definition was inadequate and missing a key point. The recent graduate of Drake University says she told them that the definition is not representative of what is actually happening in the world.
The current definition of racism says “a belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities that the racial difference produce an inherent superiority of a particular race.”
In an interview with CNN, Kennedy said “the way that racism occurs in real life is not just prejudice, it’s the systematic racism that is happening for a lot of Black Americans.”
Merriam-Webster says the revised entry for racism will be added to the dictionary soon. It’s also revising the entries of other words that are related to racism or have racial connotations
Link:
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Our guests:
Cherris May – Freelance Photojournalist with the New York Times and President of Women Photojournalists of Washington & and an Adjunct Professor at Howard University
Michael Quander : Reporter with WUSA-9 in Washington, DC
Troy Johnson Reporter/Anchor with 16WAPT in Jackson, Mississippi
Montgomery County is preparing to enter Phase 2 of its reopening plan as early as next week.
Phase 2 will allow additional businesses and activities to start and/or increase modified operations under specified guidelines. The guidelines include:
Certain outdoor recreation activities and facilities are already permitted: golf courses, archery, shooting ranges, marinas, campgrounds, horseback riding facilities and tennis courts.
The following businesses and services will remain closed in Phase 2:
Protective measures such as maintaining physical distancing, careful cleaning and disinfecting, and face coverings being worn by employees and customers, are just some of the measures being required of businesses that are in this initial phase of recovery.
“I want to emphasize that we will only move to this next phase when the data allows it,” said County Executive Elrich. “When it does happen, following the restrictions still in place is essential. Like you, I am eager to resume as many normal activities as possible, but that cannot be the motivation for moving to the next phase – protecting the public health is what guides us. After careful discussions with our County Health Officer Dr. Gayles, we have identified further restrictions that can be lifted in Phase 2, whenever it happens. Again, I urge everyone to follow the guidelines so that we can keep moving forward and not have spikes in the number of cases. This next phase can be successful if all of us do our part and follow the guidelines.”
Activities that will be allowed in this second phase of reopening are based on metrics the County established with progress overall in decreasing daily numbers of new cases, increasing testing capacity, implementing a large-scale contact tracing effort with the State, decreasing hospitalizations and use of the emergency room by patients with COVID-19 related symptoms, and positive trends in the death rate and test positivity. \
“We remain focused on being guided by the data and science as we look ahead to a future Phase 2 reopening,” said Dr. Gayles. “Clearly the virus is still here in our community so we must remain focused on maintaining our habits of physical distancing, wearing a face covering when out in public, and frequent, careful handwashing. We are also actively working to increase testing and contact tracing to keep the numbers moving in the right direction.”
WHUT-TV is presenting their “Movie Theatre Thursdays” all month long
WHUT Free Online Film Preview Every Thursday in June. Just go to whutelmscreening.eventbrite.com. Films like “East Lake Meadows, A Public Housing Story can be viewed. The Movie Theatre Thursday is hosted by WHUT TV, Women Film and Video Washington DC and EmpowerDC.
Listen to this mornings segment here:
Reverend Al Sharpton joined the SHMS this morning to talk about the tragic death of George Floyd, the protests, police reform and more
Listen to the interviews here:
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Segment 2:
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Segment 4:
His funeral will be private. Some 6,000 people attended a public memorial service Monday in Houston, where he grew up.
HOUSTON (AP) — The black man whose death has inspired a worldwide reckoning over racial injustice will be buried in Houston Tuesday, carried home in a horse-drawn carriage.
George Floyd, who was 46 when he was killed, will be laid to rest next to his mother. On May 25, as a white Minneapolis officer pressed a knee on Floyd’s neck, the dying man cried out for his mother.
His funeral will be private. Some 6,000 people attended a public memorial service Monday in Houston, where he grew up.
Under a blazing Texas sun, mourners wearing T-shirts with Floyd’s picture or the words “I Can’t Breathe” — one of the other things he cried out repeatedly while pinned down by the police officer — waited for hours to pay their respects. Floyd’s body, dressed in a brown suit, lay in an open gold-colored casket.
Shorty after the memorial ended, Floyd’s casket was placed in a hearse and escorted by police back to a funeral home.
As the hearse drove away, 39-year-old Daniel Osarobo, a Houston resident who immigrated from Nigeria, could be heard saying, “Rest in power. Rest In Peace.”
“I’ve been stopped by police. I understand the situation. I can only imagine,” said Osarobo, who works as an engineer in the oil and gas industry. “What if it was me? What if it was my brother? What if it was my sister? What if it was my son?”
Those were questions many black Americans have asked not just in recent weeks, but for decades.
Floyd’s death sparked international protests and drew new attention to the treatment of African Americans in the U.S. by police and the criminal justice system. In the past two weeks, sweeping and previously unthinkable things have taken place: Confederate statues have been toppled, police departments around America have rethought the way they patrol minority neighborhoods, legislatures have debated use-of-force policies, and white, black and brown people have had uncomfortable, sometimes heated, discussions about race in a nation that is supposed to ensure equal opportunity for all.
Calls for “defunding the police” have cropped up in many communities, and people around the world have taken to the streets in solidarity, saying that reforms and dialogue must not stop with Floyd’s funeral.
His death has also reshaped the presidential race. To be re-elected, President Donald Trump must rebound from one of the lowest points of his presidency, with recent polls showing that 8 in 10 Americans believe the country is headed in the wrong direction and even spiraling out of control. The president got a boost late last week with a better-than-expected jobs report, but he’s struggling to show consistent leadership on multiple fronts, including the nationwide protests against police brutality.
Meanwhile, former Vice President Joe Biden met with Floyd’s family Monday, according to a photo posted on Twitter by the Rev. Al Sharpton. Biden will provide a video message for Floyd’s funeral service. Previous memorials have taken place in Minneapolis and Raeford, North Carolina, near where Floyd was born.
The memorials have drawn the families of black victims in other high-profile killings whose names have become seared into America’s conversations on race — among them Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Ahmaud Arbery and Trayvon Martin.
“It just hurts,” said Philonise Floyd, George Floyd’s brother, sobbing as he ticked off some of their names outside The Fountain of Praise church. “We will get justice. We will get it. We will not let this door close.”
For 14 nights, hundreds of thousands of people have taken to the streets in protest of police brutality and racial inequality. Cities imposed curfews as some of the demonstrations were later marred by spasms of arson, assaults and smash-and-grab raids on businesses. More than 10,000 people have been arrested around the country, according to reports tracked by The Associated Press.
But protests in recent days have been overwhelmingly peaceful — and over the weekend, several police departments appeared to retreat from aggressive tactics. Thousands of Los Angeles protesters arrested for violating curfew and other police orders will not be charged with a crime, prosecutors said Monday.
Four Minneapolis officers were charged in connection with Floyd’s death, which was captured on video by bystanders, who begged police to stop hurting him.
A Minnesota judge on Monday kept bail at $1.25 million for Derek Chauvin, the police officer charged with second-degree murder in Floyd’s death. Chauvin’s former co-workers, J Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao, are charged as accomplices.
The 44-year-old Chauvin said almost nothing during the 11-minute hearing while appearing on closed-circuit television from a maximum-security prison.
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Associated Press writers Tamara Lush in St. Petersburg, Florida, Paul J. Weber in Austin, Texas, Marina Villeneuve in Albany, and Bill Barrow in Atlanta, contributed to this report.
The DC Council will consider legislation that addresses police and justice reform in the District.
The officer charged with murdering George Floyd had has bail set at 1.25 million dollars. Derek Chauvin made his first court appearance today. He did it via video.
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A judge on Monday kept bail at $1 million for a former Minneapolis police officer charged with second-degree murder in George Floyd’s death.
Derek Chauvin, 44, said little during an 11-minute hearing in which he appeared before Hennepin County Judge Jeannice M. Reding on closed-circuit television from the state’s maximum security prison in Oak Park Heights. He wore a mask and handcuffs as he sat at a table, where he answered yes or no to routine housekeeping questions and confirmed the the spelling of his name and address. He did not enter a plea; a step that usually comes later in Minnesota courts.
Chauvin’s attorney, Eric Nelson, did not contest the bail amount and didn’t address the substance of the charges, which also include third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.
Nelson did not speak with reporters afterward. He has not commented on the case publicly since Chauvin’s May 29 arrest. Attorneys for two of the three other ex-officers charged in the case made it clear at separate first appearances for their clients on Thursday that a key element of their defenses will be to argue that their clients were rookies who tried to intervene verbally to help Floyd, but that they had no choice but to defer to Chauvin, the most senior officer at the scene. Chauvin’s next appearance was set for June 29th.
“As I tried to get (the lyrics) out, I couldn’t get them out,” Trey Songz said. “My voice would break, or tears would fall.”
So he went into the Los Angeles streets to protest in solidarity alongside thousands grieving Floyd’s death and demanding reforms to policing in America.
NEW YORK (AP) — After watching the ghastly video of George Floyd dying as a police officer pressed a knee on his neck, Grammy-nominated R&B singer Trey Songz couldn’t sleep. He felt a pain in his gut so heavy it brought him down to his home studio, where he began recording a new song.
Though Songz said the melody and lyrics came to him quickly, his voice cracked and he couldn’t sing.
“As I tried to get (the lyrics) out, I couldn’t get them out,” the 35-year-old said. “My voice would break, or tears would fall.”
So he went into the Los Angeles streets to protest in solidarity alongside thousands grieving Floyd’s death and demanding reforms to policing in America.
“It was so much love and good energy out there, like so much hope. Really looking to your right, to your left, seeing people of so many ethnicities standing for our cause — it gave me the strength that I needed to come back and finish the song,” he said.
“2020 Riots: How Many Times” was released Friday and features an-all black choir from Atlanta elevating Songz’ passionate vocals on the track.
“I was actually crying on some of them lyrics,” he said. “It’s pain. It’s sadness. It’s anger. It’s rage. It’s confusion.”
Other musicians have released songs in the last week in the wake of Floyd’s death and those of Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor. The artists include Meek Mill, Kane Brown, Ty Dolla $ign, Terrace Martin and Run the Jewels (a Spotify playlist of the songs can be found here ).
“How you gonna serve and protect with your knee on my neck,” T.I. raps on Nasty C’s “They Don’t,” released Friday.
YG, the platinum-selling rapper who released a hard-hitting diss song about President Donald Trump in 2016, dropped a punchy West Coast-flavored track last week called “FTP,” which stands for “F– the Police.” On the song, the Compton performer raps: “It’s the Ku Klux cops, they on a mission/It’s the Ku Klux cops, got hidden agendas/It’s the truth, I won’t stop.”
LL Cool J posted a fiery freestyle on Instagram and hip-hop artist Jung Youth, who is white, tackles discrimination against blacks on “God Only Knows.”
“They killed a brother for the color of his skin again/Reminds me of how they treated Serena at Wimbledon,” he raps at the top of the song.
Mickey Guyton, one of the few black voices on the country music scene, wrote the song “Black Like Me” last year about her life story and experiences with racism. She released the song on Black Out Tuesday, and said that when she hears it now she thinks of “George, Ahmaud, Breonna.”
“I have been an absolute wreck since Ahmaud Aubrey (died). That’s the first one that just punched me in my gut because you could see him in that video scared for his life. Then seeing Breonna Taylor and having a sister … I saw myself in her and that took me down a darker space. I’ve been crying for weeks. Then to see George Floyd…,” she said. “I couldn’t believe I had a song that expressed everything that we feel.”
“Black Like Me” is a poignant tune featuring the lyrics: “If you think we live in the land of the free/You should try to be black like me.”
“I wrote that song to heal my heart,” she said. “This is a song for people to understand what we’re going through. We need to talk about that.”
Like Guyton, Grammy-winning singer Leon Bridges pulled from a song he had previously written about black life and police brutality to relate to today’s grief and pain. On Monday, he released the track “Sweeter.”
“With that song, I want people to listen from the perspective of the black man. The black man in the grip of the oppressor. The black man in his last moments transitioning from life to death and literally his mind, body and soul is having a flashback to his murder essentially,” the 30-year-old said. “I’ve always struggled with how to write about some of the problems that we face in America as black men. I’ve always struggled with how to write about those things in a tasteful way. When I look at this song ‘Sweeter,’ I just feel like it’s a gift from God.”
Bridges said he originally planned to release another single, but decided to go with “Sweeter” this week because it was so relevant.
“When you constantly see black men die at the hands of police, it’s like a callus is formed over your emotions to where you can’t feel anything. I would say, for me, the straw that broke the camel’s back was seeing George Floyd,” he said. “It was the first time that I shed tears over a man that I didn’t even know, over a black man. I’ve always been aware but that was the first time I shed real tears because I saw myself, I saw my brother, I saw my sisters in that moment.”
Others who recently released tracks about the black experience include Eric Bellinger, Gramps Morgan, Fantastic Negrito, Polo G, Joy Oladokun, Breland, Mr. Killa, Cory Henry and the Funk Apostles, Wyatt Waddell, King OSF and Teejayx6.
Songz, who has released 20 Top 10 R&B hits, said that while protesting he heard classic black pride songs from James Brown, Marvin Gaye and others working as the soundtrack for activists walking the streets.
“You couldn’t be a musician and not address issues back then because you faced them so steadily. It just brought me to a place of, ‘This is what I need to be doing.’”
Being a new father also played a large role in the song’s creation: “Looking at my child is like, ‘Wow! I gotta do everything that I can to make sure I say I fought the fight, so you don’t have to go through that.’”