Solange: 'I Am A Proud Black Feminist And Womanist'

Solange Knowles is all about intersectional feminism.

The singer-songwriter recently sat down with BUST for the magazine’s April/May issue and discussed music and the importance of inclusivity in feminism. The 30-year-old’s comments were as insightful and powerful as her hit album “A Seat At The Table.” 

“I am a proud black feminist and womanist and I’m extremely proud of the work that’s being done,” Knowles told BUST. “I’m a feminist who wants not only to hear the term intersectionality, but actually feel it, and see the evolution of what intersectional feminism can actually achieve.”

The term “womanist” was coined by writer and feminist activist Alice Walker in her 1983 book In Search of Our Mothers’ Garden: Womanist Prose. Womanism refers to the “black feminist or feminist of color,” Walker wrote, and focuses on women of color’s experiences in the intersectional feminist movement.

As Walker wrote: 

Womanish, the opposite of girlish… Being grown up… A woman who loves other women, sexually and/or non-sexually. Appreciates and prefers women’s culture, women’s emotional flexibility (values tears as natural counterbalance of laughter), and women’s strength.  Sometimes loves individual men, sexually and/or non-sexually… Committed to survival and wholeness of entire people, male and female. Not a separatist, except periodically, for health. 

And Knowles most definitely understands the importance of intersectionality when it comes to women’s rights. 

She said she wants to see women marching for all women’s rights, including those of Dajerria Becton, a black teenager who was slammed to the ground by a police officer during a 2015 pool party in Texas. “[Dajerria] was body slammed by a cop while she was in her swimsuit for simply existing as a young, vocal, black girl,” Knowles said. 

“I want women’s rights to be equally honored, and uplifted, and heard… but I want to see us fighting the fight for all women — women of color, our LGBTQ sisters, our Muslim sisters,” she said. 

Thank you @bust_magazine for making a platform for the loud, and proud woman

A post shared by Solange (@saintrecords) on Mar 20, 2017 at 5:10pm PDT

The BUST issue will be on newsstands March 28th. 

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Artist's 'Trumpbeast' Is A Chilling Portrait Of The Current Administration

Artist, journalist and illustrator Molly Crabapple called out President Donald Trump’s hypocrisy, absurdity and “soufflé”-like hair long before he ran for president. Now that Trump is the leader of the free world, she has no intention of easing up.

Crabapple is known for her fine-line drawings, sometimes punctuated with splashes of watercolor, which swing rabidly between realism and caricature, yielding nightmarish images that feed off the juiciest details from fantasy and reality. If you couldn’t imagine anything more bone-chilling than Trump’s cabinet as is, leave it to Crabapple to help you out by drafting the entire GOP squad as a multi-headed, reptilian beast. 

Crabapple posted an image of her horrifying creation, which she dubbed “Trumpbeast,” to Twitter on Monday. The thing features the heads of White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, among others. Their faces appear perched atop coiling, serpentine necks leading back to the same mammalian torso. Trump’s oblong hairdo is pierced by a scepter holding a “Make America Great Again” cap, which I guess the sundry heads have to share. 

According to Twitter, Crabapple is currently on the hunt for a blank wall to host a giant wheatpaste of the hungry Trumpbeast. If you know of any local businesses who might want to make a political statement while seriously traumatizing all passersby, let her know.

The artist is also selling prints of the image, titled “Make America Squamous Again,” for $100. Ten percent of the proceeds will go toward the Black Alliance for Just Immigration.

And for those who are curious, squamous is defined as being “covered with or characterized by scales,” or “relating to, consisting of, or denoting a layer of epithelium that consists of very thin flattened cells.” Don’t google it. 

We wish Crabapple luck on finding a home for her malformed monster, though we would also be content to never see this creature ever again. Either way. 

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Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. Eastern on Friday, March 31 on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 

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Famous White Man Reportedly Discovers Hollywood Diversity Issue We've All Been Talking About

As a driving force behind film and TV projects including “The West Wing,” “The Newsroom” and “A Few Good Men,” Aaron Sorkin has enjoyed an illustrious screenwriting career in Hollywood that’s spanned decades.

At an industry event over the weekend, however, Sorkin learned that other, non-white, non-male people historically have had a harder time making it, according to a report by Variety

The Hollywood diversity issue ― reported by journalists, researched by academics, dissected by insiders ― was, apparently, news to him. Or at least a topic on which he demonstrated shocking unfamiliarity. Variety reported on Sorkin’s “burning questions” during a discussion moderated by film critic Elvis Mitchell at the Writers Guild Festival in Hollywood on Saturday. According to people there, however, the talk was a genuinely compassionate one on the part of Sorkinwho invited input from those around him.

“Are you saying that women and minorities have a more difficult time getting their stuff read than white men and you’re also saying that [white men] get to make mediocre movies and can continue on?” Sorkin asked, per Variety.

“You’re saying that if you are a woman or a person of color, you have to hit it out of the park in order to get another chance?”

While various reports have found slight gains in opportunities for women and minority screenwriters ― and other behind-the-scenes workers like directors and producers ― over recent years, the picture has been clear for some time. White people, and white men in particular, are given more opportunities to create on-screen entertainment.

A most recent report, from the Writers Guild of America, West, released in 2016, found that women and minority writers were underrepresented in TV and film from 2012 to 2014. (Writers of color in television stood at just 13 percent during that time frame.) Another study, led by the same University of California at Los Angeles researcher and released in February, found similar results when 2015 shows and films were also taken into account. 

Such research has been practiced for years. The #OscarsSoWhite hashtag also dominated entertainment news cycles during awards season two years in a row, prompting a critical look at how race and gender is represented across all parts of the industry. How an accomplished writer like Sorkin could have missed the conversation is hard to imagine.

But, for his part, Sorkin was eager to learn more and become a force for positive change. “I do want to understand what someone like me can do,” he said, per Variety. 

Paging Jill Soloway

Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. ET on Friday, March 31, on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017

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Breastfeeding Won't Make Your Child Smarter In The Long Run, Study Says

There are plenty of very good reasons for moms to breastfeed their babies if they’re able to, but longterm cognitive gains may not be one of them.

A new study, published in the journal Pediatrics on Monday, found that children who were breastfed until they were at least 6 months old seemed to be less hyperactive at age 3. But by the time they turned 5, those differences had disappeared.

And after the researchers adjusted for socio-economic variables, there were only negligible differences between preschoolers who were breastfed and those who were not in terms of their vocabulary and problem-solving skills.

“We weren’t able to find a direct causal link between breastfeeding and children’s cognitive outcomes,” study author Lisa-Christine Girard, a researcher at University College Dublin, told NPR.

Girard and her co-authors collected data on roughly 8,000 children in Ireland ― born full-term ― when they were 9 months, 3 years old and 5 years old. They looked at tests measuring vocabulary and cognitive skills, as well as parental and teacher assessment of children’s “problem behaviors.”

Of course, the new study does have some limitations. Breastfeeding was broken into big time bands ― so babies who were breastfed between 32 and 180 days were looped into one large group, for example. That means that babies with potentially very different feeding experiences were analyzed together, which may “dilute the impact” of longer periods of breastfeeding, Dr. Lydia Furman, a pediatrician with Case Western Reserve University’s School of Medicine wrote in an editorial accompanying the findings.

Furman acknowledged that the topic of breastfeeding’s potential effects on cognitive abilities is controversial, but called the study “a thoughtful contribution to the breastfeeding literature.”

The findings will not alter recommendations by the American Academy of Pediatrics and World Health Organization that babies be exclusively breastfed for the first 6 months of their life, and then continue for a year or beyond ― after all, a baby’s potential IQ is not the reason doctors stick by that recommendation. But, this study will likely come as a relief to mothers who face challenges breastfeeding and worry about the effects on their children’s brains in the long run.

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That Time Audra McDonald Tried To 'Give Birth And Parent At The Same Time'

Audra McDonald’s funny birth story is proof that parenting duties never truly stop.

The Broadway icon and “Beauty and the Beast” actress shared with People what it was like giving birth for the second time. In October, her daughter Zoe Madeline Donovan, who turned 16 on Valentine’s Day, was in the room as her mom gave birth to daughter Sally James McDonald-Swenson.

“While I was giving birth to Sally James, Zoe wasn’t planning on being in the hospital room, but she got too curious so she came in,” McDonald said.

In true parenting fashion, McDonald was caught up in making sure Zoe was comfortable ― even at the exact moment she was giving birth. 

“I was so worried about her being overwhelmed that literally, as I was pushing out Sally, I was looking over at Zoe saying, ‘Are you OK? Is there anything you need from me, are you OK?’” she told People. “And Zoe kept saying, ‘Mom, would you just concentrate on having the baby!’ But I was literally trying to give birth and parent at the same time.”

Since that day, McDonald has been keeping it real on Twitter about what it’s like having a baby in the household again. 

Funny stories and tweets aside, McDonald clearly has a lot of love for her daughters.

“If you want to make me melt, just put my two daughters together, and I’m a puddle,” she told People.

H/T People

The HuffPost Parents newsletter, So You Want To Raise A Feminist, offers the latest stories and news in progressive parenting. 

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Georgetown Employee Discovers University Sold His Enslaved Ancestor

A Georgetown University employee made a haunting discovery while tracing his roots: his great-great-great-grandmother was sold in 1838 to help the college pay off its debts.

Jeremy Alexander, 45, told The New York Times that he learned this information after he and his family had their DNA tested in 2014. Alexander’s results traced back to his great-grandmother Anna Jones, without going into her story.

But Alexander was able to dive deeper into his lineage in fall 2016 when he received an unexpected email from a distant cousin, Melissa Kemp, who helped him connect the dots. The two had a conversation about older relatives they shared, according to the Times.

When Alexander brought up Jones’ name, Kemp went two generations back and informed him of Anna Mahoney Jones, his earliest known ancestor and one of the women sold by two Jesuit priests at Georgetown University to help the school survive.

Mahoney Jones was one of 272 slaves sold. The university made a total of about $115,000, or $3.3 million in today’s dollars, according to the Times. Mahoney Jones was enslaved at a plantation in Ascension Parish, Louisiana, along with her two children, 9-year-old Arnold and 6-year-old Louisa.

Alexander, who’s an executive assistant in Georgetown’s Office of Technology Commercialization, said finding this out has been quite stirring.

“Now I work here — to realize that this is my history, this is my story, blows me away,” he told the Times. “I have been really emotional as I learned about my ties to the university.”

Alexander said he wasn’t angry about the university’s ties because “it was the way the United States operated at the time.” But he said that he was happy to see Georgetown “has worked to right the wrong.”

Georgetown is currently trying to atone for its involvement in slavery. In 2015, alum Richard J. Cellini organized the nonprofit Georgetown Memory Project to trace the 272 enslaved people to their descendants. That same year, the university agreed to remove the names of the college presidents involved in the sale from two campus buildings.

In September, President John J. DeGioia announced that those descendants would be awarded preferential status in the admission process. According to The Washington Post, Georgetown will hold a religious ceremony in April as an apology for its ties to the slave trade.

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'Moonlight' Director Barry Jenkins To Turn Last Year's Biggest Book Into A TV Series

The movie of 2016 was, according to most standards, “Moonlight,” a gorgeous coming-of-age film that took home (with no small fanfare) the coveted Oscar for Best Picture. The book of 2016, on the other hand, was easily Colson Whithead’s The Underground Railroad, earning not only Oprah’s stamp of approval but the National Book Award, too.

So who better to adapt Whitehead’s critically acclaimed novel than the man behind “Moonlight,” Barry Jenkins?

According to Variety, Jenkins will write and direct a TV adaptation of The Underground Railroad, a one-hour drama series currently in development with Amazon. The New York Times reports that the show will be executive produced by Pastel, a company co-founded by Jenkins, and Brad Pitt’s Plan B Entertainment.

“Going back to ‘The Intuitionist,’ Colson’s writing has always defied convention, and ‘The Underground Railroad’ is no different,” Jenkins told Variety. “It’s a groundbreaking work that pays respect to our nation’s history while using the form to explore it in a thoughtful and original way. Preserving the sweep and grandeur of a story like this requires bold, innovative thinking and in Amazon we’ve found a partner whose reverence for storytelling and freeness of form is wholly in line with our vision.”

The Underground Railroad, described by HuffPost’s Claire Fallon as “an instant classic,” tells a story of the eponymous railroad familiar to students of American history, filtered through the lens of speculative fiction. The book centers on Cora, a young woman enslaved on a Georgia plantation, who descends into a literal subway system in an attempt to escape into freedom.

“This book has kept me up at night, had my heart in my throat, almost afraid to turn the next page,” Oprah explained in her review of the book.

Adapting Railroad isn’t Jenkins’ first foray into TV. He directed an episode of the upcoming Netflix adaptation of the movie “Dear White People” and an episode of the PBS series “Futurestates.”

According to the NYT, the Amazon production has not officially received the green light; it’s been in development for months, but it’s unclear when it will arrive or how many episodes it will span. If it gets the definitive go-ahead, the show will skip Amazon’s typical pilot procedure and move straight to series.

It’s pretty safe to say this TV show, if and when it comes to fruition, will be a must-see.

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Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. ET on Friday, March 31, on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 

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Chicago Cop Charged With 16 New Counts In LaQuan McDonald Shooting Case

A white Chicago police officer accused of murder in the shooting death of a black teenager was charged on Thursday with 16 new counts of aggravated battery, in a case that sparked national debate over police use of force against minorities.

Jason Van Dyke pleaded not guilty through his attorney in a Chicago courtroom to 16 counts of aggravated battery with a firearm that were issued by a grand jury on March 16 and unsealed on Thursday by a special prosecutor, local media reported.

Video footage of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald being shot 16 times by Van Dyke in October 2014 was released more than a year later, sparking protests and pushing the city into a national debate over police use of force, particularly in minority communities. The release of the video also led to the ouster of the police chief.

Van Dyke pleaded not guilty to murder in 2015 and is awaiting trial.

Special prosecutor Joseph McMahon did not give an explanation for the new charges on Thursday. He denied in court that he sought the new charges to correct what the defense has called errors in the initial charges, the Chicago Tribune reported.

Four Chicago police officers were suspended for not having properly functioning dashboard cameras during the shooting, officials said in January. Chicago’s Office of the Inspector General recommended 11 of the 15 officers involved in the incident be discharged.

The U.S. Justice Department began a civil rights investigation in December 2015 after the video was released by court order.

The department said in a report in January that Chicago police routinely violated the civil rights of people, citing excessive force, racially discriminatory conduct and a “code of silence” to thwart investigations into police misconduct.

The report said excessive force falls “heaviest on black and Latino communities,” with police using force almost 10 times more often against blacks than whites.

(Reporting by Brendan O’Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Randy Fabi)

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10 Relationship Facts Everyone Should Know Before Getting Married

We hate to be pessimistic, but love alone isn’t enough sustain a marriage. To truly make a marriage last, research suggests you need to be smart and conscientious in how you love your partner.

To that end, we’ve gathered 10 marriage-related facts every engaged couple should know about. Take those rose-colored glasses off and read on.

1.  Sharing the housework = more sex.

Sharing is caring ― and sharing household chores could make for a really hot sex life. A 2015 study from the University of Alberta found that couples who divvy up cleaning tasks reported higher relationship satisfaction and got busy more often than couples who left it to one partner.  

Apparently, when men in the study felt they were making fair contributions to household chores, the couple had more sex and each partner reported more sexual satisfaction. Now we understand why Mr. Clean dances like this:

2. The honeymoon phase may be a myth.

Don’t get too hung up on the hot-and-heavy phase fizzling out: the honeymoon phase may be more of a myth than a reality. According researchers at Deakin University’s Australian Center on Quality of Life, couples are happiest after their first year of marriage. What’s more, newlyweds reported having a lower happiness score than couples who had been married for a long time

Lead researcher Melissa Weinberg attributed the findings to couples having a “wedding hangover” ― a feeling of sadness once the wedding is over and the actual marriage begins.

3. Most couples wait six years before going to marriage counseling ― but you should go sooner.

The average couple who visits a marriage counselor has been struggling for about six years. By that time, some therapists say the damage has already been done. It’s much smarter to go as soon as you start to get serious, when things between you and your S.O. are going relatively smoothly, Ryan Howes, a psychologist in Pasadena, California told HuffPost recently.

“It’s OK to go to counseling when things seem ‘fine’ so that you are more resilient when they aren’t,” he explained. “Even the strongest marriages will encounter tough times eventually, and it’s good to be equipped when they come.”

4. Eye rolls could cost you. Contempt is one of the top predictors of divorce. 

Get a handle on those snarky remarks. According to marriage researcher John Gottman, contemptuous behavior like eye-rolling, sarcasm and name-calling is the number one predictor of divorce.

For forty years, Gottman and his research team at the Gottman Institute have studied couples’ interactions to determine the key predictors of divorce — or as he calls them, “the four horsemen of the apocalypse.” Contempt is the number one sign, followed by criticism, defensiveness and stonewalling (emotionally withdrawing from your partner.) 

5. Cuddling is a game-changer in a long-term relationship.

Big (and little) spoons, rejoice! A 2014 study out of the University of Toronto found that even a small amount of cuddling can produce substantial increases in sexual and relationship satisfaction, especially among women and parents of young children.

6. Arguing over finances early on doesn’t bode well for the marriage.

It may not be the sexiest premarital convo but talking about money issues now rather than later could save you a world of heartache. In 2013 study, researchers at Kansas State University found that early finance-related arguments are the top predictor of divorce. What’s more, this was true across income and wealth levels. That’s your cue to pour a glass of wine and start talking financial histories and money expectations.

7. Men really benefit from getting married. 

Research has suggested that men, in particular, benefit from married life. A major survey of 127,545 American adults found that married men are healthier than men who never tied the knot or whose marriages ended in divorce or widowhood. They also live longer!

8. A few arguments every now and then are actually good for your marriage. 

If something isn’t sitting right with you and your partner, get vocal. In 2012, Florida State University researchers found that bursts of arguments can actually be beneficial to relationships. Arguing helps signal to your partner that certain behaviors ― cough, leaving the dishes in the sink, cough ― are unacceptable, said lead researcher James McNulty

9. Divorce may be contagious. 

We don’t want to ruin your double date plans but the people you surround yourself with matter quite a bit. A study published in the “Social Forces” Journal in 2013 found that divorce can work like a social contagion, spreading among friends and families. If someone in your social network ― say your coworker BFF or family friend ― splits up, the statistical likelihood of ending up in divorce court yourself increases by 75 percent. 

As the researcher explained, “Individuals who get divorced may influence not only their friends, but also their friends’ friends as the propensity to divorce spreads.”

10. Marriage is good for your heart. 

The jury is still out on whether single people or couples are healthier, but research suggests getting hitched is at least heart healthy. 

In one recent study out of New York University’s Lagone Medical Center, researchers found that married men and women had a five percent lower chance of cardiovascular disease compared to single folks.

Why’s that? It may be because married people have better emotional support and deeper social ties to family, which in turn produces lower blood pressure and general heart health. 

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Darius Rucker Cries For The Love Of The Gamecocks, Who Reach Final Four

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We can just hear Darius Rucker singing to his team: “I only wanna be with you.”

Rucker, lead singer of ‘90s hitmakers Hootie and the Blowfish, had himself a moment in New York City’s Madison Square Garden after watching the South Carolina Gamecocks defeat the Florida Gators on Sunday, advancing to their first Final Four in the NCAA Tournament.

Watch the emotional reaction from the former South Carolina student and Charleston native below:

WISTV, a local TV outlet, pointed out that Rucker is so devoted, he hasn’t let work get in his way of March Madness, either. As he performed a concert in Charleston on Friday, the singer stole looks at onstage monitors showing South Carolina upsetting Baylor. 

Even Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Bill Murray ― other celebrity fans whose teams eventually bowed out ― didn’t show that level of fanaticism.

H/T For The Win

Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. ET on Friday, March 31, on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 

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