culture

  • Jovan Belcher’s Mother Hits Kansas City Chiefs With Wrongful-Death Lawsuit

    The mother of former Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Jovan Belcher has filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against the team after his body was exhumed so that his brain could be examined for trauma, the Kansas City Star reports. Cheryl Shepherd reportedly filed the suit in Jackson County Circuit Court in Kansas City, Mo., Tuesday, charging that…

  • ESPN Columnist: Why the N-Word Was 2013’s ‘Sports Person of the Year’ 

    Jemele Hill, an ESPN columnist and co-host of ESPN2’s Numbers Never Lie, said that while Time magazine uses its Person of the Year award to recognize impact, she wouldn’t use “Sports Person of the Year” to recognize high performers such as Serena Williams or Peyton Manning. Instead, she would nominate the n-word for 2013’s most impactful…

  • Juanita Moore, Star of Imitation of Life, Dies

    Juanita Moore, the pioneering African-American actress who was nominated for an Oscar for her performance in Imitation of Life, died at the age of 99, the Associated Press reports. According to her grandson, actor Kirk Kelleykahn, Moore collapsed in her home in Los Angeles on Wednesday. Kelleykahn told the AP that his grandmother was 99,…

  • Relationship Breaks: Won’t Fix the Issue, May Bring More Drama

    “How do you feel about couples taking a break? My girl suggested it, but I don’t know how I feel about people being able to check in and out of a relationship when they feel like it. Does it say something about my self respect if I let her take a break?” —R.Y. Taking a…

  • 4-Year-Old Left in Car for 8 Hours While Mother Gambles

    A Baltimore woman spent the first moments of 2014 in jail after she left her 4-year-old daughter unattended in a car for hours while she gambled inside a casino, New York’s Daily News reports. Alicia Denice Brown, 24, was arrested on New Year’s Eve at Maryland Live! Casino in Hanover, Md., after a routine patrol…

  • Wife Shot by Husband in Freak Gun Accident

    Police in Detroit are still investigating a bizarre shooting that took place earlier this week in the home of UAW Vice President General Holiefield, which left his wife in serious condition after a gun he was cleaning went off and shot her in the stomach, CBS Detroit reports. Holiefield’s wife, 50-year-old photographer Monica Morgan, is in…

  • Dr. Kenneth C. Edelin, Champion of Rights for Poor Women of Color, Dies 

    Dr. Kenneth C. Edelin, a champion for both the civil rights movement and women’s rights, has died of cancer in Sarasota, Fla. where he lived in retirement, the Boston Globe reports. Dr. Edelin became a nationwide figure after he was convicted of manslaughter in Boston in 1975 after he performed an abortion. He would later…

  • Uncle Phil Was a Fresh Take on Black Fatherhood

    When James Avery died on New Year’s Eve, he had amassed an enviable career of television and stage appearances, including a performance as the legendary Howard University Law professor Charles Hamilton Houston in the 1993 PBS dramatization of Brown v. Board of Education. His lasting legacy, though, is as one on the most endearing black…

  • Giving Young Killers a Chance at Redemption

    My friend Yuko was trying to convince me to watch a Web video, a TED talk by some guy who said some inspiring stuff. I like watching videos, but I don’t get home to New York that much. I had a only few hours left in my visit, so I was anxious to hit the…

  • Filmmaker Shola Lynch’s New Role in Bringing Our Stories to the Masses

    Shola Lynch has emerged as one of the most exciting black female filmmakers in recent memory. Her groundbreaking documentaries—2004’s Chisholm ’72: Unbought & Unbossed, on the history-making presidential campaign of black congresswoman Shirley Chisholm; and 2013’s Free Angela and All Political Prisoners, the story of iconic black activist Angela Davis—have established her as both a…