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Monday, November 4, 2019

Ava DuVernay slams Academy for disqualifying Nigerian Oscar contender ‘Lionheart’

Ava DuVernay is speaking out against the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences for disqualifying the Nigerian film, Lionheart. 

The director of When They See Us slammed the organization on Monday after it announced that the Nigerian film was being disqualified from the Oscar race. The film marks Nigeria’s first-ever Oscar submission and was hoping to be a contender in the Best International Film category, but was disqualified because most of the dialogue is in English.

The Academy’s rules state that submission for the category must be in “a predominantly non-English” language.

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Ava DuVernay took to Twitter to voice her concern over the decision.

“To @TheAcademy, You disqualified Nigeria’s first-ever submission for Best International Feature because its in English. But English is the official language of Nigeria,” DuVernay tweeted Monday afternoon. Are you barring this country from ever competing for an Oscar in its official language?”

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The film’s director, Genevieve Nnaji, followed up with some posts of her own.

“This movie represents the way we speak as Nigerians. This includes English which acts as a bridge between the 500+ languages spoken in our country; thereby making us #OneNigeria. @TheAcademy,” she posted.

“It’s no different to how French connects communities in former French colonies…We did not choose who colonized us. As ever, this film and many like it, is proudly Nigerian.”

The post Ava DuVernay slams Academy for disqualifying Nigerian Oscar contender ‘Lionheart’ appeared first on theGrio.



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‘Jesus Is King’ marks ninth consecutive No.1 album debut for Kanye West

Kanye West just scored his ninth consecutive No.1 album.

The superstar who dropped Jesus Is King last week topped Billboard’s Top 200 albums chart this week, marking his ninth consecutive album to debut at No. 1. He’s now tied with Eminem for the artist with the most consecutive No. 1’s on the Billboard 200 charts.

All 11 tracks from the highly-anticipated gospel album made the Billboard Hot 100 list as well, proving that despite his antics, he’s still a hitmaker.

It’s here, for real this time: Kanye West drops long-awaited ‘Jesus is King’ album

While the album was delayed multiple times before being released on October 25, it has received positive reviews from longtime fans as well as gospel veterans. Last week, theGrio caught up with Anthony Brown to hear his thoughts on the project.

“I’ve heard it. I think that Kanye is a genius when it comes to production and stylistically he creates a really awesome sound. I have a few songs that are favorites for me on there. I think it speaks to a person who has just been introduced to the concept of God and it sounds like someone who is meeting Him for the first time. I feel like people who are at that place will understand it and it will speak to them. It’s for the person who is just getting into it. What he did was wise. He chose sounds and beats and lyrics that won’t scare them off, but welcome them in. “Closed On Sunday”, “Water”, and “Hands On” are a few that I think are really dope,” said Brown. 

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“My hope and my prayer with what I see for Kanye and what he’s doing with Sunday Service is impact. Kanye has a huge following of people and if he can impact people in a way that leads them closer to Christ then in my opinion, it’s a good thing. Hopefully those of us who do this on a daily basis will be ready to receive those who have been introduced to the message by Kanye. We will have open arms and  ready to receive them and go deeper. I don’t feel in competition with Kanye at all. I think it’s important he’s making an impact and if he’s doing that, then let’s go.”

The post ‘Jesus Is King’ marks ninth consecutive No.1 album debut for Kanye West appeared first on theGrio.



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8 year old Efia Ayeyi shares her journey with Osteogenesis Imperfecta

Eight-year-old Efia Ayeyi has composed her own songs about her genetic disorder.

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Optimizing kidney donation and other markets without money

When people die, they can become organ donors for a period of about 24 to 48 hours. But 20 percent of kidneys in the U.S. that could be transplanted in these situations are never used.

Meanwhile, by some estimates, 30 to 50 percent of living people who are willing to donate a kidney never find a recipient. With around 100,000 Americans waiting for kidney transplants at any given time, those are suboptimal situations.  

What can be done to help fix this? Give the problem to a market design scholar, such as MIT economist Nikhil Agarwal, who has studied the issue in close detail.

From within the walls of MIT’s Building E52, where economics equations litter the whiteboards, Agarwal’s work has now leapt out to the medical establishment. In the last year, a new method he and some colleagues formulated for a more efficient kidney-donation system has been approved for implementation by the Alliance for Paired Donation, the second-largest platform for such transplants in the U.S.

“It’s particularly exciting,” says Agarwal, who is low-key about his accomplishments but allows that he is thrilled to see his work having a tangible effect. Currently there are about 800 kidney transplants in the U.S. annually; by Agarwal’s estimation, a more efficient exchange market could increase that number by 30 to 60 percent.

Though Agarwal’s work is still being implemented, and it is not yet easy to quantify its impact yet, it is simple enough to see his rising trajectory in academia. For his research and teaching, Agarwal was granted tenure at MIT earlier this year.

“That’s not how a lot of markets work”

At first glance, transplants might not seem to be a problem for an economist. But a growing cadre of economists have made notable progress understanding markets that match pairs of things — transplant donors and recipients, applicants and schools — and do not use money to settle matters.

“In economics,” Agarwal says, “we often [assume] there’s the demand, the supply, the price, and the market clears, somehow. It just happens.” And yet, he says, “That’s not how a lot of markets work. There are all these different important markets where we do not allow prices.”

Scholars in the field of “market design,” therefore, closely examine these nonfinancial markets, observing how their rules and procedures affect outcomes. Agarwal calls himself a specialist in “resource allocation systems that do not use prices.” These include kidney donations: The law forbids selling vital organs. Many education systems and entry-level labor markets, for example, also fit into this category. 

In Agarwal’s case, he has a specialty within his specialty. Some market-design scholars are theorists. Agarwal is an empiricist who locates data on nonpriced markets, evaluates their efficiency, and works out improvements.

“Data can teach you new things you maybe wouldn’t have otherwise thought,” Agarwal says.

In a series of papers examining the inefficiencies of kidney transplant systems in the U.S., Agarwal and a variety of co-authors looked at the numbers and came back with solutions. One major source of inefficiency, Agarwal has discovered, is a lack of scale. Bigger networks of hospitals could better match donors and recipients. Right now, 62 percent of kidney donor-and-recipient pairings consist of patients at the same hospitals; that number would be lower in a more efficient system.

One reason for this: Donors and recipients must have matching blood types. People with type O blood can donate kidneys across blood types, but they can only receive kidneys from other type O people. Due to the timing of when people enter kidney markets, a bigger network is more efficient in this regard. In single-hospital networks, 22.8 percent of type O donors give a kidney to a non-type O recipient (for whom other donors might be found), while in the biggest U.S. kidney network, just 6.5 percent do, meaning its type O participants are connecting more optimally.

Agarwal’s research also suggests that hospitals tend to be very concerned about the financial and administrative costs they incur while handling the transplant process — although such costs are small compared to the overall social value of transplants. Well-crafted subsidies and mandates, as he has detailed, can help address this particular problem.

Open questions in need of answers

Agarwal was an economics and math double major at Brandeis University, where he received his BA in 2008. Directly out of college, Agarwal was accepted into Harvard University’s PhD program in economics, but, as he recounts it, he did not have a clear idea of what he wanted to study. Before long, though, Agarwal connected at Harvard with Alvin Roth, an innovative market-design theorist who would soon be awarded the Nobel Prize, in 2012; Roth’s work helped create new mechanisms for school-choice programs.

Working with Roth, as well as Harvard professors Susan Athey (now of Stanford University) and Ariel Pakes, and MIT Professor Parag Pathak, Agarwal began focusing on market-design problems and developing his taste for empiricism. The theorists had broken the field of market design open; as a result, unanswered questions about the activity in many markets had been identified but not necessarily answered.

“I’ve always liked combining different ways of learning about something,” Agarwal says. “Initially I was training as a theorist, but then I got interested in data, because I just saw a big set of open questions there, which wasn’t informed by numbers.” Pakes, who Agarwal cites as a major influence, “showed me what data, especially when combined with theory, can teach us.”

Agarwal joined the MIT faculty in 2014 and began publishing papers on a range of topics, on a variety of markets. He has studied online advertising and school-choice systems; one of his first prominent papers, in the American Economic Review in 2015, examined the system used to allocate medical students to residencies.

Still, the majority of Agarwal’s work has been on kidney transpants specifically, a field of knowledge he has gradually built up.

“You need to have domain expertise,” Agarwal says. “It’s very important to have that. Otherwise [theories] may not be directly implementable. For that reason, people really do specialize, so they understand the setting.” One of Agarwal’s co-authors is a kidney transplant surgeon.

“I’ve learned a lot from other people,” Agarwal notes.

He has also benefitted, as he tells it, from his home in the MIT Department of Economics, where all kinds of work is valued — even work on nonpriced markets, which, as Agarwal quips, can seem like “kind of a weird thing to study,” at least to outsiders.

“The economics department is an intellectually amazing place to think about things,” Agarwal adds. “People value good work on the merits and they’re open-minded.”

Now Agarwal is also encouraging others to research markets of all kinds: His students are studying topics as diverse as electricity markets, the palm oil industry in Indonesia, and water markets in Australia, among many others. Every such market, he notes, can differ from others, in its practices and in the behavior of its participants.

“We have to think a little more carefully about how markets work and demand meets supply, and what are all the implications of that,” Agarwal says.

After all, as Agarwal has already seen, a little more careful thought about markets could have a lot more real-world impact.



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Queen Latifah to executive produce and star in ‘The Equalizer’ reboot at CBS

Queen Latifah is ready to breath new life into an old favorite.

According to Deadline, the Oscar-nominated actress is set to executive produce and star in a reboot of The Equalizer for CBS. The network has reportedly given a pilot commitment to the series that will be Andrew Marlowe and Terri Miller, and both will serve as show runners. Debra Martin Chase will also serve as an executive producer.

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Queen Latifah will take on the starring role, offering afresh take on the character previously played by Denzel Washington in the film and Edward Woodward in the original CBS series.

We can’t wait to see how the superstar will do as an ass-kicking killer with a heart of gold. So far, no word on a prospective premiere date.

SNEAK PEEK: See how Queen Latifah is preparing for ‘The Little Mermaid Live!’

The Grammy winner has tons of projects on the way and will star as Ursula in Disney’s The Little Mermaid Live! on ABC on Tuesday. In it, she will serve up her own rendition of the 1989’s beloved song “Poor Unfortunate Souls” and star alongside Shaggy, who will play Sebastian.

The post Queen Latifah to executive produce and star in ‘The Equalizer’ reboot at CBS appeared first on theGrio.



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Detroit to Host the Largest Black Doll Expo in the Nation

On Saturday, Nov. 9, Detroit will host the largest doll show in the country, promoting dolls of color to empower children of color.

The doll show will be hosted by the entertainment company, Sandy’s Land L.L.C. Its mission is for their clients to be able to “Party with a Purpose.” The main purpose of the doll show, according to BlackNews.com, is to celebrate the history, culture, diversity, and self-love with the promotion of dolls of color.

According to BlackNews.com, the Detroit Doll Show will include new as well as returning vendors that seek to fully serve every child and adult who has an inner child. The vendors themselves are a diverse and talented set of individuals. These experienced vendors include “children authors, the culture corner, Black memorabilia and Black dolls.”

The program will also include a variety of entertainment from artists such as Motown Mic, who was recently awarded Spoken Word Artist of the Year, and TEDx speaker Mikhaella Norwood who is also doing spoken word. There will also be a Mini Play House workshop sponsored by Power Org Math as well as a photo booth sponsored by the companies, B Elegant & Strike a Pose.

According to BlackNews.com, other events include “the Doll Look-Alike contest, Giant Games, Girl Power Corner, Head Wrap Workshop, Doll Making Workshops, Building Better Men, a presentation by Odis Bellinger who is the founder of the Building Better Men Program, and a screening of the movie, The Sky Princess.

The doll show will be hosted at its new venue, Northwest Activities Center. This center will provide free parking and food to the attendees.

 

 



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Solange Knowles addresses rumors that she cheated with manager

Just days after announcing her split from husband Alan Ferguson, singer Solange Knowles has come forward to address swirling rumors that she may have had an extramarital affair.

According to Page Six, Friday, after Knowles announced her decision to separate from Ferguson after 5 years of marriage, some speculated that the 33 year old may have cheated with her manager, John Bogaard after a picture of the duo walking together started circulating online.

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“yo ty @onvacation for bein the best co-manager for 5 yrs. sorry the internetsss are so unkind n b lying. go back to enjoying ya vacation,” she wrote on her Instagram Stories.

While Bogaard himself has not commented on the rumors, it is now being reported that he is likely in a relationship with a woman named Judith Joy who has previously been posted on his Instagram.

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In a series of now-deleted tweets, the singer sharply addressed the cheating claims explaining, “Yo, John [Bogaard] is my former co-manager y’all gotta chill. I’m not about to be silenced into letting complete lies narrate my life. To take my words ‘my body left me with no choice but to listen and be still’ after speaking about my health journey…which has already been painful enough and turn [it] into an interpretation of unfaithfulness is just…wow.”

Then concluded with, “I hate to even give this energy, but I will not let something so untrue follow me when I’ve tried to lead my life in truth. I hope y’all spread this with the same conviction and energy that [you] did that false narrative. Much love.”

READ MORE: Queen Latifah and Tina Knowles deliver inspirational words to college grads

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the past 2 years have brought me more physical and spiritual transition and evolution than ever before my body left me with no choice but to listen and be still within that stillness i begin my journey in confronting my worst enemy, fear. ive lived my best and worst moments in front of the lens and gaze of the world since i was a teenager. ive always tried to live in my truth no matter how ugly or full of love it is. ive also tried to carve out the space to protect my heart, and my life as it unfolds, evolves, and changes. 11 years ago i met a phenomenal man who changed every existence of my life. early this year we separated and parted ways, (and tho it ain’t nan no body business 😭) i find it necessary to protect the sacredness of my personal truth and to live in it fully just as I have before and will continue to do. it is unfair to not have power of your own story as you shape and mold and rewrite it yourself. a nigga ain’t perfect, but im leaning into the fear of the unknown and all the glory and power i know exist within god and the universes grace. may all of your transitions no matter how big or small, be kind to you and filled with incredible love and light!

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The post Solange Knowles addresses rumors that she cheated with manager appeared first on theGrio.



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FIRST LOOK: Samuel L. Jackson, Anthony Mackie and Nia Long star in ‘The Banker’

Apple TV+ is ready to unveil its film The Banker at the 2019 AFI Fest in Los Angeles.

The film stars Samuel L. Jackson, Anthony Mackie, Nia Long, and Jessie T. Usher among others and is based on real events surrounding Black businessmen in the 1950s.

Peep the official description:

Based on a true story, The Banker centers on revolutionary businessmen Bernard Garrett (Anthony Mackie) and Joe Morris (Samuel L. Jackson), who devise an audacious and risky plan to take on the racist establishment of the 1960s by helping other African Americans pursue the American dream of homeownership.  Along with Garret’s wife Eunice (Nia Long), they train a working-class white man, Matt Steiner (Nicholas Hoult), to pose as the rich and privileged face of their burgeoning real estate and banking empire–while Garrett and Morris pose as a janitor and a chauffeur. Their success ultimately draws the attention of the federal government, which threatens everything the four have built.

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Anthony Mackie and Nnamdi Asomugha are executive producers on the project.

The Banker will be released in select theaters on December 6 and will be available for streaming on Apple TV+ in January.

Check out the trailer:

 

The post FIRST LOOK: Samuel L. Jackson, Anthony Mackie and Nia Long star in ‘The Banker’ appeared first on theGrio.



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South African drought town's warning to the world

How one small town is struggling through South Africa's worst drought in living memory.

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VSCO Girls Are Just Banal Victorian Archetypes https://t.co/vy442iK4lc


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November 04, 2019 at 11:21AM
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Liverpool's Naby Keita returns to Guinea squad https://t.co/7xi3FXFZHD


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November 04, 2019 at 11:12AM
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Oklahoma frees 527 inmates, setting U.S. single-day commutation record https://t.co/VeJFXu9UhE


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November 04, 2019 at 10:48AM
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Sadio Mane 'is not a diver': Jurgen Klopp responds to Pep Guardiola comments https://t.co/GmozNQkVg9


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November 04, 2019 at 10:42AM
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Serena Williams Raises Awareness About Financial Abuse https://t.co/83pkARkOLA


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November 04, 2019 at 10:23AM
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Florida State believes firing Willie Taggart will ultimately save them money https://t.co/vnK6HKQYez


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November 04, 2019 at 10:18AM
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Master P’s Rap Snacks headed to 4,200 Walmart stores nationwide https://t.co/PzR2OcOfhG


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November 04, 2019 at 09:48AM
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Microsoft Is Taking Quantum Computers to the Cloud https://t.co/eI1m1PyQ0w


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November 04, 2019 at 09:21AM
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Star Wars News: What Happens to the Franchise Now? https://t.co/cWEhOAvEPX


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November 04, 2019 at 09:21AM
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Nigerian army investigates torture video https://t.co/ZgqTn1Ik1o


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November 04, 2019 at 09:12AM
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Hamburg's Bakery Jatta excuses himself from Gambia squad https://t.co/kmPWqDIcZH


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November 04, 2019 at 09:12AM
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