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Saturday, September 28, 2019

Tiny, Heiress, Tamar Braxton and more flood TI’s timeline with birthday love!

Recently rapper T.I. celebrated his 39th birthday and wife Tiny, daughter Heiress, and many more were sure to show their love for the self-proclaimed King of The South, via social media.

On Wednesday (September 25) the Grand Hustle CEO turned 39. Tamika “Tiny” Harris took to her Instagram to show some grown and sexy love to her husband and “Big Daddy.”

READ MORE: Fans praise T.I. for being ‘honest’ and apologizing to wife Tiny Harris for cheating

“Happy birthday to my husband, my best friend!! Thank you for loving me like no one else can. As I’ve always said u are the man of my dreams. 20 years strong & we loving on each other like we just met. Thank you for being the best you!! You complete me.. celebrating you everyday!! Now eat the [cake] Big Daddy.”

Tiny and Tip’s youngest daughter, 3-year-old Heiress Harris, also uploaded some Insta-love in a video photo collage. In the videos, Heiress is heard singing the traditional “Happy Birthday” song, before changing over to an “Old Town Road” remix and version of the popular track.

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Singing to daddy 💙🎉

A post shared by Heiress Harris 👑 (@onlyheiress) on

Singer and close friend of the family, Tamar Braxton, also showed her love to TI on his birthday, uploading a photo of both Tip and Tiny, while applauding the rapper for being a strong example of a husband.

“Happy birthday to @troubleman31! we fall out and fight like true blood because we are. Because you love my eternal sister @majorgirl with every fiber of your being!!! And u know we share the same feeling no matter what!!! You and my Precious made sure that bond was never tainted and I’ll forever look up to you and love y’all because y’all make it through whatever, whomever, whatever…. the TRUE meaning of marriage and friendship,” the singer said.

Braxton continued, “No matter come what may, we are bonded for life!!! May you have everything I told u i have seen a few weeks ago, it was truly GREATNESS and i told u that… May that be and much more and your year around the sun this year is just like all of your visions!!! I love y’all (heart emoji’s) thank you for loving my sister Love Tiny since day 1!!! Periodt!”

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Happy birthday to @troubleman31 we fall out and fight like true blood because we are. Because you love my eternal sister @majorgirl with every fiber of your being!!! And u know we share the same feeling no matter what!!! You and my Precious made sure that bond was never tainted and I’ll forever look up to you and love y’all because y’all make it through whatever, whomever, whatever…. the TRUE meaning of marriage and friendship❤️❤️ no matter come what may, we are bonded for life!!! May you have everything I told u i have seen a few weeks ago, it was truly GREATNESS and i told u that… May that be and much more and your year around the sun this year is just like all of your visions!!! I love y’all ❤️❤️❤️🥰🥰🥰 thank you for loving my sister Love Tiny since day 1!!! Periodt

A post shared by Tamar Braxton ❤️ (@tamarbraxton) on

READ MORE: Tamar Braxton asks courts to immediately end her marriage to Vincent Herbert

Happy belated birthday, T.I!

The post Tiny, Heiress, Tamar Braxton and more flood TI’s timeline with birthday love! appeared first on theGrio.



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Meghan Markle visits memorial of slain South African student, urges #AmINext movement awareness

The Duchess of Sussex, Meghan Markle, recently visited the memorial of Uyinene Mrwetyana, the young South African woman and university student whose rape and murder sparked outcry in the nation, and onset the #AmINext movement.

On August 24, the University of Cape Town student was raped and murdered inside the Clareinch Post Office in Claremont, by 42-year-old employee, Luyanda Botha, according to News24.com.

READ MORE: In new Sudan, women want more freedom, bigger political role

According to reports, Botha told Mrwetyana the credit card machine wasn’t working due to a power outage. Mrwetyana advised the 19-year-old to come back, with a promise of helping her at a later time. Power outages are a common occurrence in the area surrounding the post office, so the request was not far out the ordinary, nor did it raise much suspicion.

 

When the student returned after 2 p.m., the rest of the staff had left for the day. Botha locked the door behind Mrwetyana, proceeding to raped her. When she wouldn’t stop screaming, the employee beat her to death with post office scales, folded her body into the trunk of his car, and proceeded to set it on fire, according to news stories.

In a post on the official account for the Royals, the Duchess can be seen tying a ribbon at the site of Mrwetyana’s murder. The image is caption,  “Simi kunye kulesisimo” – ‘We stand together in this moment.’

The caption also details Markle’s private visit with Mrwetyana’s mother.

“The Duke and Duchess had been following what had happened from afar and were both eager to learn more when they arrived in South Africa. The Duchess spoke to the mother of Uyinene this week to relay their condolences,” the post reads.

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“Simi kunye kulesisimo” – ‘We stand together in this moment’ The Duchess of Sussex has tied a ribbon at the site where 19-year-old Cape Town student Uyinene Mrwetyana was murdered last month, to pay her respects and to show solidarity with those who have taken a stand against gender based violence and femicide. Over the last month in Capetown, protests erupted through the streets in outrage over GBV in South Africa. The Duke and Duchess had been following what had happened from afar and were both eager to learn more when they arrived in South Africa. The Duchess spoke to the mother of Uyinene this week to relay their condolences. Visiting the site of this tragic death and being able to recognise Uyinene, and all women and girls effected by GBV (specifically in South Africa, but also throughout the world) was personally important to The Duchess. Uyinene’s death has mobilised people across South Africa in the fight against gender based violence, and is seen as a critical point in the future of women’s rights in South Africa. The Duchess has taken private visits and meetings over the last two days to deepen her understanding of the current situation and continue to advocate for the rights of women and girls. For more information on the recent events in South Africa, please see link in bio. #AmINext

A post shared by The Duke and Duchess of Sussex (@sussexroyal) on

 

It continued, ” Uyinene’s death has mobilized people across South Africa in the fight against gender based violence, and is seen as a critical point in the future of women’s rights in South Africa. The Duchess has taken private visits and meetings over the last two days to deepen her understanding of the current situation and continue to advocate for the rights of women and girls.”

The Instagram post then prompts followers to learn more about the #IAmNext movement, and how more people can gain awareness on the sexual assault epidemic plaguing the women of South Africa.

Currently the royal family is touring various parts of Africa, including a Johannesburg visit by Markle, to a charity that helps to raise awareness of sexual violence in schools.

The royal family’s Africa visit ends on Oct. 2.

READ MORE: Michelle Obama praises Meghan Markle for ’breaking the mold’ during royal Africa tour

The post Meghan Markle visits memorial of slain South African student, urges #AmINext movement awareness appeared first on theGrio.



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Mugabe funeral: Zimbabwe ex-president laid to rest in Kutama

Zimbabwe's ex-president is laid to rest in Kutama, three weeks after his death at the age of 95.

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Melanin In Milan: Prada’s Social Media Manager, Candace Marie, on inclusivity in fashion

Social media maven and expertise Candace Marie Stewart recently opened up about her latest role as PRADA‘s Social Media Manager.

The Seton Hall University alum, whose resume boasts the likes of Barney’s New York, Refinery 29, and more, also holds an MBA in finance. Back in April, Prada hired Marie, months after the company faced some Black-lash for their racially-insensitive “monkey” paraphernalia. Fast-forward, and now Marie is the woman behind the most forward-facing asset of the brand: their social media presence.

READ MORE: Ava DuVernay selected to co-chair Prada advisory board on diversity and inclusion

In an interview with XONecole this year, Marie opened up about how the fashion world, as a whole, urging the need for more inclusion both behind the scenes and in front of it.

“They [the fashion industry] can do way better. So much is hidden and deep-rooted that they don’t realize what it is. I could be sitting in a board meeting and I question why am I the only black person out of 45 people that are here?” I’m analyzing it in my head; there’s not one other person of color in the room,” Marie stated.

Marie is currently attending her first fashion week in Milan, courtesy of the many perks that come with working at PRADA.

 

In her interview with XONecole, she details how Fashion Week still has a ways to go in including people of color.

“I’ve had conversations with peers who are Black or a minority and we don’t want to be the Bible for all things black. It needs to be a shift and a change. I honestly noticed it more as I started to travel and go to Fashion Weeks. You’re not seeing any other women of color at the shows especially going into the luxury space. I remember a photographer told me he was shooting me because he wanted to make the street style some type of diverse. It’s not their fault.”

READ MORE: Supermodel Naomi Campbell takes spotlight at London Fashion Week

The post Melanin In Milan: Prada’s Social Media Manager, Candace Marie, on inclusivity in fashion appeared first on theGrio.



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NAACP supports Byron Allen in $20B discrimination suit against Comcast

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) has released an exclusive statement in response to Comcast cable network’s ongoing legal battle with Byron Allen Entertainment Studios, in which Comcast requests the Supreme Court to weaken protections laid out in the Civil Rights Act of 1866.

As it stands, Comcast is currently in the midst of a $20 billion racial discrimination lawsuit with Byron Allen Entertainment Studios. Back in 2015, media mogul Byron Allen sued the cable and media giant after it refused to carry his digital television channels, including Pets.TV and Cars.TV.

READ MORE: BYRON ALLEN: Donald Trump’s Department of Justice and Comcast are Working Together to Destroy a Civil Rights Law in the U.S. Supreme Court

Allen claims that the cable operator is in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which explicitly prohibits racial discrimination in contracting, by refusing to carry networks owned by his company and/or other Black-owned media companies.

The Chairman/Founder and CEO of Entertainment Studios’ lawsuit also pointed to Section 1981 of the Act, which says that all people should have “the same right … to make and enforce contracts … as is enjoyed by white citizens.”

READ MORE: Killer Mike demands Black people stand with Byron Allen in discrimination fight against Comcast going to the Supreme Court

Earlier this year, an Amicus Brief filed by the Department of Justice requested Allen prove that race was a motivating factor in his claim that Comcast was in violation of the Civil Right Act.

Allen responded to the DOJ with a statement of his own:

“This is historic,” Allen said of the brief filed in January. “Donald Trump’s DOJ and Comcast are working together to destroy a civil rights statute in the U.S. Supreme Court.

“You have one of the biggest media companies in the world, which has been beating up Donald Trump for racism, and now they are saying we will work together to maintain institutionalized racism in America, in this Amicus Brief they delivered,” Allen continued.

READ MORE: Byron Allen calls out Comcast and Justice Dept. for “institutionalized racism” after new brief filed

Fast forward, and the NAACP has come forward in support of Allen for his upcoming battle. On Thursday (September 26), the organization released an exclusive statement, detailing Allen’s ongoing suit, and requesting protection against discrimination for Allen:

“For more than a century, Section 1981 has been used as an important tool to combat race discrimination, particularly for employment discrimination claimants,” the statement said.

It continued, “Yet now, in a situation that has become all too familiar during this era, an upcoming Supreme Court decision has the potential to reject these lessons of history by rolling back the clock on basic civil rights.”

The $20 billion suit is set to forward to the Supreme Court November 13.

The post NAACP supports Byron Allen in $20B discrimination suit against Comcast appeared first on theGrio.



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Equatorial Guinea: Angel Lopez steps down as national coach

Equatorial Guinea coach Angel Lopez quits his job just one year after taking over, saying he needs a new challenge.

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Spider-Man To Keep Spinning A Web In The Marvel Cinematic Universe

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Spider-Man, the popular web-slinging superhero currently played by actor Tom Holland, will headline a new movie in 2021 and appear in a future Marvel Studios film under a deal announced Friday by Sony Corp and Walt Disney Co.

The agreement between the Hollywood studios was welcome news to fans who had feared that a corporate dispute would keep Spider-Man out of the blockbuster Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU).

“I am thrilled that Spidey’s journey in the MCU will continue”, Feige said in a statement.

In August, Disney-owned Marvel Studios and Sony’s Sony Pictures were at an impasse over Spider-Man’s future. Sony owns the rights to the Marvel character under a long-standing arrangement, while Disney controls others such as Iron Man, the Hulk, Captain Marvel and Black Panther.

The news about the breakup had disappointed fans, who took to Twitter to start a campaign with hashtags “#SaveSpiderMan” and “#SaveSpidey”.

Under the new deal, Marvel Studios and its president, Kevin Feige, will produce a third film starring Holland that will be released on July 16, 2021, a statement from the companies said. Amy Pascal also will be a producer.

The most recent film in the series, June release “Spider-Man: Far From Home,” ranks as Sony Pictures’ highest-grossing film, fetching $1.11 billion at global box offices.

Spider-Man also will appear in a future Marvel Studios film, the companies said.

(Reporting by Ayanti Bera in Bengaluru and Lisa Richwine in Los Angeles; Editing by Patrick Graham, Arun Koyyur and David Gregorio)



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6 Best Game Controllers (2019): PC, Xbox, PS4, Switch

A great gamepad can help you play better, and these are the best of the best for Switch, Xbox, PS4, and PC.

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A DoorDash Breach Exposes Data of 4.9 Million Customers

A NotPetya lawsuit, bricked Mac Pros, and more of the week's top security news.

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Greta Thunberg's Digital Rise Calls Back to a Pre-Digital Era

The climate activist's ability to dominate social media is powerful—and, surprisingly, similar to what young people did in the 1960s.

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Reclaiming Sci-Fi's Lost History

Many sci-fi and fantasy authors didn't get recognized in their time. It's time they got their due.

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10 Best Android Phones of 2019 (New, Unlocked, and Cheap)

Wonder what the absolute best Android phone is right now? We have the answer, and some alternatives, including Google Pixel, OnePlus, Samsung Galaxy, LG, Moto, and more.

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Meghan 'shows solidarity' at memorial of murdered student

The duchess visits a memorial to "show solidarity" with protesters against gender-based violence.

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The Goose Game Is on Sale! And 13 More Great Tech Deals

From mini drones to soundbars, here are our favorite discounts around the web.

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Porsche Taycan Review: The Best Electric Car $150K Can Buy

The all-new sport sedan may be the world's most advanced car—we just wish it felt more like a Porsche of old.

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What Past Whistle-Blowers Think of the Trump-Ukraine Complaint

Two former intelligence community whistle-blowers say the life of whoever wrote the Trump-Ukraine complaint has been permanently altered.

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Chepngetich wins marathon in gruelling heat

Kenya's Ruth Chepngetich wins the women's marathon at the World Championships as 28 of the 68 starters withdraw in gruelling conditions in Doha.

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Friday, September 27, 2019

Letter from Africa: The dilemma of how to appease Mugabe's spirit

The controversial Zimbabwean leader is due to be buried, three weeks after his death.

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Rebecca Zoro: Beyoncé designer on how she reached the top

Ivorian designer Rebecca Zoro describes how it feels to see Beyoncé wearing her outfits.

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Black girl terrorized by white boys who held her down and cut off her ‘ugly’ locs at Christian school

A young Black girl at a predominately white private school in Virginia was abused and suffered through a traumatic incident involving three white classmates who held her down and cut off her locs.

Kids in Bahamas stranded with schools damaged by hurricane

The family of Amari Allen are outraged that the 12-year-old girl was harassed, called “ugly” and told her hair was “nappy” by white boys enrolled at the Immanuel Christian School in Fairfax, Virginia.

“They said my hair was nappy and I was ugly,” Amari told News4.

During the horrifying ordeal, Amari said one boy held her hands behind her back, while the others clipped off her locs with scissors.

“They kept laughing and calling me names,” Amari told WUSA9. “They called me ‘ugly,’ [and] said I shouldn’t have been born.”

The girl, with tears in her eyes, said the boys ran along after the bell rang and left her lying on the ground.

There is no word about where teachers were during this terrifying event, which reportedly lasted about five minutes.

Amari is an honor student who earned straight-A’s and plays the violin. On Wednesday, Amari’s grandmother noticed her hair was shorter and asked her what happened.

“It’s very painful,” Cynthia Allen said. “I want to see them dismissed from the school. I want to see something done.”

Florida cop who arrested 6-year-old girl over school tantrum fired

The school as reportedly launched an investigation.

“We take seriously the emotional and physical well-being of all our students, and have a zero-tolerance policy for any kind of bullying or abuse,” Head of School Stephen Danish said in a statement.

The family also reported the violent assault to Fairfax County Police and met with administrators on Thursday.

The school has been in the news for other discriminatory practices in the past due to their staunch anti-gay stance and the banning gay and transgender students. It also requires job applicants to pledge marriage is only between a man and woman, the outlet reports.

Mike Pence’s wife Karen also reportedly teaches art at the controversial Christian school twice a week.

The post Black girl terrorized by white boys who held her down and cut off her ‘ugly’ locs at Christian school appeared first on theGrio.



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Black Women in Tech: Dell’s Only Black Woman Senior Vice President

Najuma Atkinson has built a 20-year career at Dell Technologies Inc. Earlier this year, she joined Dell’s Chief Customer Office organization as the senior vice president for customer advocacy, insights & analytics, becoming Dell’s only African American female SVP and one of few senior black women in tech.

Atkinson started her career in finance after earning her bachelor of arts degree in political science from Fisk University. In 1999, she took a job at Dell as a tech support manager but quickly transitioned to human resources. She got a master’s degree in organizational management from Trevecca Nazarene University, and over the next two decades she worked her way up from HR operations manager to vice president.

Now, she and her team are responsible for customer data and analytics strategy, including using data science to improve the quality of Dell’s proprietary customer data, developing products that monetize that data, and addressing customer pain points. Here she shares how she became one of the few black women in tech to make it to her level.

How did you start your career?

I graduated from Fisk University with a science degree. But I went to the financial industry because they’re willing to give you any opportunities. So I actually worked for SunTrust bank first as an analyst. And that’s where I found that I have a proclivity for data, and information, and for numbers. I came to Dell Technologies as the front line tech support manager. At Dell, we were opening up our first call center outside of Central Texas, and they wanted leaders. They really didn’t care that you had technical capability or capacity. But they wanted to make sure that you had good leadership skills; I had those. And that’s how I got the first opportunity. About 18 months later, I moved into HR.

You built up a 20-year career in HR. Why did you decide to make a transition?

When you think about the skills, it really was a natural transition. I started to look for opportunities that would leverage those skills—how do I bring together groups of individuals, using facts and data to solve problems and create solutions that empower people and make situations better? HR is definitely one of those places to do it. But I wanted to do it for our customer.

I had an opportunity to see our chief customer officer, Karen Quintos, in action. She was talking about the work that she did in the broad organization and I’m like, “Well, that’s fascinating.” So I was at an event with Michael Dell, and I took the opportunity. I said, ‘”You know what really interests me, Michael? I think my next career should be in the chief customer office. I’m really interested in that space, and I’d like to explore it more if I’m ever given the opportunity.” Karen heard about that. And Karen is one who looks for skills and capabilities, not necessarily job titles, as she’s adding individuals to her team. She felt like if this was something I wanted to explore, I should be given that opportunity.

The more I interviewed and the more I spoke to people, the more I said, “Yeah, this is for me.” This is an organization that I think is at a pivot. It’s got broad, complex things that they’re looking at. And I do that very well. I take the complex and make it really, really simple. So I was bringing the skills that I had so that we could drive strategy for the organization.

Atkinson at the Dell BE Smart Student Symposium (Image: Black Enterprise)

There’s a huge lesson there in asking for what you want.

What’s the worst that could happen, right? He could say, “Well, that’s very interesting” and then we could change the subject. Or he could listen. And that’s what he looks for. He wants people that have perspective and opinion, and they’ll go after what they want. That’s what our organization is about.

You were successful at what you were already doing. What made you comfortable making that kind of leap?

I think those individuals that are successful are those that are risk-takers, that understand that you may not know everything and have 100% of the answer. But if you’ve got like 70%, then you should go for it. Was it a risk? It definitely was. I had built my career in HR, my credibility was there, my successes were there, most of my sponsors were there. I was going to be completely stepping outside of that and moving away from those relationships and that support to try something new. At the same time, nothing ventured, nothing gained.

If I stayed where I was, I could continue to do really great work. But would that be good for Dell? Was it the best thing where I could be the most impactful? They can’t have you play small, and let’s be No. 1, right? We can’t go after market share, achieve success, if people play small. This is a unique environment in that it truly allows you to be empowered and to try stuff that has never been tried. That’s what innovation is all about.

It can be difficult for black women in tech. What challenges have come specifically with making the transition into this role?

One of the interesting challenges is credibility when you work with highly technical people. I work with Ph.D.s, data scientists. They live and breathe data, they design strategies, they build infrastructure, these are like the big brain, Mensa people. And that is not who I am. And that’s not what I bring to the table. But I’ve worked very quickly to build credibility, and I did it by being authentic. I will never be as good as you are in that space. And I don’t need to be. Here’s where I think I have value.

Then going out there and figuring out what are all the things that we need to go after, and synthesizing that into two to three key actions that align to the overall vision of my leader. Those are my biggest challenges right now. I’m on a listening tour. I’m talking to my key stakeholders and our customers. And I’m like, “What do you need from us? How can we help you? What have we done effectively? And what would you like to see differently from us?” This is an environment that moves very fast. So I know that I have to quickly pivot and move to action. When you’re at a senior level, they want you to make an impact. That is why they put you in the job.



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Three Simple Tests Might Help Prevent Athletes' Injuries

Coaches in the NFL and elsewhere are using software that claims to identify a player's weak spots. All it takes is a force plate—and a leap of faith.

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Enjoy Free Internet at the Library? You Can Thank This Woman

Librarian Jean Armour Polly along with African pioneer Adiel Akplogan are among this year's 11 inductees to the Internet Hall of Fame.

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Gadget Lab Podcast: Spot, the Robot Dog, Learns New Tricks

Matt Simon tells us how the internet sensation’s deployment into the workplace could alter the future of human-bot relations.

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Prosecution rests in Amber Guyger murder trial while defense team now prepares to get the former Dallas officer off

Testimony in the Amber Guyger murder trial continued on Thursday as prosecutors continued to interview witnesses who could attest to her culpability in the death of 26-year old St. Lucian accountant, Botham Jean. The prosecution has rested its case and today, Guyger’s attorneys will have their chance to present her side of the story.

Jean, who was an unarmed Black man, was shot to death by Guyger, a former police officer, when she entered the wrong unit in their Dallas apartment building last September. Guyger was off duty at the time, but has since been fired from the police force.

Her defense team has professed that Guyger acted in self-defense after seeing Jean’s “large silhouette” (which she believed to be a burglar) as she opened the door, but the prosecution says that’s a lie.

READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: Civil Rights Attorney Benjamin Crump demands former Dallas officer, Amber Guyger be charged with tampering of evidence and conspiracy on top of murder

The Dallas D.A.’s office has taken most of the week to attempt to prove that Guyger used excessive force and that Jean, who was sitting in the dark, watching television as he enjoyed a bowl of ice cream, posed to visible threat to her whatsoever.

Assistant District Attorney Jason Hermus shows Botham Jean’s door mat to the jury during his opening statement before the jury. (Tom Fox/The Dallas Morning News/Pool)

Called to the stand today were Dallas Officer Tu Nguyen. According to the Dallas News, Nguyen’s was one of the officers on the scene who attepted to help Jean by raising his legs onto a pillow in order to move the blood back to Jean’s heart.

READ MORE: Amber Guyger murder trial: Listen to her frantic 911 call

Texas Ranger Michael Adcock who testified that Guyger had a knife and pepper spray in her tool belt, helped to establish the idea that she had other means of stopping a potential intruder if she felt that her life was in danger. The fact that she reached and used her firearm would then not be deemed a reasonable decision.

Assistant District Attorney Jason Hermus questioned firearm/toolmark expert, April Kendrick, who provided details about the 9mm service gun Guyger used to kill Jean including projectile distance and bullet casings. This was to gain a better understanding of whether or not Jean was sitting on the couch when he was shot or standing in front of Guyger.

READ MORE: Family of Botham Jean holds press conference after Dallas police officer arrested for manslaughter

Independent Criminal Investigator, Michael Grice said on the stand that he collected Jean’s red front door mat three days after the shooting, and not the Dallas Police Department. This is a key piece of evidence since it was a rather huge indicator that Guyger was in front of the wrong apartment, 1478 and not 1378.


Wendy L. Wilson is the managing editor of theGrio. Follow her rants, raves, and reviews on Twitter @WendyLWilson_

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Sade’s transgender son thanks famous mom for support during sex reassignment surgery

Sade is surely cherishing the day her son came through has sex reassignment surgery stronger and more encouraged by the experience than ever.

Sade reveals she’s a Drake fan and the Internet is losing it

The Grammy-winning singer’s son, Izaak Theo Adu, took time out to thank his mom for being his strength as he braved surgery to transition from female to male.

For the last six months, Sade’s 23-year-old on was reportedly in recovery and emerged publicly to give a shout out to his mom by posting a picture hugging her and thanking her for her unwavering support.

“It’s been a long hard road but We did it!! We are coming home!!!!,” he wrote.

“Thank you for staying by my side these past 6 months Mumma. Thank you for fighting with me to complete the man I am.”

“Thank you for your encouragement when things are hard, for the love you give me. The purest heart. I love you so much. Queen of queens ♥️ #mumma #lioness #queen#iloveyou.”

“It’s been a long hard road but We did it!! We are coming home!!!!
Thank you for staying by my side these past 6 months Mumma. Thank you for fighting with me to complete the man I am. Thank you for your encouragement when things are hard, for the love you give me. The purest heart. I love you so much. Queen of queens ♥️ #mumma #lioness #queen #iloveyou.”

Sade shares Adu with reggae music producer Bob Morgan, his father.

Sade to make musical return with original song for ‘A Wrinkle in Time’

In July Adu opened up about enduring sex reassignment surgery in an emotional post on social media.

“This process is trying, tiring, painful, emotionally exhausting, physically exhausting, uncomfortable (like I can’t sleep like a normal human being rn lol) I often ask myself “why the fuck do I have to endure this to be who I am” but at the end of the day this is the path that was laid out for me and I’ll walk it to the end. My dad always says “keep your eyes on the horizon” and that’s what I do, because through all this pain is the comfort that it’s not forever and I have the rest of my life ahead of me and I am so, SO DAMN EXCITED, I just have to remind myself to be patient sometimes as I’m sure we all do. Big up to my Mumma, Pappa, family and friends for all the support you give me on the daily, it’ll never be forgotten ☺️ ?? #ftm #trans #transgender #transman#tpoc #tmoc #selfmademan#phalloplasty #thisiswhattranslookslike#yaaaaas,” he posted.

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‘OK’ hand gesture and other racist symbols added to Anti-Defamation League ‘hate’ database

The ‘OK’ hand gesture, made famous by white supremacists, and the ‘Bowlcut’ hairdo worn by “Charlotte Nine” killer Dylan Roof, are just a few of the hate symbols added to an Anti-Defamation League database.

Former NFL player accused of staging a fake hate crime says he’s innocent

At least 36 new entries tied to white supremacists and other far-right extremist are now included along with hateful symbols like the burning crosses, Ku Klux Klan robes, the swastika and many others, Al.com reports.

The Jewish civil rights group added the symbols to its “Hate on Display” in an effort to assist law enforcement with identifying the emblems that has become hallmarks for hate.

“Even as extremists continue to use symbols that may be years or decades old, they regularly create new symbols, memes and slogans to express their hateful sentiments,” Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a statement.

There are at least 200 entries now in the online database.

The “Dylann Roof Bowlcut,” was added by the ADL because it became synonymous with the killing of nine Black churchgoers in Charleston who were killed in 2015 by Roof who sported the ugly hairdo.

In addition, Jeffrey Clark, a white supremacist, had deep tied to the alt-right and boasted a Facebook username called ‘DC Bowl Gang’. He also bragged that Pittsburgh synagogue shooting victims “deserved exactly what happened to them and so much worse,” an FBI agent wrote in a court filing for gun charges against Clark, the outlet reports.

Emmett Till investigation still underway 60 years post death

The post ‘OK’ hand gesture and other racist symbols added to Anti-Defamation League ‘hate’ database appeared first on theGrio.



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VIRAL VIDEO: Racist woman who said she wants to ‘kill all n*ggers’ identified and fired

A racist while woman who screamed violent anti-Black slurs saying she wanted to “kill n*ggers” at a CVS has been identified.

Emmett Till investigation still underway 60 years post death

The women in a viral video ranting about killing n*ggers has been named as Heather Lynn Patton, Heavy reports.

On the video the woman can clearly be seen and heard spewing hateful threats: “I would kill a n***er but the law says I can’t kill the n***ers. If the law didn’t say I couldn’t kill the n***ers they’d all be dead.”

The other woman who recorded the nasty rant replied that the belligerent woman was “on drugs or something.” Patton turned around and replied, “No, I just hate n***ers.”

Patton screamed racist obscenities while at an Eagle Rock CVS in California. She reportedly is a costume designer who has worked on various film and TV projects including The Americans and Rescue Me.

The incident reportedly happened on The incident occurred on September 24 and went viral the next day. Patton can be heard saying n*gger a number of times and shouted “f*ck you n*ggers,” when a man passed by her.

Renee Saldana, who witnessed the racist incident, wrote on Twitter, “This happened yesterday afternoon. I was also there and got video of this woman’s racist rant at CVS in Eagle Rock.”

Saldana said there was nothing obvious that happened that provoked the racist outbursts from Patton.

Former NFL player accused of staging a fake hate crime says he’s innocent

She added, “There were at least a dozen witnesses and there was more yelling going on inside before the video starts. That woman was freaking out everyone in the store shouting about lynching Black people. There were 2 shoppers who saw her drive up & said she was driving erratically when she parked. When the woman took off after the rant, she was speeding west on Colorado driving on the wrong side of the street. Other frightened customers kept saying, ‘She could kill someone!’”

Saldana said she reported the incident to CVS.

After the social media outcry, the film and TV costume designer Heather Patton issued an apology on her Instagram page and claims she’s been fired.

The LAPD is also reportedly investigating the incident as a possible hate crime.

And according to IndieWire, there is an online petition being circulated by fellow costumer and Local 705 member Sarah de Sa Rego, calling for other union members to file complaints against Patton and request her immediate expulsion. De Sa Rego recommends that Patton be cited for violating “Article 11 section 2 ‘action unbecoming of a union member’ as well as ‘actions which reflect to discredit this union and its members.’”

The post VIRAL VIDEO: Racist woman who said she wants to ‘kill all n*ggers’ identified and fired appeared first on theGrio.



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NASA Wants to Send Nuclear Rockets to the Moon and Mars

It’s baaaack: Nuclear propulsion, first floated in the ’60s, is hot again. President Trump’s Mars ambitions might even hinge on it.

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Angolan family in South Korea airport for nine months win court fight

The Angolan family, trapped in a South Korean airport for nine months, can now seek asylum.

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Alphonso Davies: The Bayern Munich winger born in a refugee camp

Bayern Munich 'wunderkind' Alphonso Davies, who was born in a refugee camp in Ghana.

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Dakar's Massalikul Jinaan mosque: The 'biggest in West Africa'

Massalikul Jinaan mosque opens in Dakar, Senegal after seven years of work.

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Manchester City's Nabil Touaizi commits to Morocco

Spain-born Nabil Touaizi, who is part of Manchester City's Elite Development Squad, commits to playing for Morocco.

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Nigeria 'torture house': Hundreds freed after Kaduna police raid

Nearly 500 men and boys were tortured, sexually abused, chained up and starved, police say.

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Thursday, September 26, 2019

Photovoltaic-powered sensors for the “internet of things”

By 2025, experts estimate the number of “internet of things” devices — including sensors that gather real-time data about infrastructure and the environment — could rise to 75 billion worldwide. As it stands, however, those sensors require batteries that must be replaced frequently, which can be problematic for long-term monitoring.  

MIT researchers have designed photovoltaic-powered sensors that could potentially transmit data for years before they need to be replaced. To do so, they mounted thin-film perovskite cells — known for their potential low cost, flexibility, and relative ease of fabrication — as energy-harvesters on inexpensive radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags.

The cells could power the sensors in both bright sunlight and dimmer indoor conditions. Moreover, the team found the solar power actually gives the sensors a major power boost that enables greater data-transmission distances and the ability to integrate multiple sensors onto a single RFID tag.

“In the future, there could be billions of sensors all around us. With that scale, you’ll need a lot of batteries that you’ll have to recharge constantly. But what if you could self-power them using the ambient light? You could deploy them and forget them for months or years at a time,” says Sai Nithin Kantareddy, a PhD student in the MIT Auto-ID Laboratory. “This work is basically building enhanced RFID tags using energy harvesters for a range of applications.”

In a pair of papers published in the journals Advanced Functional Materials and IEEE Sensors, MIT Auto-ID Laboratory and MIT Photovoltaics Research Laboratory researchers describe using the sensors to continuously monitor indoor and outdoor temperatures over several days. The sensors transmitted data continuously at distances five times greater than traditional RFID tags — with no batteries required. Longer data-transmission ranges mean, among other things, that one reader can be used to collect data from multiple sensors simultaneously.

Depending on certain factors in their environment, such as moisture and heat, the sensors can be left inside or outside for months or, potentially, years at a time before they degrade enough to require replacement. That can be valuable for any application requiring long-term sensing, indoors and outdoors, including tracking cargo in supply chains, monitoring soil, and monitoring the energy used by equipment in buildings and homes.

Joining Kantareddy on the papers are: Department of Mechanical Engineering (MechE) postdoc Ian Matthews, researcher Shijing Sun, chemical engineering student Mariya Layurova, researcher Janak Thapa, researcher Ian Marius Peters, and Georgia Tech Professor Juan-Pablo Correa-Baena, who are all members of the Photovoltaics Research Laboratory; Rahul Bhattacharyya, a researcher in the AutoID Lab; Tonio Buonassisi, a professor in MechE; and Sanjay E. Sarma, the Fred Fort Flowers and Daniel Fort Flowers Professor of Mechanical Engineering.

Combining two low-cost technologies


In recent attempts to create self-powered sensors, other researchers have used solar cells as energy sources for internet of things (IoT) devices. But those are basically shrunken-down versions of traditional solar cells — not perovskite. The traditional cells can be efficient, long-lasting, and powerful under certain conditions “but are really infeasible for ubiquitous IoT sensors,” Kantareddy says.

Traditional solar cells, for instance, are bulky and expensive to manufacture, plus they are inflexible and cannot be made transparent, which can be useful for temperature-monitoring sensors placed on windows and car windshields. They’re also really only designed to efficiently harvest energy from powerful sunlight, not low indoor light.

Perovskite cells, on the other hand, can be printed using easy roll-to-roll manufacturing techniques for a few cents each; made thin, flexible, and transparent; and tuned to harvest energy from any kind of indoor and outdoor lighting.

The idea, then, was combining a low-cost power source with low-cost RFID tags, which are battery-free stickers used to monitor billions of products worldwide. The stickers are equipped with tiny, ultra-high-frequency antennas that each cost around three to five cents to make.

RFID tags rely on a communication technique called “backscatter,” that transmits data by reflecting modulated wireless signals off the tag and back to a reader. A wireless device called a reader — basically similar to a Wi-Fi router — pings the tag, which powers up and backscatters a unique signal containing information about the product it’s stuck to.

Traditionally, the tags harvest a little of the radio-frequency energy sent by the reader to power up a little chip inside that stores data, and uses the remaining energy to modulate the returning signal. But that amounts to only a few microwatts of power, which limits their communication range to less than a meter.

The researchers’ sensor consists of an RFID tag built on a plastic substrate. Directly connected to an integrated circuit on the tag is an array of perovskite solar cells. As with traditional systems, a reader sweeps the room, and each tag responds. But instead of using energy from the reader, it draws harvested energy from the perovskite cell to power up its circuit and send data by backscattering RF signals.

Efficiency at scale

The key innovations are in the customized cells. They’re fabricated in layers, with perovskite material sandwiched between an electrode, cathode, and special electron-transport layer materials. This achieved about 10 percent efficiency, which is fairly high for still-experimental perovskite cells. This layering structure also enabled the researchers to tune each cell for its optimal “bandgap,” which is an electron-moving property that dictates a cell’s performance in different lighting conditions. They then combined the cells into modules of four cells.

In the Advanced Functional Materials paper, the modules generated 4.3 volts of electricity under one sun illumination, which is a standard measurement for how much voltage solar cells produce under sunlight. That’s enough to power up a circuit — about 1.5 volts — and send data around 5 meters every few seconds. The modules had similar performances in indoor lighting. The IEEE Sensors paper primarily demonstrated wide‐bandgap perovskite cells for indoor applications that achieved between 18.5 percent and 21. 4 percent efficiencies under indoor fluorescent lighting, depending on how much voltage they generate. Essentially, about 45 minutes of any light source will power the sensors indoors and outdoors for about three hours.  

The RFID circuit was prototyped to only monitor temperature. Next, the researchers aim to scale up and add more environmental-monitoring sensors to the mix, such as humidity, pressure, vibration, and pollution. Deployed at scale, the sensors could especially aid in long-term data-collection indoors to help build, say, algorithms that help make smart buildings more energy efficient.

“The perovskite materials we use have incredible potential as effective indoor-light harvesters. Our next step is to integrate these same technologies using printed electronics methods, potentially enabling extremely low-cost manufacturing of wireless sensors," Mathews says.



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Using math to blend musical notes seamlessly

In music, “portamento” is a term that’s been used for hundreds of years, referring to the effect of gliding a note at one pitch into a note of a lower or higher pitch. But only instruments that can continuously vary in pitch — such as the human voice, string instruments, and trombones — can pull off the effect.

Now an MIT student has invented a novel algorithm that produces a portamento effect between any two audio signals in real-time. In experiments, the algorithm seamlessly merged various audio clips, such as a piano note gliding into a human voice, and one song blending into another. His paper describing the algorithm won the “best student paper” award at the recent International Conference on Digital Audio Effects.

The algorithm relies on “optimal transport,” a geometry-based framework that determines the most efficient ways to move objects — or data points — between multiple origin and destination configurations. Formulated in the 1700s, the framework has been applied to supply chains, fluid dynamics, image alignment, 3-D modeling, computer graphics, and more.

In work that originated in a class project, Trevor Henderson, now a graduate student in computer science, applied optimal transport to interpolating audio signals — or blending one signal into another. The algorithm first breaks the audio signals into brief segments. Then, it finds the optimal way to move the pitches in  each segment to pitches in the other signal, to produce the smooth glide of the portamento effect. The algorithm also includes specialized techniques to maintain the fidelity of the audio signal as it transitions.

“Optimal transport is used here to determine how to map pitches in one sound to the pitches in the other,” says Henderson, a classically trained organist who performs electronic music and has been a DJ on WMBR 88.1, MIT’s radio station. “If it’s transforming one chord into a chord with a different harmony, or with more notes, for instance, the notes will split from the first chord and find a position to seamlessly glide to in the other chord.”

According to Henderson, this is one of the first techniques to apply optimal transport to transforming audio signals. He has already used the algorithm to build equipment that seamlessly transitions between songs on his radio show. DJs could also use the equipment to transition between tracks during live performances. Other musicians might use it to blend instruments and voice on stage or in the studio.

Henderson’s co-author on the paper is Justin Solomon, an X-Consortium Career Development Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Solomon — who also plays cello and piano — leads the Geometric Data Processing Group in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) and is a member of the Center for Computational Engineering.

Henderson took Solomon’s class, 6.838 (Shape Analysis), which tasks students with applying geometric tools like optimal transport to real-world applications. Student projects usually focus on 3-D shapes from virtual reality or computer graphics. So Henderson’s project came as a surprise to Solomon. “Trevor saw an abstract connection between geometry and moving frequencies around in audio signals to create a portamento effect,” Solomon says. “He was in and out of my office all semester with DJ equipment. It wasn’t what I expected to see, but it was pretty entertaining.”

For Henderson, it wasn’t too much of a stretch. “When I see a new idea, I ask, ‘Is this applicable to music?’” he says. “So, when we talked about optimal transport, I wondered what would happen if I connected it to audio spectra.”

A good way to think of optimal transport, Henderson says, is finding “a lazy way to build a sand castle.” In that analogy, the framework is used to calculate the way to move each grain of sand from its position in a shapeless pile into a corresponding position in a sand castle, using as little work as possible. In computer graphics, for instance, optimal transport can be used to transform or morph shapes by finding the optimal movement from each point on one shape into the other.

Applying this theory to audio clips involves some additional ideas from signal processing. Musical instruments produce sound through vibrations of components, depending on the instrument. Violins use strings, brass instruments use air inside hollow bodies, and humans use vocal cords. These vibrations can be captured as audio signals, where the frequency and amplitude (peak height) represent different pitches. 

Conventionally, the transition between two audio signals is done with a fade, where one signal is reduced in volume while the other rises. Henderson’s algorithm, on the other hand, smoothly slides frequency segments from one clip into another, with no fading of volume.

To do so, the algorithm splits any two audio clips into windows of about 50 milliseconds. Then, it runs a Fourier transform, which turns each window into its frequency components. The frequency components within a window are lumped together into individual synthesized “notes.” Optimal transport then maps how the notes in one signal’s window will move to the notes in the other.

Then, an “interpolation parameter” takes over. That’s basically a value that determines where each note will be on the path from its starting pitch in one signal to its ending pitch in the other. Manually changing the parameter value will sweep the pitches between the two positions, producing the portamento effect. That single parameter can also be programmed into and controlled by, say, a crossfader, a slider component on a DJ’s mixing board that smoothly fades between songs. As the crossfader slides, the interpolation parameter changes to produce the effect.

Behind the scenes are two innovations that ensure a distortion-free signal. First, Henderson used a novel application of a signal-processing technique, called “frequency reassignment,” that lumps the frequency bins together to form single notes that can easily transition between signals. Second, he invented a way to synthesize new phases for each audio signal while stitching together the 50-millisecond windows, so neighboring windows don’t interfere with each other.

Next, Henderson wants to experiment with feeding the output of the effect back into its input. This, he thinks, could automatically create another classic music effect, “legato,” which is a smooth transition between distinct notes. Unlike a portamento — which plays all notes between a start and end note — a legato seamlessly transitions between two distinct notes, without capturing any notes in between.



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Feds Say Boeing 737s Need to Be Better Designed for Humans

A National Transportation Safety Board review of two fatal crashes suggests pilots may have been overwhelmed by multiple alerts and warnings.

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Uber's New Features Put a Focus on Rider Safety

Passengers will be able to text 911 from inside the app. Uber also is offering new ways to confirm a driver's identity.

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Prince Harry in southern Africa: Where are the world's landmines?

Prince Harry will highlight the fact that landmines continue to take thousands of lives.

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Africa's top shots: 20-26 September 2019

A selection of the week's best photos from across the continent.

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Jimmy Jean-Louis discusses powerful foreign film ‘Deserances’

Last week, Deserances premiered at the Urbanworld Film Festival in NYC and we can’t wait for you to see this powerful foreign film starring Claws alum, Jimmy Jean-Louis. 

Directed by African Director Apolline Traore, who hails from Burkina Faso, the film will be the country’s first-ever Oscars submission.

Desrances tells the story of Francis (Jimmy Jean-Louis) who is expecting a second child, a son. He looks forward to the birth of his heir. For Francis, having a son is crucial since the destruction of his country was devastated by a horrific earthquake in January 2010. His joy of welcoming a son to his happy family is short lived. While Aissey is about to give birth, a civil war breaks out in Abidjan. His newborn son, and his wife have disappeared. Despite his refusal, his 12-year-old daughter Haïla decides to accompany him on his quest. Francis discovers the unsuspected courage of Haïla.

We caught up with Jimmy Jean-Louis and Apolline Traore to find out how they created this stirring piece of art that highlights several social issues in a truly provocative way.

“I thought it was quite powerful. The read was excellent. It was very easy to read and that’s the first indication that you have something good in your hands. We talked about how she was going to approach the movie and to be shooting the movie in a place like Ivory Coast, I was in,” he said of the film.

“Once again, I was playing a Haitian character but this time with a twist because we were in Africa.”

Yes, there are subtitles, but you’ll hardly mind having to read given the incredible pacing, evocative imagery, and passionate performances from its stars. Jemina Nemlin, who plays Haïla, is particularly impressive in her first-ever film role.

“When we first met, we sort of looked alike,” Jean-Louis says of his young costar. “I do have daughters that are around her age so I understand the relationship between little girls and dads.”

The choices that director, Apolline Traore made with this film are what make the viewing experience truly astounding.

“My goal for the film was to make the audience feel what the characters were feeling and to bring them inside the main character’s head,” she explained. “Because this character is so troubled and so misunderstood, I wanted the audience to feel that.”

Without giving away any major plot points, we can attest that she was successful in her mission and the result is a riveting ride that is sure to make your heart race.

Check out the trailer for Deserances:

The post Jimmy Jean-Louis discusses powerful foreign film ‘Deserances’ appeared first on theGrio.



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WATCH: ‘RHOA’ season 12 trailer is full of fierce fights and major fallouts

The ladies of the Real Housewives of Atlanta are back and judging by the looks of the first official season 12 trailer, there will be no shortage of serious drama.

Kenya Moore will return to the series this year and she and fellow new mom Porsha Williams seem to be on good terms. That’s about where the lovefest ends because a few seconds into the clip, we see a fist fight break out between several of the ladies.

“I told you that lady was crazy,” say a very pregnant Eva Marcille before we hear Porsha’s vice telling someone to “get out of this room.”

Later, we hear Nene Leakes screaming “No, no, no, no, no,” and all hell has clearly broken loose in the A.

Former RHOA star Peter Thomas slapped with $237k tax lien

It looks like viewers will get too see the moment that Cynthia Bailey gets her proposal from Mike Hill and we’ll watch Dennis McKinley having second thoughts about walking away from his engagement to Porsha.

Nene Leakes and her husband are back together, but in one scene, she seems pretty curious about the idea of an open marriage.

Expect to see sparks fly between Nene and Cynthia when a leaked recording surfaces.

“Cynthia has a side to her that you guys do not know about,” Leakes tells Marlo Hampton in one part of the clip. We’ll also get to see the trouble brewing between Kenya and her estranged husband, Marc Daly. 

“We’re in a really low place right now,” Kenya tells Cynthia about her marriage before a scene flashes with Marc Daly yelling at Kenya.

“You can take everything, I’ll build it again!” he shouts.

BREAKING NEWS: RHOA star Kenya Moore and husband, Marc Daly break up after two years of marriage

YIKES.

Check out the trailer:

Real Housewives of Atlanta returns to Bravo on November 3.

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*The Batman* May Have Found Its Commissioner Gordon

*Westworld* star Jeffrey Wright is currently in talks for the part, and Jonah Hill is rumored to be joining the film in a “secret role.”

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Read the Trump Whistleblower Complaint Right Here

A conversation between Donald Trump and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky sparked a detailed complaint from an intelligence community whistleblower. Here it is.

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Ramon Azeez: Granada's 'faith and belief' leads to Nigeria recall

Ramon Azeez says his Spanish club Granada's 'faith and belief' in him has led to a Nigeria recall.

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