Denzel Washington

May 26 2011

Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

Alabama
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney will host a series of women’s leadership receptions in Boston, Atlanta, Cleveland, Palo Alto and Birmingham now through the end of June. The events, which are open to the public with advance registration, will feature a series of speakers who focus on the women’s market. The receptions will focus on a number of different topics ranging from “Preparing Women for Success in the Next Decade” to “Second Blooming for Women: Growing a Life That Matters After Fifty.”

California
Marc Curtis Little’s spiritual thriller, “Angels in the Midst,” was named a finalist in the religion fiction category at the fifth annual Indie Excellence Awards Competition in Beverly Hills this week. The 370-page novel is the sequel to “Don’t Blink When God Calls,” Little’s debut novel. The two books are centered on Curt Felton Jr.’s rocky campaign to get elected and inaugurated as mayor of a conservative city in Florida. Back stories include extramarital affairs, drug use and criminal activity, as well as paranormal occurrences. The Indie Excellence Awards Competition presents more than $12,000 in prizes for winners in 119 categories. It is one of the leaders in recognizing the work of self-published authors worldwide.

Chicago
Daytime television royalty Oprah Winfrey recently appeared in front of a gathering of her colleagues, the media and former Mayor Richard Daley, who eagerly presented his fellow Chicagoan with a sign that read “Oprah Winfrey Way,” the name of the new street which now runs along Harpo Studios, the command station of Winfrey’s multibillion dollar empire. “I just want to say thank you to the mayor and also to the city of Chicago for embracing me and allowing me to take a stand and make a stand here in this city,” said Winfrey in reference to the 20-plus years she’s logged as host of her Chicago-based television show, which made its last broadcast Wednesday.

Florida
Democrat Alvin Brown will become Jacksonville's first African American mayor. His Republican opponent, Mike Hogan, conceded last Wednesday evening, following a daylong vote count that gave Brown an eight-tenths-of-a-percent margin of victory. Officials say the gap is wide enough to prevent an automatic recount, and that several hundred absentee ballots filed by voters on Election Day helped give 48-year-old Brown the edge. He’s expected to take office July 1.

Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

Alabama

C. Alexander Haywood   |   OW Staff Writer
May 19 2011

Are we doers or defeatists?

I will not be as those who spend the day in complaining of headache, and the night in drinking the wine that gives it—Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

It’s not easy for me to say this, but I’m gonna: Black people, at least some of us, have become the whiniest bunch around, but fail to take action against the injustices we claim. To be even more precise, we’re hypocrites of the worst possible sort, as indicated by our all-access pass to the proverbial soapbox, on which no one else can stand without provoking our watchful eye.

May 5 2011

Martin Luther King III, Ambassador Andrew Young among founders

ATLANTA, Ga.—Raycom Media one of the nation’s largest broadcasters, will make Bounce TV the first-ever over-the-air broadcast television network designed exclusively for African American audiences. It will be available in 26 of Raycom’s market when the network launches this fall.

Gregg Reese  |   OW Staff Writer
Apr 14 2011

At Roberts & Tilton gallery

“How do you find a center core, calm place to create a painting in which there are so many variations, be it cultural, gender, sexuality?” —Kehinde Wiley

Superstar painter Kehinde Wiley returned to his native Los Angeles Saturday night for the opening of his ongoing exhibition at Culver City’s Roberts & Tilton gallery, titled “The World Stage: Israel.”

Mar 10 2011

Established Maranatha Community Church

Celebration of life services for Billy G. Ingram, Ph.D., founder and pastor of Maranatha Community Church, will be held on March 19 at 10 a.m.

Ingram, 58, died on March 8 of a heart attack while sleeping. He was taken by paramedics to Kaiser Permanente on Cadillac in Los Angeles where he was declared dead.

Across Black America

Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

California
Allied Integrated Marketing recently announced it is launching a new African American marketing division, Allied Moxy. The new division will create innovative campaigns that integrate publicity, promotions, digital and grassroots outreach to speak directly to the full diversity of African American consumers. Spearheading Allied Moxy are industry veterans Kim Walters and Gloria Jones. Walters will oversee national strategy from Los Angeles, while Jones will oversee regional/local strategy from Washington, D.C. Walters brings more than a decade of marketing experience working with entertainment companies such as Codeblack Entertainment, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, and A&E Lifetime Television, as well as consumer brands such as KIA and L.A. Gear and awards programs such as NAACP Image Awards and Soul Train Music Awards. Jones has been with Allied for five years running publicity and promotional campaigns for clients, including Universal Pictures, Focus Features and Relativity Media, and previously worked for WBDC-TV in D.C. and MTV Networks’ Nick @ Nite and TV Land.

 

Representing Los Angeles and Center Theatre Group, Tyler Edwards, a senior at the Orange County High School of the Arts, placed third at the national finals of the fifth annual August Wilson Monologue Competition (AWMC) at Broadway’s August Wilson Theatre in New York City. “I am thrilled . . . I’m so glad that I took it for L.A. the first time we got up . . . that’s what we’re talking about!” said an elated Edwards following the competition. Edwards, an aspiring actor, describes the soaring, lyrical monologues found in the plays by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright August Wilson as “very inspirational,” and said prior to the Los Angeles Regional Finals of the August Wilson competition, “I would love to share a bit of that inspiration with any audience, in hopes that they leave with more appreciation than they walked in with.”

 

Georgia
Bounce TV, the nation’s first-ever over-the-air broadcast television network for African Americans, will launch a second new original comedy series, “Uptown Comic,” on June 18, immediately after the series premiere of the just-announced sitcom “Family Time.” “Uptown Comic” is a half-hour series featuring stage and skit performances by some of the hottest up-and-coming comics in the country. The show is currently in production in front of a live studio audience at the longest-running African American comedy club in the U.S.—Uptown Comedy Corner in Atlanta. Actor and comedian Joe Torry (Russell Simmons’ Def Comedy Jam) hosts. “Family Time,” a half hour situation comedy created by Bentley Kyle Evans ( “The Jamie Foxx Show,” “Martin,” “Love That Girl”) and produced by Evans and partner Trenten Gumbs is set to launch Monday, June 18, at 8 p.m. The series premiere of “Uptown Comic” will follow and be seen weekly at 8:30 p.m. (All Times Eastern.)