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Wednesday, December 25, 2019

What Is Rihanna’s Net Worth?

Rihanna Net Worth

Robyn Rihanna Fenty is just a machine that doesn’t seem to stop! The Barbadian singer, songwriter, fashion designer, actress, philanthropist, and businesswoman has the type of work ethic that anyone who claims to like working would be envious of her efforts. She appeared on the scene with her debut album Music of the Sun (2005) and followed up with her second offering, A Girl like Me (2006), but her career really took off with the release of her third release, Good Girl Gone Bad (2007). The third album is where she abandoned her more Caribbean sound and trended into a more dance, pop, R & B album where her smashing single, “Umbrella” took on a life of its own. Good Girl Gone Bad received seven Grammy Award nominations and won Best Rap/Sung Collaboration for “Umbrella” in 2008. This started the successful runaway train that we know of today.

The Wealthiest Female Musician is what this singing beauty is according to Forbes. As the first black woman in charge of a major luxury fashion house, she has made most of her fortune outside of her music. “Most of that comes not from music but from her partnership with LVMH, the French luxury goods giant run by billionaire Bernard Arnault. Rihanna and LVMH co-own the makeup brand Fenty Beauty. It launched in September 2017 at Sephora, another LVMH brand, and online at FentyBeauty.com, quickly becoming a viral success. Fenty Beauty racked up a reported $100 million in sales in its first few weeks, propelled by Rihanna’s fame and 71 million Instagram followers.” And that’s only a part of the story!

Most of her wealth comes from strategic partnerships, campaigns, and endorsement deals. She’s had deals with the likes of Puma, CoverGirl, Gucci, Clinique and most recently reported Amazon, which has shelled out $25 million for the rights to a documentary that features her.

In 2012, the superstar founded her own charity organization, the Clara Lionel Foundation, which supports health and education efforts in impoverished communities around the world. This young woman may become a billionaire sooner than we think!

Rihanna’s Net Worth:  $600M

 



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The 10 Tech Products That Defined This Decade

From talking computers to reusable rockets, here are our picks for the products that had the most impact in the last 10 years.

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Burkina Faso: Christmas Day in a Christian-Muslim household

Five-year-old Iris Ouattara goes to church with her dad and mosque with her mum in Burkina Faso.

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We Might Not Be Planting the Right Kinds of Forests

As the world scrambles to combat deforestation, experts warn our efforts could have far fewer benefits than we think.

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How Set Up New Devices: iPhone, Amazon Echo, Google Home, TV

You have a new thing. Now let’s put it together.

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How to Return Gifts to Amazon, Apple, Walmart, and More

You can't always get what you want. Here's how to get some cash (or store credit) instead.

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How The Dodo Became the Warmest, Fuzziest Corner of the Web

The media empire's heartwarming (and highly shareable) animal videos rack up 2.3 billion views each month. It might be our favorite website of the decade.

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Pope in Christmas message urges softening of 'self-centred hearts'

In his Christmas Day message, Pope Francis says a more compassionate mankind can help end suffering.

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Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Baltimore on track to reach highest per-capita murder record as two women are slain

Carmen Rodriguez, 36, worked almost 16 hours every day of the week at the Kim Deli & Grocery near Patterson Park in Baltimore, Md., in an effort to support her children. But her life was cut short Sunday night when a gunman entered the store and opened fire, killing her, The Baltimore Sun reports.

Destiny Harris, 21, owner of Madam D Beauty Bar salon in Southeast Baltimore, was killed Saturday, when she was shot multiple times in the head, the report says.

READ MORE: Marilyn Mosby confirms 25 Baltimore officers have been accused of using excessive force

Two women were the latest names added to the list of murder victims in Baltimore, driving up the city’s per capita record to 338 homicides so far this year. The numbers, amid a widening population decline, has set a record for killings per capita, according to the news outlet.

The homicide numbers prompted the police union leader to call for police Commissioner Michael Harrison to take swift action to reduce crime, while City Council President Brandon Scott called for a complementary plan to help at-risk youth, the report says.

While the city grapples with ways to combat crime, friends and family mourned the loss of their loved ones.

Kim Deli & Grocery owner, Nidal Alshalabi, told The Sun that Rodriguez’s children were inside the deli when the shooting occurred.


Police said on the day Rodriguez lost her life, seven people were shot in Baltimore, including three teenagers outside of a downtown hookah lounge. Two people were shot and killed Saturday in East Baltimore.

Harris filed a police report saying she feared for her safety after her business was broken into twelve days before her death, according to Baltimore’s WMAR-TV. A couple was charged in the theft of $3,000 worth of hair bundles that Harrison sold at her salon, the report says. But there have been no arrests in her murder.

READ MORE: Courtroom Drama: Defendant hits Baltimore judge in the head with metal water pitcher

“She was my heart, loved her greatly… wonderful girl, entrepreneur, a go-getter. She built this [Madam D Beauty Bar] from the ground up,” her uncle Dewine McQueen told the television news outlet.

Harrison said, “Detectives are working tirelessly to identify the people responsible. We will continue through the holiday season with our planned, robust deployment throughout the city,” according to The Sun.

 

The post Baltimore on track to reach highest per-capita murder record as two women are slain appeared first on theGrio.



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Burkina Faso: Many women killed in jihadist attack

Burkina Faso has declared two days of national mourning after Tuesday's attack on a base and town.

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WATCH: Karan Kendrick and Brie Larson discuss their unmissable film ‘Just Mercy’

Just Mercy may be the most important film of the year and there are tons of reasons you should run, not walk to your nearest movie theater to see it. The film that stars Michael B. Jordan and Jamie Foxx hits select theaters on Christmas Day and opens wide on January 10.

Jamie Foxx tears up while discussing his father at ‘Just Mercy’ screening at AFI Fest

In it, Jordan (whose company produced the powerful flick) portrays attorney Bryan Stevenson, the real-life hero who has been fighting to exonerate the wrongfully incarcerated through the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) he founded in 1995. Since then, he has saved more than 125 men from the death penalty. In 2014, he wrote Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption, which is the basis of the film produced by Jordan’s Outlier Productions. 

Inclusion in action: Michael B. Jordan mandated hiring diverse staff for new film ‘Just Mercy’

Jamie Foxx co-stars as Walter McMillian, a death row inmate who insists he’s innocent. O’Shea Jackson, Tim Blake Nelson, and Rob Morgan delivered incredibly impressive performances and two fiercely talented women make a major impact as well. Karan Kendrick plays Minnie McMillan, a wife who refuses to lose hope in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds. Brie Larson plays Eva Ansley, EJI’s co-founder who has a passion for the plight of death row inmates and helps Stevenson in his quest for justice however she can.
TheGrio sat down with both of the actresses to find out how they tackled the crucial roles and showed how two very different women were able to support and strengthen two very different men.

SNEAK PEEK: Michael B. Jordan and Jamie Foxx shine in new ‘Just Mercy’ trailer

“One of the really powerful things about this film is that it gives us the opportunity to have uncomfortable conversations,” says Kendrick.

“Being a student of Bryan Stevenson, I learned so much. It wasn’t just me making those choices about that character,” she said. “That was very much part of the conversation with Dustin and Bryan from the very beginning.”

Check out the full interview above.

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Unpacking the brilliance of ‘Watchmen’ … the most important show of the year

This past June, Ta-Nehisi Coates sat before Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConell to testify about HR 40, which would commission a group to study reparations. In his remarks, Coates reminded McConnell and by extension the rest of the country, around the importance of the country addressing its whole history, citing how that White American history cannot be the 

It would take essentially, an imagination by the House to see the utility in studying reparations. Just studying it. But that’s the state of the country’s stagnation around collectively moving forward; it has required a reimagining of who we are required to be and what we could potentially become. Yet that’s continued to be a stalemate; regardless of the many entreaties to our conscience, no amount of protest, speeches, 

There was a belief that in certain arenas outside of politics there might be hope for charting such an imagination, this decade’s pop culture offerings have done little to reimagine what America could look like moving forward. This hasn’t been for lack of attempt. The 2010s have given us Ava DuVernay’s Black American trilogy of Selma, 13th and When They See Us which asked us to imagine what it says to the world about who America is and how long its campaign of terrorism has been against Black Americans. In between that trilogy came Black Panther and most recently Queen & Slim, the first imagining a world where Black people vibrated with a power and joy that reached out of the screen and into the Black zeitgeist. The latter sought to imagine telling an allegorical tale about Black love, police brutality, activism and the many ways that PTSD has nuzzled itself inside of the Black experience.

Disparately, these are patchwork statements about Black experiences and identities. They stretch narrative approaches, generations, and roles, and they’ve produced a variety of conversations ranging from the examination of Black justice, activism, pain, resilience and love. They’ve also dutifully sought to capture an accuracy around history and experience; serving as archival work in a society that tends to erase the granularity of our stories and injustices.

The REAL story of the Tulsa race massacre of 1921 depicted in ‘Watchmen’

But HBO’s Watchmen, which just completed what’s intended to be its singular season, is perhaps the only pop culture vessel we’ve had this decade that’s successfully woven all these elements together. Inspired by the Alan Moore and Dave Giboons 1986 graphic novel, the Damon Lindeloff series was a quilt of brilliance, weaving together our very real past and combining it with an alternate contemporary 2019, one where the notion of reparations, lineage, power and representation–all elements of the backbone of American conversations to and through Obama, right into our present Trump era–have been woven together to tell a comprehensive story. In its final chapter “See How They Fly”, the show’s hypothesis about American politics and sentimentality is made clear: for us to move forward, power must shift to the country’s “meek”, and Watchmen spends 9 chapters making play at the dismantlizaiton of white power and supremacy. It is, of course, the stuff of dreams and imagination, but that’s exactly what’s made this series so enthralling. Taking what we know about our past in terms of Tulsa and the Black Wall Street Massacre, turning it into a version of Black American 9/11, or telling us what we continue to know–that the ones sworn to protect and serve are just as often intentionally not interested in doing so–it made turned a collective angst and frustration and gave it something wildly radical and imaginative: justice.

5 Reasons HBO’s new ‘Watchmen’ series with Regina King is a MUST SEE!

In Watchmen, brilliant white men are sent to purgatory; they have their past haunt and claim their lives; they seek power through entitlement only to have it sometimes quite literally blow up in their faces. They lie. They kill. They build open coalitions in the light of day and convene in the thick of night and eventually all of that crumble. 

Watchmen got something right about these times that we’ve been in; for a very long time we’ve been a country of masks. We’ve long reveled in the notion of  justified white vigilantism; of a society that’s composed of hidden agendas, motives, identities, beliefs. We have had terror revisited upon us to maintain a sense of law and order for generations, and the show makes good on the notion of everything from grand conspiracies, manipulations and exquisitve planning for revenge, domination and maintaining power. Much of this is seen through Sister Night, Regina King’s character that proves to be the entire saga’s crux. King’s performance speaks to this notion of masks; literally donning one during the series, but also working through various ways that she must wear an emotional one at work, at home, in public, around family, peers, coworkers. What’s perhaps most revelatory about the series’ ending is that it’s a testament to Angela’s ability to sit on the identity of a much greater truth, and how much of that is grounded in not just power, but love too. 

In the thrall of all the mysteries about who, what, where and even when Dr. Manhattan is, Watchmen manages to also be a Black love story, and one about pulling together the trauma and relationships that span time and even disrupt the construct of it, to make a whole. The series has gotten some criticism for how it employs this; “This Extraordinary Being” was perhaps one of the finest hours of pop cutlure TV this decade, yet for some audience members its depiciton of generational trauma, the peril of being a Black police officer, of living a life covered in masks, was not as jarring as seeing that Hooded Justice was not only Black, but bisexual. The reaction, at least in social media circles, was akin to the type of outrage seen in response to The Last Jedi; a weakening of a superhero trope or narrative; a “lessening” of the heterosexual male image; further proof of a Hollywood agenda intended to weakend and discredit the Black man in mainstream media. It made for an ironic viewing of this series that steeped itself in conspiracies and masks as plotpoints; it suddenly made Watchmen, for some audiences, irrationally culpable for the same actions somehow. The show was somehow suddenly unmasked for something more nefarious than a racial justice and empowerment fantasy; it suddenly became a traitorous bait and switch by Hollywood media to further destroy the Black man. It proved that for all our sense of justice, repairing, civil rights and representation, there is still a segment of us that lack the imagination, even in fantasy, to see another world, another way forward.

But that sort of blame shouldn’t be put at the feet of Watchmen. Despite all the bluster made for and about representation, about a pop culture fantasy world that’s lurching forward, the Black experience and story still hasn’t quite taken hold in our households. Black Panther has been a lone standout, but the rest of the fantasy landscape for Black people has been woefully anemic, with the decade’s biggest fantasy and hero films–Avengers, Suicide Squad, the last Star Wars trilogy–still relegating Black people, mainly men as there have been no Black female heroes, to a familiar role of shepherding the white heroes to victory, playing the role of sidekick, or not being romantically or sexually realized. The biggest reward still is an ongoing sense of obligation and duty; of fighting a never-ending war inside and outside the story. What seems like a much greater insult is the notion that Black people–whether in space, in superhero HQs, in fictionalized African countries, in times of joy or distress–are not allowed to not only be fully in power, but in love too. Fantasy genres have still made our most persistent power invisibility. Watchmen, with Angela and Cal, Will and June, there are both stories of heroism and love, in a gener that regularly doesn’t afford commitment to anything other than violence and power.

What Watchmen does is akin to what we will likely need in the next decade; a sense of what Coates implored the House to consider in his remarks. To tell a new story, to create a new reality moving forward, to perhaps heal and feel whole, we should start with at least imagining being able to tell a wider pop culture history that includes the notion that quite anyone can be the hero. It was a series that reminded us that in so many ways, our truths are still so often hidden behind masks.

 

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Drake drops single on Christmas Eve, squashes beef with The Weeknd

Drake dropped a new single “War” on Christmas Eve and officially squashed his longtime beef with The Weeknd.

READ MORE: Drake’s dad Dennis Graham reportedly starring in dating reality show

On the song, Drake, 33, rhymes about the feud he had with The Weeknd as well as others. “OVOXO link up, mandem drink up, me in the drillers/Hawk and Stix and Cash and Baka, Gucci, P, and Gilla/And the boy that sound like he sang on Thriller/You know that’s been my n***a, yeah/We just had to fix things, family, 6 tings, we can’t split up,” Drake raps over the beat, which was produced by AXL Beats, according to Complex.

The track, a mixtape collaboration between Oliver El-Khatib of OVO and Kuumba International, is featured on the newly released El-Kuumba Tape Vol. 1. The video for the song was directed by Theo Skudra and Drake and his crew are seen at a ski resort, skiing, hitting up snowmobiles and having their own winter wonderland.

Hawk Marley, Stix, and Cash are down with XO and Baka Not Nice, Preme and Gilla are affiliated with Reps Up and OVO, reported Complex.

The song’s title belies its calm music video shots during the ski vacation. The video includes a bonfire and a skidoo, and Drake looks relaxed and chill – anything but at “war.”

He even concludes the song by rapping, “Everyone I know has code names, anyone I’m beefin’ with is a no name/N***as can’t even win home games/They just gotta fall in line like Soul Train.”

READ MORE: More Life! Drake is officially in the marijuana business

Rumors spread that Drake and The Weeknd had a beef after both dated Bella Hadid, who Drake doesn’t mention by name on the track. He does however name-drop Bella’s sister, supermodel Gigi: “If man get beaky, ring ring, call up Gigi, do him up neatly.”

In other Drake news, he announced on DaBaby show early this month that he is finishing up his new album and it should be released in 2020.

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Lil Wayne ‘all goody’ after federal agents raid private jet

Federal agents raided a private jet that flew Lil Wayne into Miami’s Opa-locka Executive Airport on Monday and discovered cocaine and a weapon, law enforcement sources say.

READ MORE: Lil Wayne calls Jay-Z ‘real friend’ and praises Swizz Beatz

Wayne, whose birth name is Dwayne Michael Carter Jr., had to remain at the airport while the FBI, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Miami-Dade police, and other law enforcement agencies searched the plane on which he was a passenger, the Miami Herald reports.

But he was “cleared” to leave the scene Monday evening by federal investigators, Miami defense attorney Howard Srebnick told the news outlet.

The artist took to Twitter to inform fans that everything was straight. He even made light of the situation, referencing a previous tweet where he rooted on the Packers with a tweet that read: “GO PACK GO!!!!!” and said he thinks the feds got confused because he shortened the football team’s name to “Pack.”

It was unclear how many other people were on the private Gulfstream G-V jet, although the plane can hold up to 14 passengers and crew, according to Opa-locka airport officials, the report says.

READ MORE: Eddie Murphy delivers highest ‘Saturday Night Live’ ratings in years

Miami-Dade police were tipped off that weapons and marijuana were on the aircraft as it headed to Miami from California, and the agency reached out to federal authorities so they could obtain a search warrant, according to law enforcement sources. Weezy, 37, was found to be a passenger on the plane, along with others.

Since cocaine and a gun were found, federal authorities will likely file charges in federal court, according to the Herald. If Lil Wayne or any of the other passengers had been charged Monday evening by the U.S. Attorney’s Office, they would have spent Christmas behind bars in federal custody until courts reopened on Thursday.

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What Is Bruno Mars’ Net Worth?

Bruno Mars Net Worth

Peter Gene Hernandez is professionally known as “Bruno Mars” is a popular singer from Hawaii who has been topping the charts the last several years as he was once signed to the legendary Motown Records. After being dropped by the label, Mars signed a recording contract with Atlantic Records in 2009 and hasn’t looked back since!

Mars amassed his fortune through the combination of producing for others such as Adam Levine, Brandy, Sean Kingston, and Flo Rida as well as for himself with his former production team, The Smeezingtons (Mars, Ari Levine, and Philip Lawrence). They found instant success with Bobby Ray Simmons Jr. aka B.o.B.’s “Nothin’ on You”, and Goodie Mob’s former rapper turned singer Thomas DeCarlo Callaway aka CeeLo Green with his hit single “F*** You.”

Mars also found immediate success with his Atlantic Records’ debut single, ‘Just The Way You Are’ from his album ‘Doo-Wops & Hooligans’ as the song reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100. Another song, “Grenade”, also topped the charts. Meanwhile, his second album, released in 2012, ‘Unorthodox Jukebox’ contained the single, ‘Locked Out of Heaven’ and it topped the Billboard Hot 100 for over six weeks in 20 countries.

The Hawaiian singer has invested in the NJOY Electronic Cigarette Company, helped launched the “Selvarey Rum” brand, was endorsed by Pepsi and invested in Chromatik. Mars started the Bruno Mars Scholarship Fund with the Hawaii Community Foundation, to help kids from Hawaii with tuition fees.

Mars has sold over 130 million records worldwide, which makes him one of the best selling artists of all time. He constantly stays on the road performing as Billboard named the singer’s tour the fourth highest-grossing of 2018, tallying more than $237 million for 100 shows. Earlier this year, Mars announced that he would venture to Sin City to play series of select dates at the Park MGM in Las Vegas.

Bruno Mar’s Net Worth: $150M



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Mariah Carey: Lawsuit accuses singer of firing nanny for complaints about wages, work conditions

Mariah Carey’s former nanny filed a lawsuit against the singer on Monday claiming she was fired last year after complaining about her $25 hourly pay and for working under stressful and threatening conditions.

READ MORE: Mariah Carey’s ‘All I Want for Christmas’ hits No. 1 for first time since 1994 release

Maria Burgues, the ex-nanny, also claims in the lawsuit filed in Los Angeles Superior Court that she was required to travel with the family when Carey was on tour without compensation for travel time. Further, the suit alleges that Marcio Moto, a bodyguard for the singer’s children, would frequently yell at her in a threatening tone, according to Variety.

The lawsuit also seeks compensation for emotional distress. The lawsuit describes a driving trip to Las Vegas in December 2017, when Moto allegedly began screaming at her and threatening to pull over and kick her out of the car. The suit says when she complained to Carey about the incident, nothing was done.

In another incident, the suit claims Moto used his phone to video chat his girlfriend while driving and nearly caused an accident. Once they got to the Sherman Oaks, California dance studio, with Burgues’ and Carey’s children in tow, one of Carey’s children allegedly left the class and no one noticed. Moto reportedly was still on the phone but she said he blamed her for the incident and screamed at her in front of children, dance instructors, parents, and other nannies, Variety writes.

After that incident, Burgues said she was fired, Variety reports. She also claims she has not been paid for outstanding wages due at the time of her firing, and that Carey never gave her regular wage statements. Variety reached out to Carey’s lawyer for comment but he reportedly told the magazine that he had not yet seen the suit and could not comment.

READ MORE: Mariah Carey celebrates women who made impact in ‘misogynistic’ corporate entertainment industry

Burgues lawsuit comes as Carey fights another suit filed by her former assistant, Lianna Shakhnazaryan, who claims the singer’s ex-manager, Stella Bulochnikov, was abusive toward her. Carey previously accused Shakhnazaryan of secretly recording her and attempting to extort her for $8 million.

In another lawsuit was filed last month against Carey, Maria Salazar, the singer’s former housekeeper, alleges Carey still owes her money.

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Colin Kaepernick’s Air Force 1 sneakers sell out quickly

Colin Kaepernick’s new Air Force 1 sneakers sold out on Nike’s website and app on Monday, the same day the sneakers were released in North America, reports say.

Some stores may still have some pairs of the sneakers, although they are sold out online, according to CNN.

READ MORE: Colin Kaepernick’s highly anticipated Nike sneaker comes out in December

The Air Force 1 x Colin Kaepernick leather sneaker is low-top, black and white and features the letter “K” on the tongue and a headshot of Kap on the back tab. The sneaker also features the date “08 14 16” on the right sole, the first time Kap refused to stand during the national anthem at a preseason game to protest racial injustice and police brutality. Instead, he remained on the bench during the duration of the song. He began kneeling on Sept. 1, 2016, sparking a movement.

Kap, 32, premiered the new kicks last month during his football tryouts near Atlanta. And last year, he signed an endorsement deal with Nike and became the face of an ad campaign for his civil rights and social justice activism, even though he hasn’t played in the NFL for three years.

“Nike partnered with a collective of collaborators to design an AF1 that connects to their life personally,” a Nike spokesperson explained to CNN. “Colin was identified because we believe his voice and perspective inspire many generations on and off the field.”

READ MORE: Colin Kaepernick spoke at ‘Un-Thanksgiving’ Day event in honor of Native Americans

Nike’s collaboration with Kaepernick was ripped by Donald Trump and many conservatives who threatened to boycott the sneaker giant. However, Nike ultimately increased its sales as a result of the endorsement, according to Forbes.

So far, Kap has done a hit commercial for Nike where he utters: “Believe in something, even if it means sacrificing everything.” That ad campaign would go on to win an Emmy. Kap is also credited with stopping Nike from releasing the “Betsy Ross” American flag shoe out of concern that the sneaker appeared to glorify the timeframe before slavery ended.

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University of North Carolina police tracked anti-racism activists after deadly Charlottesville attack

University of North Carolina campus police and state investigators used tracking technology to surveil anti-racism activists for a protest at a memorial known as “Silent Sam”—a gun-toting Confederate soldier, according to NBC News.

READ MORE: Ex-Texas policeman indicted in fatal shooting of Atatiana Jefferson

In the aftermath of the deadly 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va., UNC Chapel Hill police began using the controversial tracking technology, known as “geofencing” after the FBI notified them that activists planned to protest at the “Silent Sam” memorial. The FBI warning to UNC police came a day after protestors met in Charlottesville, Va., to remove the Robert E. Lee statue from a city park, NBC News writes.

The tracking technology pulls information from unsuspecting people who are in a specific area, determined by their phones’ geolocation systems, and even captures a person’s social media posts as well as other personal data. The technology has been used by President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign and by certain retailers to send targeted ads to a person’s mobile device, the report says.

Because of the violent nature of the Charlottesville protest, where a white supremacist killed an anti-racism activist by ramming his car into her, police were on high alert to monitor the activities of protestors in North Carolina.

NBC News reported that an FBI agent sent the UNC campus police chief an email on Aug. 13, 2017, that read, “I’m sure you’re already tracking, but wanted to make sure,” before warning that activists were expected to protest at Silent Sam later that evening.

“We have no information of any planned violence at this time,” the FBI agent said in the email, according to NBC News. “Any intelligence we develop will be pushed your way.”

READ MORE: Former FAMU student killed by police after traffic stop scuffle

NBC News reported that UNC had entered a three-year contract with a company called Social Sentinel Inc. of Vermont to use the geofencing software. The contract reportedly ran through Oct. 31, 2019, although campus police are still using it to track information in designated areas, a university spokesperson told NBC.

The spokesperson, however, wouldn’t divulge for what purposes police are using the technology or when it was last used, outside of saying it is used to “ensure campus safety.”

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Brutal stabbing of Black veteran at Oregon truck stop probed as hate crime

Ronnell Hughes, a Black, military veteran who had recently moved to Ontario, Ore., from North Carolina to be close to his girlfriend, was stabbed multiple times by a white man in what police are calling a possible hate crime, reports say.

READ MORE: Ex-Texas policeman indicted in fatal shooting of Atatiana Jefferson

Hughes, 48, was sitting at an Arby’s Restaurant on Saturday morning inside the Pilot truck stop applying for a job when Nolan Strauss, 26, reportedly approached him because he is Black and started to stab him in the neck, according to the Malheur Enterprise. Ontario is located near the Idaho border.

Police told media outlets that Strauss is believed to be a truck driver and is reportedly from Colorado Springs, Colorado. He was booked into the Malheur County Jail on charges of attempted murder, assault and intimidation.

Ben Esplin, lead detective on the case for the Ontario police, told the Malheur Enterprise that “the suspect made some statements that he did what he did because of the color of the victim’s skin.” Esplin said Strauss made the statements to police as he was being arrested.

The police affidavit adds that Strauss said he “hates black people,” according to the newspaper. The affidavit goes on to say that Strauss told police “his intent was to kill the victim.”

In October, Hughes moved to the area from Sanford, North Carolina to join up with his girlfriend, Nikita Apodaca, according to the Malheur Enterprise.

Police said Strauss and Hughes didn’t know each other and there was no indication that the incident was provoked. “The motive for the attack leans heavily towards a racially motivated crime,” police said in a statement.

READ MORE: Former FAMU student killed by police after traffic stop scuffle

Employees at the Pilot truck stop pulled Strauss off Hughes, and subdued him until police arrived.

Hughes was listed in stable condition at Saint Alphonsus Medical Center in Boise. He was put in an induced coma on Sunday after undergoing hours of surgery on Saturday, according to the newspaper, which quotes Apodaca.

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'Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker' Is a Lesson in Military Opposites

The Resistance is outmanned and outgunned, but their adaptability wins the day.

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Eddie Murphy delivers highest ‘Saturday Night Live’ ratings in years

Nearly 10 million viewers tuned in to watch Eddie Murphy host Saturday Night Live—the most watched show since May 2017.

Nielsen Media Research reported that the episode nailed an average 2.5 rating for adults ages 18-49 and brought in 9.921 million viewers, according to CNN.

READ MORE: Bill Cosby spokesperson accuses Eddie Murphy of selling out

Murphy, 58, proved he still has it as he brought back beloved sketches and characters, including “Mister Robinson’s Neighborhood,” “Buckwheat,” and “Gumby.” He delivered a stinging cold open where he questioned the likelihood that he would become a stay-at-home dad of 10 children, while Bill Cosby, America’s favorite dad, would wind up in jail.

“If you would have told me 30 years ago that I would be this boring, stay-at-home house dad and Bill Cosby would be in jail, even I would have took that bet,” he quipped before adding in a spot-on impersonation of Cosby: “Who is America’s Dad now?”

Andrew Wyatt, a Cosby representative, took offense to Murphy’s opening monologue and essentially called the whole performance a sellout to his race.“One would think that Mr. Murphy was given his freedom to leave the plantation, so that he could make his own decisions; but he decided to sell himself back to being a Hollywood Slave,” Wyatt said in a statement.

Murphy’s appearance marked the first time the comedian had been back to SNL in 35 years. To top it off, Lizzo was the musical guest, and some of the country’s top comedic performers joined Murphy on stage, including Tracy Morgan, Dave Chappelle, Chris Rock, and cast member, Kenan Thompson.

Prior to Murphy, the last time SNL had the highest rated comedy telecast was in May 2017, when Melissa McCarthy served as host, and HAIM performed as the musical guest.

In terms of entertainment series, Murphy’s SNL 2.5 rating tied Fox’s Masked Singer’s season premiere in September, ranking as the highest-rated entertainment series telecast this season, CNN notes. Murphy incorporated his Buckwheat character in a funny comedy sketch that spoofed the Masked Singer.

READ MORE: Kenan Thompson gears up for new NBC show

Wyatt didn’t mention, however, decades ago when the elder comedian would reportedly lecture Murphy about being too raunchy and not setting a good example. Murphy recently told Jerry Seinfeld, in an episode of “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee” that as a young comedian, Cosby always treated him mean. Many Murphy fans are now calling the comedian’s SNL monologue, as well as other recent comments, payback.

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2019's Weirdest and WIRED-est Photos

Highlights of our favorite photography to write about this year.

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Lizzo responds to critic who claims she is popular because of ‘obesity epidemic’

Boyce Watkins, a social media and political pundit, set off a Twitterstorm Monday when he attacked Lizzo’s weight.

He complained that the recently named Time Magazine’s entertainer of the year is popular because her weight is reflective of the obesity epidemic in the U.S. He lamented that people classified as obese are dying from diabetes, adding an image of Lizzo alongside the commentary. Fans took to Twitter in no time to condemn the remarks. Lizzo also responded, asking why male artists like DJ Khaled were not subjected to the same scrutiny.

READ MORE: Lizzo named Time Magazine 2019 Entertainer of the Year

Lizzo argued that she is popular because she writes songs that resonate with fans and that she’s a talented performer. She also noted that she’s doing fine and Watkins needs to check himself.

More than 207,000 Twitter users liked Lizzo’s tweet, many of whom accused Watkins of fat-shaming and sexism, focusing on the singer, instead DJ Khaled, because she’s a confident Black woman at the top of her game.

Here are samples of fans rushing to her defense:

Not one to be silenced, Watkins hit back:

Let us know your thoughts about this debate in the comments section.

READ MORE: For the Big Black girls who are apathetic about Lizzo’s bare bottom

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Ben Carson on slavery reparations: ‘No one is ever going to be able to work that out’

Ben Carson, the U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, in a recent interview tried to dismantle long-standing arguments by advocates and scholars that the U.S. should pay reparations to descendants of slaves, claiming the racial makeup of Black Americans precludes officials from determining just how much to give relatives today.

READ MORE: HUD secretary Carson under fire for remarks about transgender community

“What I would say about reparations is, you know, show me a mechanism that works,” he told Jericka Duncan in an interview on CBS This Morning that aired Monday. “You know, I did my DNA analysis. OK. I’m 77 percent sub-Saharan African, 20 percent European, 3 percent Asian. So how do you proportion that out to everybody?”

In response to a question from Duncan, Carson, a Republican and fierce supporter of Donald Trump, questioned how the mechanics of such an undertaking would work, and even called it “unworkable.” He suggested the topic of reparations should shift from what is owed African-American descendants of slaves to creating “a better economic situation now.”

“If you can prove you’re a descendant of a slave, though, do you think it’s worth having a conversation?” Duncan asked, for which Carson replied: “Yeah, but what percentage of money do you get? What percentage of reparation? No one is ever going to be able to work that out.”

Duncan pushed back, saying: “But nobody considered what percentage of what black people looked like in the Civil Rights era. They didn’t say, ‘Well, we’re not going to discriminate against you because you might be partially this or partially that.'”

READ MORE: Ben Carson’s hires staffer who wrote he had no problem with whites using the N-word

The retired neurosurgeon wasn’t swayed. “Proportionately, you’re not going to be able to figure it out. And where do you stop it? It’s unworkable. I would much rather concentrate on how do we provide the opportunities for people to get into a better economic situation now,” Carson told CBS.

Almost immediately, Carson’s comments hit Twitter, where experts like Nikole Hannah-Jones, a reporter with The New York Times Magazine who covers race, weighed in on the issue.


The issue of reparations has received renewed interest this year with Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX) introducing a bill in the House that calls for the establishment of a commission to study the impact of slavery and the continued discrimination against Black people. before the commission makes recommendations on reparations. And Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ), a 2020 Democratic presidential hopeful, introduced a similar measure in the Senate this spring.

Also recently, the Union for Reform Judaism, the largest Jewish denomination, backed a resolution that calls for the creation of a federal commission to look into ways to atone for slavery and systemic racism against Black people, according to Huffington Post.

 

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The 10 Worst Tech Product Launches of the 2010s

It wasn't all unicorns and cryptokitties. From Apple's Antennagate to Juicero's fruit bomb, the decade offered up plenty of brutally expensive embarrassments.

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The female coach making history in Sierra Leone

The owner of Sierra Leone's East End Tigers says Victoria Conteh is the top-flight's first woman coach 'because she's qualified and that's the bottom line'.

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Chatroulette Was Shorthand for Chaos Online. Then Came the 2010s

The video chat site wasn’t exactly civil—far from it—but it pales in comparison to the actual chaos of the past decade.

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Got the Flu? These Doctors Really Want to See You—Virtually

Getting sick is the worst. But if you're trying to lure customers who are reluctant or unable to leave home, the virus can be an ally.

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US recalls ambassador to Zambia after gay rights row

The ambassador said he was "horrified" that two men had been sentenced to 15 years in prison.

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US stops sending sniffer dogs to Egypt and Jordan

The move follows the deaths of US-trained dogs due to negligence - one died of heat stroke.

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Monday, December 23, 2019


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Africa's 2019 news quiz

How well do you remember the quirkier headlines from the continent this year?

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Eritrean players fail to return home once again

Players from the Eritrean football team have again disappeared following a regional Cecafa tournament in Uganda.

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Science Explains Why We Should All Work Shorter Hours in Winter

People tend to get gloomy when night comes early and cold weather descends. But adjusting our workday to the season could lift our mood.

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Omarosa claims Nancy Pelosi is at top of Donald Trump’s ‘list’

If it was not already apparent that Donald Trump was out for payback, then confirmation from a former insider should make it more obvious.

On Sunday, former Trump White House official Omarosa Manigault Newman talked with MSNBC host Kendis Gibson about the president’s recent impeachment, as well as his thirst to get even. When Gibson asked Manigault Newman if Trump was a “revengeful person,” she gave a disturbingly vivid picture of how the president liked to operate from her experience.

READ MORE: Omarosa, not one to stay on the sidelines, emerges as Michael Cohen advisor

“You know, he tweeted back when we were doing Celebrity Apprentice that ‘revenge was sweet not fattening,” Manigault Newman remembered. “He actually loves the idea of getting even. In fact, he writes about it in many of his books about getting even with anybody that crosses him.”

Manigault Newman, who was fired by White House Chief of Staff John Kelly in December 2017, went on to claim that Trump has a list of people he wants to seek vengeance against.

“I even remember talking with him during transition,” she continued, “he has kept a list of people who he believes has wronged him. And recently as you know with impeachment, that list has grown and he is going through that list, and he trying to figure out ways to undermine them whether that’s through policy, whether that’s through calling them names or trying to attack them publicly, but Donald Trump will find a way, in his mind, even fighting with people who are deceased, to get even.”

With Trump’s impeachment in full swing, Manigault Newman said she believed there was “no question” Nancy Pelosi would be at the top of Trump’s hit-list.

“He has a very special type of venom that he reserves for women in power, in particularly this woman who has one-up’d him, who has beat him at his game. I mean, no one has played Donald Trump quite the way she has in such a public way that will forever kind of tattoo a mark on him. And so, he is trying to plot a way, somehow, someway to get even with Speaker Pelosi.”

There is no doubt that Pelosi has been the leading voice in the fight to impeach Trump, which inevitably happened on Dec. 18 when the Democrat-led House voted in favor of impeachment. Though the Republican-controlled Senate has passionately declared that they will not vote to impeach, Pelosi is still claiming a win.

”He just got impeached. He’ll be impeached forever. No matter what the Senate does. He’s impeached forever because he violated our Constitution,” Pelosi told the Associated Press.

Trump has been beyond vocal about his disdain for the Speaker.

READ MORE: Omarosa Manigault-Newman slapped with lawsuit from DOJ for not coming clean about her coins

“They are violating the Constitution,” Trump said, calling Pelosi “crazy Nancy,” days after the announcement Reuters reported.

With all of the madness happening in Washington regarding impeachment, Manigualt Newman warned that the people around Trump at this time are “feeding his worst instincts.”

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‘Celebration of Life’ held for slain Alabama teenager Aniah Blanchard

Dozens of mourners decided to spend the weekend before Christmas showering Aniah Blanchard‘s family with love and support.

On Saturday, Blanchard’s family held a “celebration of life” to honor her memory at the Faith Chapel Christian Center in Birmingham, Ala. According to ABC News, some supporters had even traveled from Blanchard’s hometown of Homewood, Ala. to attend the memorial service. Attendees wore the color baby blue, which was Blanchard’s favorite color, and black.

READ MORE: Suspect in Aniah Blanchard death has outburst in court

Blanchard’s mother, Angela Haley Harris, spoke to friends, family and even strangers that were touched by Blanchard’s story

“It’s easy for me to talk about Aniah, she is my mini-me… I gave birth to her on my birthday,” Harris said. “She is the greatest gift to me.”

Throughout the two-hour service, many people who knew her consistently talked about 19-year-old Blanchard’s infectious “light.”

“Aniah had a light that you wanted to be around. The light she had every day of her life is still here and is still being shared,” Hannah Haley, Blanchard’s cousin, remembered.

Blanchard’s stepfather, UFC fighter Walt Harris, also spoke to fellow mourners about how his stepdaughter encouraged him in his career.

“Aniah is my biggest fan. She would always tell me when it came to my career it will be okay, you gotta keep going,” Harris said. “So now I have to go strong for the other kids… Glad to have her in my life and how she had an impact on my life.”

Harris was the resounding voice that brought national attention to Blanchard’s Oct. 23 disappearance from an Alabama convenience store. After an extensive search, her body was found on Nov. 25. Ibraheem Yazeed, 30, has been charged in her abduction of murder.

READ MORE: Teenager might have staged kidnapping because she didn’t want to move

According to ABC, authorities believe Yazeed, who is facing capital murder charges, may have killed Blanchard after she tried to reach for his gun. David Johnson Jr., 63, and Antwon Fisher, 35, have also been charged in the case.

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Trina Braxton was positively glowing as she tied the knot with Von Scales

Trina Braxton is a married woman y’all!

According to Page Six, the Braxton sister wed fiance Von Scales in a lavish Dec. 15 wedding less than a year after they were engaged. Scales is Braxton’s third marriage.

READ MORE: Tamar Braxton fires back at accusations she’s homophobic: ‘STOP with that BS!’

PEOPLE reported that Toni, Tamar, Traci, Towanda, Michael Jr., and mother Evelyn were all in tow to celebrate the lovely ceremony that took place at Windows on Washington in St. Louis. Braxton wore a breathtaking white floor-length wedding dress designed by Naama & Anat Haute Couture and was positively radiant in pictures from her reception.

“Our wedding day was unpredictable and amazing. Our personalities shined through and it was a great example of our relationship. Simple elegance, but all about celebrating with family and friends. It was perfect for us,” Braxton told PEOPLE. “I’m married to an amazing man, and our night was about displaying our love for each other amongst our loved ones and including our loved ones and blending our families. Who could ask for anything more?!”

Though Braxton and her sisters were all smiles during the wedding, according to Page Six, baby sister Tamar was not excited about the engagement earlier this year, which took place on Braxton’s 42nd birthday.

“This is not a birthday celebration for me,” she said in a video at the time. “This is some straight foul s–t.”

 Tamar would go on to apologize to her sister a few days later saying in tweets have since been deleted, “Sometimes you get so caught up in ‘ME’ you fck up not only your night, but others are well! Looking at the big picture, I’m so excited and Happy for @TrinaBraxton1 and @Vonscales!”

Braxton’s wedding happened almost one year to the date of the one year anniversary of her ex-husband Gabe Solis‘ death. Braxton and Solis had been married for 12 years and their troubled relationship was documented on Braxton Family Values.

READ MORE: Lizzo, Ciara, Toni Braxton and more hit the stage at the 2019 American Music Awards

And do not worry if you were not able to score an invite to the wedding as it was filmed for the upcoming season of Braxton Family Values.

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MIT Inclusive Innovation Challenge drives a more equitable economy

In 2015, the world began to realize a stark reality — the unprecedented wealth and prosperity ushered in by the digital age was not being shared equally across society. Research indicated that income inequality was rising, and the headlines reflected a growing public fear of unemployment driven by automation. 

MIT Sloan School of Management's Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee, co-directors of the MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy (IDE) and co-authors of “The Second Machine Age,” recognized this reality as a challenge that could be solved if the right resources were brought to bear.   

IDE’s response was the MIT Inclusive Innovation Challenge (IIC), a global tournament for entrepreneurs harnessing technology to ensure a more equitable future. Since the IIC was launched at the first MIT Solve in 2015, IDE has identified 160 organizations from around the world, awarding a total of $5 million in prizes to accelerate their missions. In three years, those IIC winners have collectively generated over $170 million in revenue, raised over $1 billion in capital, created more than 7,000 jobs, and served 350 million people. 

IIC awardees include entrepreneurs like Hugo Pinaretta, whose grandparents were smallholder farmers in Peru. He and his co-founders now lead AGROS, which applies remote sensing and precision agriculture technologies to increase small farmers’ yields. 

In another case, Helen Adeosun, a former home health care aid, launched CareAcademy, which provides online professional development to teach and up-skill caregivers, a growing profession that is unlikely to be replaced by robots or automation. Adeosun and her team provide opportunities for millions of workers to prepare for the future of health care.

The IIC has been a grassroots initiative — a small team relying on the power of an international community to scale and to drive their mission. They have worked with more than 600 experts to select IIC winners from among 4,500 global registrants and engaged more than 100 outreach partners: like-minded for-profit and nonprofit organizations that helped the IIC source inclusive innovators from every corner of the world. They also partnered with nine collaborator organizations, including Merck KGaA in Germany, MaRS Discovery District in Canada, and Liquid Telecom in Kenya, to host 14 celebrations on five continents, attended by more than 4,000 investors, policymakers, academics, and business leaders.

After accelerating the global future-of-work movement for the past four years, the IIC team began looking for ways to further amplify their impact. Coming full circle, they looked to MIT Solve, an Institute-wide initiative designed to address the world’s most pressing problems through partnership and open innovation. The IIC will transition into Solve in 2020, powering its Economic Prosperity Challenge to drive increased resources and global awareness to the inclusive innovators who are creating an equitable future of work for all. This transition will magnify the impact of IIC winners and the transformative, lasting change that is imperative for today’s global economy.



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Star Wars News: 'The Rise of Skywalker' and Everything After

The finale of the saga has come and gone. So what happens now?

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Memorial party for Chicago shooting victim turns violent

With the holiday season in full swing, it can be hard to imagine the horror that took place in Chicago during what was supposed to be a party to remember a shooting victim.

On Sunday morning, 13 people sustained gunshot wounds at a memorial party. According to Complex, the violence transpired following a personal dispute and to make matters more disturbing, a shooter decided to fire randomly at attendees who were attempting to leave the party.

READ MORE: Gunfire interrupts holiday shopping at Cumberland Mall in Atlanta

“There was a dispute where shots were fired inside,” Chicago Police Chief Fred Waller said. “The people started to spill out, and as they spilled out more shots were fired. So we have about three [shooting] scenes.”

Authorities also said that the horrific scene was caught on police cameras, which also showed one of the party-goers shooting at a passing vehicle.

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot took to Twitter to send her prayers to the 13 victims of the shooting in a series of tweets.

“Our hearts are with the 13 individuals whose lives were significantly harmed after gunmen opened fire at a memorial gathering last night,” Lightfoot wrote late Sunday morning.

“People deserve to live their lives without fear of someone pulling out a gun,” she continued. “Especially in a moment of reflection and remembrance during the holiday season.”

According to Complex, Lightfoot spent part of her Sunday visiting the 13 victims, whose ages range from 16-48, in the hospital and was urging people to come forward with any information regarding the shooting.

USA Today reported that two people of interest had been questioned with one having been armed with a revolver and the other sustained a gunshot wound. On Sunday night ABC 7 noted that 37-year-old Marciano White had been charged with unlawful use of a weapon by a felon after police searched him at the scene, but it is unclear if he was the shooter.

READ MORE: Social media influencer sentenced to 14 years for plot to steal a domain name by gunpoint

According to ABC 7, the victim who was being honored at the memorial party was killed in April after attempting a carjacking.

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With Governor’s Signature, New Jersey Becomes Nation’s Third State Forbidding Hair Discrimination

hair discrimination

New Jersey becomes the nation’s third state to have a law that prohibits hair discrimination.

The legislation surfaced Thursday after New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy signed a law making it unlawful to discriminate based on hairstyles related to race. New Jersey joins California and New York among states in America banning discrimination based on hair.

Murphy’s action comes after the New Jersey Assembly Labor Committee on Monday robustly passed a hair discrimination bill co-sponsored by Assemblywoman Angela McKnight.

The legislation was initiated after Andrew Johnson, a black high school wrestler at Buena Regional High School, was forced to cut off his dreadlocks in order to compete in a match a year ago.

The fresh law Murphy signed, known as the “Create a Respectful and Open Workplace for Natural Hair Act” (CROWN Act), includes discrimination on the basis of “traits historically associated with race, including, but not limited to, hair texture, hair type, and protective hairstyles, Murphy’s office reported.

“Race-based discrimination will not be tolerated in the State of New Jersey,” Murphy said in a statement. “No one should be made to feel uncomfortable or be discriminated against because of their natural hair. I am proud to sign this law in order to help ensure that all New Jersey residents can go to work, school, or participate in athletic events with dignity.”

U.S. Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey added, “I’m grateful to Governor Murphy for signing this important legislation and applaud Senator Sandra B. Cunningham and Assemblywoman Angela McKnight, who led the CROWN Act and Crown Coalition advocate Adjoa B. Asamoah, who worked tirelessly to end the implicit and explicit biases against natural hair.”

New Jersey Assemblywoman Angela McKnight on the New Jersey General Assembly floor. (Image: New Jersey General Assembly Office)

“Discrimination against black hair is discrimination against black people and no one should be denied a job, an education, or face discrimination because of their hairstyle,” Booker continued.

The CROWN Act updates the “Law Against Discrimination” to clarify that prohibited race discrimination includes discrimination on the basis of hair. As defined in the bill, this includes, but is not limited to, “such hairstyles as braids, locks, and twists” according to a news release from the governor’s office. This change is intended to remove any confusion or ambiguity over the scope of the Law Against Discrimination and its applicability to race discrimination predicated on such traits.

Main sponsors of the bill along with McKnight include senators Sandra B. Cunningham, Nia H. Gill, and Shirley K. Turner and Assembly members Verlina Reynolds-Jackson, Shanique Speight, and Britnee Timberlake.

“I am proud to see New Jersey become just the third state in the nation to put an end to this discriminatory practice. This law will ensure people of color are free to wear their hair however they feel best represents them, whether that be locks, braids, twists or curls. No one should ever be told it is ‘unprofessional’ to embrace their culture,” stated New Jersey State Senator Cunningham. “It is unacceptable that someone could be dismissed from school or denied employment because they wear their hair exactly how it grows, but that has been the reality for many black and brown individuals. Today, here in New Jersey, we’ve changed that.”

Earlier this month, Booker officially supported the CROWN Act with the launch of a new federal bill. A Democratic presidential candidate, Booker’s bill basically calls for banning discrimination based on hair textures and hairstyles frequently tied to a particular race or national origin.

Further, U.S. Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-LA) introduced companion legislation in the House of Representatives, joined by Reps. Ayanna Pressley (D-MA), Marcia Fudge (D-OH), and Barbara Lee (D-CA).

McKnight is an official member of the national CROWN Coalition, co-founded by Dove along with the National Urban League, Color Of Change, and Western Center on Law and Poverty. The coalition, among other things, aims to advance efforts to end hair discrimination largely against black women and girls.

McKnight stated, “Unfortunately it’s all too common for African Americans and people of color to be subjected to discrimination at work or school for wearing their hair in braids, twists, and dreadlocks or embracing their natural curls.”



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WIRED's 7 Big Science Stories That Shaped 2019

The police went nuts for DNA, the vaping wars heated up, and a black hole pic grabbed the internet: These were some of 2019's standout themes.

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12 Science Books You Should Read Right Now

Snuggle up with these 2019 books on the so-called language of God, dirty drugmakers, and the future of food and booze.

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Why Big Data Has Been (Mostly) Good for Music

The explosion of metrics and algorithms isn't just reflecting what's happening in the music industry. It's transforming it.

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