Prince’s song Kiss played on the loudspeaker and everybody paused. A woman, with dyed purple hair, was handed the microphone and the moment she started mimicking Prince's falsetto, you don’t have to be rich, people in Harris For The People shirts erupted with cheer.
A week ago, a sign was displayed at the West Virginia state capitol linking freshman Congresswoman, Ilhan Omar, a black Muslim woman, to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Right after Green Book won best picture, Spike Lee waved his hands in anger and tried to storm out the Dolby Theater.
The Jussie Smollett case is proving to be a strange unfoldment of events that only seem to happen in films and novels.
Celebrating words, art and culture, Pass It On brought veracious energy to Winston Contemporary Art Gallery on February 9th, 2019.
It was 1830 when Thomas Dartmouth “Daddy” Rice took hold of American popular culture by painting his face black with shoe polish and impersonating an old, crippled black slave named “Jim Crow”.
It’s more often than not the person with the happiest smile, the sweetest charm, the strongest love to give goes through the most private and shocking pain.
The precipitating violence and hate rhetoric that American history holds withstanding came to surface once again on the cuffs of Black History Month.
After thirty-five days of the federal government being partially shut down, over 800,000 furloughed government employees return to work on Monday, January 28th.
Jacqueline C. Goodwater is the big sister to five brothers, the department she leads, and anybody else who walks through the doors of the historic Fairchild Building at Texas Southern University.