CultureDesk , to blackmastodon group
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

Last night, Major League Baseball legend Reggie Jackson was asked in a Fox Sports show about how he felt about returning to Rickwood Field in Birmingham, Ala., for a Negro League tribute game. The 78-year-old, who started his MLB career in Birmingham in 1967, did not hold back. He told interviewer Alex Rodriguez about his experience of racial slurs and being denied entry to restaurants and hotels, in a city where the Ku Klux Klan was committing attacks of racial hatred. Here's the story from NBC, including the full video.

https://flip.it/cvlXTF

@blackmastodon

CultureDesk , to blackmastodon group
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

MLB will be honoring the Negro Leagues and the legendary Willie Mays with a televised game today at America's oldest ballpark, Rickwood Field in Birmingham, Als. Both teams will be wearing Negro Leagues uniforms — the Cardinals will wear St. Louis Stars kits, while the Giants will wear San Francisco Sea Lions jerseys. On June 17, the day before he died, Mays gave a statement to the San Francisco Chronicle about the game. "My heart will be with all of you who are honoring the Negro League ballplayers, who should always be remembered, including all my teammates on the Black Barons," he said. Here's more from TODAY about the history of Rickwood Field, preparations for the game, and how to watch it.

https://flip.it/-fDcKQ

@histodons @blackmastodon

TheConversationUS , to blackmastodon group
@TheConversationUS@newsie.social avatar
Flipboard , to blackmastodon group
@Flipboard@flipboard.social avatar

Today is Juneteenth. Michelle Garcia, Editorial Director of NBCBLK, curated Flipboard's Good Life newsletter this week. She chose a range of stories about the past and present of Juneteenth, including a look at the "Harriet Tubman of Texas," the commercialization of the holiday, and the work that still remains. "Now that it's a federal holiday, part of figuring out how to mark the day as a nation comes with educating the public about it," writes Garcia. Here's her Storyboard.

https://flipboard.com/@nbcnews/juneteenth-then-and-now-nhtvj2l9ml2ivjsq

@blackmastodon

CultureDesk , to blackmastodon group
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

Willie Mays died yesterday at 93. Our sports editor has curated this Storyboard of tributes to an American icon. "His extraordinary statistical accomplishments speak for themselves, but the grace, joy, energy and intellect with which he played the game allowed him to separate himself from other great players of his, or any, era," writes Lincoln Mitchell for @TheConversationUS.

https://flipboard.com/@thesportsdesk/willie-mays-the-loss-of-a-true-legend-kesbil0bq42nuagh

@blackmastodon

clayrivers , to random
@clayrivers@mastodon.world avatar

Happy Juneteenth everyone!

ourhumanfam , to blackmastodon group
@ourhumanfam@mastodon.world avatar

💛 “Juneteenth: Celebrate Freedom”
By @clayrivers

On the origins of Juneteenth and why the holiday matters.

@BigAngBlack
@BlackMastodon
@blackmastodon

https://www.ohfweekly.org/e-vol-5-no-22/

clayrivers , to blackmastodon group
@clayrivers@mastodon.world avatar

💛 “Juneteenth: Celebrate Freedom”
By @clayrivers

On the origins of Juneteenth and why the holiday matters.

@BigAngBlack
@BlackMastodon
@blackmastodon

https://www.ohfweekly.org/e-vol-5-no-22/

ourhumanfam , to blackmastodon group
@ourhumanfam@mastodon.world avatar

💛 “Juneteenth: Celebrate Freedom”
By @clayrivers

On the origins of Juneteenth and why the holiday matters.

@BigAngBlack
@BlackMastodon
@blackmastodon

https://www.ohfweekly.org/e-vol-5-no-22/

ourhumanfam , to blackmastodon group
@ourhumanfam@mastodon.world avatar

💛 “Juneteenth: Celebrate Freedom”
By @clayrivers

On the origins of Juneteenth and why the holiday matters.

@BigAngBlack
@BlackMastodon
@blackmastodon

https://www.ohfweekly.org/if-its-june/

TheConversationUS , to blackmastodon group
@TheConversationUS@newsie.social avatar

Tombstones that used 'Mr.' and 'Mrs.' restored a sense of dignity to people who had been denied it in life.

https://theconversation.com/how-black-americans-combated-racism-from-beyond-the-grave-207200
@blackmastodon

ourhumanfam , to blackmastodon group
@ourhumanfam@mastodon.world avatar

💛 "Juneteenth: A Reason for Celebration or Reparations?”
By @williamspivey

Instead of celebrating Juneteenth, we should be talking about how to make things right in Texas and every state for American descendants of slavery.

@blackmastodon
@BlackMastodon

https://www.ohfweekly.org/juneteenth/

CarveHerName , to random
@CarveHerName@mstdn.social avatar

"The air is the only place free of prejudices."

, 15 Jun 1921, Bessie Coleman gained her pilot's licence, becoming the first licensed civilian African-American pilot in the world.

CultureDesk , to blackmastodon group
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

Frederick Douglass visited Ireland in the decades before the American Civil War, where he met Daniel O'Connell, Ireland's nationalist leader and a vocal critic of slavery. “I am the friend of liberty in every clime, class and colour. My sympathy with distress is not confined within the narrow bounds of my own green island. No — it extends itself to every corner of the earth," O'Connell said at a meeting of his Repeal Association that Douglass attended in September 1845. Here's a look at how his words influenced Douglass's activism: "Agitate, agitate, agitate."

https://flip.it/kQCPtA

@blackmastodon

CarveHerName , to random
@CarveHerName@mstdn.social avatar

, 14 Jun 1939, Ethel Waters stars in The Ethel Waters Show on NBC, becoming the first black person to have their own show on US TV.

Photo is from her radio show.

tom4141tom , to histodon group
@tom4141tom@mastodon.social avatar

https://youtu.be/jiTaQfXt4wI

Chris and I recorded a conversation with Matt yesterday on the Colonial Marines and his new book.

I will sheepishly admit, we found Matt and the subject so fascinating that this talk runs a little long!

Hope you enjoy it as much as we did!

@histodons @histodon @warof1812

CultureDesk , to random
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

Congratulations to the James Beard Media Award winners — the best of the best in food writing and broadcasting. Here's a post from @Eater listing all the winners — a couple of whom have collaborated with @Flipboard in the past.

https://flip.it/g7G.Ff

CultureDesk OP ,
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

In 2020, @Flipboard worked with K.J. Kearney, creator of Black Food Fridays, who has just been announced as winner of the James Beard Award for Social Media Account. Here's his fantastic Storyboard on why we all need to talk about Black cuisine, which features stories about the significance of pound cake and Hennessy, the commodification of resistance, and books about Black food history.

https://flipboard.com/@food/we-need-conversations-about-black-cuisine-curated-by-tastemaker-k.j.-kearney-vgp14s7sk8usnshs

@blackmastodon

clayrivers , to blackmastodon group
@clayrivers@mastodon.world avatar

💛 “The Jim Crow Era Was Never ‘Happy Times’ for Black People”
By @clayrivers

Despite what you may have heard in the news lately, the period of Jim Crow was never nor can it ever be viewed as a period of benefit for Black families.

@BigAngBlack
@BlackMastodon
@blackmastodon

ohfweekly.org/jim-crow-era/

CarveHerName , to random
@CarveHerName@mstdn.social avatar

, 8 Jun 1953, Mary Terrell wins her Supreme Court case and desegregates Washington DC's restaurants. She's 93, and celebrates with lunch in the very restaurant that she'd taken to court.

A painting of Mary Terrell as an older woman. She is an African-American woman with white hair.

clayrivers , to blackmastodon group
@clayrivers@mastodon.world avatar

💛 “The Jim Crow Era Was Never ‘Happy Times’ for Black People”
By @clayrivers

Despite what you may have heard in the news lately, the period of Jim Crow was never nor can it ever be viewed as a period of benefit for Black families.

@BigAngBlack
@BlackMastodon
@blackmastodon

https://www.ohfweekly.org/jim-crow-era/

ourhumanfam , to blackmastodon group
@ourhumanfam@mastodon.world avatar

💛 “The Jim Crow Era Was Never ‘Happy Times’ for Black People”
By @clayrivers

Despite what you may have heard in the news lately, the period of Jim Crow was never nor can it ever be viewed as a period of benefit for Black families.

@BigAngBlack
@BlackMastodon
@blackmastodon

https://www.ohfweekly.org/jim-crow-era/

ourhumanfam , to blackmastodon group
@ourhumanfam@mastodon.world avatar

💛 “The Jim Crow Era Was Never ‘Happy Times’ for Black People”
By @clayrivers

Despite what you may have heard in the news lately, the period of Jim Crow was never nor can it ever be viewed as a period of benefit for Black families.

@BigAngBlack
@BlackMastodon
@blackmastodon

https://www.ohfweekly.org/jim-crow-era/

CultureDesk , to blackmastodon group
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

"Black Barbie: A Documentary" produced by Shonda Rhimes, will be released on Netflix on June 19. TODAY shares this clip, featuring Kitty Black Perkins, the designer of Black Barbie, and Beulah Mae Mitchell, who worked on the production line at Mattel, remembering conversations with Barbie creator Ruth Handler. “(Handler) would say, ‘Do you have any suggestions?’” Mitchell recalled. “I was able to say, ‘We want a Black Barbie.’”

https://flip.it/j5y1hh

#BlackHistory #Documentary #Film #BlackMastodon @blackmastodon

booktweeting , to bookstodon group
@booktweeting@zirk.us avatar

A VIRTUOSO RIFF ON AN AMERICAN classic: the inimitable Percival Everett retells the story of Huckleberry Finn from Jim’s perspective, transforming it from a familiar picaresque to a more complex adventure and a meditation on code-switching. A MINUS

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/james-percival-everett/1143678734?ean=9780385550369

@bookstodon

#book #Books #bookreview #bookreviews #fiction #novel #novels #Blackwriters #BlackHistory

MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Writing History May 22, 1967: Writer and activist Langston Hughes died. Hughes was a leader of the Harlem Renaissance and one of the early pioneers of Jazz Poetry. During the Civil Rights Movement, from 1942-1962, he wrote a weekly column for the black-owned Chicago Defender. His poetry and fiction depicted the lives and struggles of working-class African Americans. Much of his writing dealt with racism and black pride. Like many black artists and intellectuals of his era, he was attracted to communism as an alternative to the racism and segregation of America. He travelled to the Soviet Union and many of his poems were published in the CPUSA newspaper. He also participated in the movement to free the Scottsboro Boys and supported the Republican cause in Spain. He opposed the U.S. entering World War II and he signed a statement in support of Stalin’s purges.

@blackmastodon @bookstadon

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • test
  • worldmews
  • mews
  • All magazines