• Quote of the Day: Booker T. Washington on Legacy

    Read the quote in its full context here. Henry Louis Gates Jr. is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and the director of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute 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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  • What Happened to a Slave's Family?

    (The Root) — “Oral history tells me that my paternal great, great, great grandfather, Sanford Mason, was born in Virginia and sold as a slave. “Sanford met and married Nancy Jewett, and they had three children: Joe, Jeff and Eve. At some point, because of slavery, the family was separated. Sanford went to fight in…

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  • Why Are Americans So Angry?

    Why are we so angry? Amid escalating violence in America, Don Lemon raises the salient question at BlackAmericaWeb and explores solutions. I might sound happy this morning but I’m actually scared to walk outside of my house sometimes. Sometimes I’m scared to log onto social media. I’m nervous to turn on the TV. Because I…

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  • Does 'SNL' Have a Diversity Problem?

    Grantland‘s Rembert Browne checks in on Saturday Night Live’s history of race issues after some media critics and viewers complained loudly about the show’s six new cast members, all of whom are white. Saturday Night Live is a storied franchise that has found ways to cultivate stars until they’re ready to be released into the wild, while…

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  • Black Boys: The Death Toll Rises

    In a piece at Truthdig, Sonali Kolhatkar writes that Florida has a chance to redeem itself after George Zimmerman’s acquittal in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin. Another man is on trial for taking the life of another black male teenager in a similar case, and hopefully the criminal-justice system will work this time, she writes.…

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  • Drake Is Corny and Courageous

    (The Root) — Drake’s new album, Nothing Was the Same, sold more than 658,000 units in its first week, with the single “Hold On, We’re Going Home” demoting Robin Thicke’s “Blurred Lines” from the No. 1 spot on Billboard’s Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. The Toronto-born-and-bred MC’s personal best week ever puts him in second place…

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  • Beverly Johnson: Brains and Beauty Mattered in the 1970s

    Beverly Johnson, the “first black supermodel,” tells Glamour in its November issue that brains and beauty mattered when she started in the fashion industry in the 1970s, according to the Daily Mail. Johnson, 60, recalls failing a typing test at a casting call in 1972 because she acted “like she couldn’t even type,” but won…

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  • Celebrities Honored With W.E.B. Du Bois Medals at Harvard

    Hollywood director Steven Spielberg was among several luminaries honored with Harvard’s prestigious W.E.B. Du Bois Medal this week during the launch of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research. The Root’s editor-in-chief, Henry Louis Gates Jr., and Glenn H. Hutchins, whose $15 million gift helped establish the Hutchins Center, presided over the event Wednesday…

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  • Depression Cause of Capitol Violence?

    (The Root) — According to ABC News, Miriam Carey, the woman killed by police after driving her car into a White House barrier before leading police on a chase to the Capitol, was suffering from postpartum depression. The outlet quoted Carey’s mother as saying the 34-year-old woman had struggled with the illness following her daughter’s…

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  • Obamacare Isn't Big Enough

    (The Root) — It is long past time for Barack Obama to launch a rhetorical and public policy offensive, one that outlines economic priorities to promote job growth and end poverty. In 1941 President Franklin Roosevelt outlined the “four freedoms” that all Americans had the right to enjoy. Freedoms of speech and religion were combined…

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