culture

  • A Dollar and A Dream – Financially Planning For Your Dream Venture

    Do well in school, go to college and get a good job so that you can support your family. That’s the time-honored formula for success taught to us by our parents. Most people aren’t encouraged to journey into entrepreneurship. For many, starting a business became the only option after the financial crisis of 2008 devastated…

  • TV One’s Unsung Offers Redemption for Ike Turner

    Ever since the release of 1993’s What’s Love Got to Do With It, the film based on Tina Turner’s autobiography, I, Tina, Ike Turner has been more infamously known as a wife beater than as a musical innovator. So it’s not surprising that some have side-eyed TV One’s decision to kick off the latest season…

  • Should I Be Angry That I Might Be My Husband’s 2nd Choice?

    My husband and his brother got into an argument over my husband’s disagreement with how his brother is handling some affairs in his marriage. The brother got upset and revealed to me that when my husband and I first started dating, my husband said I was cool but I would never compare to his ex,…

  • Living With Debt: Stop Buying It When You Can’t Afford It

    Harriette Cole is the author of the book of meditations 108 Stitches: Words We Live By and a contributing editor at The Root. Follow her on Twitter. 

  • 8 Transgender Women of Color Who Are Doing More Than Just Being Visible

    Caitlyn Jenner broke the Internet yesterday when she introduced herself to the world, becoming the first out transgender woman to grace the cover of Vanity Fair magazine. Undoubtedly, Jenner will give some transgender people hope that they can live as their authentic selves—a necessary and affirming message. However, her story—one in which someone can announce…

  • Throw Away the Script: How Media Bias Is Killing Black America

    Media injustice, which leads to both the erasure and criminalization of marginalized communities, has had dire consequences for both the psyches and lived experiences of black people in the United States since at least the 18th century, when newspapers ran lost-and-found ads for runaway slaves. In 1964 it compelled Malcolm X to stand before a…

  • Searching for Summer Books for a Young Reader?

    It is no secret that the publishing world—especially in children’s literature—is overwhelmingly white. Fortunately, awareness of this issue has been rising—in part because of a new organization called We Need Diverse Books. And yet, the representations of blackness in literature for young people remain terrifyingly slim. A study by the Cooperative Children’s Book Center at…

  • Snoop Dogg’s All Grown Up, and His New Music Is the Audio Version of Linen Pants and Fish Fries … and That’s a Good Thing

    When it comes to the maturation of rappers, I have more faith that Rick Santorum and the pope will go half on my gay-wedding gift than that most emcees will age gracefully. There are a few rappers who have done so—Queen Latifah and Ice Cube come to mind—but they don’t actively release rap albums anymore.…

  • My Top 5 Songs: Misty Copeland’s Playlist for Lovers

    June is African-American Music Appreciation Month, and as we celebrate the sounds that have inspired generations both past and present, the talented Misty Copeland has provided a special glimpse into the songs that influenced her life. Starting from childhood, Copeland details how her all-time favorite songs have shaped her into the woman she is today.…

  • Jaden Smith Wore a Dress to Prom 

    Sixteen-year-old Jaden Smith is all about making bold fashion statements. So it should come as no surprise that he rocked a dress on Friday when he took actress Amandla Stenberg to the prom, writes E Online. Sternberg, 16, who played Rue in The Hunger Games, shared on her Instagram page on Friday a photo of herself decked…