culture

  • Why You Can't Say 'Racism Is Alive' in Cuba

    It appears that calling out racism in Cuba comes at a price. Roberto Zurbano wrote about inequality based on skin color in his home country in a recent New York Times article. The editor and publisher was then demoted to a lesser position at the government-controlled Casa de las Americas book publishing company this week,…

  • Belts, Cords or Switches: Let's Stop Hitting Our Kids

    In a piece at BlackAmericaWeb.com, Nikki Woods, The Tom Joyner Morning Show’s senior producer, explains why she has a problem with the viral video of a father who has been indicted on charges of child endangerment and child abuse after whipping his two teenaged daughters for “twerking.” She also says it should spark a larger…

  • Has White Male Privilege Run Amok?

    (The Root) — Questions of racial identity and belonging have taken center stage this week with news that Karen Finney, political analyst and former deputy press secretary for Hillary Clinton, will host a new weekend show on MSNBC. In its announcement, MSNBC noted that Finney was the “first African-American spokeswoman for the Democratic National Committee.”…

  • Wrong Move to Fire Bullying Rutgers Coach Mike Rice

    ESPN’s Roxanne Jones says in a piece for CNN that firing Rutgers basketball coach Mike Rice will not take the brutality out of college sports. In fact, it just might pave the way for him to receive another job after he rehabilitates his reputation. Watching the video of Rice batter and berate his players, I…

  • Villages Don't Raise Children Anymore

    Back in the day, neighbors and extended family helped raise children and set them on the right path when they went astray, San Francisco-based author Shawn Taylor recalls at Ebony. Today, much of the black community is splintered, and families have become more fractured and increasingly violence-prone. He asks where we should go next. ……

  • 25 Most Influential African Americans in Technology

    Business Insider is reporting that diversity in Silicon Valley has become a hot topic lately. In a one-and-a-half year long investigation, CNNMoney probed 20 of the most influential technology companies in the U.S. What they found: racial minorities and women are generally underrepresented in management roles. And those roles are typically dominated by white and…

  • Trayvon Martin: The Latest, Week 56

    Friday, April 5, 1:36 p.m. EDT: Trayvon Martin’s parents settle a wrongful-death claim: Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin are believed to have settled for more than $1 million with the homeowners association of the Sanford, Fla., subdivision where their teenage son was killed more than a year ago, the Orlando Sentinel reports. The settlement was…

  • Watch This: FLOTUS' 'Busy Single Mother' Slip

    First lady Michelle Obama’s slip of the tongue while promoting her Let’s Move! campaign, accidentally calling herself “a busy single mother,” continued to reverberate a day later. Proponents and opponents tried to analyze the statement, asking whether there is marital strife, pointing out the president’s public acknowledgment of another beautiful woman, along with a lot…

  • What Roger Ebert Said About Black Films

    (The Root) — When Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert died on April 4 after a battle with cancer, a cross-cultural, countrywide coalition of fans expressed grief over the loss of the 70-year-old Pulitzer Prize winner. You didn’t have to be a Chicagoan to have heard of his work, which had a national audience. And…

  • Judge Orders Morning-After Pill Available Without Prescription

    CNN is reporting that a federal judge in Brooklyn, N.Y., has ordered the Food and Drug Administration to make the morning-after birth control pill available over the counter to people of any age without a prescription. This order overturned a 2011 decision by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to require a prescription for…