Morehouse men launch new upscale condom
First to target African American community
Morehouse graduates Jason Panda and Ashanti Johnson have recently made headlines by taking a new and innovative approach to help decrease the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the community. They are the creators of b condoms, a plush prophylactic that focuses on changing sexual health practices in four main target audiences: African-Americans, Latinos, people 50 and older, and gay and bisexual males.
Their goal is to make condoms cool, which should induce more people to use them and, in turn, reduce transmission of HIV/AIDS.
The letter b was chosen by the company’s founders to give brand flexibility with its marketing.
“You can say b Latina, b African American, b gay or bisexual, b the Bronx, b Harlem, b what you are,” says Panda, 31.
To set the brand apart, the founders have enclosed the condoms in attractive packaging that contain the slogan: “b cool, b safe, b yourself.”
Panda and Johnson came up with the idea for b condoms after having discussions with other Morehouse colleagues last summer about the detrimental effects the AIDS virus was having on the nation, and around the globe. The reflections in that conversation morphed into a business plan prompting Panda and Johnson to invest $50,000 of their own money into b condoms, which officially launched on Dec. 1, 2010, World AIDS Day. Since then, the condoms have grown tremendously in popularity and with business booming, Johnson was able to resign from his sales and marketing position at Johnson & Johnson, and Panda from his job as a corporate attorney, to focus on marketing the product.
Taking their commitment to the prevention of HIV/AIDS one step further, the two young entrepreneurs have promised to reinvest a portion of company sales into organizations geared towards fighting the spread of sexually transmitted diseases in target communities.
“There are [other] condom companies, definitely, but we just didn’t see enough condom companies that wanted to make a change in the trajectory of HIV and AIDS in our community,” says Johnson.
The business partners are first and foremost focused on affecting urban communities and have already partnered with Bronx AIDS Services, Florida A & M University, the University of Southern California and their alma mater Morehouse College, which they worked with during this year’s National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day.
Currently, the urban brand’s classic condom is already available in small stores in NYC ($3 for a 3-pack), but they have high hopes of soon finalizing distribution deals for b condoms to be sold in large retail chains such as Walgreens and CVS pharmacy.
By the end of February, Panda, Johnson and the b condom team plan to offer the 3-pack of condoms on their website www.bcondoms.com and the 12-pack and more selections such as their ribbed, large, and ultra thin brands in the near future.
African Americans and HIV/AIDS
By race/ethnicity, African Americans face the most severe burden of HIV in the United States. At the end of 2007, Blacks accounted for almost half (46%) of people living with a diagnosis of HIV infection in the 37 states and 5 U.S.-dependent areas with long-term, confidential, name-based HIV reporting.
As the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors wrestled with three proposals to redraw district lines, Supervisors Gloria Molina and Mark Ridley-Thomas contended that the current lines were disproportionate, disenfranchising minority groups like Latinos and African Americans.
Molina and Ridley-Thomas said two majority Latino district are needed because Hispanics now comprise 48 percent of the county’s population— about one-third of voting-age residents. They also agreed that one district with an African American plurality is needed.
LOS ANGELES, Calif.—Reported hate crimes in Los Angeles County fell by 28 percent in 2010 to the lowest level in 21 years, according to the county Commission on Human Relations’ annual report released.
The commission defines a hate crime as one where hatred or prejudice toward a victim’s race or ethnicity, religion, disability, gender, or sexual orientation was a substantial factor in the crime.
According to the 2010 Hate Crime Report, there were 427 reported hate crimes countywide last year, a decline of 166 from the previous year.
Say mental illness in the African American community, and most likely you will cause a pause in conversations as large as the white elephant in the room. Mental illness has a disturbing and persistently negative history in the Black community throughout the United States.
Fueled by mistrust of a system that often views Black people as nothing more than guinea pigs ripe for experimentation, accepting the label “mentally ill” comes with a huge stigma.
The Black churches of Los Angeles appear to be losing the struggle to stay vital, which could have grave consequences for an institution that cultivated one of the most important social movements in American history, according to a new report authored by Daniel E. Walker, a research associate with the USC Dornsife College’s Center for Religion and Civic Culture.



