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Hidden Figures: The Story of Tia Bolden

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The 2016 motion picture, Hidden Figures, was a pioneer for the box office as a bold new statement for African American films. Setting the bar high with new content, the film set itself apart by keying in on black excellence, but of course not without centering on the struggles that came along with it first. “Hidden Figures” tells the story of three African American women: Dorothy Vaughn, Katherine Johnson and Mary Jackson. Portrayed respectively by Octavia Spencer, Taraji P. Henson and Janelle Monae, these three women dominated in their STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) fields and helped the first American man orbit the Earth in the 1960’s. With all three of the of characters portrayed being HBCU graduates, the movie became an inspiration not only to black women, but also to students of historically black institutions.

These women were so inspiring that there is a plethora of modern day hidden figures that walk alongside us every single day. Tia Bolden, to name one, is a graduate of Savannah State University with quite the campus background. During her college career, Tia served as a catcher for the university’s softball team, a campus resident’s assistant, as well as becoming a woman of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc. all while keeping up as an electrical engineering major with a minor in technology education. Now someone try saying all of that in one breath.

Ms. Bolden recently accepted the job offer of a lifetime at the NASA Michoud Plant in New Orleans, Louisiana. So, it’s safe to safe she’ll be getting to the bag down on the bayou all while still setting the standard for young black women with similar upbringings. I was able to sit down and speak with the modern day hidden figure herself to ask just a few questions about the big life step and how it came to be, and of course it wouldn’t be right unless we asked about HBCU experience as well.

Damesia: Tia!! It’s so great to have you here to talk about this new chapter in your life. So, jumping straight into it, how did your HBCU Experience at Savannah State University aid you in your journey to NASA?

Tia: My HBCU experience taught me that nothing in life worth having would be handed to me and that hard work was necessary to succeed. Engineering doesn’t want to see Blacks succeed. Engineering doesn’t want to see women succeed. Imagine falling into both categories. During my undergraduate experience, I realized that being a Woman of Color in a male dominant field, I would have to work twice as hard to receive half of what I deserve. My HBCU experience also equipped me with internship experience and valuable Engineering knowledge so that I would be able to prosper in the Engineering work force outside of college.

Damesia: How did you manage to land your new job at NASA as an Electrical and Manufacturing Engineer just a year after graduating from Savannah State?

Tia: In March of 2018, I attended the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) National Conference. Throughout the conference, I was able to interview on spot for Full Hire positions with major Engineering companies like Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Google and Apple. I appreciate so much NSBE for the networking opportunity and all their efforts in securing success for minorities in the Engineering field. They were by far the most pivotal force in the securing of my new position.

Damesia: What is your best advice to students who are going along the same path as you that want to secure a job when they grow up?

Tia: My advice to young black students in Engineering would be to defeat all odds that are set against them, network everywhere that you have an opportunity and gain internship experience.
Odds: Everywhere that you go, there will be someone who doesn’t believe in you and it’s your job to show them where they went wrong. The “twice as hard for half of what I deserve” mentality pushed me through all adversity and allowed me to remain steadfast throughout my adolescent journeys with Engineering.

Network: The truest statement I’ve heard in terms of success is, “it’s not about what you know, it’s about who you know.” My school sponsored 12 Engineering Students to attend the NSBE conference, and if it had not been for my advisor submitting my name to be included on the roster, I may not even have been in this incredible position I have been given. Often times we overlook networking, but I’ve realized that it’s not always who you know, but rather who knows you and who speaks highly of you; so I make it my goal to have a lasting impression on everyone that I encounter, because you never know how they may help you down the line.

Experience: Throughout the NSBE conference and career fair, I heard most of the recruiters say, “your degree is great, but what do you know?” and that says that just graduating is not enough anymore. Earlier, I mentioned defeating all odds. As a Minority, I had to do what was necessary to make myself stand out from my competition. It meant having leadership experience, undergraduate internship experience, a 3.5+ GPA and community service involvement on my Resume, just to be considered. My mother always told me, your networking will get you the interview, but your experience will get you the job. Those words stood true along my pursuit as well.

Damesia: That was some essential and crucial life advice. Of course, someone of your stature and with this much of an inspiring story, readers may want to be able to keep up with you along your journey. Where can we find you?

Tia: The engineering position is relocating me to New Orleans, Louisiana. But I’m still the Georgia Peach who was raised in Decatur, so I’ll never stray too far from home.
You can also find me through social media on Instagram at @Tbold14.

Kanye West Says Slavery Was A Choice

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Ok, is it time to cancel Kanye West now? These past two weeks Kanye West has been at peak levels of trolling and aggravation. This time, however, he crossed a line! To say that “slavery was a choice” isn’t a comment that is said with a deeper context or something that we won’t get at the surface level. It’s just insulting to our history. Kanye, at this point, is completely out of pocket!

Before I explode let’s backtrack. On TMZ Live today, Kanye West was interviewed about his love for Donald Trump and other topics related to his Twitter rants. At a point in the interview, he said his controversial slavery comments. He said, “When you hear about slavery for 400 years. For 400 years? That sounds like a choice. Like, you were there for 400 years and it’s all of you all? You know, it’s like we’re mentally in prison. I like the word prison ’cause slavery goes too — too direct to the idea of blacks. So prison is something that unites us as one race, blacks and whites being one race. We’re the human race.”

Bro, what is he talking about? I don’t think Kanye can even fathom the conditions that our ancestors went through those 400 years that they were in bondage. For him to say something so insensitive is insane to me. This further proves to me that Kanye’s antics over the past few years is because he doesn’t have the centering of his Mom in his life, who died in 2007 from complications of surgery. His mom wouldn’t have this. Being a college professor and coming from the background she did, she would’ve put Kanye in check a while ago.

I love Kanye’s music. I believe that musically he’s one of the best musical artists we’ve experienced. The trends he set and the things that he’s done with rap music is amazing and it’s true that the man shifted the culture. However we have to now look at the realization that we have to separate the words of the man from the art that he’s created. If you still want to listen to Kanye’s music, it’s cool. I still will. I just can’t support him as a person and I it’s sad to me that he’s taken this turn. Oh, and I will be listening to the new album but I definitely won’t be putting any money in his pocket. Just fill in the blanks….

Source

Carissimo, Justin. “Kanye West under Fire after Saying Slavery Was a Choice.” CBS News, CBS Interactive, 1 May 2018, www.cbsnews.com/news/kanye-west-under-fire-after-saying-slavery-was-a-choice-2018-05-01/.

Bill Cosby Found Guilty Of Sexual Assault By Jury

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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Matt Slocum/AP/REX/Shutterstock (9640100co) Bill Cosby departs after his sexual assault trial, at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown Bill Cosby, Norristown, USA - 23 Apr 2018

After four years, Bill Cosby has been found guilty of sexual assault. Cosby, the creator of the HBCU media staple A Different World, was found guilty of drugging and molesting a woman in his home in 2004. Before this, the other allegations from the 60 other women went outside the statute of limitations. Because this trial is based on an incident in 2004 the prosecution was able to bring this to trial.

According to NBC News, Cosby has been charged with three counts of aggravated indecent assault. He’s facing up to 10 years for each count. Bill Cosby is 80-years old. Prosecutors used Cosby’s previous comments about drugs and sex along with testimonies from five other women.The case is based on  testimony from accuser Andrea Constand, a former employee with Temple University women’s basketball team. She testified that Cosby drugged and sexually assaulted her when she visited his home to ask for career advice.

His lawyers argued that the allegations lobbied against him were false and were accuser Andrea Constand’s attempt to sue and get a large civil settlement. The panel was made of seven men and five women.

This story is developing.

Source

Levenson, Eric. “Bill Cosby Guilty on All Three Counts in Indecent Assault Trial, Jury Decides.” CNN, Cable News Network, 26 Apr. 2018, www.cnn.com/2018/04/26/us/bill-cosby-trial/index.html.

Kanye West Doubles Down On His Endorsement of Donald Trump

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It’s official now: The Old Kanye definitely isn’t coming back. That era has been lost in history, drowned out by the asine tweets that this new “Sunken Place” Kanye has been spewing since his return to Twitter. The tweets have literally been all over the place. One hour, he’s dropping the names of artists that are supposed to be releasing new music this summer. The next hour he’s tweeting out quotes that only sort of make sense. Now, he’s deciding to hop back into political talk, at the urging of Kim Kardashian.

Let’s think about this one now. Kim Kardashian is now Kanye’s voice of reason. According to him, she’s the one that prodded him to hop back on Twitter and clarify his tweets champion Candace Owens and Donald Trump. Instead the “All Falls Down” and “Crack Music” rapper doubled down on his support of Donald Trump, even sporting a MAGA hat.


Let’s be clear. It’s not even about the fact that he’s showing support for Donald Trump or leaning on a Republican ideology. The man has the freedom to speak on what he wants and support whoever he wants to. It doesn’t really affect me in anyway. Well, at least until he runs for president. Nevertheless, I don’t like how Kanye has switched up. As fans, we have this concept about what the “Old Kanye” is. The Old Kanye was politically astute and was a trendsetter that set the stage for the Drakes of the world to shine. The Old Kanye was unafraid to speak truth to light no matter the consequences, hence his “George Bush doesn’t care about black people” soundbite from back in 2005.

However, we don’t have to go back that far to cite Kanye West’s hypocrisy. Just five years ago he created the song “New Slaves” and clamored about how he can’t be controlled and brought light to the Prison Industrial Complex. He rallied against Nike and other big clothing companies for not supporting fashion designers of color and threatened to expose them. Then again, let me pause and think. Was he speaking for us or was he speaking for himself all along, using our struggle as a way to come up. I’m starting to think so.

Let’s be clear about who Kanye is. Kanye is a raving hypocrite. He is an opportunist that has no problem stand on both sides of an issue for his personal gain. This should be Kanye’s removal from the black community as a whole. He’s one of them now. He’s so much under hypnosis that he doesn’t realize that he’s in the Sunken Place. At this point, that movie was the autobiography of his life.

As a fan of Kanye West, this hurts. And, seeing how things are going in America, we’re going to be seeing a whole lot more of Kanye in the political realm in the future.

29-Year Old Tennessee State Alumnus Saves Nashville Waffle House From Active Shooter

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Look at this black man doing what black men do! Everything about the story of James Shaw Jr. is amazing to me. The brother was bold, quick thinking and took a risk to save himself and others from sudden danger. But, the fact that he’s a HBCU alum makes the story even sweeter! Shaw, according to The Tennessean, was at a frat house party with his friends in the area at 2:30 AM. They decided to leave the party and go to the Waffle House that was two miles away from the location at 3:20 AM. Five minutes later suspected shooter Travis Reinking open fire, killing four people and leaving four injured. Shaw was grazed by a bullet as he lunged towards the bathroom. Reinking is still on the run.

As the shooter was reloading his gun as he walked through the door, Shaw saw the opportunity to make a move on him. “When he came in, I distinctly remember thinking that he is going to have to work for this kill,” Shaw told The Tennessean. “I had a chance to stop him and thankfully I stopped him. I grabbed the gun and kept it down. He had one hand on it. I pulled it away and threw it over the bar.”

After Shaw disarmed the shooter, the shooter left out of the Waffle House and walked away. Shaw was hesitant to follow him in the case that he had another gun. Shaw was taken to the hospital at about 4 a.m. and released at 7:30 a.m.

Shaw said, “While I was in hospital, a girl that was there said you saved my life,” he said. “I didn’t do it to be hero.”

Shaw didn’t intend to be a hero but he definitely is. Big shout out to him for springing into action to prevent more lives from being lost due to the sick actions of this shooter. And, I want to say that James Shaw Jr. should get free Waffle House for life! 

Samsung Gives Misinformation About Phones, Will Go To Trial

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Phone manufacturer Samsung is under fire by a federal judge for allegedly putting out false information about the Samsung Galaxy 4, misrepresenting the total power available on the device. A federal judge most recently slammed the company for misleading customers about the product. Samsung has been confronted with a long-standing class action lawsuit led by plaintiff Daniel Norcia. In 2011 Norcia filed a lawsuit against the company saying that the features and capabilities of the Samsung S4 were “grossly misrepresented”. He also stated that Samsung led customers of the phone to believe that the S4 was more powerful than its competitors phones at that time. Although parts of the lawsuit have been dropped, the complaints about the power of the phone alleged by Norcia are still being upheld by courts.

Norcia complained, “Samsung also knew that if it artificially boosted the performance of its devices when running benchmarking apps, reviewers and the public would falsely believe that the Galaxy S4 was similarly fast in real-world situations. In reality, the processors in the Galaxy S4 run at a lower speed and the artificial performance boost disappears when the devices are performing real-world tasks instead of running benchmarking apps”

Samsung tried to fire back, attempting to move the case to arbitration court by arguing that the S4’s warranty specifically “forbid class actions lawsuits being brought.” Unfortunately, an appeals court dismissed the claim stating that the warranty isn’t imposed on the buyer, especially when introduced after the sale.

At a previous hearing on the case, U.S. District Judge James Donato said: “Samsung rigged the deck, fixed the game; and as a result of that, consumers were misled about the speed of the phone.”

Chance The Rapper To Speak At Dillard University Commencement Ceremony

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Chance the Rapper, whose full name is Chancelor Bennett, announced in a news conference Monday that he would be donating $1 million to the Chicago Public School system.

Dr. Walter Kimbrough proves why he’s the most lit HBCU president time in and time out but this time he’s outdone himself! Dr. Kimbrough has been an amazing representation of both Dillard University and HBCU life in general. He’s active on social media and knows how to galvanize the media to give positive coverage to his institution. With this latest information, Dillard University is definitely about to be a trending topic!

He just announced that Grammy-award winning artist Chance The Rapper will be speaking at Dillard University 2018 Spring Commencement on Saturday May 12, 2018. Dillard has boasted amazing commencement speakers, having singer and Hidden Figures actress Janelle Monae speak at last year’s Spring Commencement. Chance the Rapper is no stranger to the topic of HBCU’s. Last August he boldly proclaimed that he wants to enroll at Clark Atlanta University. It set off a hilarious HBCU bidding war between Clark Atlanta and FAMU, Morehouse, Grambling and Prairie View A&M. Although he isn’t speaking at Clark Atlanta, Dillard University’s commencement is the next best thing.

Having individuals such as Chance The Rapper and Janelle Monae speak at your commencement is a great thing. It gives that graduating class a special moment that they’ll never forget and a chance to interface with a celebrity as acclaimed as Chance. It also brings free visibility to the university and the greatness that is being honored during the graduation ceremonies. Shout out to Dr. Kimbrough and Dillard University for making it happen. We need a livestream link for sure!

The Black-ish HBCU Episode Wasn’t As Bad As You Think

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BLACK-ISH - "Black Math" - When Junior is accepted to Howard and Stanford, Dre tries to convince him to attend his alma mater. Meanwhile, Jack develops a comedy style and Ruby decides she's going to manage his career, forcing Diane to compete for her attention, on "black-ish," TUESDAY, APRIL 3 (9:00-9:30 p.m. EDT), on The ABC Television Network. (ABC/Byron Cohen) ANTHONY ANDERSON, MARCUS SCRIBNER

Tuesdays of this semester at my HBCU Fort Valley State University have been my busiest days. They’ve even been busier than Monday’s! Two back-to-back classes, a new book I’m trying to finish and filming for my first amateur documentary about student campaigns at HBCU’s (which starts next week). On top of that, the yard has been rich with events. Angela Rye came to speak at our John W. Davidson Lecture Series last Tuesday and we had the new Greeks come out in our joint probate, meaning that they had to turn up during their joint yard show yesterday. The Cafe and Library Patio were lively. The energy I felt at that moment was amazing. Experiencing the feeling of that moment where I saw all of our students congregating in one area having fun made me happy that I chose to attend an HBCU. The experience is priceless!

That’s why I was happy to see Black-ish finally take on the misconceptions about HBCU’s and showcase their beauty. Sure, I found out the episode was HBCU-centric after it went off thanks to Twitter. Granted The Quad, an actual HBCU show on BET, was having it’s season finale and I nearly missed that because I was hanging out on the yard with my peers talking about life and the direction FVSU was going with the new Greeks on campus and the upcoming elections. I hated that I missed the opportunity to comment on this episode live!

I finally got a chance to watch the episode, called “Black Math”. I saw the episode after seeing all of the tweets from HBCU alumni bashing this episode because of its depiction of HBCU’s and how it prepares us for society. Before I dive into the content of the episode, let me say that it’s clear Zoey should’ve been the one that went to an HBCU. I know it would send a A Different World season 1 vibe to Grown-ish but it fit her character more. However, Junior could benefit from going to an HBCU for sure and I would love to see them do a spinoff with Junior going to Howard University and put it on Freeform and show the other side of the HBCU experience!

Anyway, the episode starts off with Dre, Bow and Junior discussing his college choices. Junior gets accepted into Howard University and Stanford University respectively. Dre is happy, since Howard University is his alma mater (which is Anthony Anderson’s real alma mater). However, Junior wants to go to Stanford and Bow supports his decision 100%. Dre is distraught that Junior doesn’t even have an HBCU on the table to pick and decides to take him on the campus of Howard University to convince him that HU was the right choice.

This leads to Dre making a fool of himself and painting his experience as the monolithic black experience at an HBCU. The episode then turns to Rainbow and Dre having a conversation about Junior’s college choices and Dre, normally incredibly combative about anything black, concedes to the notion that “going to an HBCU makes you unprepared for the white world”. Black Twitter went crazy off that one! Of course, currently attending an HBCU in my third year, I disagree with this statement. We live in a white world. Going to an HBCU doesn’t make us unaware of how to deal with white people. If anything, it teaches us about who we are. It gives us confidence in ourselves and our ability to make a way out of no way. It gives us a voice and like-minded individuals to share our points of view with.

On that front, the episode lost me. Bow normally presents the less appealing view to the black argument (see the police brutality episode “Hope”). However, I saw what they were trying to do. Of course, they wanted to bring the comedy out of the situation while also presenting the other side of the HBCU argument about us not being relevant. However, Black-ish always excels at hitting a crescendo at the end of the episode where the hammer home the message that they want to convey.

Junior’s monologue about why he wanted to attend Howard was amazingly accurate. If anything, that was the saving grace of the episode! Plus, Dre was showing HBCU alumni love in his workplace discussion with his colleagues and affirmed why HBCU’s still mattered before the counter argument was presented. These aspects, to me, don’t make the episode horrible. I hate the underlying message that they sent but it didn’t unvalidate HBCU’s in any way. The ending was everything that needed to be conveyed about why HBCU life is so brilliant!

Speaking of the brilliance of HBCU life, let me go on and get ready for class. I’m about to watch Undisputed, featuring Savannah State University alumni Shannon Sharpe, and get ready to see what the new D9 Greeks have in store for Fried Chicken Wednesday in the cafe!

No Charges Filed Against Police Officers Who Killed Alton Sterling

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Here goes America being America again! Earlier today CNN reported that Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry announced that the officers involved in the 2016 shooting death of Alton Sterling will not have charges filed against them. This comes after an investigation into the shooting where it was deemed that the officers acted in a “reasonable and justified manner”. This announcement comes months after federal prosecutors determined that civil rights charges wouldn’t be filed against the officers. Landry informed Sterling’s family and they weren’t pleased.

“They’re not going to bring charges on anybody. Why would they do that? This is white America,” Washington-Abusaleh, Sterling’s aunt” said.

Sterling family attorney Chris Stewart was taken aback by the news. He said, “”It takes courage … to fight for justice; we didn’t see that in this situation. But that’s fine, because … we know what the repercussion is: Getting you out of office.”

Alton Sterling was shot and killed by two police officers who approached him outside of a convenience store in July 2016. Sterling was pinned to the ground as he was shot. The police say that the shooting happened because he was reaching for a gun.

Source

  1. Hanna, Jason. “No Charges to Be Filed in Alton Sterling Death, Louisiana Attorney General.” CNN, Cable News Network, 27 Mar. 2018, www.cnn.com/2018/03/27/us/alton-sterling-investigation/index.html.

Byron Allen Buys The Weather Channel For $300 Million

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If you didn’t know, Byron Allen is the black media mogul that always goes unnoted. He moves low-key but has a media empire that just got bigger. Allen’s company Allen Media just acquired the Weather Group, the parent company of The Weather Channel, from The Blackstone Group, Bain Capital and Comcast/NBCUniversal.

“The Weather Channel is one of the most trusted and extremely important cable networks, with information vitally important to the safety and protection of our lives,” said Allen, Founder, Chairman, & CEO of Entertainment Studios. “We welcome The Weather Channel, which has been seen in American households for nearly four decades, to our cable television networks division. The acquisition of The Weather Channel is strategic, as we begin our process of investing billions of dollars over the next five years to acquire some of the best media assets around the world.”

Allen started his entertainment career as a comedian and started the Entertainment Company 25 years ago. The company is 100% owned by Allen, making it a fully black-owned media empire. Allen has become a successful indie film producer and distributor but lost out on Nate Parker’s Birth of a Nation to Fox Searchlight even though he offered to buy the rights to the film for $20 million, nearly $3 million more than Fox Searchlight’s $17.5 million dollar tag.  

I wish much success to Byron Allen! He’s definitely inspiring me as a young, aspiring, HBCU Educated media content curator!

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