Tag Archives: startup

Bronx-Bred Creative Tyson Hall Uses Art As A Means For Activism

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B lack artists often find themselves fighting for a seat at the table when it comes to having their work featured in exhibitions at renowned art institutions. According to a study conducted by Art News , less than three percent of museum acquisitions over the past ten years have been pieces created by African American artists. Despite the exclusion from mainstream galleries and museums, they are forging paths of their own, carving out spaces where they can share their artistry with the world, and using their work as a means for social and political activism. Bronx-bred visual artist and actor Tyson Hall is one of the individuals a part of a modern-day renaissance of Black artists who are reclaiming their space in the art industry and utilizing their work to uplift and empower their communities. Hall says his passion for activism runs deep. He was born in Washington Heights, New York across the street from the Audubon Ballroom where civil rights leader Malcolm X was murdered. The activist’s impact would later influence pieces of Hall’s work that echoed his messages of Black unity and the power of Black economics; pieces that were created decades after Malcolm X’s untimely death but are still relevant with today’s social and political climate. Hall—who came of age in the Bronx during the birth of hip-hop—has also pulled inspiration from the music genre throughout his career. His first art form was graffiti and then he decided to transition his canvases from MTA trains to sketchbooks. Hall was inspired by the political messages behind the music from groups like Public Enemy and how music mogul Sean Combs remixed soulful tracks from legends like James Brown to introduce that era of music to a new generation. He says incorporating the teachings of Black leaders from the past in his artwork to uplift and inspire the next generation of creatives is something that he strives to do through his work. It was the 1996 film Basquiat that drew him closer to the idea of using art as a form of activism. “Throughout my career, I’ve taken a lot of what our ancestors have said and done and remixed those voices through visual artistic expression,” Hall told NewsOne. “I did a series titled Buy Black where one piece, in particular, had four panels that read “Buy Black” and as you go down each panel it starts to disseminate. It was representative of the short life span of a dollar within the Black community and how we should do more to support each other.” Despite the powerful messages displayed through his art, Hall says one of the most challenging parts of being a Black artist is getting his work placed in galleries and museums. Instead of waiting for these art institutions to give him an opportunity, Hall has developed his own and has created spaces for his work. His pieces are on the walls at Harlem restaurants including Angel of Harlem and Corner Social and he has donated his work for auction to charities that include The Jackie Robinson Foundation, Abyssinian Baptist Church, the MOCADA Museum, and the ARRC. Going beyond the canvas, Hall uses acting as a form of artistry. His acting credits include Paid in Full , American Gangster , and Godfather of Harlem . He does motivational speaking as an avenue to empower inner-city children to use art as a means for change. He’s also developing a platform called SOL (Solidifying Our Legacy) Media Plus which is dedicated to educating, empowering, and connecting the creative community. As far as his advice for emerging Black artists, he says to “lock in and identify with your purpose as an artist to push forward.” SEE ALSO: Issa Rae Invests In Black Woman-Led Tech Startup Diddy Donates $1M To Fund New Bronx Charter School [ione_media_gallery src=”https://newsone.com” id=”3888948″ overlay=”true”]

Bronx-Bred Creative Tyson Hall Uses Art As A Means For Activism

Serena Williams Invests In Startup Focused On Maternal Health

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T he Black maternal health crisis has been an ever-growing issue within our country. According to a report released by the National Partnership for Women & Families, African American women in the U.S. are more likely to die from pregnancy and childbirth than women of any other race. Further research revealed that Black women are more likely to experience preventable maternal death than white women. Tennis star Serena Williams is determined to address these alarming trends. She recently invested in the maternal healthcare startup Mahmee , Black Enterprise reported. . @serenawilliams , @mcuban Invest in Black-Owned Maternal Healthcare Startup https://t.co/WQs7FUUIgc — Black Enterprise (@blackenterprise) July 17, 2019 For Williams, the matter is personal. She has been very candid about the complications she endured while giving birth to her now 1-year-old daughter Alexis Olympia Ohanian Jr. She needed two surgeries after having a C-section due to a pulmonary embolism that had developed. The app—which was co-created by Melissa Hanna —connects patients with healthcare providers so that they can develop a solid prenatal and postpartum healthcare plan.  Mahmee provides expecting parents with a comprehensive dashboard that tracks the health of the mother and child. Parents can also utilize the platform for educational resources. “Mahmee is a digital maternal health care company that uses predictive analytics to provide personalized, on-demand support to new mothers and infants. Women’s healthcare, in general, is substantially under-regulated. This is across the board. Maternity is just the glaring error of it all,” Hanna told The Helm in an interview. “There is so much work that we need to do on postpartum depression and women’s mental health in general.” Williams is proud to back the growing company. “I am incredibly excited to invest and partner with Mahmee, a company that personifies my firm’s investment philosophy,” she said in a statement, according to the news outlet. “Given the bleak data surrounding maternal death and injury rates, I believe that it is absolutely critical right now to invest in solutions that help protect the lives of moms and babies. Mahmee’s data-driven approach is the right solution to one of the most significant problems in the system: that of fragmented care.” Williams has been dedicated to investing in the futures of women entrepreneurs. In March, she joined forces with Bumble to provide women with capital to start and further their business ventures. SEE ALSO: Serena Williams Becomes Second Black Woman Tennis Player To Grace Wheaties Box Serena Williams Joins Forces With Bumble To Support Women Of Color Entrepreneurs [ione_media_gallery src=”https://newsone.com” id=”3882606″ overlay=”true”]

Serena Williams Invests In Startup Focused On Maternal Health

The Day Ahead: Monday, December 5

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Senate Democrats will release “serious” plan to cut payroll tax today ( CNN ) Newt Gingrich is the first Republican presidentical candidate to rsvp to a debate moderated by Donald Trump ( USA Today ) Occupy DC ends in a standoff between police and protesters over a wooden structure builting erected by Occupiers ( CNN ) Vice President Joe Biden is in Greece to meet with Greek leaders as they try to… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Amspecblog Discovery Date : 05/12/2011 02:34 Number of articles : 5

The Day Ahead: Monday, December 5

Lonely Planet’s Mobile Travel Startup Launches, With Content From Rivals

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Lonely Planet’s new San Francisco-based mobile startup has gone live with its flagship mobile travel guide app Wenzani , which paidContent first reported about in September. Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : Paidcontent Discovery Date : 05/12/2011 14:18 Number of articles : 3

Lonely Planet’s Mobile Travel Startup Launches, With Content From Rivals

From TechStars To TV Stars, The New York Startup Accelerator Snags A 6-Episode Show On Bloomberg

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This morning TechStars announced that it’d be the star of a new Bloomberg TV show, creatively called ” TechStars .” The show will launch on September 13th at 9 PM and will run through October 18th. It follows around the 11 winter TechStars NYC companies and the mentors that worked with them, including Fred Wilson , Dennis Crowley , Joel Spolsky and Chris Dixon . David Tisch, Managing Director of TechStars… Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : Silicon Alley Insider Discovery Date : 02/08/2011 14:21 Number of articles : 3

From TechStars To TV Stars, The New York Startup Accelerator Snags A 6-Episode Show On Bloomberg

From TechStars To TV Stars, The New York Startup Accelerator Snags A 6-Episode Show On Bloomberg

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=27175079

The rest is here:

This morning TechStars announced that it’d be the star of a new Bloomberg TV show, creatively called ” TechStars .” The show will launch on September 13th at 9 PM and will run through October 18th. It follows around the 11 winter TechStars NYC companies and the mentors that worked with them, including Fred Wilson , Dennis Crowley , Joel Spolsky and Chris Dixon . David Tisch, Managing Director of TechStars… Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : Silicon Alley Insider Discovery Date : 02/08/2011 14:21 Number of articles : 3

From TechStars To TV Stars, The New York Startup Accelerator Snags A 6-Episode Show On Bloomberg

How To Make a Killing While Your Startup Burns [Silicon Valley Users Guide]

Give Kevin Rose credit: The Digg CEO keeps a cool head. ” Gotta take risk ” was the tech playboy’s cheerful response to Digg’s mounting problems today. His secret to staying relaxed: Extracurricular investments with buddies hedge Rose well against Digg’s death. More

How Bitter Infighting May Break Up One of Tech’s Most Lucrative Conferences [Nerdfight]

High revenues and relatively low costs have made TechCrunch 50 the envy of its rivals, competing tech conferences like Demo and the Wall Street Journal ‘s D. If only its founders could stop fighting like rabid dogs. TechCrunch 50 , a Silicon Valley conference where hungry startups strut their stuff, is as volatile as it is profitable. The event nearly broke up last year amid a spat between co-organizers Michael Arrington , publisher of the blog iteration of TechCrunch, and Jason Calacanis , the Web entrepreneur. ” We fight like rabid dogs ,” Calacanis told VentureBeat, but would not “throw an amazing event like this out the window.” Or maybe they will: We’ve heard from multiple sources that a chasm has opened between Arrington and Calacanis again. Though we’ve had some help from said sources, it’s not hard to figure out what sorts of little feuds might derail one of the industry’s most lucrative conferences. We catalog some of them below, if only to provide other media-event organizers with a nice overview of traps to avoid. For their record, neither Arrington nor Calacanis would comment about their dispute for this post. Kidding around with puppets: Last year, Calacanis confirmed the conference series was finished in an interview with a puppet controlled by blogger Loren Feldman. He later unconvincingly tried to say he’d only been kidding . Purportedly his public statements about his spat with Arrington remain a point of irritation. Participating in rival events: Calacanis’ participation in Silicon Alley Insider’s Startup conference supposedly rubs Arrington the wrong way, even though it’s ostensibly a different sort of event. Conflicts of interest : Calacanis’ newly-launched Open Angel Forums are designed to help select startups get investment funding. At TechCrunch 50, Calacanis helps award prizes, potentially to the some of the very startups he helped raise money for. As for Arrington, one could argue he has an incentive to help reward startups who have been especially helpful to his coverage. That’s certainly enough basis for petty bickering (you don’t need much!). Big pointless online flame war: Calacanis became enmeshed in a big complicated online controversy and Arrington supposedly found his behavior in said fight tacky and classless. Which it kind of was. The gory details, if you care: A teenaged TechCrunch writer asked a startup founder to give the writer a free MacBook Air in exchange for an article on TechCrunch. The writer was publicly busted but the startup founder remained anonymous for a while. The startup founder, Sam Odio, emailed Calacanis out of the blue to ask advice on going public. Calacanis for some reason forwarded his email to Calacanis’ venemous blogger friend Loren Feldman, who promptly threatened to expose Odio’s not-so-terrible secret — he had originally promised to give that TechCrunch writer his bribe, “but not right now.” Odio blogged about Calacanis’ behavior and a shitstorm ensued . Just plain mean : Supposedly Calacanis has been gratuitously and exceptionally rude to some of the startups at TechCrunch 50. We’ve heard stories about Arrington being that way at other events. So, hey, maybe everyone just got on each other’s nerves, with the rudeness to other people. So there you have it: Avoid these pitfalls and your conference/event/sausage fest just might possibly avoid descending into vicious infighting. In the meantime we’ll see how long it takes before Calacanis and Arrington realize that only by taming their egos in the near-term can they play Silicon Valley kingmakers in the long term, thus allowing their egos to gloriously balloon to their fullest potential. [Photo via TechCrunch 50 on Flickr ]

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How Bitter Infighting May Break Up One of Tech’s Most Lucrative Conferences [Nerdfight]

Yahoo Lap Dancers the Latest in a Chorus Line of Tech Sexism Scandals

Yahoo has apologized for providing lap dances on stage at a Tawian programming event. Critics aren’t mollified , and that’s probably just as well: it’s all but certain something like this will happen again soon. Certain, that is, if you judge from recent history.

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Yahoo Lap Dancers the Latest in a Chorus Line of Tech Sexism Scandals

Twitter ‘Investigative’ Journalism 101: The Syllabus

When we read this morning that a Chicago Tribune intern would be teaching a journalism school class on ” investigative ” Twitter use, our jaws hit the floor. But then the intern/professor in question sent us a copy of the class syllabus.

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Twitter ‘Investigative’ Journalism 101: The Syllabus