Stronger

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Valerie June – You Can’t Be Told

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Film Review: ‘Lee Daniels’ The Butler’

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Lee Daniels’ The Butler (Reminder #4)

MV5BMTg5MDg1MzkwM15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwMjMxMTQ2OQ@@._V1_SX214_Please mark your calendars! The day is almost upon us. Lee Daniels’ (Precious) “The Butler” opens in theaters on August 16, 2013. It is the story of Cecil Gaines who as the head butler at the White House served eight Presidents and was a witness to some of the most turbulent periods in American history. This film has a star-studded cast that includes: Forest Whitaker, Oprah Winfrey, Vanessa Redgrave, Terrence Howard, Jane Fonda, Liev Schreiber, Robin Williams, Cuba Gooding Jr., Minka Kelly, Melissa Leo, James Marsden, David Oyelowo, Mariah Carey, Alan Rickman, and Lenny Kravitz. Don’t forget, support this film!!!

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Oprah faced not just fashion retail racism, but size bias too

According to Keirsey, Oprah Winfrey may be a T...

(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

By Heidi Moore

Oprah Winfrey is a successful billionaire with an empire worth $3bn, a woman whose public reputation has been built on self-empowerment. She has been frank about the stresses in her life – racism and sexism figure often – and about her struggles with her weight.

It is this last aspect that may be the hardest to deal with. Oprah’s thyroid condition makes her weight problems unavoidable. She has to deal with the rebellion of her body. She may find sympathetic tailors and fabulous shoes, and accessorize brilliantly, but she likely knows what all women know: shop assistants won’t be kind to women over a size 10, and that is especially true of woman of color.

To find something nice for Tina Turner’s wedding, Oprah walked alone into Trois Pommes in Zurich last month, an upscale shop that carries clothes from the usual runway names – Celine, Jil Sander, Lanvin – and has locations in wealthy ski towns that attract billionaires: St Moritz, Gstaad, Basel.

A shop assistant refused to show Oprah a $42,000 crocodile handbag. Here is the incident in Oprah’s words, via the International Business Times:

I was in Zurich the other day, in a store whose name I will not mention. I didn’t have my eyelashes on, but I was in full Oprah Winfrey gear. I had my little Donna Karan skirt and my little sandals. But obviously, the Oprah Winfrey Show is not shown in Zurich. I go into a store and I say to the woman, ‘Excuse me, may I see the bag right above your head?’ and she says to me, ‘No. It’s too expensive.’

Oprah later mused to Larry King that she considered following the script of Pretty Woman and deploying her fortune by buying everything in the store, but decided not to give the saleswoman the satisfaction of a larger commission. The head of the luxury chain, Trudie Goetz, later said that the saleswoman didn’t recognize Winfrey and that by rejecting Oprah’s request she tried to be “too kind”.

No doubt, the details of the incident will be pored over. It has already been attributed to racism, and rightfully so: Oprah’s incident tripped a wire that worries many women of color: to be judged negatively and immediately by their race, to be treated as second-class citizens, to be pointed to the things that are not the best, but considered merely “good enough” for you. The best and most expensive, the implication goes, is saved for those with the obvious status markers: well-groomed, accompanied by a wealthy-looking man, and usually, not coincidentally, very thin.

This is what Oprah, and most other women, rarely talk about: the struggle for respect faced by women of color is shared, at times, with another group: women of size, another category to which Oprah belongs. The scale is not the same – racism can be as ugly as anything humans are capable of – yet, on a day-to-day basis, they have parallels. There is the same sense of diminishment, the same high-handed assumption by others, the same struggle for control of your own image.

Read More Oprah faced not just fashion retail racism, but size bias too | Heidi Moore | Comment is free | theguardian.com.

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Court ruling could doom living-wage law

By Andrew J. Hawkins

cashA judge’s decision to strike down the city’s prevailing-wage law provides the Bloomberg administration an opening to get rid of another City Council statute it doesn’t like: the 2012 living-wage law.

The administration’s lawyers believe that New York Supreme Court Judge Geoffrey Wright’s assertion that the state’s minimum wage preempts the need for a prevailing wage law should also apply to the living wage, which requires employers to pay workers at least $10 an hour at development sites that receive at least $1 million in subsidies or abatements from the city.

“We believe the 2012 Living Wage law is invalid for the reasons the prevailing-wage law was struck down by the court,” said Brian Horan, assistant corporation counsel in the city’s Law Department. “We’re assessing our next steps.

“In its lawsuits against the living-wage and prevailing-wage laws, the Bloomberg administration argued that the statutes were invalid for numerous other reasons, but Judge Wright’s decision did not address those.

Read More Court ruling could doom living-wage law – The Insider Blog | Crain’s New York Business.

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Being Unemployed For Over Nine Months Is The Same As Losing Four Years Of Experience

By Bryce Covert

jobsThere is reason to believe that the long-term unemployed face discrimination when they try to get a job. Now some Swedish economists have tried to quantify exactly what that penalty looks like. They found that for someone applying for a medium or low-skill job after being jobless for more than nine months, interview requests drop by 20 percent, which is about the same as losing four years of work experience from their resumes. While the research was conducted in Sweden, the authors argue that they likely apply to the U.S., which has a somewhat similar job market.

This pattern doesn’t hold true for those who have only been unemployed for six months or less, which had no impact on whether or not they got a call for an interview. In fact, short-term unemployment seemed to be a boon for those seeking low-skill jobs, possibly because they could start immediately. The problem also didn’t impact those who were looking for jobs that require a college degree.

Once someone who is unemployed for a long period of time finds a job, however, their attractiveness should bounce back. Resumes with a year-long period of unemployment in the past got the same response as those who hadn’t been out of work.

Other research backs up the evidence of a penalty for those who are out of work for long periods of time. Northeastern University graduate student Rand Ghayad found that being out of work for more than six months had a huge impact on whether someone could get a call for an interview. Those who had been out of work for more than six months but had experience still got called back less often that those who were currently employed but lacked experience.

Read More Being Unemployed For Over Nine Months Is The Same As Losing Four Years Of Experience | ThinkProgress.

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A Better Bargain for Responsible, Middle Class Homeowners

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Young, black and shot in the head

By Kate Selker

imagesA few months before he was shot in the head, Marshall Coulter passed me in the hallway.

“Ms. Selker! Remember how otters hold hands when they sleep?”

Of course I did. I was the one who had told him about otters, one afternoon in the fall. I’d run into him after class and noticed he looked upset — school wasn’t always easy for Marshall. So I showed him a silly photo a friend had emailed me — two sea otters floating with their tiny paws interlocked. If you’ve never Googled “otters holding hands,” you should; it’s pretty irresistible. They do it so they don’t float away in the waves while they sleep. It’s how they stay safe at night.

Marshall loved the photo, and his anger thawed. He’d been fist-clenched and tight-lipped before, but he went on his way smiling. Later, he’d remind me about the otters, whenever he thought I looked tired or sad. He could be a challenging kid, but he noticed things like that.

And then, in July, he was shot. Unarmed, just a few blocks from home. He remains in critical condition.

The man who shot him, Merritt Landry, says he was afraid Marshall was going to break into his home. According to our local paper, the Times-Picayune, the police declared Marshall was not “an imminent threat” of any kind. The article draws a parallel to Trayvon Martin’s case, not simply because the victims were young and black, but also because Landry is arguing innocence for more or less “standing his ground.” But Marshall’s situation is unlikely to generate the outrage of Trayvon.

For one, Marshall had a criminal record for burglary. For another, he scaled Landry’s fence at 1:40 a.m. Marshall’s injuries have left him unable to speak, so I can’t ask him why he was there. But in the court of public opinion, he seems to have been convicted already. Reading through comments sections for the Times-Picayune and the New York Daily News, it’s hard to find readers outraged by the notion of a homeowner shooting someone on his property in the middle of the night. “I am appalled at this story,” reads one comment. “Why was he only shot once?”

And then I feel sick. I, too, am appalled – that he was shot in the first place. And that more people aren’t furious about the fact that a 14-year-old boy can step off his bike in the Marigny, one of our city’s “safest” neighborhoods, and get a bullet through the brain.

Read More Young, black and shot in the head – Salon.com.

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Nelson Mandela’s health improving by the day, his daughter says

By David Dolan

nelson-mandelaFormer South African President Nelson Mandela’s health is improving daily and he is now able to sit up for minutes at a time, his youngest daughter told state broadcaster SABC.

The 95-year-old has been in a Pretoria hospital for two months for treatment of a recurrent lung infection. The government said late last month his condition remained critical but was showing improvement.

Zindzi Mandela told SABC on Friday her father was becoming increasingly alert.

“He’s fine. Tata now manages to sit up, like now he sits up in a chair for a few minutes in a day, every day you know he becomes more alert and responsive. Tata is determined not to go anywhere anytime soon, I cannot stress this enough,” she said, referring to him by the Xhosa word for father.

Read More  Nelson Mandela’s health improving by the day, his daughter says | Reuters.

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