Yasmine Murray Becomes First Black Woman COO at H.J. Russell & Co.

Yasmine Murray Becomes First Black Woman COO at H.J. Russell & Co.


Yasmine S. Murray has been named chief operating officer at H.J. Russell & Co., making her the first Black woman to fill the role in the company’s 70-year history.

Based in Atlanta, Russell told BLACK ENTERPRISE the company projects 2022 revenues of $274 million, up from over $170 million in 2021. The company attributes the expected growth to expansion this year into new markets like Boston and New York and boosting its number of standalone projects in the Southeast and other growth markets it is pursuing, stretching from Texas to Massachusetts.

Russell is one of America’s largest Black-owned construction companies. It last ranked No. 25 on the BLACK ENTERPRISE BE 100s list, an annual ranking of the nation’s top Black-owned businesses.

In her new role, Murray will become the firm’s second in command, reporting to CEO Michael Russell, and is positioned to be part of the leadership succession plan. Her new role is also rare because white males typically dominate the construction industry. Murray will keep working with the CEO to set the company’s strategic direction. She will oversee many of the firm’s operations, including risk management, human resources, and property management. A lawyer, Murray, will also lead the firm’s construction and program management divisions this year.

BLACK ENTERPRISE was told via email Murray has several growth goals for Russell as its COO. They include expanding the firm’s footprint beyond the “southern smile,” where it has focused on since 2018. That means expanding into Boston, Philadelphia, Seattle, Los Angeles, and New York.

Murray also plans to explore where Russell can develop strategic partnerships and potentially acquire other businesses in its industry.

She previously served as executive vice president. Murray will remain the firm’s corporate secretary and general counsel. That includes heading up legal affairs, corporate transactions, acquisitions, and other functions.

As executive vice president, she impacted Russell’s growth by collaborating with its operations teams to adjust business strategy during the COVID-19 pandemic and pursuing creative business opportunities in new markets and standalone work.

As Russell’s general counsel, she saved the firm over $8 million, including negotiating and ensuring it got the proper amount of insurance coverage to which it was entitled. Russell reported that Murray’s development projects during the last two years are worth over $100 million.

CEO Michael Russell commented, “Simply put, she is the right person for the job. Year over year, Yasmine proves to be a consistent, knowledgeable, and respected leader. She has been an invaluable asset to the organization and a key partner in developing Russell’s strategic direction and executing our organizational goals as well as living out our mission and vision.”

With Russell for 11 years and a member of many organizations, including the American Bar Association, Murray reflected on how Michael Russell and his family have helped her advance.

“It is that legacy of growing and supporting generational wealth within a diverse family that makes this role particularly important for me because I believe closing the wealth gap is critical for a successful society.”

Broadway’s Cort Theatre Will Be Renamed After Tony Award Winner James Earl Jones

Broadway’s Cort Theatre Will Be Renamed After Tony Award Winner James Earl Jones


The Shubert Organization, the largest theatre owner on Broadway, will rename one of its 17 theatres after two-time Tony Award winner James Earl Jones.

According to The New York Times, the organization said Wednesday it would rename the Cort Theatre, a 110-year old theatre located on West 48th Street in Manhattan, after Jones, to celebrate his career and fulfill a pledge it made to include more Black recognition in the industry amid the 2020 Black Lives Matter movement.

Jones, who has appeared in 21 Broadway shows throughout his six-decade career, told the Times that he is honored by the news in a telephone interview.

“It means a lot,” Jones, 91, said. “It’s too heavy for me to try to define.”

Although Jones is widely known for his movies including Star Wars, Coming To America and The Sandlot, he sports a long and illustrious career on Broadway. Jones began his Broadway career in 1957 as an understudy in The Egghead. Jones got his first starring role a year later in Sunrise at Campobello, which ran for over a year at the Cort Theatre. Jones’ last Broadway appearance came in 2015’s The Gin Game.

The Cort, which seats more than 1,000 people, is among Broadway’s oldest theatres and is currently undergoing a $45 million renovation. The theatre will reopen later this year at which time there will be a rededication ceremony. It will be the second Broadway theatre named after a Black artist; the first was named after playwright August Wilson shortly after his death in 2005.

The Shubert Organization pledged last summer to name one of its theatres after a Black artist in an agreement with Black Theatre United. Robert E. Wankel, chairman and chief executive of the Shubert Organization praised Jones for an amazing career on Broadway.

“He’s an icon — he really is one of the greatest American actors, and this is just a perfect match.”

In addition to his two Tony Awards, Jones has also won a Golden Globe, Daytime and Primetime Emmy Awards, and numerous NAACP Image Awards.

Laverne Cox Acknowledges But Doesn’t Apologize For ‘Entanglements’ Comment to Will and Jada Pinkett Smith

Laverne Cox Acknowledges But Doesn’t Apologize For ‘Entanglements’ Comment to Will and Jada Pinkett Smith


Laverne Cox has responded to the backlash caused by her red carpet interview at the SAG Awards.

She told Jada Pinkett Smith, in front of her SAG Award-winning husband, Will Smith, that she “can’t wait for more ‘Red Table Talk’ and more entanglements,” referring to Jada’s extramarital affair and popular Facebook series. 

While speaking on an Instagram Live session, she tried to explain and acknowledge what she said and how it was perceived when she did it. But, she stated she wouldn’t do apologize for doing so. She said if the Smiths wanted an apology, she would give them one privately. She also stated that “this is a love letter to them.”

The Shade Room reported that the Orange Is the New Black actress was clearing the air and addressing her use of “entanglement” when she talked to the Smiths during the SAG Awards last weekend. She caught a lot of flack from viewers, including Vivica A. Fox. The Cocktails With Queens co-host expressed disappointment with Cox while discussing the incident.

“Talk about wrong place, wrong time,” Fox said. “… As [Jada’s] standing next to her husband, who is absolutely in line to win an Oscar for playing the role of Richard [Williams] in the Venus and Serena Williams’ story, King Richard… I just thought it was tacky.”

Cox took to her Instagram Live to explain what she meant during the short interview.

“I’ve been thinking about it. No one is above critique. I like to hold myself accountable. This is part of my process as a human being. When I’m wrong, I try to promptly admit it,” she said.

Cox acknowledged what she had done when she blurted out what some perceived as a disrespectful comment preceding Smith winning an award. She says it was taken out of context. Saying her intent was “not to mock or make fun of,” but she understands there is a difference between intent and impact.”

When asked if she was apologizing, she quickly said, “I did not apologize. This is not an apology. If the Smiths need an apology from me, I will find out privately, and I’ll do that privately.”

“This is a love letter to them and an invitation to think critically about our relationship to what we call” mess.”

 

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Emeline King, Ford’s First Black Woman Transportation Designer, Authors Motivating Autobiography

Emeline King, Ford’s First Black Woman Transportation Designer, Authors Motivating Autobiography


The proud daughter of a Ford plastic model specialist, Emeline King, fell in love with the Ford Mustang and relentlessly chased her childhood dream of designing cars like her dad.

“I loved to play with toy cars when I was a child. It was like an insult to give me a doll,” The Chicago Tribune quoted King as saying in a Jan. 30, 1994 publication.

In 1983, King, a Detroit native, was hired by Ford Motor Co. to become the first Black woman Transportation Designer for Ford. Her portfolio includes some of her best-known work from her nearly 25-year career at the company, including the interior design of the award-winning 1994 Ford Mustang, according to Ford Online.

She also contributed to the design of the 1990 Ford Probe and 2000 Ford Thunderbird, among other vehicles in Europe. Also, she patented a 15-inch wheel cover the 1989 Thunderbird.

Image Credit: Emeline King

“I’m coming from it from a woman, or a female point of view,” she told Fox 2 News. “I was thinking about not breaking a fingernail—making sure the knobs were soft. I was making sure that in my design features for the 1994 Mustang that we’d be able to get in and out of the vehicle without splitting a skirt.”

A Cass Tech graduate, she attended Wayne State University — the College for Creative Studies and then the Art Center College of Design in California. King is not only a pioneering designer but also a motivational speaker, songstress, musician, and author.

Image Credit: Emeline King

“We’ve got plenty of guys who always wanted to design cars and started drawing as little kids. But most women don’t realize that this is an option, a distinct possibility for them,” said Ron Hill, then-chairman of transportation design at the Art Center College for Design in Pasadena, California.

Having made her mark in the auto industry, King’s journey, confronted by racial and gender barriers, will be detailed in a motivating autobiography entitled What Do You Mean A Black Girl Can’t Design. The book is available for purchase at emelineking.com and Amazon, Target, and Barnes and Noble.

“A lot of times I tell a lot of young ladies—and little girls—do not let anyone discourage you or tell you what you can’t become,” Emeline said in hopes of opening a STEM Academy for girls . “If Emeline King can do it, so can you.”

‘Unhinged’: Kanye West Abducts and Buries a Claymation Pete Davidson Alive in ‘Eazy’ Music Video

‘Unhinged’: Kanye West Abducts and Buries a Claymation Pete Davidson Alive in ‘Eazy’ Music Video


With the release of the video for the song Kanye West did with rapper The Game, Eazy, it’s apparent that Ye still has Saturday Night Live regular Pete Davidson on his brain.

In a recent Instagram post, Ye has continued the assault on his now ex-wife, Kim Kardashian‘s current love. The feud in Ye’s mind isn’t over as he appears, in Claymation-style, in the video for the Eazy song he recorded with Compton’s The Game.

The video begins with The Game reciting the lyrics for his verse. The visuals switch to the second verse with Ye and his words. Ye is seen riding on a motorcycle through what looks like a desert. The scene goes to a character who resembles Davidson, holding a drink in hand and a cigarette in the other. A bag is thrown over the head of the character as he is kidnapped.

While holding a severed head, Ye continues rapping the lyrics to his verse. He is then seen driving an ATV with the kidnapped victim tied up behind him on the seat. As he continues speaking about the divorce from Kardashian, he is shown dragging the body through a desert.

After the man is buried alive with his head still above the ground, Ye pulls out a pack of rose seeds and pours them around the head and neck of the buried man. He pours water on the head, and as his verse comes to an end, Ye is seen riding off to the sunset on his motorcycle.

He comes back to the site looking at the roses that grew on the head and prunes several roses. In reference to the truck of red roses he delivered to Kardashian on Valentine’s Day, he is seen driving a truck full of roses as the video ends.

 

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Page Six reported that the SNL comedian returned to Instagram for a brief moment after Ye’s video was posted. But, he deactivated it once again.

An Instagram account titled kimandpeteupdates took a screenshot and stated, “PETE IS BACK!” as fans commented, hoping he kept the account live.

Kardashian can legally drop the West off her last name as a court stated she is now legally single as she continues her divorce from West.

The reality TV star filed for divorce from Ye in February 2021 after being married for nearly seven years. The two share four kids: North, 8, Saint, 6, Chicago, 4, and Psalm, 2.

Founders Of The App Drift Wellness Announces Updates To Improve Mental Health Across The Black Community

Founders Of The App Drift Wellness Announces Updates To Improve Mental Health Across The Black Community


After the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2020, more Black people began taking their mental health and overall wellness more seriously.

Jeffery and Oyin Antwi, the founders of the Drift Wellness app, created their app to help people better control their mental health. Now, they have updated it to help create even more customization for users.

According to AfroTech, the new measures include allowing users to check their heart rate and beats per minute, and the app creates ambient sound tailored to the user’s pulse.

The update is part of regularly scheduled updates planned by the Antwi’s. The couple wants to provide a fluid app that changes along with the mental health needs of its users.

“Mindfulness apps with the pandemic and the BLM movement in 2020 — so many apps started coming out. So, we were like, ‘What could we do that’s a little bit different?’ Early summer, there was just this idea of customizing the sound for you,” Oyin told AfroTech.

“That’s actually what it was originally. Then we thought, ‘How do we make it unique to the person?’ That’s when we started to talk about, ‘What’s the benefit of knowing how someone’s feeling well?’ And the easiest way to know is to start with their blood pressure — their BPM. I think that that idea of just being able to connect your BPM with a sound that’s custom for you was where we started to build from there last summer.”

Along with the heart rate monitor, the Drift Wellness app also features additional nature and ambient sounds and a video that helps get users to a relaxed state essential for sleep or a calm state supporting focus and a positive mood. The upgrades also include a voice command that guides users to take deep breaths during their app time.

The mental health of Black people suffered greatly during the COVID-19 pandemic. Between the loss of jobs, health and wellness disparities, the digital divide in education, school openings and closures, and a lack of childcare options, Black people had reason to be worried throughout the pandemic constantly.

Making matters worse is the fact that despite cities opening up again and indoor vaccine requirements set to end in several metro cities, many in the medical community believe more variants and shutdowns will come back later in the year.

Selling Tampa’s Colony Reeves Talks Mental Health in the Black Community and Current Seller’s Market

Selling Tampa’s Colony Reeves Talks Mental Health in the Black Community and Current Seller’s Market


Colony Reeves is among the stars of Netflix’s newest real estate-based reality show Selling Tampa. The show is the first within the franchise to star an all-Black and all-female cast of luxury realtors and has been well-received among viewers.

Appearing on BLACK ENTERPRISE’s “Hip Hop and Enterprise,” Colony opens up about her new life as a reality star and how she’s branding herself as a lifestyle, health, fashion advocate, and luxury real estate expert.

Reeves was a standout on the new series. Catching attention through her natural flair for fashion, beauty, and devout loyalty to Allure Realty’s owner Sharelle Rosado.

The Tampa native and University of South Florida graduate has a passion for real estate and credits her father for encouraging her to get into the field. She has also praised the industry for revitalizing her drive following a rough period in her life.

“I couldn’t be more proud of the woman I see. I always say Real Estate saved my life,” she captioned one video clip of the show.

 

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With Selling Tampa seemingly working to add to the diversity on Netflix, debates were raised around the depiction of the ladies at Allure Realty as it compares to its all-white predecessor Selling Sunset. Power 105’s DJ Envy publicly questioned why producers seemingly highlighted more luxury properties and closed deals on Selling Sunset than what appeared in the final cut of Selling Tampa.

Reeves addresses this misconception while thanking DJ Envy for raising awareness on the new show. She also touches on how “slept on” Tampa is within the luxury real estate market.

With all the recent news around the mental health crisis and its relation to the Black community, Colony also aims to use her platform to share her own story and help stop stigmas about mental health. She advocates for mental health and therapy and shares details about her own past of battling depression to help others heal.

 

‘The Jennifer Hudson Show’ to Take Over Time Slot of ‘The Ellen DeGeneres Show’ in Fall 2022

‘The Jennifer Hudson Show’ to Take Over Time Slot of ‘The Ellen DeGeneres Show’ in Fall 2022


A Grammy Award winner and former American Idol contestant will join the talk show hosts’ ranks when she debuts her own show this upcoming fall.

According to Variety, Warner Bros. announced on Wednesday that Academy Award winner Jennifer Hudson would have a talk show aired on Fox television stations.

The Jennifer Hudson Show is slated to occupy the current time slot The Ellen DeGeneres Show held. DeGeneres is completing her final season, which is in its 19th year and will be ending soon.

“I have experienced so much in my life; I’ve seen the highest of the highs, the lowest of the lows, and just about everything in between, but as my mother always told me, ‘Once you think you’ve seen it all, just keep on living,’” Hudson said in a written statement on Wednesday.

“People from around the world have been a part of my journey from the beginning — 20 years ago — and I’m so ready to join their journey as we sit down and talk about the things that inspire and move us all. I have always loved people, and I cannot wait to connect on a deeper level and let audiences see the different sides of who I am, the human being, in return. And I couldn’t be more thrilled to do it alongside this incredible team. We’re about to have a lot of fun and shake things up a little bit!”

The Respect star had been pitching her daytime talk show produced by the same team behind The Ellen Degeneres Show, Variety reported last November. It would be a continuation of Ellen’s show and is expected to be an entirely new series with Hudson at the center. This is similar to how Sherri Shepherd is taking over Wendy Williams’ time slot by the same production team.

The Jennifer Hudson Show will be produced in Los Angeles by Warner Bros. Unscripted Television in association with Telepictures and distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution.

Jesse Williams Agrees to Settle Child Custody Dispute With Ex-Wife Aryn Drake-Lee

Jesse Williams Agrees to Settle Child Custody Dispute With Ex-Wife Aryn Drake-Lee


A child custody dispute has been resolved between actor Jesse Williams and his ex-wife Aryn Drake-Lee. 

According to People, the formerly married couple has agreed to continue to share legal custody of both of their children, Sadie, 8, and Maceo, 6. After appearing in Los Angeles County Superior Court, the judge didn’t honor the request by Williams to adjust his custodial schedule to a 2-2-5-5 plan.

Under this arrangement, the children would spend two days with one parent, the next two with the other, then five straight days with the first parent, and then five days with the second one. The request was due to Williams’ upcoming schedule as he will be performing in the Broadway production of Take Me Out, which will open on April 4.

“Given [Williams] profession as an actor, it does not seem that this schedule is necessarily going to become more predictable in the future,” according to court documents obtained by People.

“Neither does it seem to be in the best interest of the children for their time with their father to be cut back dramatically as a result of his varying schedule so as to only visit him during predictable timeslots. This situation results in an understandably frustrating experience for both sides.”

The judge has also recommended that Williams and Drake-Lee pursue co-parenting counseling, as “both seek a great deal of fine-tuning in their custody and visitation orders, much of which a court is not as well equipped to handle.” The former couple can return to court if the counseling doesn’t work out.

Earlier this year, as reported by Radar Online, the co-parenting agreement between the two wasn’t working, according to Drake-Lee. She stated in court papers that Williams had failed to comply with the mutual arrangement worked out between the two.

Drake-Lee asked to alter the joint custody agreement to give her primary control of the two children. She requested that the court change the custody agreement so Williams could have visitation on the first and third weekends of each month and the fifth weekend in months that have five weeks.

The actor filed for divorce in 2017 after being married for five years and being together for 13 years. According to TMZ, the former couple settled in 2020. Williams agreed to pay her $50,629 a month in child support until October 2019, and after that, the amount went down to $40,000 a month.

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