Liked ‘Get Out’? Jordan Peele Plans To Make More Films On ‘Social Demons’

If you loved “Get Out,” then you’re in luck. Jordan Peele is planning to make an entire series of horror films.

The comedian and filmmaker told The Verge that he hopes to unveil four other “social thrillers” within the next decade.

“I love these new social thrillers,” he said in the interview published Thursday. “There’s several other ideas that have been germinating for the past eight years, and I’d like to do all of them. As far as I’m concerned, my next decade or so — along with helping other untapped artists, or untapped identities, find their own platforms as a producer — I want to write and direct these four other social thrillers.”

In February, Peele told Business Insider that he plans to explore different “social demons” and explore “innately human monsters that are woven into the fabric of how we think and how we interact” with each film.

“The best and scariest monsters in the world are human beings and what we are capable of, especially when we get together,” he said.

“Get Out,” Peele’s directorial debut, examines attitudes about race by telling the story of a young black man, Chris (played by Daniel Kaluuya), meeting his white girlfriend’s family for the first time. Suspense intensifies as the weekend goes on and Chris realizes that the white family isn’t as welcoming as he had hoped.

The thriller/comedy grossed $30.5 million over opening weekend and debuted with an impressive 100 percent on Rotten Tomatoes. Its score has since been knocked down a tad to 99 percent

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'White Tears' Is The Horror Story 'La La Land' Should Have Become

Despite dramatically failing to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards, “La La Land” was a film juggernaut of 2016. Audiences and critics thrilled to its romantic, yet melancholy, portrayal of an idealistic jazz fiend (Ryan Gosling) who privileges musical purity. Well, not universally ― some bridled at the positioning of white keyboardist Sebastian as the savior of jazz music; his foil, the sellout of the film, is played by John Legend. The white guy is the one who really cares, and by his caring he earns a certain ownership over the pure jazz tradition. He represents the best of jazz.

For filmgoers who chafed at seeing a bland hipster tap his way into a white savior role for an African-American musical tradition, White Tears will hit bookstores bearing inside a remarkably similar setup ― but also the comeuppance “La La Land” never gave to Sebastian. Where “La La Land” is a nostalgic musical romance, White Tears is a supernatural mystery, a horror story, and ultimately a tale of black Americans’ historical exploitation by white profiteers.

The novel opens on Seth, the book’s narrator, living in New York City and wandering the streets recording the ambient sounds he encounters. It’s not long after college, and he lives with Carter, his best friend from the liberal arts school they attended together. Seth is awkward, nerdy and self-conscious of his tenuous position in life as a new graduate with little safety net, but Carter buoys the partnership with his careless charisma, his single-minded passions, and, perhaps most importantly, his seemingly endless supply of cash. Carter Wallace is a scion of an enormously wealthy family, and he uses his dough to fund his and Seth’s shared pursuit: music.

The odd couple’s friendship was forged over music ― specifically, their particular interest in how the sounds they love are created. Though Seth prefers new, shiny music like EDM (old music makes him feel uncomfortably unmoored from the present, as he slips deeply into what he listens to), Carter’s ideal is the early, unpolished era of musical recording. Such is the strength of his personality, and the depth of Seth’s naive admiration for his new friend, that the obsession with vintage records, specifically the blues, becomes a shared one. Carter’s place, and later their apartment, fills up with expensive mixing boards and rare vintage microphones; he pays top dollar for blues records, the older the better. They begin collecting 78 RPM records, which were common in the gramophone era but were mostly phased out by mid-century ― 45s are too close to modern audio recording for their taste.

In college, Carter is a typical white Rasta; by the time they’ve moved to the city, he’s savvier, a hipster in an old-fashioned haircut and suspenders. “We really did feel that our love of the music bought us something, some right to blackness, but by the time we got to New York, we’d learned not to talk about it,” Seth recalls. “We didn’t want to be mistaken for the kind of suburban white boys who post pictures of themselves holding malt liquor bottles and throwing gang signs.” Of course, the blues buddies aren’t any different from those suburban white boys, save for their tact about flaunting their self-perceived ownership of black musical tropes. Their love for the music convinces them that the music is for them. They set up shop as a boutique production company, pursuing the crackling, analog sound that Carter deems authentic.

Instead of triumph, however, what ensues is dizzying mayhem. The pair becomes fascinated by a blues song Seth picked up while recording chess players at Washington Square Park. Carter convinces Seth, the skilled one of the operation, to rework the recording ― playing it through a feeble vintage speaker to re-record it, layering it with fuzz and distortion: “By the time I’d finished, it sounded like a worn 78, the kind of recording that only exists in one poor copy, a thread on which time and memory hang.” Carter fakes a record label and calls the mysterious singer Charlie Shaw; he dates the song to 1928 and releases it on a file-sharing site. Blues collectors clamor over this precious discovery, bidding to buy the record.

Then one commenter posts a series of all-caps queries, insisting that they meet in person to discuss their finding. “Now I will tell you something,” he types, once the meeting has been arranged. “Before you posted that song, I had not heard Charlie Shaw since 1959.”

They’re dismissive, certain that Charlie Shaw is a figment of their own masterful imaginations and encyclopedic 1920s blues knowledge. Then tragedy strikes Carter, leaving Seth panicked and at odds with his friend’s wealthy, insular family, who are already suspicious of their son’s trust-fund-free friend ― except for Leonie, Carter’s older sister and an aspiring artist. Together, Leonie and Seth journey South in hopes of saving her brother and locating the real Charlie Shaw ― if the real Charlie Shaw exists. In the process, Seth is confronted with police brutality against black men, the roots of the prison-industrial complex in slavery and Jim Crow, and the exploited, unrecognized work of black musicians ― which become closely intertwined in the narrative.

The book is moody, threatening, and profoundly dark; Kunzru’s prose has a Delilloesque density, constructing settings and atmospheres so charged and vivid they seem to envelop the reader in a miasma of mise-en-scène. Carter and Seth’s work, and the idealistic gloss they layer over a creeping sense of historical guilt, receives no artistically optimistic reading from Kunzru. “He respects the music,” Seth tells Leonie, defensively. “That doesn’t make them like you any better,” she replies. “It’s theirs. They’d rather you left it to them.” It’s a glib reading of a complex dynamic, offered by an insulated daughter of privilege, but there’s a kernel of truth: The boys can’t buy authenticity and ownership of the blues tradition with the strength of their interest. It belongs to someone else.

Kunzru, a British writer of Indian descent, is here taking on a dynamic somewhat outside his direct experience. When it comes to the black blues tradition, he’s taking an outsider perspective: the reader comes along with him on Seth’s journey, one defined by historical naivety and self-absorption. White Tears isn’t exactly a re-centering of black experience, but a collapsing of the white hero mythology that often guides American movies, books and TV shows that nominally address black culture. It zeroes in on an impulse that yearns to be pure, uncompromising and compensatory, finding the nasty worm of entitlement and exploitation that’s burrowed at the heart.

By the time White Tears resolves, it’s still tricky to assign a single genre to the novel: It’s a story about ghosts, about sounds reverberating not just through space but through time, about grievances leaking through the fabric of decades, and about retribution, violence and hatred. At every turn, Kunzru’s words concoct a dreamlike world where the past isn’t dead, nor even past, and the boundaries of reality flicker at the margins. For a nation seduced by a fantasy of white appropriation, maybe a horror story of white appropriation is exactly what we need.

The Bottom Line:

In hypnotic style, White Tears punctures the fantasy of a white male musical hero championing black artistic traditions, uncovering a dark and ugly underbelly.

What other reviewers think:

Publishers Weekly: “The excellent new novel from Kunzru (Gods Without Men) opens as a coming-of-age yarn and ends as a ghost story, but its real subject is a vital piece of American history: the persistence of cultural appropriation in popular music.”

Kirkus: “Record collecting turns dangerous in a smart, time-bending tale about cultural appropriation.” 

Who wrote it?

Hari Kunzru is a British novelist. He has been recognized as one of Granta’s 20 Best Young British Novelists (2003) and awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship (2014). White Tears is his fifth novel. Fun fact: Kunzru is married to Katie Kitamura, whose well-received novel A Separation came out in February.

Who will read it?

Fans of gritty literary genre fiction and racially provocative novels.

Opening lines:

“That summer I would ride my bike over the bridge, lock it up in front of one of the bars on Orchard Street and drift through the city on foot, recording. People and places. Sidewalk smokers, lover’s quarrels, drug deals. I wanted to store the world and play it back just as I’d found it, without change or addition. I collected audio of thunderstorms, music coming out of cars, the subway trains rumbling underfoot; it was all reality, a quality I had lately begun to crave, as if I were deficient in some necessary vitamin or mineral.” 

Notable passage:

“The first thing he told me after he unbolted the door was that I should prepare to cry. He’d cried. He’d been crying for two hours straight. He told me to just sit and listen ― I wouldn’t be the same after. He turned to the desk, and through the studio speakers came the sound of a New York street. Traffic, the sound of footsteps. My footsteps. I quickly recognized Tompkins Square in the East Village. I could hear barking from the dog run, skaters panhandling by the benches. He turned up the volume. I heard myself walk past the skaters into a sort of aural dead zone. The street noise faded, the dogs too. The only significant signal was the sound of a guitar, someone fingerpicking in a weird open tuning that made the instrument seem to wail and moan. It was mesmerizing, the performance of a musician struggling with inexpressible pain and loss. The recording was completely clear, unmarred by voices or traffic.”

White Tears
By Hari Kunzru
Knopf, $26.95
Publishes March 14, 2017  

The Bottom Line is a weekly review combining plot description and analysis with fun tidbits about the book.

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How Poetry Helped This Eating Disorder Survivor Heal

“Anorexia is not a choice, but recovery is.” These are the words 20-year-old slam poet Blythe Baird lives by. 

The Illinois-native said she developed an eating disorder in high school, after growing up “an obese child” in an environment where weight and food were constant conversations in her life. Baird told HuffPost that her parents tried to help her lose weight by enrolling her in a diet program at a young age, but it only fueled her eating disorder. By high school anorexia had fully taken hold of her life. 

“When I was fat, people either made fun of me or didn’t see me. When I got thin, suddenly people saw me as attractive and worth talking to,” Baird said. “It was hard not to see my weight loss as the best thing that ever happened to me.”

Throughout high school, Baird said recovery was a constant battle. She would lose weight, gain it back, lose it again; she was in a constant state of recovering then relapsing. “Recovery has not been at all linear for me,” Baird told HuffPost, adding that there are different components to healing: learning to love your body as it is and then “the actual act of eating.” 

So, right around her 17th birthday, Baird began to write poetry, using her writing as an outlet for processing her eating disorder.  

“These stories were too heavy to carry around with me, so poetry became a home for them,” she said.

Since then, Baird has become an award-winning slam poet and a published author. Spoken word ― a form of poetry performed aloud for an audience ― is her artistic weapon of choice.

Recovery is a choice I have to consciously and continuously make every day.
Blythe Baird

Baird’s slam poems are intrinsically feminist with many dissecting her long-fought battle with anorexia.

“If you develop an eating disorder when you are already thin to begin with you go to the hospital,” Baird says in one of her most popular poems “When The Fat Girl Gets Skinny,” which has more than a million views on YouTube. “If you develop an eating disorder when you are not thin to begin with you are a success story.”

In 2014, Baird was the youngest competitor at the National Poetry Slam. In 2015, she published her debut book, a collection of her poetry, titled Give Me A God I Can Relate To.

Now a college student in Minnesota double majoring in Women’s Studies and Creative Writing, Baird sees spoken word and writing as therapeutic tools that pushed her to recovery. 

“Recovery is not linear, nor does it have a past tense,” she said. “Recovery is a choice I have to consciously and continuously make every day.”

As part of National Eating Disorder Awareness Week, HuffPost sat down with Baird to discuss her battle with anorexia, her love for poetry and how she used her writing to heal. 

When did you first discover slam poetry? 

I first discovered slam poetry in high school. I had never heard of it before. There was this thing at my school called “Writers Week” where different authors come to speak to students. Sierra DeMulder (who is now like my big sister) was performing. She had a line in one of her poems, “Your body is not a temple. Your body is the house you grew up in ― how dare you try to burn it to the ground?”

It rocked my shit. It made me want to take recovery seriously. I was amazed that a poem could have that much of an impact on me. I wrote my first poem a few years later, when I went to Slam Camp in Minnesota, where Sierra was my counselor. I haven’t stopped writing or performing since. Now, I’m a counselor at the same camp I wrote my first poem at. 

It is a rebellion and act of political warfare to consume in a culture that tells us we are only meant to be consumable.
Blythe Baird

How has poetry helped you on your path to healing?

Writing has become integral to my healing process. I write because I have to let these experiences live outside of myself. These stories were too heavy to carry around with me, so poetry became a home for them. My involvement in spoken word has completely shaped the lens through which I view the world. It taught me how to articulate an argument in a way that is clear, concise, effective, and artistic. It also taught me how to pull the meaning and significance out of my personal experiences in order to use them as a method of eliciting social change.

When I get messages like, “I ate breakfast because of your poem,” or “I started going to therapy and getting help because of your poem” or even “Your poetry makes me feel like I’m not alone,” I remember that my writing is doing bigger things than I as a person am capable of. I want to honor that. That is healing and motivating for me, too.

If you could give advice to someone struggling with an eating disorder right now, what would you say? 

Recovery is possible and beautiful. One day, after years of starving and gaining and fighting, I stepped on a scale and suddenly the number didn’t say anything about me. That night, I ate dinner with my family and nothing on my plate said anything about me, either. I got ice cream from a truck and I didn’t have to make myself earn it. I could take it just because I wanted it, just because it tastes good. Recovery is freeing and worth striving for. Also, even if you mess up, don’t give up. It’s an ongoing process. 

Why do you think it’s so important for everyone ― but young women especially ― to understand that their worth is not determined by a number on the scale?

In a world that does everything in its power to convince women that we need to be smaller, that we should occupy less space, it is a radical act to take. It is a rebellion and act of political warfare to consume in a culture that tells us we are only meant to be consumable. This, too, is fighting the patriarchy.

Head over to Baird’s website to read more about her. 

If you’re struggling with an eating disorder, call the National Eating Disorder Association hotline at 1-800-931-2237.

To read more from Alanna Vagianos follow her on Facebook

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'This Is Us' Star Susan Kelechi Watson On What To Expect After That Big Death

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Spoiler alert: Please proceed with caution if you’re not up to date on “This Is Us.”

When “This Is Us” returns on Tuesday, the Pearson family will face a really tough loss: the death of William Hill (Ron Cephas Jones), who succumbed to cancer during last week’s episode. And it’s not going to be easy. 

William, the biological father of Randall Pearson (Sterling K. Brown), was a fun-loving person with a passion for music and the arts who faced a troubled and storied past. By the time Randall tracked down his dad for the first time, William’s health was failing. 

As the season progressed, William became a big part of Randall’s life, getting to know his wife, Beth (Susan Kelechi Watson), and their two daughters, Annie (Faithe Herman) and Tess (Eris Baker). So it’s no surprise that the family will take this hard, especially because Beth and the kids didn’t get to say a proper goodbye. 

In the last episode, Randall and William took a road trip to Memphis to visit William’s old stomping grounds and, along the way, they connected with some of William’s extended family. They stopped by the club where William used to play music and ate at one of his favorite restaurants. But William’s health took a turn for the worse and he never made it back home to see Beth and the kids. 

Beth did get to see the two of them off before they hit the road in a short but memorable scene. In a way, at that moment, Kelechi Watson had to say goodbye to her castmate Cephas Jones.

“There’s this scene where they’re getting in the car to go to Memphis and I bend down into the car and I look in his eyes and I say, ‘You take care of you.’ And the look Ron gave me, I said, ‘Ron, stop. You can’t do that … You know what you’re doing.’ We’re looking at each other like he knows he’s going to leave,” Kelechi Watson told The Huffington Post during a Build Series interview. “We knew that these moments were so precious having him on set.”

Because the NBC series toggles back and forth between the past and present, it’s possible we’ll see William in flashback scenes, Kelechi Watson said. Though, she added, “He’s gone now in that everyday way and that was hard.”

The actress said William’s death will hit her character “hard.” Probably harder than the audience may expect. 

“They started off as strangers … and then she kind of sort of let him in. And then he figures his role out in the family, and they become family and they become friends. It’s going to be difficult and she didn’t have a chance to say goodbye,” she said. “And her being his main caretaker in a sense, being home with him. You’ll find out how much she’s helped him in terms of medicine and doctors … So, it’s going to have a big effect.”

With only two episodes left, viewers are waiting in anticipation for how Season 1 will wind down. Kelechi Watson assures “This Is Us” fans that some lingering storylines will be tied up in the season finale, especially when it comes to Milo Ventimiglia’s and Mandy Moore’s characters, Jack and Rebecca Pearson. 

“There are aspects of Jack and Rebecca’s life that we’ve been tracking through the season and we’ll see a lot of that — and some questions will be answered,” she said.

“This Is Us” has already been picked up for two additional seasons, so there are plenty more stories to tell.

When asked whether viewers will learn more about Beth’s past in upcoming seasons, Kelechi Watson said, “That has to be a possibility playing with time and everything like that. We have the space right now to do it because we have two more seasons. Have they thought about it that far? I’m not sure. I imagine that’s an option that’s available to us. I know that we will learn about who she is, her family and her career.”

“This Is Us” airs Tuesdays at 9 p.m. ET on NBC. Watch the full Build Series interview with Susan Kelechi Watson below. 

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Second Marriages Are More Likely To End In Divorce. Here's Why

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Marrying for a second ― or third time ― is not for the faint of heart.  

Even with the best intentions, statistics show that second or later marriages are much more likely to end in divorce than first marriages. 

Why are these unions more perilous than first marriages? Below, marriage therapists share seven reasons why remarrying couples have a harder time staying together.

“A lot of couples enter into second marriages before the first one is finished. This can contribute to trust issues surfacing later on in areas such as communication with an ex or activity on social media sites. Healthy boundaries are crucial in all relationships, but especially in second marriages.” ― Kurt Smith, a therapist who counsels men 

“In first marriages, it’s expected that couples will split finances as well as share financial goals and responsibilities. Because of the higher age of couples in second marriages, couples often get together with much more financial assets than they had in their first marriages. They also probably had independent financial goals they’ve been working towards for a long time before they got married a second time. And just because they’re married now doesn’t mean that their goals should change from what they were before they were married. There are also questions about how to split household finances and how to divide assets that were accrued before the current marriage. Money is already a top issue that couples fight about. With more complicated finances, couples in second marriages are more likely to fight about finances, which often leads to divorce.” ― Aaron Anderson, a marriage and family therapist in Denver, Colorado

“Couples remarrying should still get premarital (or pre-commitment) counseling. A good counselor or religious figure will be able to ask the questions you need answered before you wed, including some questions you may not have thought of or are avoiding. You’ll start out on a more secure basis with some independent advice and counsel.” ― Tina B. Tessina, a psychotherapist and author of How To Be A Couple And Still Be Free 

“One reason many couples choose to solve or deal with marital problems is because they don’t want to go through the turmoil of breaking up their family and divvying up community property. If you don’t share children and significant assets, there’s less incentive to try to make second marriages work. And if a stepparent has never bonded with stepchildren, there’s less guilt for splitting up a blended family that never felt blended ― in fact, it might even feel like a relief for all parties. Divorce is not as scary as it was the first time around. It’s now the ‘devil you know:’ if you’ve been through it once before, you know you can do it again.” ― Virginia Gilbert, a marriage and family therapist based in Los Angeles

“Whether its the unexpected complications of blending families or the disappointment that a new marriage still falls short of one’s hope for marital bliss, expectations about marriage and family will be challenged by a second marriage. Complicating this, many second marriages aspire to avoid the irreconcilable problems they left in a previous marriage, only to find them in different forms in their new marriage. Expectations are often unreasonably high, and bonds can crumble under this burdensome weight.” ― Alicia HClark, a psychologist in Washington, D.C.   

“You both likely have leftovers from earlier relationships. If you understand your own history and seek to learn about your partner’s, you’ll stop repeating past mistakes. Talking about your past will help you understand each other, and resolve guilt, fear and jealousy about past loves. Learn about your similarities and differences, hopes and dreams. Familiarity with what went wrong in the past will help you recognize problems before you repeat them.” ― Tina B. Tessina

“When people get married, they envision all the love and romance that they’ll share together as a happily wedded couple. But most couples in second marriages also bring children with them which means that along with all the romance comes practical aspects of managing not just one, but two families. That means shuttling children around to and from exes’ houses, splitting holidays and helping each others’ kids (who may not like you) with homework, dance costumes and soccer practice. That also means that you may not have the time together you want to have because you’re splitting it with both partner’s children. All the to-do’s of one family is hard enough ― having two families makes it even harder.” ― Aaron Anderson

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Alternative Wedding Shoes For Brides Who Live In Sneakers

No heels? No problem!

A pair of sky-high stilettos might make you feel like Beyoncé, but let’s be honest: heels that high hurt like hell and will, without a doubt, cramp your dance floor flow. Instead, take a cue from one of the bangin’ brides below who sported a pair of sneakers with style. 

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Jay Z: Kalief Browder Was A 'Prophet' Who Taught Us 'How To Love Better'

Jay Z thinks we can all learn something from Kalief Browder, the young man who took his own life after spending three years in jail without a trial or conviction. 

The rapper and executive producer of “Time: The Kalief Browder Story,” was featured in the docuseries, remembering Browder as a “prophet.”

“I believe our prophets come in many shapes or forms,” Jay Z said in the episode that aired Wednesday. “Sometimes our prophets come in the form of young undeveloped energy that will teach all us grown-ups how to love better and have more compassion.”

Jay was first touched by Browder’s story when he met the young man after he was released from Rikers Island. Unable to make the $3,000 bail and unwilling to take a plea deal for allegedly stealing a backpack, Browder had spent years behind bars waiting for a trial that never happened. He was abused by correctional officers and inmates, and spent nearly two years in solitary confinement. In 2013, the charges against him were dropped. 

His sister Nicole Browder previously told The Huffington Post that her brother was consumed by paranoia and started fights with his family once he returned home. It was a serious change from Browder’s demeanor before his arrest, she said. In 2015, at just 22 years old, Browder died by suicide

Jay Z said he was “thrown off course” when he heard about Browder’s death, but he hopes the young man’s story will “save a lot of lives.”

“What was done to him was a huge injustice, and I think people see his story and realize like, man, this is going on,” he told Democracy Now! earlier this year. “This is not like one case that happened. This is happening to a lot of people, you know, especially places where I come from ― inner boroughs and Marcy Projects and the Bronx and Brooklyn and all these places. So, it’s very important, his story.”

H/T The Grio

Read more about “Time: The Kalief Browder Story” here. 

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You'll Want To Steal The 'Pick-Up Lime' This Teen Used To Ask A Girl Out

A teen from Richmond Hill, Georgia decided to ask out his crush in a sublime way.

Seventeen-year-old Michael Nguyen and his classmate, Natalie Salguero, have been friends since freshman year of high school.

But recently, Nguyen decided he wanted to take his relationship with Salguero to the next level. On Feb. 23, he worked up the nerve to ask her out during their sociology class ― and he did so in a very creative way. 

“He passed me a lime that had his number written on it,” Salguero told the Huffington Post. “I looked at him in confusion as to what type of joke he was trying to play. He then told me, ‘It’s my pick-up lime,’ which led to me and everyone in the class laughing their asses off.”

Thinking it was a joke, another student in the class asked Nguyen why he made it.

“And he said so seriously, ‘I made it for her’,” Salguero said. “Which caused everyone in the class to say, ‘Aww’ and I just laughed it off because my face was so red.”

Salguero posted pictures of the pick-up lime to Twitter, where it was RTed nearly 600 times and received over 1,000 likes.

Her caption said: “This is Michael. Michael gave me a lime. It had his number ,Then proceeded to say “It’s a pickup lime”

And though the gesture was sweet, Salguero told HuffPost she sees Nguyen strictly as a friend.

But don’t get sour about it, Nguyen seems to have taken the everything pretty well.

“We still talk in class all the time,” Salguero said. “He’s a good friend.”

The Huffington Post reached out to Nguyen but didn’t hear back at the time of publication. This story may be updated.

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Source: HuffPost Black Voices

My Brother’s Keeper Is Changing Lives And The Future

Imagine a life where you must confront violence in your community and in your own home. Imagine that this unforgiving environment could determine your destiny. This is the life that confronted a young man named Malachi Hernandez. And as a young man of color, he does not represent an exception to the rule. Yet, instead of stories of hopelessness, for Malachi and so many of his peers across the nation, different narratives are being written―stories of remarkable success, self-determination, and work ethic. They are succeeding with the help of committed and determined leaders, volunteers, and caring adults.

Malachi was born and raised in Boston. As a child, he would frequently hear gunshots in his neighborhood and often witness the brutality and cruelty of domestic violence in his home. In his young life, Hernandez has faced many challenges that most could not even imagine.

Three years ago, this week, former President Barack Obama launched My Brother’s Keeper (MBK), an initiative established to help boys and young men of color like Malachi. From the outset, MBK was designed to take an evidence based, community driven approach to remove barriers―from cradle to college and career―that impede the progress of boys and young men of color.

If America stands for anything, it stands for the idea of opportunity for everybody.
Former President Barack Obama

When he launched MBK from the East Room of the White House, President Obama told the nation that, “if America stands for anything, it stands for the idea of opportunity for everybody; the notion that no matter who you are, or where you came from, or the circumstances into which you are born, if you work hard, if you take responsibility, then you can make it in this country.” Today, we have entire generations of Latino, African American, Native American, Asian American and Pacific Islander boys and young men who―often despite their own best efforts―have not been afforded the same opportunities as others.

For Malachi, over the course of his childhood, the opportunities have been limited. However, he is overcoming obstacles and setbacks and has been embraced by a community determined to see him succeed. Through the city of Boston’s MBK initiative, Malachi found a mentor, who pushes him to do better in school and to keep striving for success. Malachi’s mentor has shown him that, despite difficult circumstances growing up, there is a different path towards achievement. Malachi is now a student at Northeastern University and a community leader in his own right. But Malachi’s story must not be the exception.

Inspired by President Obama’s call to action, a new non-profit – My Brother’s Keeper Alliance (MBK Alliance) was launched in May 2015. We bring together business, philanthropy, nonprofit, government, community organizations and other influencers to help young people redefine their future. We help to identify, invest and build what works―focusing on work that is happening at a local level to address issues such as education, employment, violence prevention and reentry. And, we are working with others to provide opportunities for young men from cradle to career, so that those programs can be expanded or replicated. But to create the change we need, we must all continue to do the groundwork in cities and communities nationwide.

The importance of policy work on behalf of young men of color cannot be overstated.

Together, with My Brother’s Keeper Challenge Communities across all 50 States, D.C., and Puerto Rico, MBK Alliance will continue to promote and develop engagements and resources to support the work being done by advocates and champions on the ground, including opportunity summits, data dashboards, communities of learning and innovation resources.

In 2016, we hosted community conversations in five cities nationwide, including the Bronx, Greensboro, Detroit, Seattle and Oakland. Each exchange provided young people with a unique platform to share their voices in a community setting. The corporate sector is also recognizing its vital role. For instance, we also worked within two of these cities to successfully pilot opportunity summits. These two events, in Oakland and Detroit, created pathways to success, and resulted in immediate jobs, resources and supports for more than 2,000 boys and young men of color.

In 2017, we will be supporting MBK Challenge Communities across the nation to advance this important work. In June, the MBK Alliance will join Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland, FedEx, the Greater Memphis Chamber and other partners to host an opportunity summit in Tennessee. MBK Alliance Opportunity Summits create networks and expand infrastructure, to support boys and young men of color, in gaining and retaining employment.

Additionally, MBK Alliance and Sprint joined forces in 2016, setting a goal to bring wireless devices to one million high school students living in households without internet across the East and West Coast.

Finally, the importance of policy work on behalf of boys and young men of color cannot be overstated. Progress on this front is underway in many cities across the nation. Earlier this year, in New York (the first state to accept the President’s challenge), top education leaders convened to discuss how to raise educational achievement for boys and young men of color. Last year, policymakers spearheading the state’s MBK efforts secured $20 million from the legislature, developing a grant program to encourage the recruitment of a diverse pool of high-quality teachers, along with family and community engagement, and programs focused on college and career success.

On December 14, 2016, during the final MBK convening at the White House, President Obama reminded those assembled that “this is something I will be invested in for the rest of my life” and intends to carry his commitment to his vision and the mission of MBK well beyond his departure from the Oval Office.

That’s how it is for us and for the legions of adults who have had the privilege of working on MBK in government and in the private sector. The lives of millions of boys and young men of color are at stake.  As is the future of our nation.

 

ABOUT MBK ALLIANCE

My Brother’s Keeper Alliance (MBK Alliance) is an independent, nonpartisan 501(c)(3) born out of President Obama’s call to action to ensure all of our nation’s boys and young men of color (BYMOC) have equal opportunity to live up to their full potential. In order to improve life outcomes, MBK Alliance works to elevate the voices of our nation’s BYMOC and unite business, philanthropy, nonprofit, government, community leaders, and youth to impact lasting social change. This collaborative, cross-sectoral movement led by MBK Alliance helps break down barriers that BYMOC disproportionately face and creates pathways to promising futures. For more information visit, www.mbkalliance.org, like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter: @MBK_Alliance.

 

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Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Jaden Smith Theatrically Reads Scientific Facts Like A Total Boss

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Jaden Smith: actor, rapper, artist, model, activist, and … scientist?

Well, not quite, but he sure has us fooled. In a video for Vanity Fair, Smith performs a dramatic reading of facts about human biology and astronomy to the camera while striking various theatrical poses.

We’re not entirely sure we understand why this even happening in the first place, but we’re not going to question it. After all, it’s very entertaining, especially when he drops knowledge like, “In an average lifetime, human skin completely replaces itself 900 times,” or, “You were once the youngest person in existence,” or, “Sharks have been around for longer than trees.” 

As he says in the video, “Mind. Blown.”

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— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices