Source: Bossip / WeTV Bossip on WeTV had us in stitches last season so it’s only right they do it bigger and better than ever. Our faves are back on WeTV with their season premiere Thursday night at at 10/9c. Are you still deciding whether or not you should tune in? Allow us to give you 5 reasons you should be front and center. Hit the flip!
Over the last three seasons, you’ve watched Rickey Smiley on TV One’s “ Rickey Smiley For Real ” as he juggles his career, fatherhood and personal life, all while traveling between Birmingham, Alabama (his hometown) and Atlanta, Georgia. Follow @TheRSMS RELATED: How The Rickey Smiley Morning Show Team Spent Their Vacation [EXCLUSIVE] This week, Rickey released a hilarious behind-the-scenes video, that included meeting the people who make the magic happen behind the camera! Plus, not only will you get a chance to meet the people behind the scenes of the show but you also get to learn what they all do! Who knows, you could be sitting in their seat one day helping to run the show! RELATED: Rickey Smiley Opens Up About How Being On “Rickey Smiley For Real” Affected His Kids [EXCLUSIVE VIDEO] Listen to “ The Rickey Smiley Morning Show ” 6am ET. RELATED: Rickey Smiley Talks About The Dreams For His Morning Show Coming True [EXCLUSIVE VIDEO] The Latest : Rickey Smiley Shows “Rickey Smiley For Real” Behind The Scenes [VIDEO] Choreographer ‘Hollywood’ Talks Working With Diddy, Artistry & His Thoughts On Dance Challenges From Rape To Healthy Sex: 9 Revelations From Tiffany Haddish’s ‘Glamour’ Interview Gary With Da Tea Shares His Heartbreaking But Uplifting Testimony About Battling Cancer [EXCLUSIVE VIDEO] Tune In: Big Bird & Oscar The Grouch Are Beefing & Petty Twitter Jumped In If Your Cousin Isn’t Blessing You Like The Rock Did His, You Need New Cousins Whaaa? Child Actor Is Put In Blackface In Upcoming Seth Rogen-Produced Movie Trump Trolled Mercilessly After Saying You Need ID To Buy Groceries Lebron James On How Trayvon Martin Changed His Life Trump Is Reportedly Scheduled To Meet With ‘Inner-City’ Pastors — And Ben Carson
Source: picture alliance / Getty CEO Buys Employee A Car After Hearing He Walked 20 Miles For His First Day Walter Carr, an Alabama college student, whose car broke down the day before his first day of work at his new job decided to make the 20 mile trip on foot because he couldn’t secure a ride. Hours before his first day working for Bellhops Movers, Carr started walking at midnight, making it to the town by 4 a.m. When he got there he encountered Pelham police officers, who took him to breakfast and dropped him at his assignment. Jenny Lamey says Carr declined her offer to rest before working, instead he went straight to work. Impressed by his work ethic, she started a GoFundMe that raised more than $6,600. When Bellhops CEO Luke Marklin learned about his new employee, he drove from Tennessee to surprise him with a new whip.
No Charges Filed In Ulysses Wilkerson Case The family of an Alabama teen is reeling after a grand jury made a damning decision. As previously reported Ulysses Wilkerson, 17, was beaten bloody by Troy Police department authorities and his parents demanded answers. Wilkerson reportedly fled from police during a foot-chase and police admitted to using “physical force to subdude the teen” on December 23 after Wilkerson reportedly reached for his waistband. Now the four police officers who were investigated for their role in the encounter will not face criminal charges. AL.com reports that Circuit 4 District Attorney Michael Jackson and retired Tuscaloosa District Attorney Tommy Smith were appointed as special prosecutors to handle the case, which was investigated by the State Bureau of Investigation. Jackson told AL.com Thursday that a grand jury met this week in Pike County and declined to issue indictments against the Troy officers. “The grand jury determined they acted properly in their official capacity and no crime was committed,” Jackson said. “If they had found differently, we would have gone forward with the case.” This is extremely sad and unfortinately unsurpising. What makes it even more frustrating is that the NAACP was calling for the release of body cam footage that reportedly shows exactly what happened in this case. It looks like we may never get to see it…
No Charges Filed In Ulysses Wilkerson Case The family of an Alabama teen is reeling after a grand jury made a damning decision. As previously reported Ulysses Wilkerson, 17, was beaten bloody by Troy Police department authorities and his parents demanded answers. Wilkerson reportedly fled from police during a foot-chase and police admitted to using “physical force to subdude the teen” on December 23 after Wilkerson reportedly reached for his waistband. Now the four police officers who were investigated for their role in the encounter will not face criminal charges. AL.com reports that Circuit 4 District Attorney Michael Jackson and retired Tuscaloosa District Attorney Tommy Smith were appointed as special prosecutors to handle the case, which was investigated by the State Bureau of Investigation. Jackson told AL.com Thursday that a grand jury met this week in Pike County and declined to issue indictments against the Troy officers. “The grand jury determined they acted properly in their official capacity and no crime was committed,” Jackson said. “If they had found differently, we would have gone forward with the case.” This is extremely sad and unfortinately unsurpising. What makes it even more frustrating is that the NAACP was calling for the release of body cam footage that reportedly shows exactly what happened in this case. It looks like we may never get to see it…
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — The first time John Lewis traveled to Mississippi in 1961, he was arrested and jailed with other Freedom Riders, black and white, who challenged segregation in a bus station. Lewis, who is African-American, remembers going into a restroom labeled for white men only. A Jackson police officer told him and other young people in the group to leave. They refused. “The next words he said: ‘You’re under arrest.’ And that was my introduction to the state of Mississippi and the city of Jackson,” Lewis told The Associated Press on Thursday in a phone interview from Atlanta. After 37 days of being locked up in sweltering local jails and a notorious state prison on the disorderly conduct charge, Lewis was released. He continued working for racial equality in Mississippi and across the South in the 1960s, and as chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, he helped organize the 1963 March on Washington. Georgia voters elected him as a Democrat to the U.S. House in 1986, and he remains in office. Lewis, 78, returns to Mississippi on Friday, one of five people being honored for advancing civil rights. A private group called Friends of Mississippi Civil Rights organized a gala Friday and symposium Saturday to celebrate the new Mississippi Civil Rights Museum. Lewis’ jail mug shot hangs in a gallery at the museum with those of other Freedom Riders. He was scheduled to speak at the museum’s state-sponsored opening in December but canceled his appearance because Republican Gov. Phil Bryant invited President Donald Trump. Lewis said Thursday that he has never met Trump but, “I felt that I couldn’t be there with him after he said some unbelievable things about individuals and about groups — whether it’s members of the African-American community or the Latino community or the Dreamers,” younger immigrants who arrived in the country illegally as children and have been protected under President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA. “I just couldn’t be there with him.” The opening of the Mississippi Civil Rights Museum and the adjoining Museum of Mississippi History capped the state’s bicentennial observation. The two museums are in downtown Jackson and are separate entities under a single roof. They are a short distance from the bus station where Lewis and the other Freedom Riders were arrested. The general museum skims 15,000 years of history, from the Stone Age to modern times. The civil rights museum concentrates on the intense period of social change from 1945 to 1976. Lewis grew up south of Montgomery, Alabama, and was 15 years old when a black 14-year-old from Chicago, Emmett Till, was lynched while visiting relatives near the small town of Money, Mississippi. A cousin who was with Till said he had whistled at a white woman in a country store. “I kept thinking that if something like this could happen to Emmett Till, it could happen to cousins of mine that were living in Buffalo, New York, or were living in Detroit, Michigan, when they came to Alabama to visit during the summer,” Lewis said. One of the other people being honored Friday for civil rights work is Rita Schwerner Bender, who demanded answers from Mississippi officials after her first husband, Michael Schwerner, and two other activists, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman, were killed outside Philadelphia, Mississippi, in 1964 — a case that became known by its FBI name, “Mississippi Burning.” Bender, now an attorney in Seattle, said Wednesday that in accepting the award in Mississippi, she intends to urge people to stand up for justice. “Most social change doesn’t happen without a demand side,” she said. Bender said she also would emphasize the importance of public education: “How can we be a thriving democracy which provides for the intellectual development of all our people, for the health of our people, for our place as contributors on the world stage, without high quality education?” The other honorees are Ruby Bridges, a Tylertown, Mississippi, native who faced threats and ostracism when she became the first black child to integrate a public school in New Orleans in 1960; former state Rep. Robert Clark, who in 1967 became the first African-American of the 20th Century to win a seat in the Mississippi Legislature; and Democratic U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi. ____ Follow Emily Wagster Pettus on Twitter: http://twitter.com/EWagsterPettus . READ MORE STORIES ON BLACKAMERICAWEB.COM: GET THE HOTTEST STORIES STRAIGHT TO YOUR INBOX: Close Thank you for subscribing! Please be sure to open and click your first newsletter so we can confirm your subscription. Email Submit
The i am OTHER/Interscope Records’ Alabama duo, WATCH THE DUCK , rings in 2018 with a unique blend of future R&B and nostalgic feels with their new single, “There You Are.” The track continues duo members Jesse and Eddie’s new musical venture, with a more intimate and personal sound starring Jesse’s R&B vocal. “There You Are” is a feel-good record that encourages listeners to stay in the moment, and move with whatever feelings come from being in the present. Directed by Watch the Duck’s own Eddie, the accompanying visual inspires us with the magic of the everyday by closing the gap between typical music video fantasy and the mundanity of an ordinary work environment. “As artists in this very competitive space, we’ve realized that our best chance at standing out comes from our ability to humanize everything, and that’s what we wanted to do with ‘There You Are.’” What did you think of the song and video? Download Watch the Duck “There You Are” eSingle Continue reading →
W e all know President Trump isn’t the brightest Cheeto in the bag and Little Donnie is right behind him. For some reason, people still decide to interview Donald Trump Jr. and every time he babbles we get a glimpse into the abyss of delusion. In an interview with right-wing outlet The Daily Caller , he was asked about his daddy’s clear and present racism. Little Donnie answered, “It’s been terrible to watch, because I know him, I’ve seen him my whole life, I’ve seen the things he’s done. It’s amazing, all the rappers, all the this, all his African-American friends, from Jesse Jackson to Al Sharpton , I have pictures with them . . . it was only till he got into politics that all of a sudden, Oh, he’s the most terrible human being ever.” See below: Donnie clearly doesn’t understand racism. You can still be racist and shake hands with rappers. You can still be racist and know a civil rights leader. You can still be racist and donate money to civil rights causes. Just because his daddy dearest knows rich or famous Black people does not absolve him from the ignorance in his heart and mind. Trump’s racism has been evident for years. There was his five-year racist rant that President Obama was not born in this country, calling for the execution of five Black teenagers wrongfully accused of assaulting a White woman, housing discrimination lawsuits and his disgusting behavior as President. Not to mention, his father Fred Trump was arrested at a KKK rally in 1927 . Little Donnie should never discuss racism again. Instead, he should prepare to not ” crack like an egg ” under the pressure of the ongoing Russia investigation. SEE ALSO: Will Alabama’s Black Voters Turnout For Crucial Senate Race? President Donald Trump’s Voter Fraud Claims Could Lead To More Voter Suppression
UPDATE: @GeorgiaStateU soccer player to withdraw from school after backlash over controversial social media post. https://t.co/bI75I20wm6 pic.twitter.com/ZY7cKsUFHb — AJC (@ajc) January 22, 2018 Natalia Martinez Withdraws From Georgia State Just days after former University Of Alabama student Harley Barber went viral for her racist MLK Day rant, another college student is in hot water for being a rancid racist. The AJC reports that Natalia Martinez, a Georgia State University soccer player who was suspended from the team after she used a racial epithet on social media, has withdrawn from the school. Martinez was on Finsta, an app for “secret” Instagram pages when she dropped the N-word. @GSUWomensSoccer pic.twitter.com/hIel8wqRFp — Michaela (@_michaelabailey) January 19, 2018 A petition was created to have her kicked out of school that garnered more than 500 signatures by Monday, when the university announced Martinez had “officially withdrawn.” Georgia State University said in a statement that they “do not tolerate the language (Martinez) used in her post.” Bye beyotch! Continue reading →
Alabama Teacher Uses Slur After Hearing Students Bumping Tupac A teacher has been placed on paid leave after hurling the N-word to describe music that was playing in her classroom. Food & Nutrition teacher Teddie Butcher allows her class to play music as they work on projects but when a student hit the play button on Tupac’s “Dear Mama” Butcher reportedly told the class to “turn the n*gger tunes off”. Claiming that she was upset by the foul language, many parents of students at Hoover High School have stepped forward to refute this by saying there is no vulgar or inappropriate lyrics in the song. Butcher apologized to the students in her class but many don’t feel it was genuine stating “After meeting with her, it’s just baffling to me how someone does not understand the severity of the weight of that word.” There was a video of Butcher making the statement but the school made students delete the evidence of her using the slur.