Nov 01 - Nov 07, 2018
Houston Style Magazine Houston’s Premiere Weekly Publication
Volume 29 | Number 45
Complimentary
Jesse Jackson
We Must Not Be Bystanders When Darkness Descends
Actor Kedrick Brown Brings His Own Seat to the Table Words By Cecilia Smith, Style Feature Writer and Photography by Marla Cardenas
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Honoring Houston’s Treasures
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NAACP Centennial Freedom Fund Gala
Voting While Black Creating a Midterm ‘Black Wave’
Houston Texans
Extend Winning Streak to Five-Games
Links’ Grande Tea
N E W S | C O M M E N TA R I E S | S P O R T S | H E A LT H | E N T E R TA I N M E N T
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Nov 01 - Nov 07, 2018
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06 Publisher Francis Page, Jr. Associate Publisher Lisa Valadez
Voter Suppression Continues Against Students at PVAMU
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Managing Editor Jo-Carolyn Goode editorial@stylemagazine.com Social Media Editor/Videographer Reginald Dominique reggiedominique@me.com
NATIONAL WRITERS
Jesse Jackson jjackson@rainbowpush.org Roland Martin www.rolandmartin.com Judge Greg Mathis www.askjudgemathis.com
PHOTOGRAPHERS Vicky Pink vhpink@gmail.com
Will Tyler Perry Really Retire Madea?
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William Ealy Williamealy1906@gmail.com Semetra Samuel semetra@artistikrebelcreative.com Mike Munoz artrepreneur91@gmail.com Robert Franklin editorial@stylemagazine.com
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COMMENTARY
We Must Not Be Bystanders When Darkness Descends By Jesse Jackson, National Political Writer
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hese are dark times.
Thirteen pipe bombs were sent to two former presidents and other political and cultural leaders. In Kentucky, a white man shot and killed two elderly African-Americans at random in a Kroger grocery store, after failing to force his way into a black church. In Pittsburgh, in what is believed to be the deadliest attack on the Jewish community in U.S. history, a gunman walked into the Tree of Life synagogue and massacred 11 during Sabbath services. What time is it? In Isaiah, chapter 21, verse 11-12, the watchman in his tower is asked: “Watchman, what from the night?” The inquiry comes from an occupier and oppressor of the Israelites. The watchman replies: “The morning cometh, and also the night.” What time is it? Is it dusk moving toward midnight, or dawn moving to the day? We are not bystanders in this drama. It will not be an act of nature that decides, nor a matter of fate. What is clear is that seeds of violence have been strewn across this country. Hatreds that lay fallow have been roused. Divisions have been sharpened. Rain comes from the top, never bottom
up. The president rouses fears of an invasion of an alien caravan coming this way. He invents the claim that terrorists have infiltrated the caravan. He lies that Democrats are to blame for not fixing our laws, although he torpedoed a bipartisan reform bill.
news” used to discredit reporting on the inventions and lies of the president. Political opponents slandered before mass audiences. What Teddy Roosevelt called the “bully pulpit” - meaning wonderful pulpit - taken over by a bully.
He ignores the fact that these are people seeking asylum, who will gain entry only after their applications are reviewed and accepted. His appeals to fear are echoed and augmented by allies for partisan purpose.
What time is it? The seeds of anger and hate are blowing in the wind. No wall, no boundary, no law can contain them. What we do know, as the Bible teaches, is that we will reap what we sow.
Their cynicism is clear. “It doesn’t matter if it’s 100 percent accurate. This is the play,” an administration official told the Daily Beast.
In this darkness, are we moving toward midnight or towards the dawn? We can decide. The arc of the universe, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. taught, is long but it moves towards justice, but only if we bend it that way.
Furious, the murderer in Pittsburgh, who raged about a Jewish humanitarian group that helps resettle immigrants in America, arms himself with an assault rifle and three handguns and assaults the synagogue. The president says the answer is to arm synagogues and churches and schools. Sowing division is not an accident; it is a strategy. President Obama attacked as illegitimate with the lie about his birth certificate. Neo-Nazi rioters in Charlottesville, Va. -- chanting “Jews will not replace us” -- praised as including some “fine people.” The American media assailed as “the true enemy of the people,” the claim of “fake
POLITICAL
Clearly, as president, Trump has neither the intention nor the capacity to do that. He has profited from division and has no reason to change course. This is a time for others to lead, for citizens to act to bring us together. Captive in Egypt, Israelis were asked to make brick
Now, however, we can vote. We can speak. We can act. We can choose to build walls or to build bridges with our voices, our votes and our marching feet. Today we feel the darkness, the hard cold of hatred and division. Will we be a thermometer and simply record this environment or act like a thermostat and alter these conditions? Will we choose to descend further toward midnight, or choose to force the dawn? Ultimately, we will decide, by what we do and what we choose not to do, by how we vote or whether we choose not to vote, by whether we come together or whether we allow our fears to drive us apart. Now is the time to act. You can write to the Rev. Jesse Jackson in care of this newspaper or by email at jjackson@rainbowpush.org. Follow him on Twitter @RevJJackson. Share this story online at stylemagazine. com.
‘Voting While Black’: How Activists Are Racing to Create a Midterm ‘Black Wave’ CNN/StyleMagazine.com Newswire
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n a drizzly Saturday morning, nearly 200 people gathered in a downtown conference center here for what was billed as a “black joy” brunch -- complete with mimosas, glasses of sweet tea and plates of fried chicken and waffles. But the gathering wasn’t merely social. As a DJ blared Beyoncé’s “Crazy in Love” over the sound system, the crowd of mostly African-American women pulled out their cell phones, logged into an online voter-outreach tool called Relay and began a texting marathon. In a little more than two hours, they had reached 65,000 infrequent African-American voters in a swath of rural Georgia, known as the Black Belt. Their messages warned of purges of African-American residents from the voting rolls and urged support for Stacey Abrams, the Georgia Democrat who’s vying to make history as the nation’s first black female governor. This brunch and a crop of other quasi-social events organized around the country by the two-year-old Color of Change PAC seek to drive black turnout in key states. That includes Georgia, where African-Americans make up nearly 31% of the population but, like many voters, sit out off-year elections in droves.
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This is the test of leadership. It is now that leaders must appeal to the better angels of our nature. It is now that leaders must bring us together and remind us of our common bonds.
without straw, a cruel impossibility. Under slavery and segregation, blacks were asked to embrace democracy without the vote, a cruel impossibility.
The event also illustrates how a little-known but growing network of African-American political groups is laboring behind the scenes to reshape who will vote in the midterms and engineer what Color of Change’s executive director, Arisha Hatch, hopes will become a “black wave” that sweeps Abrams and other Democrats into power. Their ultimate goal: build lasting political clout for African Americans, especially in the South, where more than half of the nation’s black residents live. To do so, they will have to defy history and permanently change decades of voting behavior. Faced with a “bigoted and destructive agenda” in Washington, “black voters are seeing this as a transformative moment for the country,” said Adrianne Shropshire, who runs BlackPAC, a two-year-old political action committee. “They are using their votes as their resistance,” she said. BlackPAC, which helped boost turnout for winning Democrats last year in Virginia and Alabama, is now spending $8 million in the final sprint to Election Day to target African-American voters with radio ads and mailers in Georgia and nine other states.
Nov 01 - Nov 07, 2018
Other groups working to change the complexion of the midterm electorate include PowerPAC Georgia, a group affiliated with San Francisco lawyer and veteran Democratic strategist Steve Phillips, which is plowing in $5 million to help turn out 100,000 infrequent African-American voters who live outside the metro Atlanta area. Collective PAC, which bills itself as the EMILY’s List for black candidates, is launching a national text-messaging program to reach about 2 million African-American voters in at least five states, including Florida and Mississippi. The Black Economic Alliance, a group started in this election cycle by African-American executives, is spending $2.6 million in a last-minute voter-mobilization push in 15 federal and state races. Color of Change PAC, whose financial backers include labor unions and Democratic billionaire Tom Steyer, plans to spend about $5 million to reach 1 million black voters. And a coalition of African-American groups, led by the Black Women’s Roundtable is trying to mobilize at least 150,000 black women to vote in Georgia. Several of these groups, including BlackPAC and Collective PAC, came to life
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in 2016, as African-American political operatives prepared for the end of Barack Obama’s presidency and a new era in American politics. Quentin James -- who co-founded Collective PAC with his wife, former Obama campaign aide Stefanie Brown-James -said he also wanted to help turn the energy feeding Black Lives Matter protests into something more durable: greater political representation. “People are saying, ‘I don’t just want to protest. I want to run. I want a seat at the table to make the change,’ “ he said.
BUSINESS Wells Fargo Closes $700 Million Loan Supported by Properties in Hawaii, Texas and Maryland
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ells Fargo & Company (NYSE: WFC) announced it has closed a $700 million syndicated loan facility to The Howard Hughes Corporation® (HHC), a publicly traded company that owns, manages and develops commercial, residential and mixed-use real estate throughout the United States, including a portfolio of acclaimed master planned communities. “This financing achieves several objectives, including converting bridge and construction loans to a five-year term loan facility that provides operating flexibility and enhanced liquidity for The Howard Hughes Corporation, and Wells Fargo was pleased to agent and partner with HHC for the financing,” said Bill Vernon, head of Real Estate Banking in Wells Fargo’s Commercial Real Estate group. “HHC is a valued client, and we look forward to continuing to provide flexible capital solutions that meet the company’s financing objectives for its existing portfolio and future acquisition and development pipeline.” The loan facility comprises a $615 million term loan and an $85 million revolver that will provide general working capital for HHC. The loan facility is secured by a di-
By StyleMagazine.com Newswire
verse collateral pool comprised of 26 retail, office and hotel properties located in HHC’s acclaimed master planned communities of Ward Village®, The Woodlands®, and Downtown Columbia®. * Ward Village® is a 60-acre coastal master planned community in the heart of Honolulu, recognized as the “Best-Planned Community in the United States” by Architectural Digest, and most recently as the “Master Planned Community of the Year” by the National Association of Home Builders. Upon completion it will introduce approximately one million square feet of retail experiences; it is currently home to 90 unique stores and 40 restaurants. * The Woodlands® is a 28,000-acre award-winning master planned community located 27 miles north of downtown Houston. Highlights include 1725 and 1735 Hughes Landing®, two Class A office towers with a structured parking garage, located within the 66-acre, mixed-use Hughes Landing development, one of Houston’s premier mixed-use urban centers.
by legendary developer James W. Rouse in 1967. At full buildout, the redevelopment of Downtown Columbia will feature more than 14 million square feet of office, hotel, retail, as well as residential, cultural, and public space. Highlights include Columbia Corporate Center and One Merriweather®, nine Class A and Class B office buildings.
* Downtown Columbia® is located at the T:10.812” “This new facility achieves our stated ficenter of Columbia, MD, one of the first masnancial goals of both increasing our financial ter planned communities in the U.S. founded
flexibility as well as reducing our weighted average cost of capital. By reducing our cost of funding, extending our maturity and adding a revolving component, this financing exemplifies our commitment to further improving our credit metrics,” said David R. O’Reilly, Chief Financial Officer of HHC. “Further, we are thrilled with the strong support that our lenders have shown to execute on this transaction.”
CMYK
A re-newed focus: you. New customers can qualify for a $500 bonus,* and get access to our team of personal bankers who are there to help you with your banking needs. In order to qualify, you must be a new Wells Fargo customer and: • Open a new consumer checking account with a minimum deposit of $25, and within 150 days set up and receive at least 3 consecutive monthly direct deposits of $500 or more a month, and • Open a new consumer savings account with a minimum deposit of $25, and within 10 days, deposit at least $25,000 in new money, and maintain a balance of at least $25,000 for 90 days T:6.5”
• This limited-time offer expires November 16, 2018. Visit a participating* Wells Fargo branch and talk to a banker today! Your bonus will be deposited into your new consumer checking account within 45 days after eligibility and qualifications are met. Find a branch near you: wellsfargo.com/locator *Important things to know about this offer: Checking and Savings Bonus Eligibility: Only certain consumer checking accounts are eligible for this offer, including non-interest bearing checking accounts. Ask a personal banker for details. Teen Checking, SM Greenhouse by Wells Fargo, and the prepaid Wells Fargo EasyPay® Card are not eligible for this offer. All consumer savings accounts are eligible for this offer, excluding Time Accounts (CDs). This is an exclusive, non-transferable offer. A valid bonus offer code will be provided to each customer while meeting with a banker. You cannot be: a current owner on a Wells Fargo consumer checking or savings account, a Wells Fargo team member, or a recipient of a consumer checking or savings bonus in the past 12 months (limit one bonus per customer). Offer is only available to customers in the following states: AK, DC, ID, MN, NJ, NE, TX, WY. Bonus Qualifications: To receive a $500 bonus: 1. Open a new, eligible consumer checking account with a minimum opening deposit of $25 by November 16, 2018. Within 150 days of account opening, set up and receive at least three consecutive monthly qualifying direct deposits of at least $500 each month. During this time, your account balance must be at least $1.00 or more. A qualifying direct deposit is the customer’s salary, pension, Social Security, or other regular monthly income of an accumulated $500 or more, electronically deposited through the Automated Clearing House (ACH) network to this checking account by your employer, or an outside agency. A non-qualifying direct deposit is a transfer from one account to another, or deposits made at a Wells Fargo branch or ATM. AND 2. Open a new, eligible savings account with a minimum opening deposit of $25 by November 16, 2018 and within 10 days of account opening, deposit at least $25,000 in new money into either the new checking or new savings account, and maintain at least a $25,000 cumulative account(s) balance for 90 days. New money is defined as at least $25,000 in new deposits from sources outside of Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., or its affiliates. Due to the new money requirement, accounts may only be opened at your local branch. Offer subject to change and may be discontinued at any time. Offer cannot be: paid without a valid U.S. Taxpayer Identification Number (W-9); combined with any other consumer deposit offer. Minimum new money deposit requirement of at least $25,000 is for this offer only and cannot be transferred to another account to qualify for any other consumer deposit offer. If you wish to take advantage of another consumer deposit offer requiring a minimum new money deposit, you will be required to do so with another new money deposit as stated in that offer’s requirements and qualifications. Those who take advantage of this Savings bonus offer cannot also take advantage of any New Dollar promotional interest rate offer during the same promotional period. Offer cannot be reproduced, purchased, sold, transferred, or traded. Bonus Payment: We will deposit the $500 bonus into your new consumer checking account within 45 days after eligibility and qualifications have been met. Checking account must remain open in order to receive the bonus payment. You are responsible for any federal, state, or local taxes due on your bonus, and we will report as income to the tax authorities if required by applicable law. Consult your tax advisor. New account open subject to approval. Checking and savings accounts are subject to monthly service fees; please refer to the Consumer Account Fee and Information Schedule (available at www.wellsfargo.com/online-banking/consumer-account-fees) or speak to a banker for more details. The consumer savings accounts eligible for this offer are interest-bearing accounts with variable interest rates. For example, Wells Fargo Way2Save® Savings pays an Annual Percentage Yield (APY) of 0.01% on all balances and requires a minimum opening deposit of $25. The APY is accurate as of 9/13/2018 and may change at any time without notice. Fees may reduce earnings. © 2018 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. All rights reserved. Member FDIC.
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NATIONAL BRIEFS Ntozake Shange, ‘For Colored Girls’ Playwright, Dies at 70 [Variety.com]
More than 7.8 Million Latino Voters Expected to Cast Ballots in Election 2018 [StyleMagazine.com Newswire]
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laywright Ntozake Shange, who wrote the 1975 Tony-nominated play “For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf,” died Saturday in Bowie, Maryland, according to her family. She was 70. Shange, who was also a poet and author, had suffered a series of strokes in 2004 and died at an assisted living facility. Shange was born Paulette Williams in New Jersey and graduated Barnard College and received a master’s from USC. Her Zulu name Ntozake means “She who comes with her own things” and Shange means “She who walks like a lion.” She won an Obie for “Colored Girls” as well as for her adaptation of “Mother Courage and Her Children.” Her other plays include “A Photograph: A Study of Cruelty,” “Boogie Woogie Landscapes” and “Black and White Two Dimensional Planes.” Among her novels are “Sassafrass, Cypress, and Indigo” and “Some Sing, Some Cry,” written with her sister, Ifa Bayeza. Shange worked with a number of black theater companies and taught at universities including Brown, Rice, Villanova and DePaul.
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Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Pledges $1 Million to Fund New School in the Bronx [GoodBlackNews.org/Variety.com]
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ean “Diddy” Combs announced Tuesday that he’s pledging $1 million to the Capital Preparatory Schools network to help provide children from underserved communities access to high-quality education. The school has been approved to expand to a third location in the New York City’s Bronx borough, and is set to open in September 2019. Capital Prep Schools is a free, public charter school network, currently operating in Harlem and Bridgeport, Connecticut. The schools provide students in grades K-12 with a year-round, college preparatory education and has sent 100 percent of its low-income, minority, first-generation high school graduates to four-year colleges every year since its first class graduated in 2006. Capital Prep Bronx will open to serve 160 students in 6th to 7th grade and will grow to serve 650 students in 6th to 11 grade during an initial five-year term. Combs is a Harlem native and worked closely with Dr. Perry to expand the school to new locations as well as enlist a team of educators, parents, and business leaders to bring the idea to life. He is also a benefactor.
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ess than two weeks before Latino voters head to the polls, the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO) Educational Fund released its projections for Latino turnout in key states and nationwide, as well as other critical election analysis during a briefing held at the National Press Club. According to NALEO Educational Fund analysis, more than 7.8 million Latinos are expected to cast ballots this year. This would mark a 15 percent increase in turnout and 6.9 percent increase in the Latino share of the vote from 2014. Approximately 6.8 million Latinos voted in Election 2014, an increase of 129,000 million voters – or 2 percent - from November 2010. As candidates in Election 2018, Latinos will continue their progress as leaders of their communities by seeking positions in Congress, statewide offices, and state legislatures across the nation. Latinos are running for top offices in 36 states. The geographic diversity of Latino candidates demonstrates that Latinos are mobilizing for political progress in both the traditional Latino population centers, and in regions with emerging Latino communities such as the Plains States, the Midwest, the Deep South, and New England.
Waller County Voter Suppression Continues Against Students at PVAMU [StyleMagazine.com Newswire]
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aller County once again voted to deny students at Prairie View A&M University (PVAMU) equal and accessible access to vote on campus in the first early vote week of the midterm election. Waller County Commissioner’s Court held an emergency meeting to revisit their election plan and expand early voting on campus at PVAMU, the second oldest Texas public university and a Historically Black College. The Commissioners Court voted on October 17 to uphold a previous plan to only provide three days of early voting on the PVAMU campus in the second week. “I worked extensively with Senators Lois Kolkhorst and Royce West, the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc., students and leaders from PVAMU and Waller County Commissioners Court in hopes that an amicable solution could be met. Unfortunately, Waller County Commissioner’s Court refused to provide equal access and opportunity to vote during the entire early voting period compared to other parts of the county,” said Senator Borris Miles. Waller County has a long, well-documented history of voter suppression, which dates back to 1979 when the US Supreme Court ruled in favor of Black students who registered to vote at their college address.
Beto with Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee
Beto O’Rourke
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Beto O’Rourke is a father and husband who has served communities as a small business owner, City Council member and now member of Congress. Beto is running a grassroots campaign for U.S. Senate that has taken him to all 254 counties of Texas so that he can listen to and learn from those he wants to serve and represent.
WO R K I NG TO GE T HEr, b eto b el i eves we can achiev e: « « « «
An economy that works for all Texans—one with good-paying jobs and a fair shot at economic success Guaranteed, universal health care for all so that every Texan can get the care they need A high-quality education for every single child by keeping public school dollars in public schools and ensuring educational equity Comprehensive justice system reform that ends mass incarceration, private prisons, the federal prohibition on marijuana, mandatory minimums, and the cash bail system
VOTE NOVEMBER 6, 2018 | EARLY VOTE OCTOBER 22 - NOVEMBER 2
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ENTERTAINMENT Kanye West Appears to Be Ava DuVernay ‘Honored’ to Be Mak- Pharrell Williams Threatens to Sue Tyler Perry Ending ‘Madea’ Over Politics Trump Over Use of ‘Happy’ ing Prince Documentary Character in 2019 [CNN/StyleMagazine.com Newswire] [CNN/StyleMagazine.com Newswire] [CNN/StyleMagazine.com Newswire] [CNN/StyleMagazine.com Newswire]
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ust weeks after visiting the White House, Kanye West appears to be a little tired of politics. The rapper and designer on Tuesday said on Twitter that he plans on “distancing” himself from politics, alleging he’s being “used to spread messages I don’t believe in. “I am distancing myself from politics and completely focusing on being creative!!!” he wrote. This week, West became associated with a campaign led by conservative activist Candace Owens that encourages black voters to leave the Democratic Party. While Owens clarified West’s role in designing the logo for her campaign -- she said on Twitter that West merely made an introduction -- West was seemingly unnerved by the attention. West wrote that he “never wanted any association” with the campaign and has “nothing to do with it.”
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he curmudgeonly character of “Madea” has helped to make Tyler Perry wealthy, but it sounds like he’s now over her. During an appearance on Bevy Smith’s SiriusXM show, “Bevelations,” Perry said he plans a farewell stage tour and the film “Tyler Perry’s a Madea Family Funeral” next year to end the character. Perry dons a wig, makeup and dress to portray the tough-talking elderly black woman. It’s time for me to kill that old bitch, I’m tired, man,” he said. “I just don’t want to be her age, playing her.” Mabel Earlene “Madea” Simmons first appeared on stage almost 20 years ago and went on to be the star of several of Perry’s hit films. Those movies have grossed hundreds of millions of dollars despite some criticism that the character stereotypes black women.
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va DuVernay is turning her lens on the life of Prince. The famed director of “A Wrinkle in Time” and “Selma” is doing a documentary about the legendary musician, according to Deadline. “Prince was a genius and a joy and a jolt to the senses,” DuVernay told the publication. “He was like no other.” Prince, whose full name was Prince Rogers Nelson, died of an accidental overdose of the opioid fentanyl in April 2016. He was 57. DuVernay reportedly has the full support of the singer’s family and estate, which has granted her access to his recordings and unreleased music. The film will be made for Netflix, which won accolades with DuVernay’s last project for the company: “13th.”
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harrell Williams isn’t too happy with President Donald Trump. In a cease and desist letter sent Monday, Williams’ attorney Howard King called on the President to stop playing the hitmaker’s song “Happy” during events. The song was played at a rally over the weekend just hours after a gunman killed 11 people at a Pittsburgh synagogue. “On the day of the mass murder of 11 human beings at the hands of a deranged ‘nationalist,’ you played his song ‘Happy’ to a crowd at a political event in Indiana,” King wrote in the letter. “There was nothing ‘happy’ about the tragedy inflicted upon our country on Saturday and no permission was granted for your use of this song for this purpose.” King claims the use of “Happy” without consent constitutes both copyright and trademark infringement.
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A WORLD OF OPPORTUNITY, NOW FROM HOME WHEN OUR COMMUNITIES THRIVE, SO DO WE.
These propositions are at the bottom of your very long ballot, even if you vote straight ticket. Vote FOR Proposition A. It continues our successful, dedicated, pay-as-you-go fund for drainage and streets, with no new taxes and no new city debt.
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Vote AGAINST Proposition B. It’s filled with mistakes that will force us to pay police officers a lot less than firefighters and slash city services like public safety, health clinics and libraries.
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FEATURE
Actor Kedrick Brown Brings His Own Seat to the Table By Cecilia Smith, Style Feature Writer Photography by Marla Cardenas
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wo years ago actor Kedrick Brown was steadily carving out a name for himself, delivering a string of impressive performances in Greenleaf, American Crime, Survivor’s Remorse, Underground and more. Since then the Straight Outta Compton actor has kept that same hunger, landing supporting roles in everything from Black Lightning to the Spike Lee produced Tales From the Hood 2, now available on Netflix. Sitting down with Houston Style again it’s clear that Brown’s passion for his craft has only grown, as he revealed how he’s working to inspire a new generation of actors.
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Up next he’ll appear in Cuba Gooding Jr.’s directorial debut, Bayou Caviar, featuring Gooding as former boxing champion Rodney Jones. Catch up with Kedrick below: HSM: Tell us about the pressure of creating a sequel KB: I actually didn’t feel any. I went in knowing that this is a different time and knowing where they wanted to go with the story. We all know the purpose of Tales in the Hood is to provoke political, social thought and to remind us of our responsibility, knowing where we came from and where we can
Nov 01 - Nov 07, 2018
KB: The market here could be so much go back to if we allow things to just be and more, and I think there are conversations in not deal with them. the works attempting to make that happen, HSM: Share your behind the scenes but I don’t personally feel as if they’re doing experience of Tales From the Hood 2 enough. I think we can push the narrative a lot more, but it boils down to incentives and KB: I knew this was going to be unique. we’re further behind other regions. If we’re We only knew our stories (he appears in the going to have success here, we’re going to second one), that’s how underwraps they have to compete with those areas that are kept it. giving those types of tax breaks. It’s unfortunate that the state doesn’t see the necessity HSM: How do you feel about repre- in that. Everything is taking a sharp turn with senting Houston; giving Houston a seat all of the new streaming avenues, all of the at the table? different apps are now streaming so it’s not necessarily the content - the opportunity for
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FEATURE
HSM: Tell us about your experience content is there - but the City of Houston has to continue to speak up at the table and make working alongside veteran actor, Cuba it a priority. Once the city does that, things Gooding Jr. will begin to change and mountains will start KB: He’s just an amazing person and one to move. of the realest you could ever meet. When I say HSM: How do you stay motivated in a real, I mean he will show you real (laughs.) The first time we met he mentioned ‘Man you killed competitive industry? that shit, I watched that shit like seven times’ KB: By living my philosophy of “Do the and it just felt like we’d been knowing each work, everything else will come.” Sometimes other forever. And that was that official moit’s really hard to keep pushing because just ment when I’m like, ‘Oh my God this is Cuba like anybody else that’s ever done this, we Gooding Jr. All of this training you’ve been doing better come through. You better throw get impatient, but I’ve been at this too long. them punches, just like he’s throwing them.’ HSM: How do you manage to stay rooted When I tell you, I went toe to toe with him, in Houston while juggling a career? with nothing but fire in me. I wanted to know KB: Honestly, I was told to move, and this if I could hold my own with someone at that was coming from someone that had been in level, and I did. And that was God’s assurance California. But I told them if I”m good enough, to me that I’m growing in the right direction. and they feel that I’m good enough; they’ll You have to earn it. Nothing has ever been come, they’ll bring me in. Thankfully that has given to me, I’ve had to fight and prove myself been the case, and I’m extremely thankful for day in and day out. the work that my agents have done for me. HSM: How do you feel about inspiring a They make me priority because I don’t live there. They’re literally putting their money new generation? where their mouth is, and that has been an KB: I recently accepted a Theater Arts anchor in my success.
position at the new Audrey H. Lawson Middle School where I’ll be teaching the next stars of tomorrow in a new program they’re allowing me to create, that includes a state-of-the-art theater. I’m pouring all of my knowledge of the
business back into the black and brown community and have signed on to be their new Theater Arts Director. Brand new program, brand new building. Learn more about actor Kedrick Brown here.
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BOOK
“My Love Story” by Tina Turner with Deborah Davis and Dominik Wichmann By Terri Schlichenmeyer, Book Reviewer
J
ust wait.
Two words that are impossible to hear, especially if you have big plans. Hold on, don’t veer off-course, work the plan, hard as it may be. Just wait. As in “My Love Story” by Tina Turner, good things really do come to those who do. If you’ve come to this book solely because of the name of the author, you probably don’t need to be told about her early adult life. Even so, it bears repeating: Anna Mae Bullock was born in November, 1939, on a farm near a tiny Tennessee town. Hers was a difficult childhood; her mother, who mostly rejected Anna Mae, tired of her marriage and abandoned it when Anna Mae was eleven years old. Two years later, Anna Mae’s father abandoned the family, too, so Anna Mae moved to St. Louis to live with her estranged mother. She took one important thing with her.
Ike seemed to feel as though he owned Turner; for sure, he owned her name, since he’d registered it as a trademark. He told her what to do and where to be, didn’t trust her, beat her, slept with other women and didn’t bother to hide it. She endured it, waiting for things to get better, until one hot July night, she fought back, and she ran… Admittedly, a story you (sort-of) already know makes up the bulk of this book. If you’ve come to it for the promise of the title, you’ll read about “My Love Story” in the first 18 pages. So why pick it up, then? Wait. There are a few rock-your-world
moments inside author Tina Turner’s memoir, things she says she’s never admitted before, memories she’d rather not revisit, nuggets that were rumors ‘til now. These come wrapped in steely pulses of determination and power, all saucy and flippant but studded with soft notes of pain as Turner also tells about illness, family, personal losses, and missed opportunities. But wait: this isn’t a poor-me tale. Though Turner writes (with Deborah Davis and Dominik Wichmann) about challenges, gratefulness beams between sentences. So do words of inspiration, so-whatever humor, and that wonderful romance. Wait. That love story you’re promised? It’s a perfect bow atop a not-anywherenear perfect life, and for readers who want a memoir with a minimum of gratuitous name-dropping, but heavy on sassitude and triumph, “My Love Story” tells it right. So why wait? Share this story online at stylemagazine. com.
PHOTO BY JEFF MYERS
“Even as a little girl,” says Turner, “I knew I could sing… I was born with that talent. My voice was my gift and I knew
how to use it.” Because her sister was old enough to go to St. Louis clubs, Anna Mae managed to tag along and that was where she met Ike Turner, a womanizer who ignored Anna Mae until he heard her sing. Not long afterward, he started paying her be onstage and they became friends. He was “ugly,” she was “skinny and all voice,” but they were a team until they started sleeping together, she became pregnant, they got married-not-married, and the fighting began.
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SPORTS
Texans Defeat the Dolphins to Extend Winning Streak to Five-Games
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By Brian Barefield, Style Sports Editor
ave you ever heard that saying that do. These guys work hard, but it’s only – I goes, “You should always have some know it’s five in a row, it’s really good, like form of humility?” I’m not trying to downplay that, but it’s only eight games in. You guys know, it’s a Well, that doesn’t apply to me. When I am what-have-you-done-for-me-lately league,” right I love to scream it to the mountain top said O’ Brien after the game. that I am, but I am not afraid to admit when I am wrong. Well, in this case I remember One player who could see this winning the day and the time I predicted the future like Nostradamus. It was Monday, Septem- streak coming was no other than the starting ber 24, 2018. I was doing my daily sports quarterback Deshaun Watson. He is still radio show (Sportz Talk with Big Sarge M-F reminded of his comments after a loss to 3-5pm on 1140am/92.3fm KYOK) talking the Tennessee Titans in week two. about how the Texans had lost their third game in a row by a combined 15 points. “If you are one of those guys or one of the people, one of the fans hitting the panic “Looking at this schedule, the Texans could go on a five-game winning streak button, then that’s on you. Don’t hop on the and totally turn this season around,” I said train later on in the season,” Watson said as I recapped the loss to the NY Giants the during the press conference after a game he best in the league stymie the Dolphins to 13 felt the Texans should have won. day before. second half points. Well, five weeks later the Houston Texans On Thursday night, Deshaun showed all “I can tell you five in a row is a hell of are on a five-game winning streak heading the fans in attendance why he is one of the a lot more fun than 0-3. I can tell you that into their last game before their bye week young leaders on this team. Watson finished against the Denver Broncos. Houston the game with more touchdowns (5) than definitively. I’m happy as hell to have a defeated the Miami Dolphins 42-23 in a he did incompletions (4). His final stat line three-day weekend, I can’t lie to you. To get some time off and to rest and just let the nationally televised game to gain sole conread: 16/20 239 yards, five touchdowns and body recoup but then to get back to work one trol of the AFC South at 5-3. Head coach Bill O’ Brien was happy with his team’s no interceptions. Those numbers along with day at a time because that’s how we got to performance, but also did not want the team Lamar Miller’s second consecutive 100 yd where we are now. It’s just been one day at rushing game (133) and DeAndre Hopkins a time, putting in work and doing our job,” to lose focus. six catches for 82 yards and two touchdowns said star DE J.J. Watt, who is currently tied “Yeah, I feel good for the team, I really helped a defense who has become one the for second place in the NFL in sacks.
One of the sadder notes of the game was injuries to key players. The Texans had a plethora of players go down during the game, but none was bigger than WR Will Fuller V who was lost for the season with a torn ACL. Fuller was an intricate part of Houston’s offense this year with 503 yards receiving and 4 touchdowns. The Texans took a huge step forward in replacing Fuller by trading for four-time pro-bowl WR Demaryius Thomas from the Broncos for a 4th and 7th round pick exchange on Tuesday.
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EAT WITH STYLE Family Favorites from Tree to Table By Family Features
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etting the whole family around the dinner table every evening can be hard. Feeding your family meals that incorporate high-quality ingredients and are also delicious can be even harder. Sometimes, though, that special ingredient you’re looking for can already be in your pantry. Consider including bursts of flavor from an ingredient such as California Ripe Olives at your next family meal and take into account the versatility and taste made possible by the hard-working farm families who grow them.
young grove was planted with the intention of harvesting mechanically. As newer olive groves are planted, mechanical harvesting is slowly being implemented. “It’s a labor of love,” Benson said. “We view olives as our crop for the next generation.” Whether you’re enjoying olives as a snack or using them in a new dish like this favorite recipe from a California Ripe Olive-growing family, consider the hundreds of farming families behind each can of olives.
1 1/2 teaspoons dried basil 1 1/2 teaspoons sea salt 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes 1 1/2 pounds baby yellow potatoes, halved 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, divided 4 small boneless, skinless chicken breasts 1 1/2 cups California Black and Green Ripe Olives 1/4 cup chicken broth 1/4 cup white wine 1 lemon, thinly sliced and seeds removed
Grown by his family for more than a deLearn more about multi-generational cade, Rick Benson vividly remembers the farming families like the Bensons and find day he convinced his father the next crop at more recipes at calolive.org. Benson Farms should be California Ripe Olives, which are both heat- and salt-tolerant. Rustic Chicken with Ripe Olives Recipe courtesy of Vincent Richutti, That was 12 years ago, and the Benson a third-generation California Ripe Olive family has grown olives ever since. Though grower they are seasoned farmers, the Benson family members are new to olives, and they have Prep time: 20 minutes brought an innovative way of harvesting to Cook time: 30-35 minutes the decades old industry. Servings: 4 1/2 cup mixed, porcini or chanterelle Heat oven to 425 F. While California Ripe Olives remain a dried mushrooms In small food processor, pulse mushprimarily hand-harvested crop, the Bensons’ T:5” 2 teaspoons fennel seeds rooms, fennel seeds, basil, salt and red
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pepper flakes until mixture is finely chopped and almost powder-like. Place potatoes on large, shallow-rimmed baking sheet and drizzle with 2 tablespoons olive oil; toss to coat. Sprinkle with half the mushroom mixture and toss lightly. Brush chicken with remaining olive oil and sprinkle both sides with remaining mushroom mixture. Nestle chicken and olives into potatoes. Drizzle with broth and wine, and top with lemon slices. Roast 30-35 minutes, or until chicken and potatoes are cooked through. Remove lemon slices before serving.
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2018
THE KINGDOM BUILDERS CENTER HOUSTON, TX
Houston Senior Citizens Conference Photography by Vicky Pink ouston City Councilwoman Amanda K. Edwards hosted The Empowered You: Houston Senior Citizens Conference. Over 1,300 seniors citizens were in attendance to be educated and equipped with information, inspired by Rawle Andrew and Jane Bavineaux, and get ready for their next journey. Some in attendance were Una Topps, Charlene James, Carl Davis, Leslie Williams, Lavar Williams, and City Councilwoman Martha Castex Tatum.
2018
H
ROYAL SONESTA HOTEL HOUSTON, TX
The Links’ The Art of a Grande Tea Photography by Vicky Pink
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he Fort Bend County Chapter of the Links, Incorporated spent an afternoon celebrating the arts as they host their biennial signature fundraiser - The Art of a Grande Tea. In partnership with the Houston Grand Opera, the affair featured soprano Ardeen Pierre, baritone Nicholas Newton, violinist Demola, author Brit Bennett, painter Bari Jenks, and designer Toni Whittaker. Journalist Tracey Ferguson and Comcast’s Bryce Hairston Kennard emceed the event whose proceeds will go towards service initiatives and scholarships. Some in attendance were Pam Branch, Carlotta Brown, LaDonna Harris, Grenita Lathan, Shantay Guice, Lucy Anderson, Shawntell McWilliams, Staci Fullmighter, and Patricia Ingram.
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2018
MARRIOTT MARQUIS HOUSTON HOUSTON, TX
NAACP Houston Branch Centennial
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Photography by Vicky Pink
2018
his year marks the 100th Anniversary of the founding of the NAACP Houston Branch. In celebration of a century of activism and advocacy, this year’s NAACP Houston Branch Centennial Freedom Fund Advocacy & Awards Gala was one for the record books. The affair chaired by Alane Lillie and Reginald Lillie. Kudos to Yolanda Smith and her team. Some in attendance were Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, Congressman Al Green, Kim Ogg, Carlotta Brown, Rhonda Skillern-Jones, Wanda Adams, Rev. Jesse Jackson, Commissioner Rodney Ellis, Akwanza Watson, Amari Watson, Winell Herron, Jolanda Jones, and Anita Bates.
TEXAS SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY MUSEUM HOUSTON, TX
Houston Treasures Project Photography by Vicky Pink r. James Matthew Douglas, Georgia Doyle Provost, and Rev. William Alexander Lawson are living Houston legends. Dannette K. Davis hosted a luncheon celebrating these warriors with a featured docuvideo in their own words and bronze art piece unveiling. Some in attendance were Bishop James Dixon, Charles Davis, and Mary Samuels.
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