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NBJC and SBA Urge LGBT Community to Build Businesses

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Many Faces. One Dream conference participants engage in a the Interactive Knowledge Exchange session. (Photo Credit: Mark D. Gibson/U.S. Small Business Administration)
Many Faces. One Dream conference participants engage in a the Interactive Knowledge Exchange session. (Photo Credit: Mark D. Gibson/U.S. Small Business Administration)

The National Black Justice Coalition (NBJC) and U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) stopped through Atlanta Aug. 11-13 to encourage the black lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community to turn passion into a prosperous future.

Both organizations partnered to host a day-and-a half long financial empowerment and social justice series, Many Faces.One Dream. The 13-city tour gives budding LGBT business owners of color the opportunity to participate in one-on-one workshops, panels, seminars and town hall meetings on financial counseling which they might go on to seek through companies similar to LegalVision to help ensure their tax practices are legal and up to date, franchising, government contracting, strategic planning, business plan development, credit scores, certifications, marketing and securing financing. New business owners have more and more opportunities opening up to them with the help of business consulting companies similar to Porte Brown assisting them to meet their business goals.

“You have to be president and CEO of yourself. You have to wake up everyday with the ownership that your success is based on yourself. A dream can come true. You don’t have to choose to be black today or to be gay today,” says Sharon Lettman-Hicks, Executive Director and CEO of NBJC.

Despite ongoing discrimination and high instances of unemployment particularly for the black LGBT community, SBA hopes outreach and educational programs like Many Faces.One Dream will inspire future entrepreneurs to take action in mastering their fate.

“You have to have a clear idea of what it is you want to have. Being an entrepreneur means being willing to take on risks. We just try to help take a calculated risk. It’s about coming together and learning to support each other. Fifty percent of something is better than 100% of nothing. We can help in laying the foundation. We want people to feel we’re an option for them,” says Terri Denison, Georgia District Director, SBA.

Eugene Cornelius, Jr., Deputy Associate Administrator for Field Operations, SBA, concurs. “We’re spinning our wheels trying to reach out individually to communities where we can take one point and reach all of the communities. Our biggest problem in the African American community is we don’t have ownership. We are relying on other people. We don’t need to wait for our 40 acres and a mule. Let’s take it,” says Cornelius.

Passionate and full of vigor, Cornelius further acknowledges Many Faces One Dream‘s importance 50 years after the March on Washington. “We are in the third phase of the Civil Rights Movement. This is better than demonstrating and holding a picket sign. This is action. This is taking responsibility. If we are going to unshackle the chains of exclusion, empowerment is equity,” he says.

Atlanta, the third major American city for LGBT population per capita, was the second stop to feature both NBJC and SBA executive staff, financial experts, civic leaders, federal government officers, professors, life coaches and small business owners.

Councilman Kwanza Hall represents Midtown, Atlanta’s core LGBT area. The benevolent, down-to-earth representative believes both black LGBT entrepreneurship and consumerism are essential in breaking down cultural, sexual and economic barriers.

“Small business opportunities are huge avenues to improve the economy, increase jobs and provide a variety of services and goods to our communities. We want to make sure equality rings free for anyone. It’s supreme over all things no matter your background, color or orientation. Those factors should not define how you interact with anyone in society. You should have a level playing field, and small businesses are the life blood of our economy,” says Hall.

No one said running a business was easy, regardless of the industry. But with that being said, with there being potential solutions such as Zenefits (that assists with managing HR) and software that can help with dealing with the financial side, running a business may not be as challenging as people may have initially thought.

Moreover, thanks to developments in technology, revolutionary software is totally changing the way that companies of all sizes do business. For example, integrated accounting software like Xero and Quickbooks, for instance, has made it easier than ever before to balance the books. If you would like to learn more about how software is helping businesses to handle the administrative side of things, this useful guide to Xero vs Quickbooks might come in useful.

Like Hall and Cornelius, Lettman-Hicks reiterates that Many Faces One Dream encourages LGBT communities of color to take ownership in their own plight.

“Our community has gone through so many trials and tribulations of dealing with acceptance. You can use yourself to your advantage by seeing yourself as a consumer market. You have to look at the different needs of our community that can be overtly marketed to. We need to be strategic to want to own our power,” says Lettman-Hicks.

This post was written by Christopher A. Daniel, pop cultural critic and music editor for The Burton Wire. He is also a contributing writer for Urban Lux Magazine and Blues & Soul Magazine. Follow Christopher @Journalistorian on Twitter.

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South Africa: Arrests Made in Soweto Protests

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Service delivery protesters hold up signs about lack of services. (Google Images)
Service delivery protesters hold up signs about lack of services. (Google Images)

IOL News is reporting that arrests have been made in Protea Glen south Soweto due to service delivery protests.  Four more people were arrested bringing the total number of arrests to 19 since the protests began in recent weeks.  Some of the reasons given for the protests include dissatisfaction with the delivery of basic municipal services such as running water, electricity and toilets, especially in informal settlements. Unemployment (officially at around 23%), high levels of poverty, poor infrastructure, and the lack of houses add to the growing dissatisfaction in this and other poor communities.

Protesters are demanding that municipal leaders meet with them to hear and address their concerns, which have been ongoing for nearly two decades. Many leaders have vowed to change the living conditions for many, including those who live in Protea Glen south Soweto, to no avail.

Police are on high alert and some crowds have been dispersed with the use of tear gas.

Read more at IOL News.

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Awkward? Issa Rae Developing Show for HBO

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Writer/producer Issa Rae is developing a show with comedy genius Larry Wilmore for HBO. (Photo Credit: Google Images)
Writer/producer Issa Rae is developing a show with comedy genius Larry Wilmore for HBO. (Photo Credit: Google Images)

Shadow and Act is reporting that writer/producer/actress/rising superstar Issa Rae is developing a series for HBO. Rae, who is already developing a series for ABC with showrunner extraordinaire Shonda Rhimes, will also be working with comic genius Larry Wilmore (The Daily Show) to develop the series for HBO, which reportedly previously passed on working on a show with Rae featuring her as the lead. We wonder what happened? Oh, probably the meteoric rise to fame due to her presence pretty much everywhere in the media landscape. She’s a host on Aspire TV’s talk show, “Exhale,” working closely with Pharrell Williams’ I AM OTHER production company to further develop her web series “The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl” and is developing a show for Alright TV, Bob Johnson and Tracey Edmond’s YouTube channel. Issa Rae is clearly winning. Hopefully her online magic will successfully translate to the small screen. With Shonda Rhimes, Pharrell Williams and Larry Wilmore backing her, the sky is the limit.

Read more at Shadow and Act.

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Ghana Honors Jamaican Rita Marley with Citizenship

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Jamaican Rita Marley is being honored by Ghana with citizenship. (Photo Credit: Google Images)
Jamaican Rita Marley is being honored by Ghana with citizenship. (Photo Credit: Google Images)

The Jamaican Observer is reporting that Rita Marley, widow of pop icon Bob Marley, was made an honorary citizen of Ghana on August 1, which is the country’s Emancipation Day.

The author writes that Dr. Erieka Bennett, Head of Mission for the African Union’s Diaspora Africa Forum said:

“We are thrilled to see the Ghana government recognising the tremendous contribution Nana Rita has made to Ghana socially as well as economically. This is a historical day for those of us from the Diaspora.”

Rita Marley has lived in Ghana for nearly 20 years and has been involved in organizing Africa Unite concerts.  The author adds:

“Ambassador Kwesi Quartey, Ghana’s deputy minister of foreign affairs and regional integration, agreed: ‘Indeed Mrs. Rita Marley continues to leverage her unique name recognition to showcase Ghana and talk up Ghana’s pan-Africanist role and tourism potential at every opportunity,’ he said.”

Marley will receive a Ghanaian passport.

Read more at Jamaican Observer.
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Twin Valedictorians Headed to Stanford University

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Las Vegas twins and co-valedictorians Marcos and Malcolm Allen are heading to Stanford University in the fall. (PHOTO CREDIT: Google Images)
Las Vegas twins and co-valedictorians Marcos and Malcolm Allen are heading to Stanford University in the fall. (PHOTO CREDIT: Google Images)

Summer is winding down and students are preparing to enter college this fall. Las Vegas twin brothers and co-valedictorians Marcos and Malcolm Allen are headed to Stanford University. The Centennial High School graduates and 18 year-old twins graduated with 4.8 grade point averages and earned basketball scholarships to the prestigious university. This will help them with their student loans (which others need https://www.sofi.com/refinance-student-loan/ and similar companies to assist with) as they set off on their next stage of education.

Jennifer Kastner of KTNV reports that much of their success can be attributed to their mother, a recent Stanford graduate, who kept the boys on the right path.

“Mother Trina Wiggins graduated from Stanford University several years ago. ‘You have to have a plan. You can’t just go day to day and think this is going to miraculously happen,’ she tells us (KTNV).

She helped the two put their future plans into place when they were only seventh graders. Both started taking SAT prep classes in middle school.

‘It all pays off and I feel like the earlier you start, the better you’ll end up,’ adds Malcolm.”

In the wake of the criminalization and demonization of black and brown teenage boys in America, The Burton Wire is committed to bringing you one of many instances of black and brown teens positively contributing to society.

Read more about this story at KTNV.

Read more positive stories about black and brown teens adding value to society, here.

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African Children's Choir Featured in Documentary 'Imba Means Sing'

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The African Children's Choir sings all over the world raising funds to educate choir members. (Photo Credit: ACC)
The African Children’s Choir sings all over the world raising funds to educate choir members. (Photo Credit: ACC)

African Children’s Choir (ACC) is the subject of an upcoming feature-length documentary, Imba Means Sing. The independent film, shot over two years, chronicles 20 talented kids from their Ugandan villages to their tour throughout the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom.

Slated for release in Spring 2014 (in time for ACC’s 30th anniversary), Imba Means Sing, produced by Peabody Award winner Erin Levin, is told primarily from the perspectives of Moses and Angel from the 39th choir. Moses aspires to be a pilot. Angel wants to be the first female president of Uganda.

Despite poverty in the village and being homesick on the road, ACC brings sincere optimism and innocence to the screen. “The film shines a positive light on Africa. These kids are real people. You’ll see different attributes about yourself, your friends and family. I want other people to get to feel how I feel,” says Levin.

Members of the ACC perform song and dance. (Photo Credit: ACC)
Members of the ACC perform song and dance. (Photo Credit: ACC)

Humanitarian and minister Ray Barnett organized ACC in 1984 in response to a civil war in Uganda. ACC is now present in Kenya, Rwanda, Sudan, South Africa, Ghana and Nigeria. The Grammy Award-nominated child prodigies have performed with Elton John, Paul McCartney, Mariah Carey, John Legend, Bob Geldof, Jars of Clay, Queen, Josh Groban and Annie Lennox.

ACC has also performed for Queen Elizabeth II, the United Nations, Nelson Mandela and Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Levin, an Emmy Award-winning former CNN producer, first came in contact with ACC while serving as a Peace Corps health educator in Madagascar. She began to accompany and film ACC’s travels following a conversation with a missionary family about ACC.

ACC 2
(Photo Credit: ACC)

Quick to acknowledge how the power of ACC’s music brings joy, an enthusiastic Levin says the film’s production problems revolve around securing the funding. “Everything would be 50 times easier if we were fully funded. People don’t understand the power of film, why it matters and how hard it is to make. We’re halfway up the mountain, but we still have to get to the peak,” says Levin.

ACC, a vocal ensemble full of radiant smiles, recently stopped in Atlanta for eye-opening performances at The Buckhead Theatre and another prior to an Atlanta Braves game the following evening.

All of Imba Means Sing’s proceeds will support ACC’s objective to provide the participants with a quality education. So far, over 52,000 kids have had their education funded.

“Education is an important answer to solving all of the world’s problems. This film shows the difference between what these kids’ lives are before getting educated and the opportunities that they have now that they will be educated,” says Levin.

ACC’s performances, now in its 29th year, are filled with infectious spirit. Each child introduces themselves individually, stop for photo ops and hugs everyone. Prior to ACC’s headlining performance, four of the boys perform an impromptu polyrhythmic drum performance in the lobby.

ACC’s charisma wins over audiences. The joyful young performers – rocking from side-to-side – combine angelic harmonies with pulsating congas, chants, echoing handclaps, streams of thrusting elbows, horizontal fists pumping, arena-like foot stomps and rotating lead vocals.

(Photo Credit: ACC)
(Photo Credit: ACC)

One boy pop locks. Another one backflips. The ambitious kids also state to the audience one-by-one their names and what they want to be when they grow up. To Levin, Imba Means Sing is an important documentary that reveals ACC’s global impact. “People should realize that there is an education crisis in our world. However, they make other people’s lives better,” says Levin.

This post was written by Christopher A. Daniel, pop cultural critic and music editor for The Burton Wire. He is also a contributing writer for Urban Lux Magazine and Blues & Soul Magazine. Follow Christopher @Journalistorian on Twitter.

Like The Burton Wire on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter @TheBurtonWire.

African Children’s Choir Featured in Documentary ‘Imba Means Sing’

0
The African Children's Choir sings all over the world raising funds to educate choir members. (Photo Credit: ACC)
The African Children’s Choir sings all over the world raising funds to educate choir members. (Photo Credit: ACC)

African Children’s Choir (ACC) is the subject of an upcoming feature-length documentary, Imba Means Sing. The independent film, shot over two years, chronicles 20 talented kids from their Ugandan villages to their tour throughout the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom.

Slated for release in Spring 2014 (in time for ACC’s 30th anniversary), Imba Means Sing, produced by Peabody Award winner Erin Levin, is told primarily from the perspectives of Moses and Angel from the 39th choir. Moses aspires to be a pilot. Angel wants to be the first female president of Uganda.

Despite poverty in the village and being homesick on the road, ACC brings sincere optimism and innocence to the screen. “The film shines a positive light on Africa. These kids are real people. You’ll see different attributes about yourself, your friends and family. I want other people to get to feel how I feel,” says Levin.

Members of the ACC perform song and dance. (Photo Credit: ACC)
Members of the ACC perform song and dance. (Photo Credit: ACC)

Humanitarian and minister Ray Barnett organized ACC in 1984 in response to a civil war in Uganda. ACC is now present in Kenya, Rwanda, Sudan, South Africa, Ghana and Nigeria. The Grammy Award-nominated child prodigies have performed with Elton John, Paul McCartney, Mariah Carey, John Legend, Bob Geldof, Jars of Clay, Queen, Josh Groban and Annie Lennox.

ACC has also performed for Queen Elizabeth II, the United Nations, Nelson Mandela and Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Levin, an Emmy Award-winning former CNN producer, first came in contact with ACC while serving as a Peace Corps health educator in Madagascar. She began to accompany and film ACC’s travels following a conversation with a missionary family about ACC.

ACC 2
(Photo Credit: ACC)

Quick to acknowledge how the power of ACC’s music brings joy, an enthusiastic Levin says the film’s production problems revolve around securing the funding. “Everything would be 50 times easier if we were fully funded. People don’t understand the power of film, why it matters and how hard it is to make. We’re halfway up the mountain, but we still have to get to the peak,” says Levin.

ACC, a vocal ensemble full of radiant smiles, recently stopped in Atlanta for eye-opening performances at The Buckhead Theatre and another prior to an Atlanta Braves game the following evening.

All of Imba Means Sing’s proceeds will support ACC’s objective to provide the participants with a quality education. So far, over 52,000 kids have had their education funded.

“Education is an important answer to solving all of the world’s problems. This film shows the difference between what these kids’ lives are before getting educated and the opportunities that they have now that they will be educated,” says Levin.

ACC’s performances, now in its 29th year, are filled with infectious spirit. Each child introduces themselves individually, stop for photo ops and hugs everyone. Prior to ACC’s headlining performance, four of the boys perform an impromptu polyrhythmic drum performance in the lobby.

ACC’s charisma wins over audiences. The joyful young performers – rocking from side-to-side – combine angelic harmonies with pulsating congas, chants, echoing handclaps, streams of thrusting elbows, horizontal fists pumping, arena-like foot stomps and rotating lead vocals.

(Photo Credit: ACC)
(Photo Credit: ACC)

One boy pop locks. Another one backflips. The ambitious kids also state to the audience one-by-one their names and what they want to be when they grow up. To Levin, Imba Means Sing is an important documentary that reveals ACC’s global impact. “People should realize that there is an education crisis in our world. However, they make other people’s lives better,” says Levin.

This post was written by Christopher A. Daniel, pop cultural critic and music editor for The Burton Wire. He is also a contributing writer for Urban Lux Magazine and Blues & Soul Magazine. Follow Christopher @Journalistorian on Twitter.

Like The Burton Wire on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter @TheBurtonWire.

Rihanna Wins Lawsuit Against Topshop

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Bajan superstar Rihanna Fenty won a lawsuit against British retailer Topshop.  (PHOTO CREDIT: Google Images)
Bajan superstar Rihanna Fenty won a lawsuit against British retailer Topshop.
(PHOTO CREDIT: Google Images)

Caribbean 360 is reporting that Bajan superstar Rihanna Fenty has won a lawsuit against British fashion retailer Topshop. Fenty sued the retailer for using her image on a t-shirt without her permission or approval.

The author writes:

“High Court Justice Colin Birss, who did not make an assessment of damages, ruled in favour of Rihanna, saying buyers were likely deceived in believing the singer had authorized the sale. ‘I am quite satisfied that many fans of Rihanna regard her endorsement as important. She is their style icon. Many will buy a product because they think she has approved of it. Others will wish to buy it because of the value of the perceived authorization itself. In both cases they will have been deceived,’ the judge said.

Topshop’s position is that Fenty was making an assumption that only celebrities can profit from their likeness. The retailer is considering appealing the decision.

Read more at Caribbean 360.

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Zimbabwe: Mugabe Declared Winner of Presidential Election

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Mugabe

AllAfrica.com is reporting that the hotly contested election for the next president of Zimbabwe has been settled with incumbent Robert Mugabe being declared the winner. The results of the presidential election were announced by Zimbabwe electoral Commission chairperson, Rita Makarau.

AllAfrica.com writes:

“Mugabe received over 2 million votes – that’s 61.09 percent while Morgan Tsvangirai got just over one million votes 33.94 percent.

MDC leader Welshman Ncube came a distance third with just over 90,000 votes – 2.6 percent of the vote.”

On Wednesday, the integrity of the elections was called into question by the resignation of Zimbabwe Electoral Commissioner Mkhululi Nyathi.

Nomalanga Moyo writes:

“In his letter to the Commission, seasoned lawyer Nyathi said he had been forced to step down as a result of the unprofessional manner in which the whole electoral process was handled.

Nyathi wrote: ‘I hereby tender my resignation from the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission with immediate effect. I do not wish to enumerate the many reasons for my resignation, but they all have to do with the manner the Zimbabwe 2013 Harmonised Elections were proclaimed and conducted.’

Nyathi, who handed in his letter on the day of the election, explained that his resignation was not so much about the poll result but rather, the failure by the electoral body to ensure that the process was legitimate.”

Read more at AllAfrica.com.

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Akosua Report: Tidjane Thiam

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Tidjane Thiam is the first black person to head a FTSE 100 company (the 100 most highly capitalized companies in the United Kingdom).  PHOTO CREDIT: Google Images
Tidjane Thiam is the first black person to head a FTSE 100 company (the 100 most highly capitalized companies in the United Kingdom).
PHOTO CREDIT: Google Images

“I know this might sound shocking but I wish a list like this did not have to exist. It is a sign that we do not live in a perfect society.” – Tidjane Thiam, the first black person to head a FTSE 100.

Tidjane Thiam, the first black person to head a FTSE 100 company (the 100 most highly capitalized companies in the United Kingdom), was born in Cote d’Ivoire on July 26, 1962. Thiam spent most of his childhood in Paris, France. In 1984, he received an engineering degree from the École Polytechnique and, in 1986, a degree in civil engineering from the École Nationale Supérieure des Mines de Paris, where he was top of his class.

In 1988, he earned his Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree from INSEAD, an international graduate business school and research institution. In 1994, Thiam was appointed the head of the National Bureau for Technical Studies and Development for the government of Cote d’Ivoire and in 1997 he became president of the National Council on Information Super Highways and national secretary for Human Resources Development. In 1998, he became Minister of Planning and Development where he oversaw the construction of the first privately-financed power plant in Africa. In 2008, Thiam was appointed finance director at Prudential plc and a year later was named Chief Executive Officer.

In 2010 and 2011, he was named the most influential black man in the United Kingdom.

Thiam is a member of the Africa Progress Panel, an independent authority on Africa to focus the attention of  world leaders on delivering on their commitments to the continent.

The Akosua Report: Facts on The African Diaspora, is written by Akosua Lowery. Follow her on Twitter @AkosuaLowery.

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