Making An Impact By Embracing The CHEW

Making An Impact By Embracing The CHEW


As National Account Manager for Ferrara Candy Co., the leading manufacturer of sugar candies, William Felder exemplifies the qualities of one of its top brands, Now and Later.

In managing the $50 million portfolio for Target—Ferrara’s second largest seasonal desk—his DNA has been infused with the power of CHEW: Champion, Hustle, Empower, Win.

Growing up in Columbia, S.C., Felder was influenced and nurtured by his parents’ lessons on the need to maintain a solid reputation and take a “no-excuses” approach to work and life. Over the years, he has applied his retailing, technology and management prowess to boost revenue and market share growth for iconic brands, including Now and Later, Laffy Taffy, BRACH’S and SweeTARTS. A decade-long veteran in the consumer-packaged goods industry—having held positions at Mars Wrigley Confections, Advantage Sales & Marketing, Lumidata and Target—Felder, 37, has been aptly designated by the National Confectioners Association as a 2022 Future Leader.

In addition to driving the top line for his division, he pushes his bottom-line concerns related to diversity, equity and inclusion at Ferrara and throughout corporate America. The South Carolina State University alumnus serves as co-chair of Ferrara’s Black Employee Business Resource Group—known as BE—and a member of the company’s Diversity Council, engaging with its senior management team on strategies to advance DEI. In fact, he received Ferrara’s highly acclaimed Empathy Award for his efforts.

Residing in Minneapolis with his wife and two children, he has witnessed firsthand how the tragic death of George Floyd at the hands of local police officers impacted the local Black community and galvanized organizations and individuals across the globe to take a stand against racial inequities. Felder, and Ferrara’s BE, continue to collaborate and ideate with the Now and Later brand on initiatives to promote its message of industry and philanthropy with African Americans and expand outreach efforts to the Black business community and HBCUs.

In coordinating his expansive agenda, Felder maintains he specifically embraces two qualities of CHEW – empowerment and achievement. He asserts:

“Winning alone isn’t as good as winning with others. I love empowering others to be their true selves. It lifts everyone.”

In our recent BLACK ENTERPRISE interview, Felder, among other topics, shared valuable lessons he gained in his career journey, the importance of DEI in corporate America today and his favorite Now and Later moment. The following are edited excerpts from that interview:

What led you to attend the HBCU South Carolina State?

I was on a marching band in high school, and South Carolina State played at halftime during one of our football games. I was hooked and said, “That’s where I’m going to school.” To this day, it’s the best decision I made. I only applied to one college, and it was South Carolina State. I didn’t really understand the value of HBCUs in high school. It wasn’t until I attended the institution that I understood the history of South Carolina State, and it made me proud. We have a [Henry] Smith, [Sammy] Hammond and [Delano] Middleton Memorial on our campus. Those are the three students killed during the Orangeburg Massacre. We have Sojourner Truth Hall. Everything about an HBCU is in your blood. It’s for us by us. It’s a family.

How did your experiences there further your drive to enter the confectionery industry?

That experience created the pathway. When I got into the Department of Business on campus, it was the best decision I had ever made. I wasn’t just there to “learn business.” They taught me how to be a Black man in the business world and made me feel as though I wasn’t just another number. Students also took etiquette classes. We had to wear a suit every Wednesday. They were teaching us how you’re supposed to dress in a corporate environment. I learned what a gig line was. I learned where my tie is supposed to stop on my pants. Like BLACK ENTERPRISE Magazine, “There’s nothing casual about business.”

Share your experiences that led to your current role.

I got an internship at the Enterprise Rental Car Management Program, which was my first real experience in the 9-to-5 world. That internship was very fast paced, so it made me comfortable working in a space that moved very quickly. It was trial by fire, and I think that’s why, every time I learn something, I can’t tiptoe in it. You just got to throw me in, and I learn how to swim. In this industry, specifically at Ferrara, we say, “Ferrara fast,” because everything is always moving. The industry’s always changing. For me, that’s my wheelhouse. That’s where I’m comfortable. I can move quickly.

Your professional work, coupled with tech innovation, prepared you for a broad-based experience in the food industry. When designing your career, did you determine that you wanted retail experience in placing a product and buttressing that with data analytics?

My work experience at Lumidata was a happy accident. I was originally at a company headquartered in Minneapolis, and it didn’t work the way I wanted it to work. So, I needed to find another job. I knew someone from that company who transitioned over to Lumidata and told me [it was focused on computer software.] I was like, “I don’t know anything about computers.” she said, “But you would understand the software and we are teaching people how to read the category data.” I went to the company and in explaining the familiar software to customers, I refined my selling and category management skills. So, it started as a happy coincidence, but if you look at my résumé, the experiences strategically build upon one another to where I am now.

Share with us the mentors you acquired along the way. Were there managers within these different experiences—whether you’re talking about Target, Mars, or Lumidata, among others—who guided you to the next step of your career?

One of the biggest influences of my career was Lena Lewis, a former executive at Ferrara. While working on different programs, she would say, “Hey, I need you to come to this meeting with the CEO so you can tell them what you’re doing.” I felt a bit anxious, but she would say, “You need to tell them what you’re doing to gain visibility.” That happened enough times to where they knew who I was by name and face, and knew the success I was able to achieve.

She was an advocate for me. She really impacted my career. I try to do for others what she did for me because I can see how it made a difference. She was a huge influence. I share that story often as possible to help inspire others to understand the value of being an advocate.

What have been the most significant challenges you’ve had to overcome, and how have the lessons learned made you a stronger professional?

Being a Black man in corporate America. I am from Columbia, S.C. My first big career movement was in Minneapolis, Minn. Not only did I have to learn about a completely different region of the country, but I had to try to navigate a culture I knew nothing about. I was the only Black man on the entire team. Not only that…I was the only man on the team. I had a hard time relating to my team on a personal level and I was afraid to share anything. I did the work, but I just could not relate to anyone. As a result, my peers assumed I was standoffish and cold. That was the hardest two years. I called my mom and told her, “I think I made the worst mistake of my life.”

It was that difficult for me because I could not be myself. I could not be authentic. I couldn’t be Will. I was trying my hardest to fit in that box and just could not.

Every job I had where I felt like I had to try to fit in somebody else’s box was unsuccessful. Not unsuccessful in the fact that “I quit. I failed.” But it just did not feel comfortable for me. What I’m trying to do at Ferrara and with our BRGs [Business Resource Groups] is make everyone comfortable in being themselves. Do you want to grow your hair out? Do you want to color your hair? Do you want to wear something different? Do it. The length of your hair doesn’t take away from the knowledge in your head. Be you. It’s like [BLACK ENTERPRISE Earl “Butch” Graves Jr. said at the Black Men XCEL Summit], “When you’re confident, you perform better.”

Serving on the Black BRG and being on the Ferrara Diversity Council, you have dealt with this crossroad related to corporate diversity, equity, and inclusion. We’re in an era in which corporations are wrestling with employee demands for workplace environments that embrace authenticity and belonging. In your roles, how do you help Ferrara make this shift in corporate culture?

In the aftermath of George Floyd two years ago, corporate leaders had to assess everything internally. Everybody wanted to have a diversity conversation. Everybody was going full force. Right? Now, it is our job to maintain enthusiasm and keep the conversation going. What do we do specifically at Ferrara? We have CEO listening tours.

CEOs are trying to run the company and don’t always have a pulse on how individual contributors are feeling. That is our job as a BRG. We translate how employees at all levels feel so senior leaders can receive the feedback and act. At Ferrara, we do not want to just change our internal environment. We want to impact the environment as a whole. We are taking 2% of our total media spend and investing it into Black-owned companies. By 2024, we will have 30% of employees of color at director levels. This is a direct result of the work we are doing with our BRGs.

What’s your impression of this post-George Floyd moment of change related to racial equity and systemic change? Do you think it is sustainable or a brief period before corporations revert to the status quo?

That’s a really good question, and I would need a crystal ball to answer it because we are still in the storm. I think the next generations will answer that question. How hard are they going to continue to push to maintain and drive new change?

From a corporate standpoint, I look at a lot of companies the same way we look at [people getting in shape]. When they first start, they go on an extreme diet. They say, “I’m going to work out when I get up in the morning. I am not eating this… I’m not eating that.” Then eventually, a week or so later, you’ll ask them, “You still working out in the mornings?”

The response: “I don’t have time.” Eventually, they fall off the wagon. Some companies are falling off the wagon.

At Ferrara, specifically, we are not. We are leaning on our BRG’s and the DEI council. We have the metrics and reporting to hold ourselves accountable. We’re hiring more Black talent, we are finding more Black interns, we are making partnerships with HBCUs and we are investing in the Black community. As a BRG, we are showing that there are consequences to not having a diverse talent pool and diverse associates.

What are your aspirations at Ferrara or within the food industry in general?

If you asked me this question a few months ago, I’d say, “I’m going to be a sales director. I’ve always been in sales.” However, as a member of the National Confectioners Association, I am exposed to different events, people and experiences. I’m having conversations with CEOs, vice presidents, and senior level change makers. In the future, I want to influence the culture and decisions of a company.

I don’t just want to say, “We did Now and Later partnership with BLACK ENTERPRISE and it went really well.” I want to make a connection and leverage our partnership so we can come to BLACK ENTERPRISE and say, “We’re looking for a candidate for a CFO. Do you have anybody that we can tap?” Really driving the culture of a company. I don’t know if there’s a specific title for that, but that’s what I’m leaning toward. I want to take Ferrara to a place where employees say, “I enjoy Ferrara, and you should come join us because this is different.” Maybe, Chief People Officer. That is where I see myself.

Given your position and engagement with the Now and Later brand, can you share a Now and Later story?

My favorite color is red. All of them…strawberry, cherry, whatever. If it’s red, I’m going to eat it. My Now and Later story is more recent. Being at Black Men Xcel, it was clear that everybody including [civil rights attorney] Ben Crump or [former NBA star and entrepreneur] Grant Hill responds to the brand in some way. They’ll say, “Oh, I remember Now and Later and what it tastes like” or “Yeah, I used to sell them for a nickel. I used to sell for a dime.” It is rewarding to work for a brand so many great people who have a strong connection with.

Harvard Names New President, First Black Woman to Hold Top Job


By Ross Kerber and Dan Whitcomb

BOSTON (Reuters) –Harvard University on Thursday named Claudine Gay, the school’s dean of Faculty Arts and Sciences, as its 30th president, the first Black person and only the second woman to hold the job.

Gay, the daughter of Haitian immigrants who joined Harvard as a professor in 2006, succeeds Lawrence Bacow as president of the prestigious, nearly 400-year-old Ivy League university. She will take over in July 2023.

Claudine is a remarkable leader who is profoundly devoted to sustaining and enhancing Harvard’s academic excellence,” Penny Pritzker, secretary of the U.S. Commerce Department under President Barack Obama and chair of the search committee, said in a written statement.

Gay, 52, will step into the job in Cambridge, Massachusetts as the university faces challenges to its admissions policies.

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to consider a 2014 lawsuit claiming that Harvard violates the U.S. Constitution and discriminates against Asian students by considering the race or ethnicity of applicants. Many legal experts believe the conservative-leaning top court will agree.

Harvard argues that eliminating race as a consideration would hamper its efforts to create a more diverse student body.

The university has also been criticized for so-called legacy admissions favoring children of alumni, big donors or athletes.

“With the strength of this extraordinary institution behind us, we enter a moment of possibility, one that calls for deeper collaboration across the University, across all of our remarkable Schools,” Gay said in a written statement.

“There is an urgency for Harvard to be engaged with the world and to bring bold, brave, pioneering thinking to our greatest challenges,” she said.

Harvard’s website lists tuition for full-time students as$54,768 per year, although many students are eligible for grants or scholarships.

The university, with an endowment for 2022 of $50.9 billion, was founded in 1636 and is the oldest higher learning institution in the United States. It counts eight U.S. Presidents among its alumni, including Obama.

(Reporting by Ross Kerber and Dan WhitcombEditing by Diane Craft and David Gregorio)

Arizona Sen. T.J. Shope, Kwanzaa

Here are Five Ways To Make An Easy Transition From Christmas To Celebrating Kwanzaa


Kwanzaa is a week-long holiday celebration of the culture and heritage of African Americans. The holiday, which was created in the 1960s by activist Maulana Karenga, begins Dec. 26 and continues through Jan. 1. Each of the seven days in the weeklong holiday represents one of the seven fundamental values of African culture or “Nguzo Saba,” which means the seven principles in Swahili.

Black, red, and green candles on a Kinara represent the seven values of Kwanzaa. The seven values are Umoja (Unity), Kujichagulia (Self-Determination), Ujima (Collective Work and Responsibility), Ujamaa (Cooperative Economics), Nia (Purpose), Kuumba (Creativity), and Imani (Faith).

If you’re considering celebrating Kwanzaa this holiday season, but don’t want to skip out on Christmas, here are five ways to easily transition from one holiday to the next.

Add Kwanzaa decorations to your holiday or Christmas decor

Kwanzaa decorations typically use red and green, the base colors of Christmas. Putting up Kwanzaa decorations along with your Christmas decorations will allow you to keep the holiday spirit after Christmas. It will also keep you from doing extra work disassembling the decorations for one holiday and putting up decorations for another.

If you need to know where to find decorations for Kwanza, you can grab a bevy of decorations at Amazon, Target, and Walmart. If you’re looking for more authentic decorations and gifts, Mahogany Books, It’s A Black Thang, and Etsy sport numerous Kwanzaa-themed products from Black-owned businesses.

Look for Kwanzaa events in your city

It may not seem like it, but a litany of Kwanzaa-related events are happening this month in numerous metro cities, including New York, Chicago, Detroit, Atlanta, Los Angeles, and more, celebrating African American art, food, music, culture, and more.

Look online for events in your area and use them to meet people, share ideas, and, most of all, celebrate African American heritage and culture. The events can also be used as an educational tool for kids, showing them that Black culture has its way of celebrating the holidays.

Take time each day during Kwanzaa to Celebrate the meaning of the day

Turn off the TV, tablets, and smartphones, and sit down with your family to discuss each day’s meaning and how you’re celebrating each day of Kwanzaa. Sitting down with family and friends and tuning out from distractions will fulfill the first day of Umoja or Unity.

Take a half hour each day of Kwanzaa to discuss and celebrate each day of the holiday. Also, find inexpensive ways to celebrate each day. Use Ujamaa (Cooperative Economics) to open a children’s savings account for your toddler or child. Work on a family project or volunteer on the day celebrating Ujima (Collective Work and Responsibility).

It will get you used to regularly celebrating Kwanzaa each year while keeping it short enough to keep your children’s attention.

Celebrate Kwanzaa with friends as well as family

Including your friends and distant relatives in your Kwanzaa celebration is a great way to get those close to you to celebrate the holiday. Holding a dinner on a day during the weeklong celebration is a great way to celebrate Kwanzaa at the end of the year.

Holding a Kwanzaa-themed event is also a way to celebrate the holiday without the debauchery of typical end-of-year celebrations for people you know who don’t drink. It can also be a way to celebrate the holidays without spending more money by turning the party into a potluck event.

Be Safe

If you’re celebrating Kwanzaa this year, be safe. The COVID-19 pandemic has not ended,d and making things worse, cases of the flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) are also straining hospitals across the country. You may not have done it in a few months, but now is the time to put that mask back on.

Remember at the beginning of the pandemic, Black Americans were disproportionately infected by the virus and dies as a result. Ensure you’re in for a safe holiday by staying updated on vaccinations to make sure the beginning of your 2023 isn’t in a hospital or sick at home but instead focused on accomplishments for the new year.

Let Spaces Declutter Your Mac Computer

Let Spaces Declutter Your Mac Computer


Apple’s macOS is one of the most popular in the technology space for good reason. Apple’s found the optimal way to integrate software and hardware through macOS, multitasking through macOS is virtually unrivaled against the competition, and Apple has one of the best-operating systems when it comes to warding off malware and viruses.

Despite the many things macOS does well, it isn’t exactly perfect. For example, clutter is one of macOS’s most commonly experienced issues. Clutter cuts down production, which can hinder users’ experiences.

Thankfully, Spaces Pro for Mac can clean up your desktop or laptop. For a limited time, you can purchase a lifetime license to the software for $9. That’s a savings of 52% from the original MSRP ($19).

Spaces cleans up your computer and organizes your workplace quickly and with minimal effort. It offers new workspaces that can be used at any time and a to-do list of sites you wish to check out while working.

This version of Spaces comes with more than 16 new custom layouts. In addition, you can automate spaces from other apps using deeplinks. In addition, there’s the ability to create unlimited spaces of “launcher” types. It accounts for Raycast integration, comes with Siri shortcuts and has support for manual controls, among other features.

Spaces is compatible with Apple computers that run macOS Monterey or later. Updates to the software are included to ensure your experience is up to date. This offer, however, is only available to new users.

“It’s a decent app with window features. So far been using it with no issues. Minor stuff here and there, but a decent one,” writes verified buyer Goutham R.

Spaces takes care of the decluttering by taking matters into its own hands and organizing, so you don’t have to. Purchase it today to get a better handle on your computer.

Prices subject to change.

House Votes for Thurgood Marshall Bust to Replace Writer of Racist 1857 Dred Scott Decision


Congressional leaders have been working together to remove statues of those who reflect racist ideals, and replace them by honoring pioneers who have contributed to America’s advancement.

In a vote by the House, a bust of Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall, the first Black U.S. Supreme Court Justice, is set to replace one of the chief justices who wrote the racist 1857 Dred Scott decision, ruling against Black American citizenship.

According to Axios, the House passed the legislation to remove the marble bust of the former Chief Justice Roger Taney, following a voice vote to have it replaced with one of Marshall.

The vote directed the Joint Committee of Congress on the Library to pull down Taney’s bust from public display and make the replacement of the statues near the entrance to the Old Supreme Court Chamber in the Capitol.

Reportedly, the bill was passed in Senate last week and has been prepared to be sent along to President Joe Biden to be signed into law.

According to Majority Leader, House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer (MD) introduced legislation to remove the statue of Taney from display in March 2020, praising Marshall for his efforts in moving America forward.

“A bust of Chief Justice Taney should not be displayed in a place of honor in our nation’s Capitol,” Hoyer said in a 2020 statement. “In Maryland we made the decision to remove a statue of Taney from the State House grounds, reflecting his shameful contribution to the evil system of slavery and its defense, and we ought to do the same here. ‘We are better than this,’ as our late colleague Elijah Cummings would say. It is time to make it clear to visitors from across our nation and from abroad that America celebrates champions of inclusion and equality, not proponents of hate and injustice.”

Marshall was sworn in as the first Black member of the U.S. Supreme Court in October 1967.

BLACK ENTERPRISE previously reported that the nation celebrated the life of Marshall’s late wife, 94-year-old Cecilia “Cissy” Suyat Marshall, who died on Nov. 22. 

Convicted Criminals Todd and Julie Chrisley Say Daughter’s Biological Mother Has ‘No Rights’


Reality television stars Todd Chrisley and Julie Chrisley claim that the biological mother of their 10-year-old adopted daughter has no rights, according to Entertainment Tonight.

The Chrisleys adopted their granddaughter, Chloe Chrisley, in 2017. The couple claimed during their podcast, Chrisley Confessions, on Dec. 14 that her biological mother, Angela Johnson, has no parental rights.

Johnson told TMZ that she planned to file for full custody after the stars of Chrisley Knows Best were both convicted of bank and tax fraud last month. They were both sentenced to several years in prison, and Johnson wants custody. She said she had been trying to get custody for years, but it was made more difficult after the Chrisleys moved from Georgia to Tennessee. Their son Kyle Chrisley is Chole’s father and lost custody in 2016 due to drug addiction. Johnson was arrested a year later after she falsified an application for Medicaid.

Todd said that he and his wife will decide who Chloe’s caregiver will be “if and when the time comes.”

“It’s ironic that her biological mother would come forward now when she has not been in her life since 2015,” he said. “Angela Johnson surrendered her parental rights in March of 2017, and we never heard from her again. Chloe was legally adopted by myself and by Julie. She is legally our child. We will be the ones who decide, if and when the time comes, as to who will be her caregiver.”

“Angela Johnson, she literally surrendered her rights to her child. She did this in front of a judge. Just so the record is very, very clear, Angela Johnson has no rights to Chloe. Her rights were terminated. She has been legally adopted.”

Todd went on to say he tried to help Johnson and provided her with housing when she was homeless, but Johnson failed to pay the $258 HOA fee needed to maintain the condo he’d bought for her. He also claimed that when she had joint custody of Chloe, she rarely showed up to pick her up because she had no vehicle.

“Angela didn’t have a car that would get her back and forth. We bought her a car, a Toyota Prius, and gave it to her free and clear for her to be able to meet Julie every other week in Commerce, which was halfway, Commerce, Georgia. She wouldn’t show up half the time. She would never even call and tell us that she wasn’t showing up.”

Todd went on to say Johnson’s lack of responsibility led them to pursue the adoption. He added that Johnson was “trying to squeeze out five minutes of fame” by filing for custody of Chloe.

“What she needs to do is spend more time trying to find a better wig and less time trying to go out here and get more time on the camera.”

The Chrisleys will begin their prison sentences on Jan. 17. Todd was sentenced to 12 years at the Federal Prison Camp in Pensacola, Florida and Julie was sentenced to seven years at the Federal Correctional Institution in Marianna.

Todd also threatened Johnson during the podcast and said if she continued to seek custody of her daughter, they would release her text messages.

“I know you listen to this, Angela. What you need to do is understand that I have retained every text message, and so does Julie, with any communication that we’ve ever had with you,” he said. “We have not released those, but if we need to we will.”

Prince Harry Blames Legal Battle with Tabloids for Meghan Markle’s Miscarriage


Prince Harry is blaming the tabloids he and Meghan Markle battled with legally for causing the miscarriage they suffered in 2020.

Volume two of the six-part Harry and Meghan Netflix docuseries was released on Thursday and highlights the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s experience in Montecito, CA after leaving the United Kingdom in early 2020.

At the time of their arrival in the States, Markle was in the middle of a legal war with Associated Newspapers and the Mail on Sunday for printing a private letter she had written to her estranged father, Thomas Markle, ET reported.

The Duchess was also pregnant with what would have been their second child, but the couple lost the baby upon arrival to Montecito.

Markle recalled not sleeping due to the stress of the legal case. At one point, her friend and former Suits co-star, Abigail Spencer, came to visit Markle during the pregnancy, and the Duchess told her, “I’m having a lot of pain.”

“She was holding Archie and she just fell to the ground,” Spencer recalled.

Markle revealed the devastating news she and Harry received on their first day in California.

“The first morning we woke up in our new home was when I miscarried,” she said.

Prince Harry is adamant that the stress brought on by the lawsuit with the tabloids is what caused the miscarriage.

“I believe my wife suffered a miscarriage because of what the Mail did. I watched the whole thing,” Prince Harry said.

“Now, do we absolutely know that the miscarriage was created, caused by that? ‘Course we don’t. But bearing in mind the stress that that caused, the lack of sleep, and the timing of the pregnancy, how many weeks in she was. I can say from what I saw that the miscarriage was created by what they were trying to do to her.”

Markle eventually won her privacy lawsuit against the tabloids in December 2021, BBC reports.

In addition to their son – Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, born in May 2019 – the Duke and Duchess welcomed their second child, daughter Lilibet Diana Mountbatten-Windsor, in June 2021.

University of Virginia Student D’Sean Perry Spoke to Mother Moments Before Deadly Shooting

University of Virginia Student D’Sean Perry Spoke to Mother Moments Before Deadly Shooting


One of the University of Virginia students who was shot and killed in Charlottesville on Nov. 13 spoke to his mother on his cell phone moments before the shooting, according to NBC News.

D’Sean Perry, a linebacker for the University of Virginia’s football team, was one of several students who were shot on a chartered bus as they returned from a field trip to Washington, D.C. Devin Chandler and Lavel Davis were also shot and killed. Running back Mike Hollins was also shot three times but survived. Police arrested 22-year-old Christopher Darnell Jones Jr. in connection with the shootings.

D’Sean’s mother, Happy Perry, said she talked to her son every day at 10 a.m. and 10 p.m. She said she last talked to her son at 10:06 p.m. on the night of his death. Perry said that her son told her they were almost back on campus and that his cell phone was going dead.

“His cell phone had gone dead,” she said. “I had just gotten off the phone with him. I had just gotten off the phone with him,” she repeated.

Perry said that, minutes later, they heard about an active shooter on campus. Perry and her husband, Sean Perry, remained hopeful knowing that the battery on their son’s phone needed to be charged, but Mrs. Perry noted the wait was excruciating.

“Dreadful, to say the least,” she said. “I had called my sister and let her know what was going on. I just needed everyone to pray.”

At 2:30 a.m. they received the tragic news that their son was one of the victims shot on the bus.

“I heard my wife on the phone. Once she got the call, she just broke down crying,” said Mr. Perry. “All I could do is run around the house and say ‘no,’ and we just cried together.”

Perry would have graduated in January.

His parents said they plan to join national efforts to stop gun violence. “If we don’t do something about it, it will continue,” said Mr. Perry.

“We’re just a voice. We’re just two voices just trying to make people aware of what happened to our son. We’re lost, but we’re not empty. I know my son is right here as we speak.”

Nipsey Hussle ‘Building Brand Through Culture’ Course to Be Taught at Loyola University


Nipsey Hussle’s legacy will carry on in the form of education, thanks to an official college course created in his honor.

Loyola Marymount University, the same school where Hussle served as an adjunct professor, is set to introduce “The Marathon Continues: Building Brand Through Culture” inside their business school. On Wednesday, Hussle’s longtime business partner David Gross announced the new course on Instagram.

“Next month the TMC takeover of higher education begins with a class I’ll be teaching “The Marathon Continues: Building Brand Through Culture” at Loyola Marymount’s business school,” Gross shared in his caption.

“The class will focus on Hussle’s genius and authenticity in his approach to business and life.”

 

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A post shared by David Gross (@david.a.gross)

Gross thanked Richard Hamilton, a tenured professor at the school who first reached out to Hussle and Gross in 2017 to teach a class that became the blueprint for the newest course.

“He reached out to me and Nip in 2017 and asked if we’d teach a class at the business school,” Gross shared. “He gave us carte blanche, with the caveat that we were authentic and didn’t water anything down because we were in a university environment.”

The class was a hit, and it lead to a second class the following semester,” he continued. “This was Spring of 2019, so we never got to finish the class. #LLNHTG”

 

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A post shared by David Gross (@david.a.gross)

Hussle was fatally shot outside his Marathon clothing store in Los Angeles in March 2019. But Gross says Hamilton continued reaching out to invite him to teach anything of his choosing at the school.

“It’s finally time like to go back this Spring to teach a the class that honors Nip’s enormous legacy, and analyzes how he was able to put a dent in the universe by creating the most resonant brand to come out of the culture #TMC,” Gross shared.

A course description says the new class will focus on “brand building strategies and tactics that are motivated and driven through cultural influence.”

Students can also expect weekly guest lectures led by “some of the most influential people in the music and entertainment industry.”

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