North West, Kanye West, Kim

North West Debuts First-Ever Solo Cover For i-D Magazine

Even at ten years old, North West is coming into he own!


North West, the oldest daughter of rapper Ye and Kim Kardashian, nabbed her first-ever solo cover for VICE’s i-D magazine on Oct. 31.

The 10-year-old socialite and influencer was styled in looks from her own closet. She spoke with the publication about many subjects, including her memories, hobbies, and favorite rapper and song: Tupac and her father’s 2004 smash debut hit, “Through the Wire.” A confident North navigated each question effortlessly. She also deemed herself as her favorite style icon. The “blessed, awesome, cool” celebrity child was incredibly self-aware in the interview.

When i-D editors asked North about her future career plans, Ye’s mini-me said she would eventually take over her parents’ companies.

“When I’m, like, thirteen, I want to walk dogs, to make money to buy art supplies, because everything around here is so expensive,” North explained, seemingly grasping the concept of inflation and expenses. “So a rapper, a basketball player, and I’m going to make artwork that I sell. Also, one day, I want to own Yeezy and SKIMS, and I want to be a business owner.”

North unabashedly hypes herself up when given the opportunity to describe herself in three words.

“The best ever,” she says.

Despite this being her first solo venture, it wasn’t her first magazine spread, as the tween icon was featured with Ye and Kim for her parents’ 2014 Vogue cover shoot. North was a few months old when the cover was shot.

The full i-D interview on the eldest West child is available now.

Nas, Steve, Stoute, hip, hop, history

Nas, Steve Stoute, And Others Give $500K To Hip-Hop ‘Contributors Who Didn’t Get What They Deserved’

Nas and Steve Stout have joined forces to pay homage to hip-hop greats in the form of financial support.


Hip-hop has created a lot of millionaires and even billionaires in its 50-year history. But some early pioneers never got their just due, and Nas, Steve Stoute, and others are looking to change that. Nas and Stout have joined forces with Andreessen Horowitz co-founder Ben Horowitz and his wife, Felicia Horowitz, to pay homage to hip-hop pioneers through financial support.

The inaugural Hip Hop Grandmaster Awards is set to take place and honor hip-hop legends Rakim and Scarface in a celebration where 100% of proceeds will go “to support hip-hop greats and other creatives,” the Paid In Full Foundation states.

“Over the past several decades, hip-hop music and culture rose from a local niche New York art form into a global phenomenon,” said the foundation. “In doing so, it has created countless careers, many fortunes, and, most importantly, gave hope and aspiration to a generation of young people.”

However, many pioneers were ahead of their time in shaping hip-hop culture before the art form received the financial backing and success that came in the late ’90s into the 2000s. Because of this, the Paid In Full Foundation intends to right the wrongs by securing a financial future for many of those early trailblazers.

“The Paid in Full Foundation aims to rectify that through its grantmaking program by both honoring the people who built hip-hop and enabling them to pursue their creative and intellectual pursuits for the benefit of society.”

Stoute says the foundation will give $500,000 and healthcare to hip-hop “contributors who didn’t get what they deserved.” The Hip Hop Grandmaster Awards will also become an annual event.

“What I wanna do is, all of the artists who [came in] early who signed bad deals or were taken advantage of, that the least we could do is give to them,” Stoute said on the Rap Radar podcast. “Pay that forward and give to them.”

He continued, “No one’s ever done this before. No one’s given the people who’ve helped move this industry forward reparations of some sort for what they’ve done but didn’t get back.”

The Hip Hop Grandmaster Awards is sold out and will take place on Nov. 17 in Las Vegas.

RELATED CONTENT: ‘Grammy Salute To 50 Years Of Hip-Hop’ To Air On CBS In December

Black Owned Business, Oakland, Atlantic city

The Groundbreak Coalition Has Raised $1B In Funds To Help Boost Black Ownership of Homes and Businesses In Minneapolis


The Groundbreak Coalition (Groundbreak), a group including more than 40 philanthropic organizations and corporations, has reportedly raised almost $1B toward boosting Black ownership of homes, businesses, and developments in the Twin Cities area of Minnesota. The coalition has hit the milestone in less than a year, putting it closer to its overall goal of $5.3 billion in funds dedicated to closing the racial wealth gap, the Star Tribute reports.

“What makes this unique is that we’re not trying to raise a fund, we’re trying to create fundamental change,” said Tonya Allen, president of the McKnight Foundation in Minneapolis.

“This is about changing the rules and changing the way that capital grows, and I think that those are game-changers.”

The coalition was created in 2022, aimed at rebuilding areas destroyed in Minneapolis and St. Paul following the murder of George Floyd and the subsequent riots that followed. The funds are also intended to address the longstanding racial wealth gaps for Black and Indigenous Minnesota residents.

“We’re really doing this work because we believe that every person, no matter their race or their background, should have the opportunity to have incredible prosperity,” Allen said.

“And we know if we do this work together and if we do it smartly, it’s not just about those individual people, it’s about the magnifying, the amplifying effect that will happen in our region.”

There is a wide gap in the state between white and Black residents when it comes to homeownership, the outlet reports. Only 1/3 of Black Minnesotans own homes, while 78% of white residents are homeowners. In fact, Black people make up the racial group least likely to own a home in the state, the outlet reports.

The coalition is also working to fix issues that face not only Black Minnesotans but many members of the community in other states who face discrimination from banks and other lending institutions when trying to purchase a home. Groundbreak has focused on implementing tools to provide special loans with financial assistance, startup funding designed specifically for Black entrepreneurs, and commercial mortgage loans to even the playing field for Black-led neighborhood developments.

“People are just being creative, innovative, and bold in their thinking,” Allen said. “If we can … change the rules in the way that banking institutions work, what we aim to do is really create this long-term, systemic change.”

Minnesota is one of few states still making good on the promises made in the aftermath of Floyd’s death, something that Allen attributes to fully understanding the importance of closing the racial divide to prevent further tragedies.

“We know the ramifications if we do nothing,” she said. “We will be the scene-setters for the rest of the country on how we solve these challenges.”

gene editing, HIV, Aids, clinical trials

Clinical Gene Editing Emerges As Promising Path To HIV/AIDS Cure


An academic paper published in the National Library of Medicine suggests a relatively new technology has the potential to provide a solution to HIV/AIDS. The paper, authored by Mourya Hussein, Mariano A. Molina, Ben Berkhout, and Elena Hererra-Carrillo, argues that employing CRISPR technology, which can be used to edit genes, to target host and viral genes, activate antiviral host factors, and inhibit viral replication, could lead to the elimination of the virus.

HIV currently affects 38 million people worldwide, resulting in approximately 800,000 annual deaths from virus-related complications.

The paper acknowledges that while promising, there are challenges in developing a viable pathway to curing HIV/AIDS through gene therapy, such as the risk of affecting genes unrelated to HIV/AIDS production and spread in the body. Nonetheless, the study recommends further examination of gene-editing therapy through clinical trials to assess its effectiveness.

In July 2023, the FDA fast-tracked a trial for gene therapy relating to HIV/AIDS to test the efficacy and safety of using CRISPR to treat the disease in conjunction with antiviral drugs. According to Medical Professionals Reference, a fast-track designation from the FDA is intended to accelerate the development of promising treatment for conditions for which either no treatment exists, or the therapy being investigated is expected to provide advantages over currently available treatments.

Excision BioTherapeutics CEO Daniel Dornbusch, whose company received the designation, said in a press release, “We are pleased with the FDA’s decision to grant Fast Track designation to EBT-101. This designation underscores the importance of finding a cure for people living with HIV and bolsters Excision’s efforts to rapidly develop potentially curative therapies for significant unmet medical needs.”

Following that news, MIT Technology Review reported on Oct. 25 that Excision added the gene-editing tool to the bodies of three people living with HIV. The company directed the gene-editing tool to eliminate the virus but has not yet revealed any data about the effects of the treatment, which leaves experts in the field wondering exactly how effective it has been at achieving the intended goal.

Fyodor Urnov, a genome editing expert at the University of California-Berkeley, told MIT, “This is an exceptionally ambitious and important trial,” before adding that it “would be good to know sooner than later” the effects of the treatment, “including, potentially, no effect.” 

Excision says the trials have yielded no major negative side effects and that it has plans to increase doses of the treatment in 2024. The company says it wants to have six additional patients receive three and 10 times the amount of treatment delivered thus far.

William Kennedy, senior vice president of Excision’s Clinical Development division, says that the full results for the original three clinical participants will not be available until 2024.

Kamel Khalil, a Temple University professor who helped start the company, says that even if the treatments don’t cure HIV, they represent an important step toward development in treating the disease, as he told MIT. “Even if we don’t completely cure [HIV], we might be getting a significant delay in the rebound of the virus. That could set us up for the next stage, like any drug where there are first and second generations.”

RELATED CONTENT: Meharry To Study Genetic Roadmap Of Black People

Home owner, realty, brokerage

Florida Woman Surprises Mom With First Home For Her Birthday


Nyomi Jackson surprised her mother, Wanda Fields, with a tour of her first home.

According to a video posted to TikTok on May 4, what Jackson’s mother thought was an Airbnb rental for her visit to The Sunshine State was actually her daughter’s newly purchased property in Jacksonville, Florida. Since posting, the prank has gone viral, amassing over 3.5 million views.

https://www.tiktok.com/@nyomispeaks/video/7229401599393746219

“What many of you see in the video is my mom. She’s coming in from Virginia, where she currently resides, as well as my younger sister Nia, to come spend some time at what they think is an Airbnb with the rest of our family, in celebration of my mom’s birthday,” Jackson told Good Morning America.

“But what she doesn’t know … is that I [had] actually moved into the house within the last three previous weeks.”

The new homeowner’s younger sister, Nia, was also shocked at the news.

The home is a major achievement for Jackson, who recalled their upbringing in a one-bedroom New York City apartment. She’s been working on her home for a year and wanted to present it to her family once everyone was together.

“She never said anything,” her mother told GMA. Jackson would take calls from her mother inside a closet, careful not to give away any hints.

“For my mom to see me purchase my first house and do something really incredible, I think it speaks volumes to what’s possible,” Jackson said. “If you have a vision, you stick to it, and you make it happen.”

Fields said she rewatches the viral TikTok video sometimes just because the prank makes her so happy. Seeing friends, family, and strangers so receptive and supportive of her daughter’s moment of success makes her cry.

Michael Jordan, Wedding, Best man

Marcus Jordan Wants Michael Jordan As His Best Man When Marrying Larsa Pippen

Marcus Jordan is hoping to continue his family tradition by having his father Michael Jordan serve as best man when he marries Larsa Pippen.


Marcus Jordan hopes to continue the family tradition by having his father, Michael Jordan, serve as best man when he marries Larsa Pippen.

The NBA legend has publicly expressed his disapproval of his 32-year-old son dating the 49-year-old ex-wife of his former teammate turned nemesis Scottie Pippen. When asked if he supported their romance, Jordan replied, “No.”

But that didn’t stop Marcus from taking things further with Larsa and embarking on a high-profile public relationship despite their nearly 20-year age gap. The couple is sharing their love life on the new season of The Real Housewives of Miami and appeared on Pablo Torre Finds Out, where they teased the possibility of getting married.

When the time comes for them to tie the knot, Marcus expects his dad to serve as best man, as he did for his older brother, Jeffrey.

“I was the best man at his wedding and the best man at my brother’s wedding, and so obviously, we’ll keep that tradition going is my thoughts on it,” Marcus said.

When asked if the wedding would be televised, Marcus didn’t shut down the possibility.

“Now that I’ve been on The Housewives of Miami, all the producers are inquiring around when’s the wedding, are we going to film it on TV, so that’s another thing that we’re playing along with is whether or not we’ll air it.”

While Larsa appears comfortable with the limelight and sharing her private life on reality TV, Marcus comes from a more private family who likely wouldn’t be comfortable attending a televised wedding.

“We’re very private people, the Jordans, and so if it was up to me, I think we would do multiple weddings, one private for our family and friends and then maybe there’s one that’s a little more public but I guess time will tell,” Marcus said.

Larsa and Marcus first sparked dating rumors one year after she finalized her divorce from Scottie Pippen. In early 2023 the couple made things Instagram official.

After Michael Jordan publicly shaded their relationship, Marcus seemed to defend his dad on his and Larsa’s Separation Anxiety podcast, chalking it up to the six-time NBA champion being intoxicated. Marcus even said he thought his dad’s response was funny. Larsa, however, was “traumatized” by the response.

“You thought it was funny,” she told Marcus. “I didn’t think it was funny. There is nothing funny about it.… I kinda felt like it went everywhere, and I was kind of embarrassed.”

Keith Lee, TikTok Awards

TikTok Food Critic Keith Lee Shuts Down Foolishness After Review of ATL Restaurants

Points were made.


On Oct. 31, amid the furor surrounding his candid critiques of Atlanta restaurants, Keith Lee, the popular TikTok food critic, felt compelled to address the controversy and the alleged threats he and his family received in a new video posted to his TikTok.

https://www.tiktok.com/@keith_lee125/video/7296285392611872030?embed_source=121355058%2C121351166%2C121331973%2C120811592%2C120810756%3Bnull%3Bembed_blank&refer=embed&referer_url=www.fox5atlanta.com%2Fnews%2Ftiktoks-most-popular-food-critic-keith-lee-tells-whats-good-and-whats-not-about-atlanta-restaurants&referer_video_id=7296285392611872030

In the video, Lee expressed his perspective, saying he shares his opinions because people ask for them, and he finds some of the narratives surrounding his reviews “insane.”

“I can’t win for losing. I understand everybody’s going to have an opinion on the situation. You can disagree with me. You can like what I say. I completely understand. I’m okay with that. But when my safety and my family’s safety are coming into play, that’s where I draw the line,” Lee said.

The native Detroiter emphasized that he meant no harm and his intentions were not malicious. He encouraged his viewers to form their own opinions and discouraged directing hate at any specific restaurant based solely on his personal experiences.

He concluded the video by recognizing the weight of his influence and the responsibility that came with it, affirming his purpose in sharing food experiences. He said he valued honesty over everything else and would never compromise his integrity by lying.

Lee said plainly, “Nobody’s safety should be on the line. Not mine, not my family, not the restaurants that we go to. Relax. Like, relax, bro. Like I understand, I get it. I get it. But at the end of the day, what you want me to do? You want me to lie? I can’t do that. I’ll walk away from everything before I lie. I’m telling you that right now. On ten toes, everything. God bless me.”

Meanwhile, The Real Milk & Honey restaurant issued a statement following Lee’s unfortunate experience there. The statement arrived after the restaurant had reportedly posted a video claiming not to be aware of Keith Lee, which has since been deleted.

Even Cardi B chimed in on dining in Atlanta, revealing that she often uses her celebrity status to secure a table at most Atlanta restaurants. The Bronx native commended Lee’s videos as a “delightful adventure to watch.”

https://www.tiktok.com/@irissullivan/video/7295599686184881438?embed_source=121355058%2C121351166%2C121331973%2C120811592%2C120810756%3Bnull%3Bembed_blank&refer=embed&referer_url=www.fox5atlanta.com%2Fnews%2Ftiktoks-most-popular-food-critic-keith-lee-tells-whats-good-and-whats-not-about-atlanta-restaurants&referer_video_id=7295599686184881438
Deion Sanders, NCAA, jewelry

Deion Sanders Wants NCAA Or The Rose Bowl To Reimburse Players For Stolen Jewelry


After five University of Colorado football players were robbed of their jewelry during Sunday’s road loss to UCLA, University of Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders said the NCAA and/or the Rose Bowl should reimburse the student-athletes.

The missing chains are said to be worth several thousands of dollars.


“Our kids got robbed during the game last week,” Sanders said. “I think that’s a travesty. I would expect the NCAA to do something about that…This is the Rose Bowl. They said the granddaddy of ’em all, right? I’m sure Granddaddy had some money. Grandpa should have some money to give these kids.”

UCLA’s athletic department confirmed that the Pasadena Police Department has started an investigation into the alleged theft.

“I’m going to have a list made out from these young men, and I know they’re going to be truthful about what they lost, so we can try and get it back for them,” Coach Prime said.

“They may not be able to get the items back, but they should be able to reimburse them. That was unbelievable,” he continued. “…It don’t make no sense when you’re out there ballin’ and playing your heart out and you get robbed at the same [time]. I hope we can do something about that, NCAA. You do something about everything else. Do something about that.”

“I was just told walking over here, awful,” UCLA’s head coach, Chip Kelly, said, according to Fox Sports. “The Pasadena police were looking into it, but I literally just found out one minute ago. That’s awful for anybody. You would think that when you go anywhere that your valuables are safe.”

The Buffaloes will play at home against Oregon State on Saturday, Nov. 4.

RELATED CONTENT: Reggie Bush Plans To Sue The NCAA For Defamation That Led To Heisman Being Revoked

Black Business, Amazon

This Black Woman Turned A Delivery Business Into A Million-Dollar Brand By Partnering With Amazon


Learning 2 Exhale Industries (L2E) founder Sophia Strother turned her delivery business into a multimillion-dollar brand in just 18 months after partnering with Amazon.

Taking the online retail giant up on its pledge to partner with small businesses, Strother invested $10,000 into her dreams in 2020; in three years, her company has cleared over $3 million.

But it almost didn’t happen, Business Insider reports.

Strother was asked to meet with Amazon partners in Seattle in 2019. As a single mother, the 43-year-old founder didn’t have the funds to travel from Austin, Texas, to the Pacific Northwest, so “with only one week to accept the interview, I turned it down,” she said.

Amazon came knocking again a day after Christmas.

“This time, I knew I’d regret it if I didn’t let things play out. I went to Las Vegas for the Amazon event and there were over 200 people in the room,” Strother said. “Each candidate had to be interviewed by an Amazon executive.”

Despite having operated her own consulting business for over 15 years, Strother had no transportation experience. Instead, in her application she “talked about initiatives I’ve led and how passionate I was for serving people and families in my community,” she said.

L2E is now responsible for providing service to communities in a large portion of Central Texas. The business employs nearly 80 associates and a fleet of 38 vans.

“We’re given 25 to 35 daily routes, and I have to make sure the vans are in place and my staff is dressed and ready to go,” Strother said. “On the backend, I lead the operational duties for my company and plan ahead for the various routes my associates need to take—whether the route is rural, urban, or underdeveloped.”

While she enjoyed relatively quick success in her partnership with Amazon, the founder has also experienced the pains that come with a growing business.

In February 2021, an unprecedented winter storm hit Texas, causing L2E to shut down for a week and resulting in a significant decrease in deliveries and earnings. That tough quarter led Strother to empty her retirement and savings accounts to continue paying her employees and keep the business afloat. She also stopped paying her own salary. After meeting with a temporary business coach from Amazon, Strother got the wheels moving once again.

“Since then, I haven’t missed a payroll check, and I’ve been able to start paying myself again,” she said.

RELATED CONTENT: AMAZON ANNOUNCES CONSTRUCTION OF WIND FARM IN MISSISSIPPI CASINO COUNTY

Real estate, Realtors, Inflated commission, Crime

US Jury Finds Realtors Liable For Inflating Commissions, Awards $1.78 Bln Damages


*Originally Reported by Reuters

Oct 31 (Reuters) – A U.S. jury on Tuesday found the National Association of Realtors and some residential brokerages, including units of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (BRKa.N), liable to pay $1.78 billion in damages for conspiring to artificially inflate commissions for home sales.

The verdict by a federal jury in Kansas City, Missouri, could upend decades-old practices that have allowed real estate agents to boost commissions as home prices and mortgage rates rise, hurting consumers by making housing transactions more expensive.

Plaintiffs in the class action included sellers of more than 260,000 homes in Missouri, Kansas and Illinois between 2015 and 2022, who objected to the commissions they were obligated to pay buyers’ brokers.

The verdict followed a two-week trial, and the damages award can be tripled under U.S. antitrust law to more than $5.3 billion.

“Today was a day of accountability,” said Michael Ketchmark, the lead lawyer for the plaintiffs.

The defendants included Berkshire-owned HomeServices of America and two subsidiaries, as well as the realty Keller Williams.

NAR spokesperson Mantill Williams said the trade group plans to appeal, and seek reduced damages.

HomeServices said it was disappointed in the verdict and planned to appeal, while Keller Williams spokesperson Darryl Frost said the realty company would consider its options for an appeal. “This is not the end,” Frost said.

Broker compensation in the U.S. has typically been about 5% to 6% of a home’s sales price, with about half paid to a buyer’s broker.

Home sellers complained that this model suppressed competition by keeping commissions for buyer brokers in the 2-1/2 to 3% range despite the brokers’ diminishing role, with many buyers able to find homes independently online.

Sellers said the arrangement had “severe anticompetitive effects” and made “no economic sense, except for the buyer broker.”

The defendants denied wrongdoing, with the NAR saying there was no evidence agents were required to “make offers of compensation at all, let alone at amounts that stabilize, fix, or raise commissions.”

Re/Max (RMAX.N) and Anywhere Real Estate (HOUS.N), whose brands include Century 21, Coldwell Banker and Corcoran, had been defendants but settled before trial, with Re/Max paying $55 million and Anywhere paying $83.5 million, without admitting liability.

Shares of real estate brokerages not involved in the verdict closed lower.

Re/Max fell 4.4% and Anywhere fell 2.7%, while online brokers Zillow Group (ZG.O) and Redfin (RDFN.O)declined 6.9% and 5.7%, respectively.

The U.S. Department of Justice is separately asking a federal appeals court in Washington to let it revive an antitrust probe into the NAR’s practices.

RELATED CONTENT: How Redlining And Banking Impact Generational Wealth

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