Culture

How to Show Up For Someone Who Is Grieving This Holiday Season

How to Show Up For Someone Who Is Grieving This Holiday Season

Here are a few practical ways to let someone know you’re there for them when they’re managing grief during the holidays
How CoCo Gauff Became the World's Highest-Paid Female Athlete at Just 21 Years Old!

How CoCo Gauff Became the World’s Highest-Paid Female Athlete at Just 21 Years Old!

Forbes named Coco Gauff the world’s highest-paid female athlete of 2025, proving she knows exactly
Why Rihanna and A$AP Rocky Are The Flyest Parents Ever

Why Rihanna and A$AP Rocky Are The Flyest Parents Ever

Between Rihanna’s billionaire empire and Rocky’s influence on fashion and culture, their children might just
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    ASNE to Help Editors Reach Out to 'New America'

    Now that it has revealed that the number of journalists of color in daily newspaper and online-only newsrooms declined for the third consecutive year, the American Society of News Editors plans to enlist non-media companies to brief news executives on appealing to an increasingly brown America. “ASNE will be a leader at keeping diversity at…

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    Journalists of Color Decline for Third Year

    U.S. “Minority” Population at 36 percent; in Newsrooms, 12.79 percent The number of journalists of color in daily newspaper and online-only  newsrooms declined for the third consecutive year, the American Society of News Editors reported Thursday in disclosing the results of its annual diversity survey. Minority journalists declined from 5,500 to 5,300, though overall, “American newspapers…

  • Black in Latin America: Brazil's Complex View of Race and Color

    Brazil once touted itself as free of racism. It turns out that the truth was more complicated — a lot more complicated. In his new PBS series, The Root’s editor-in-chief examines the complexities of race and color in Brazil, the country with the second-largest number of people of African descent in the world after Nigeria —…

  • The Vine: Thelma Golden on Art and the Black Community

    Thelma Golden, the director and chief curator of New York’s Studio Museum in Harlem, spoke to The Root recently for the Vine video series on African-American leaders. She told Omar Wasow that art might not seem very important when you take into account some of the serious issues facing the black community, but “the ability…

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    Media Cite Alleged Malcolm X Killer Via Marable Book

    Death of Malcolm X Biographer Manning Marable on Eve of Biography’s Release Gave Opportunity Media Have Long Resisted. The mainstream media long resisted identifying the man believed to have pulled the trigger in the 1965 assassination of Malcolm X, but found its opportunity with Monday’s publication of the late scholar Manning Marable’s new biography, “Malcolm…

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    Malcolm X Scholar Dies on Eve of Revelations

    Noted African American historian Manning Marable died in New York on Friday, three days before his long-awaited book containing revelations about Malcolm X is to be published, his publicist confirmed. He was 60.A prolific writer, Marable directed the Institute for the Research in African American Studies at Columbia University and for years wrote the column…

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    Black Journalists Want Larger Voice in Minority 'Unity' Group

    President Notes Association Is “the Largest Partner” The National Association of Black Journalists is seeking a larger voice within Unity: Journalists of Color, an organization that gives each of its four partner organizations the same number of votes, NABJ President Kathy Y. Times told members in a message Tuesday night. “All four journalism organizations that…

  • The Vine: Marcus Samuelsson's Melting Pot

    As part of the Vine series on leadership, The Root’s Omar Wasow interviewed the Ethiopian-born, Swedish-raised celebrity chef about code switching, the difference between eating expensively and eating well, and the unique role of today’s African-American leaders. “Being able to be in many different worlds is really an opportunity,” he says. “I can talk to…

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    Bob Herbert Writes Final N.Y. Times Column

    Bob Herbert, the first African American op-ed columnist at the New York Times, is leaving the paper after 18 years, the Times said on Friday. His last column appeared on Saturday. “I have been writing a column for 25 years, nearly 18 at The New York Times,” Herbert said in a note to the Times…

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    Elizabeth Taylor Tributes Touch on Race

    Story Includes “Cleopatra,” Civil Rights, Michael Jackson “I did a short story on her when she held a news conference in D.C. to promote the play, ‘The Little Foxes’ that she was starring in at the Warner Theater,” Brenda Wilson, then reporting for NPR, recalled for Journal-isms on Wednesday. “The then Mrs. Warner was a…