• Utah Station Hires State's 1st Black Anchor

    At a time when diversity among broadcast and cable news anchors appears to be on the wane, or barely exists in places like, say, um, Utah, 27-year-old Nadia Crow’s recent move represents a bit of good news. She became the first regular African-American anchor at Utah’s KTVX-Channel 4 and in the state, according to the…

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  • Why Harry Belafonte Is Suing the Heirs of MLK

    Eighty-six-year-old singer, actor and activist Harry Belafonte has moved on to a different battle, following his high-profile intergenerational beef with Jay Z this summer.  Saying that at his age it’s time to get his affairs in order, he filed a lawsuit Tuesday in a New York City federal court against the three surviving children of…

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  • Are College Sports a Modern-Day Plantation?

    (The Root) — When 2012 Heisman Trophy winner and Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel was reprimanded for allegedly taking payment for signing autographs, the ensuing controversy reignited an age-old debate: Should college athletes be compensated? Manziel appeared on the cover of Time magazine under the headline “It’s Time to Pay College Athletes.” But the way…

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  • Quote of the Day: Malcolm X on Self-Hate

    Read The Root’s coverage of Malcolm X here. Henry Louis Gates Jr. is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and founding director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University. He is also the editor-in-chief of The Root. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • Why Kendrick Lamar Is a Sensitive Rapper

    (The Root) — While the federal government hangs by the hair of its chinny chin chin, hip-hop MC Kendrick Lamar is playing the big, bad wolf, challenging rappers during Tuesday night’s broadcast of the 2013 BET Hip Hop Awards cypher to step up their art and performance in respect for the culture’s battle tradition. Surrounded…

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  • Man Paralyzed by Cops Faces 20 Years

    (The Root) — On Nov. 11, 2012, just before 10 p.m., Leon Ford Jr. looked in his rearview mirror and saw flashing lights. Ford pulled to the side of the road. Almost everything that happened next — whether Ford should have been stopped, what happened when Pittsburgh police officers approached Ford’s car, what Ford and…

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  • Why Do Italian Men Love Black Women?

    (The Root) — “I went to Italy, where Italian men love black women. My male friends here in the U.S. seem to think I’m exaggerating this when I bring it up, or act offended when I rave about the great time I had there and how much I enjoyed the unusual amount of attention and praise (yeah, I’ll…

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  • Sen. Cory Booker's Rich Friends Will Win

    (The Root) — Cory Booker’s inevitable election to the U.S. Senate on Wednesday will prove, for large segments of the black community, both historic and bittersweet. Booker’s meteoric rise since being elected mayor of Newark, N.J., in 2006 has been assisted by a well-crafted media persona. Booker first burst onto Newark’s political scene in 2002,…

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  • African Voodoo Should Not Be Fodder for Halloween

    American Apparel should dismantle its “makeshift Vodou” display and not associate African spiritual traditions or religions with Halloween, Shantrelle Lewis argues at Ebony magazine. Lewis is concerned about the “bastardization of Vodou as a formal religion” and describes how many of the first black communities in the New World were practitioners of African spiritual systems.  …

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  • Assess the Crowd, Not Just the Lone Radical

    Ta-Nehisi Coates, in a piece at The Atlantic about a recent protest by conservatives in Washington, D.C., explains how he is less interested in the actions of a single radical person and more concerned with how the surrounding crowd, or audience, accepts or rejects the individual’s claims.   It is the wisdom of the crowd…

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