Black Tech Founder Gives Rec Basketball Players $1.6 Million League

Black Tech Founder Gives Rec Basketball Players $1.6 Million League


In communities across the country, recreational basketball is more than a way to pass the time while staying in shape; it’s a lifestyle filled with passion for the sport. Still, not everyone who loves basketball will make it to the professional level, whether it be the NBA or the WNBA. Some won’t even make it to the NCAA level and participate in March Madness despite possessing an incredible amount of natural athleticism and the grades to get into college.

So, what’s missing? Why do so many young men and women struggle to take their basketball skills to the next level? The answers aren’t easy to come by, especially when you consider socio-economic factors, and it only gets more complex when you add the coronavirus pandemic on top of it all.

That’s the problem we face today in our communities of color. The will and the academic talents are there; the only thing missing is a way for basketball players to continue playing the sport. Only a select, elite few receive invitations to Elite AAU teams or get scholarship offers from power conferences like the Big 10 and the ACC.

But tech entrepreneur Jamar Johnson, the founder and CEO of the CBLHoopCity app, saw an opportunity to build something truly unique in the basketball world: an amateur recreational league that users can access through an app and compete for cash prizes, totaling $1.6 million.

The big picture: building a community for adult non-professional basketball players and enthusiasts

Mr. Johnson started the CBL back in 2008 as a modest offline summer basketball league with a basic website. Today, the CBL has evolved into what Mr. Johnson considers the 3.0 version, and now the league is ready to onboard players and teams across the country. It’s one thing to have an idea; it’s another thing to execute on that idea and see it through to the end. That’s exactly what Mr. Johnson has accomplished, yet he isn’t stopping there.

At its core, the CBLHoopCity will be a competitive and fun basketball league experience for non-professional players who still love the game despite not making it to college or the pros. No other recreational-based basketball league is doing anything close to this concept, and it’s for a good reason: there are no huge profits in the adult recreational basketball world, only the love for the game by its participants.

Overall, the idea is to create a platform to empower and build a community for this marketplace of players, and honestly, nothing like it exists at the national level. All you really have across the country are fitness centers and city parks and rec leagues that don’t really offer any compensation other than self-confidence, respect and maybe a T-shirt or a miniature size trophy, that is normally given to kids for sports awards.

But the CBLHoopCity challenge is different, and here’s why.

How is CBLHoopCity app different from other recreational leagues?

Without a doubt, basketball is a unique sport in the U.S. Other countries have pro leagues, but it’s different here. It’s not only a sport because sports can teach life lessons, and that’s equally as important as staying fit and active.

Eventually, all athletes learn a hard lesson: you either sharpen your skills to make it to the next level, or you hit the ceiling and can’t progress any further in your career. Just imagine putting 20 to 22 years into a sport you love and cherish, and then you must realize and accept that your talent level doesn’t suffice to play at the next level. It happens all the time.

No matter how you try to sugarcoat it, it’s never easy when a young man or a young woman has been told that they will not be able to fulfill their dream of playing at their next level, despite putting two decades of work into the game. But the CBLHoopCity app is a way for basketball players to continue with their passion and careers after all other avenues close.

Not everyone can be LeBron James and jump straight to the number one pick in the NBA draft, nor can every young man or woman who plays basketball grow up to be like Michael Jordan. It takes a platform to get to that level because it doesn’t happen on its own, especially since talent isn’t necessarily the problem. Not every young basketball player receives the same level of coaching during pivotal periods of their development. Often, there’s an additional development period that gets overlooked.

Yet, the CBLHoopCity app wants to change that — and change it for the better in ways none of us can predict now. When you build a national league and community experience for passionate recreational players, anything can happen once it takes off. Look how quickly the AAU developed as a farm system for top NCAA basketball programs for the entire college basketball network.

Either way, the CBLHoopCity League at its core provides players with an alternative when the traditional roots to success are no longer available after high school and after college basketball as well. Best of all, Mr. Johnson founded this league and oversaw the development of the application that will run it all, so you can rest assured that everything young basketball players need to play is there.

What’s an NBA-like experience?

One of the most exciting things about Mr. Johnson’s CBLHoopCity league is that it promises a college and NBA-like experience for its recreational basketball players, but how so? What’s the difference?

The platform breaks down athletes into a tiered system with multiple levels to advance for starters. All players must start out in the rec leagues and then progress and get more exposure through the CBL Accelerator program. It’s another way for players to showcase their talents and skills to agents, scouts and general managers from college and professional teams from all over the world.

Many young players may not know that some of the best NBA players got their professional start overseas, sharpened their skills and were given an opportunity at the highest level.

The CBLHoopCity app will showcase and give players the exposure and professional basketball organization creditability they need, which is something that no other recreational league in the country can do. Mr. Johnson genuinely believes that the player — the individual driven by a passion for the game — now has the tools to help them determines their success.

While the purpose of the league isn’t necessarily to flood the NBA with fresh talent, the CBLHoopCity league gives their players a shot at taking their skills to the next level after they learn to compete and win championships at the amateur level. Professional basketball leagues analyze and qualify players on many dimensions. Still, the will to win and championship experience against the nation’s best talent is arguably the most important, much more so than the ability to jump a 42-inch vertical or shoot a 33-foot 3-point shot.

But the league isn’t just for players either because, as anyone who’s ever run a recreational league knows, teams need sponsorship. After all, they do not have a revenue stream like an NCAA or professional leagues, including those overseas.

Top three benefits of sponsoring or owning a team

When you choose to sponsor or own a team in the CBLHoopCity, team plans are 100 percent tax-deductible, which makes it ideal for those who want to keep their finances in check while also helping under-served communities with the game of basketball.

Another benefit is increasing exposure for a company’s brand to demonstrate that this business is both active and passionate about supporting its community. Sponsorship has always been a part of the sports world because it allows businesses to amplify their brand and gain national exposure. The community goodwill and return on a tax-deductible sponsorship alone is worth considering.

The last benefit is that when you partner with the CBLHoopCity, you’ll most likely gain more website traffic, which only translates to more exposure in more opportunities to show the community that your business isn’t only here for profits.

Nowadays, people don’t want faceless brands with no personality; instead, companies that take a stand are gaining an edge over competitors who still have an old-school mindset of following the trends and political correctness.

No matter how you look at the situation, the future of CBLHoopCity is in good hands moving forward due to the high player demand and engagement. Look for the league to become a nationwide phenomenon in 2022 as the CBL promotes its cash prizes, totaling $1.6 million.

This article first appeared on Blacknews.com

FedEx Launches A Second E-Commerce Learning Lab Program for Minority Small Business Owners

FedEx Launches A Second E-Commerce Learning Lab Program for Minority Small Business Owners


Are you a woman-owned minority small business owner wondering how to take your small business online? Not sure what the best e-commerce platform is for small business owners? Wondering how to launch a successful small business online store? Are you looking for ways to improve your e-commerce business and sell more online?

Enter the FedEx E-Commerce Learning Lab. Powered by non-profit partner Accion Opportunity Fund and leading e-commerce consultancy 37 Oaks, the FedEx E-Commerce Learning Lab is a multi-faceted four-month program designed to help minority small business owners – primarily women of color – who are looking to develop or expand their e-commerce operations. The program includes:

  • Immersive e-commerce courses and workshops
  • Coaching from industry experts
  • Networking with fellow entrepreneurs
  • Online sales support and order fulfillment through Summer 2022
  • A $2,000 business grant to support e-commerce growth plans

Created specifically for minority small business owners, the FedEx E-Commerce Learning Lab initiative is a crucial component of FedEx Cares, FedEx’s global community engagement program. “Before the program, we were really struggling with scaling our online sales,” says India Russell, Co-Founder of Everything Sauce. “All of the information covered during the program was very valuable and very thorough … Now, we have a solid blueprint and know what we want to implement to have a successful e-commerce store.”

FedEx Announces the Launch of a Second FedEx E-Commerce Learning Lab to Help Women-Owned And Minority Small Business Owners Thrive in the E-Commerce Space

“This is our fifth year of organizing special programs that directly reach out to women-owned minority small business owners and empower them with the resources they need to succeed,” says Rose Flenorl, Global Citizenship Manager at FedEx. “With the boom, we have seen in the growth of e-commerce during the COVID-19 pandemic. This program will prove to be especially helpful in taking participants from the brick-and-mortar to online.”

Applications to participate in the FedEx E-Commerce Learning Lab are open now until Friday, April 1, 2022. For eligibility requirements or to apply, click here.

 

 

 

 

Gospel Songstress Tasha Cobbs Leonard Introduces Her New Adopted Baby Boy To The World

Gospel Songstress Tasha Cobbs Leonard Introduces Her New Adopted Baby Boy To The World


Love is in the air, and a new baby has arrived. Gospel artist Tasha Cobbs Leonard shares her miraculous story with the world as she welcomes her son through adoption.

In an interview with PEOPLE magazine, the “Break Every Chain” singer and her husband, music producer Kenneth Leonard, recently introduced fans to their son, Asher Amaris Leonard.

“Asher means happy. His middle name means chosen by God and he literally lives up to his name,” says Tasha. “He wakes up laughing. He’s laughing all day unless he’s asleep. He loves to play.”

During the conversation, the couple speaks openly about their adoption journey and the contributing factors leading up to their decision. The journey wasn’t easy. Following years of struggling with infertility and in vitro fertilization, the Leonards credit their faith in God in helping them through.

“One of the things that I’m really happy for is that at the end of that process, our hearts were still open to God doing this, how he chose to do it,” Kenneth added. It really strengthened our faith; looking back, God really kept his promise to us.”

“After all of the disappointment, and it was many times that we tried, and we were disappointed, but you have to have something internally saying, I believe that this is what is meant for me,” adds the singer.

“So to have Asher now, and just the story behind how we got him, it is beyond what we could have imagined or expected,” she continues. “He is more than what we could have prayed for. So we are super excited just to watch him every day. Sometimes we look at him and say, ‘This is real?’”

With the help of an “amazing” adoption agency, the couple reportedly matched up with a birth mother one month before her due date. After Asher’s birth, the highly anticipated parents were able to bring their new son home. Asher is now eight months old. Calling their experience a “beautiful” one, Tasha hopes to inspire others with their full journey.

“If you desire a child, and you’ve been struggling, adoption has been beautiful for us,” she said. “It’s literally like Asher is our blood.”

Asher is the latest member of the Leonard clan, joining three older siblings from Kenneth’s previous marriage.

 

Altitude Trampoline Park Hits New Heights, Names Amy Phillips President

Altitude Trampoline Park Hits New Heights, Names Amy Phillips President


ATLANTA — Bringing active, indoor entertainment and fun to families across America with its Jump Life!℠ mantra, Altitude Trampoline Park announced that it has named Amy Phillips to the role of president, according to a release.

Promoted to co-lead the company’s strategic franchising phase with CEO Mike Rotondo, a key focus for Phillips will be expanding the company’s leadership and corporate support team as the brand prioritizes growing its presence. Additionally, her oversight will continue to include strategic marketing, brand messaging and franchise development, while leading the charge on innovations in digital and in-park experiences, guest offerings and vendor partnerships. She will retain her chief marketing officer title as well.  

“Over the years, I’ve had the chance to hone in on the core of what makes the family entertainment industry so exhilarating for guests across the country,” said Phillips, who has 20-plus years of experience working with international family entertainment brands including Pepsi, Dave & Buster’s World Headquarters, Main Event Entertainment, Drive Shack and most recently Altitude Trampoline Park.

“In this new role, I look forward to pushing the boundaries of our guest experience and evolving with our growing corporate team to support our franchise network in new and profound ways.”   

Phillips joined Altitude Trampoline Park in 2020, and quickly rose through the ranks to Chief Marketing Officer. She sprang into action with major brand-wide initiatives such as Altitude Trampoline Park’s widely successful membership program, which drove double-digit sales increases in 2021 compared to 2019 at several participating locations. Her work also has resulted in overarching, company changing initiatives like a partnership with the American Heart Association as well as a call center to streamline event and party booking.

Her marketing and brand activation prowess only grew over the course of her career as she continuously created and delivered high-flying results through a wide variety of campaigns, including one that earned her national recognition as the American Marketing Association’s “Marketer of the Year” in 2012.  

“Amy has already made a significant impact on the brand’s results in her time as CMO, and I look forward to the results she will drive as our President”, said Rotondo, who joined the company as CEO in late 2019 to architect the Altitude Trampoline Park growth initiative.

“Her network of industry resources is unparalleled and her experience speaks for itself. With her at the forefront of our strategic growth plans, we will only further solidify our status as the leading indoor entertainment concept for active family fun now and in the years to come.”  

With her inspiring, energetic spirit infused into the business, Altitude has soared to new heights and overcome pandemic-induced challenges, uniquely positioning the brand to reach its goal of expanding to 100 parks in the next year. Already, new parks are bounding onto the horizon in attractive markets such as Cincinnati, Ohio, Lawrenceville, Ga., the Pittsburgh suburbs and Tallahassee, Jacksonville Beach and Bradenton, Fla. These new locations will benefit from Phillips’ and the Altitude Trampoline Park leadership team’s persistent efforts to update equipment, introduce new attractions, refresh concessions partners and create additional revenue streams.

“Altitude Trampoline Park is all about helping our young guests have the time of their lives while building confidence in themselves,” continued Phillips.

“I couldn’t be more motivated to be a part of building our brand to the next level.”  

Former NBA Player Mo Williams Hired to Coach Jackson State University Basketball Team


Another former professional athlete is heading to Jackson State University (JSU) to become a head coach.

According to the Clarion-Ledger, former NBA basketball player Mo Williams, who played in the NBA for 14 years, is going to Jackson State University to take over the collegiate men’s basketball team.

Williams is the second former professional sports player to take over head coaching duties.

Deion Sanders, AKA Coach Prime, is a former NFL football player who is now the head coach of the school’s football team at Jackson State.

Williams is currently the basketball coach at Alabama State.

He is an NBA championship winner who played 14 seasons and won an NBA title while on the Cleveland Cavaliers team with LeBron James in 2016. Williams was selected as a player in the 2009 NBA All-Star Game.

Williams is a Jackson native, who played basketball at Murrah, which is the same high school that JSU athletics director Ashley Robinson attended. In 2001, Williams was selected as a McDonald’s All-American during his senior year at Murrah. The Utah Jazz selected him with the 47th overall pick in the 2003 NBA Draft.

Last week, Jackson State University men’s basketball coach Wayne Brent announced that he was retiring at the end of this basketball season.

Brent’s collegiate record at JSU was 117-155 with only two winning seasons out of the nine he coached at JSU. He joined JSU in 2013 after being an assistant coach at Ole Miss. As a high school coach in the Jackson area, his team won four state titles in six years at Callaway.

Williams was Alabama State’s head coach the past two seasons, where he acquired an 11-34 overall record and a 10-23 conference record. Williams retired from the NBA in 2017 and started his coaching career as an assistant coach at Cal State Northridge from 2018-20 before taking the Alabama State job.

14-Year-Old Black Brainiac Headed to Southern University on a Full-Ride Scholarship

14-Year-Old Black Brainiac Headed to Southern University on a Full-Ride Scholarship


Elijah Precciely of Baton Rouge is the youngest full-ride scholarship recipient Southern University has ever signed.

At just 14 years old, this child prodigy is striving to learn all he can while preparing for his last few semesters at the HBCU.

“You have to have a mindset to actually know, ‘Hey, I have to learn this, my life depends on it,’” Precciely told ABC News. “Act like your life depends on it because it does. When you learn, you increase your life.”

The celebrated boy genius, who is currently a junior at Southern, was home-schooled by his mother while taking college-level courses in biology, physics, and business at just 8 years old, according to WAFB.

By 11, he had earned a spot in Southern University’s Honors College and began his career as a full-time student in the 2019 spring semester. He was even bestowed with a J.S. Clark Presidential Scholar Award.

A double major in physics and chemical engineering, Precciely’s pursuits transcend his academic career. He’s hosted a weekly radio show and been featured in various national outlets, including a Cartoon Network special. He is a published author of two books, A Prodigy, My Secrets (2021), and Mission Christian: God’s Got Firsts! Coloring Book Edition: Coloring Book Edition (2018).

Additionally, while breaking records and making history, the teenager is an inventor at heart. He has already applied for more than five patents for his inventions. As he rises to the occasion, Precciely is more focused on “changing lives.”

“I don’t look for just breaking records; I look for changing lives. And in that, I will break records,” he said, according to WBRZ.

“My first priority is to be a shining light to help others, and the second priority is to make sure that I help people like me and people who want to connect with me.”

“You’ll have many Black and brown children to see someone who looks like them and does not have to cater to other institutions that are traditionally known for geniuses,” added his father, Pastor Steven Precciely.

“There is a greatness right here at an HBCU. There’s greatness here, and you can shine and you can get a great education here and encourage them to do likewise.”

At only 14, Precciely anticipates graduating in May 2023.

Former NYC Schoolteacher Will Auction More Than 20,000 African American Historical Artifacts

Former NYC Schoolteacher Will Auction More Than 20,000 African American Historical Artifacts


In a three-story Staten Island home is one of the largest collections of African American historical artifacts in the country. From Muhammad Ali’s boxing shoes and Tuskegee Airmen headgear, more than 20,000 items are now headed to the auction block.

Elizabeth Meaders, a 90-year-old retired New York City schoolteacher, has been building a personal collection signifying the Black experience for more than six decades, CBS News reports.

Over the years, she has maintained her collection on a teacher’s salary and through fees earned from lectures and exhibitions of artifacts. Meaders even refinanced her mortgage twice.

Elizabeth Meaders (CBS)

Despite her reluctance, Meaders has decided it’s finally time to part with her collection. According to the Smithsonian Magazine, the Staten Island resident is experiencing ongoing health problems, including diabetes, so she says selling the collective items is “overdue.”

“It’s taking up too much space in my house as well,” she added.

Conceived at the age of 18, Meaders’ collection began with magazines and other memorabilia linked to baseball great Jackie Robinson.

Today her home is set up like a museum.

In the living room dwells reward posters for the capture of people fleeing enslavement and tools used for punishment. Meaders’ basement contains her self-titled “civil rights, civil wrongs” collection of letters written by Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks, typed instructions given to protesters during the Montgomery bus boycott, and handwritten signs from the 1963 March on Washington.

The rest of Meaders’ house is history.

“Everywhere, every day Black history is being made,” Meaders told CBS. “So it’s up to us to embrace it, and respect it, and promote it.”

Some experts, who even appraised Meaders’ collection, believe that the true value of her pieces lies in its in-depth storytelling of Black history. They could even see the items in a museum, echoing Meaders’s wishes.

“Unlike other collections that are rather glitzy and have things like Lincoln’s autograph, Elizabeth has filled in all of the gaps of the minutiae of history,” Wyatt Day, former head of African Americana at Swann Auction Galleries, told Smithsonian.

Diane DeBlois, a co-owner of aGatherin’ appraised the collection at $10 million, The New York Times reported. DeBlois believes that Meaders’ fundraising efforts to “go toe-to-toe with some pretty impressive collectors to outbid them” increased the collection in value.

Arlan Ettinger, president of Guernsey’s Auction House, will be hosting the auction on March 15 at 2 p.m. ET.

“Hey, Mayor Adams, come on. New York City, with all its greatness, does not have a full-blown African American Museum, and you’ve got one sitting here on Staten Island,” Ettinger said, adding that he hopes the buyer of the collection keeps it in New York.

NOT AGAIN! Kanye West Attacks Pete Davidson In Second ‘Eazy’ Video

NOT AGAIN! Kanye West Attacks Pete Davidson In Second ‘Eazy’ Video


If the goal of Ye is to keep people talking about him, then he is accomplishing that task.

The second video of Eazy, the latest song by Kanye West and The Game has emerged, and once again, a caricature of current Kim Kardashian beau Pete Davidson is attacked in the video.

According to US Magazine, Ye returns with an alternate version of the song but in this one, he doesn’t focus as long on the Davidson character. But a character is violent toward a caricature of Davidson nonetheless.

There is a skinned monkey on the cover of the single and it is prominent in this video.

Ye says in the song, “God saved me from that crash / Just so I can beat Pete Davidson’s ass,” and that’s when an animated figure wearing a red sweatsuit with a hoodie appears on the screen. Across the chest, the nickname Ye gave Davidson, Skete is written and the face is blurred.

The skinned monkey kicks and then jumps on the “man” and continuously punches him in the face as the song goes on.

The second video follows up the disturbing images in claymation figures depicting Ye kidnapping and burying alive Davidson in the first video.

After the release of that video, Ye wrote on a now-deleted Instagram post, “Art is therapy just like this view. Art is protected as freedom of speech. art inspires and simplifies the world. Art is not a proxy for any ill or harm. Any suggestion otherwise about my art is false and mal intended.”

Ye has been busy on social media recently. He took to his social media account to share his latest creation with his 15+ million Instagram followers, a poem he named DEAD. The epistle is a follow-up to a previously shared piece titled DIVORCE that he posted over the weekend.

The Voting Access Of 37 Million Americans Is In The Hands Of Three Black Women

The Voting Access Of 37 Million Americans Is In The Hands Of Three Black Women


Three secretaries of state will determine the voting access for 37 million Americans in the upcoming midterm elections and all three are Black women.

California Secretary of State Shirley Weber, New Jersey Secretary Leigh Chapman, and Tahesha Way of Pennsylvania hold the posts. The posts have become high-profile positions as Democrats and Republicans fight over election districts and voting access in states across the country.

The three women told NBC News they regularly consult each other as they work toward increasing voter turnout and access and eliminating voter suppression. Way added having multiple Black female secretaries of state is the result of advocates who came before them and refuse to be silent.

“It’s a wonderful feeling,” to be in this cohort, Way said. “You always think back to not only minorities who fought for the right to vote, but you also think about women who fought for the right to vote. … So I’m in good company, with the lady secretaries from California and from my neighboring Pennsylvania.”

A 2013 Supreme Court ruling rescinded a key part of the 1965 voting rights act that enforced voter access in southern states.

Since that ruling, Southern and Republican states chipped away at the ability for Black Americans to vote. After President Joe Biden was elected, 19 states have passed voting restriction laws curbing voter registration, early voting, absentee ballots, and even whether food and drinks can be served to those waiting in line to vote. In Florida, lawmakers passed a bill establishing an election police force.

In Chapman’s state of Pennsylvania, which is considered a battleground state, has seen numerous lawsuits seeking to recount the ballots from the 2020 presidential election. The state finished its redistricting last month and Chapman is working to make sure that all residents have the information they need, including polling locations, hours, and how to vote by mail or in person.

In New Jersey, Way, who has been the secretary of state since 2018, has implemented automatic voter registration, in-person early-voting, online ballot tracking, and drop boxes. Way also overhauled the state’s voting system so it can be done almost completely by mail for the 2020 election. The changes led to the state’s highest election turnout ever and led the nation in youth voter turnout.

Meanwhile, Weber co-authored legislation in 2020 to restore the right to vote for those on probation, on parole, or still in jail. Weber’s plan faced resistance from the state department of corrections to notify those whose rights were restored. That led Weber to create a campaign to inform and enroll thousands of formerly incarcerated residents to vote

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