Safeguard Your Child’s Mobile Activity With This Cell Phone Monitoring Program

Safeguard Your Child’s Mobile Activity With This Cell Phone Monitoring Program


If you’re a parent, there are more than enough things that warrant worry as you try to keep your children and their belongings safe. With nearly everyone having access to mobile phones, it’s a practice that has only become more challenging. Cell phones are no longer just a luxury, they’ve almost become a necessity as much of our lives revolve around them and the features that accompany them. Some schools have required them as a platform for learning-based apps, and they’re a convenient device that allows you to remain in touch with your children when you’re not physically around them.

Unfortunately, they can also invite unwanted dangers if they’re not properly protected and monitored.  Enlist the help of Highster Mobile Cell Phone Monitoring to help you in your efforts to keep your children safe and guarded when using their mobile devices. A lifetime subscription to this highly secure software is available for the low price of $69.99. That’s a savings of 30% from its MSRP ($99).

With Highster Mobile Cell Phone Monitoring, you can remotely track virtually anything on your child’s phone, including text messages, call logs, emails, photos and videos, browser history, among other activities.

There’s also a GPS tracking feature that allows you to view all locations of the targeted device within 50 feet on a Google Maps format. Additional features include a keylogger, remote uninstall, search alerts that notify you when pre-determined search terms are entered, and remote lock.

All that’s needed to access this program is a mobile device with Android 5 or later or iOS 7 or later. Updates are included with your purchase. Highster Mobile Cell Phone Monitoring has been featured in The New York Times, Medium, Tech Junkie, and other leading publications.

Even the most protective of parents are unable to be with their child 24 hours a day. When they’re not there, Highster Mobile Cell Phone Monitoring can step in and offer an extra pair of eyes along with robust security. Purchase it today for $69.99.

Prices subject to change.

Black Enterprise to Present Summit Focused On the Impact and Best Practices Of Corporate Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Efforts, Feb. 17


(New York, NY) February 16, 2022—BLACK ENTERPRISE will present its next Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Virtual Summit, on Feb. 17, in partnership with Toyota.

The latest installment of this groundbreaking virtual event will explore the state of African American recruitment, retention, and advancement in corporate America while examining how corporations are progressing—or not—toward implementing real changes in their respective workplaces, systems, and cultures.

The Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Virtual Summit features candid, engaging conversations with corporate leaders, as well as discussion on actionable solutions to systemic inequities in corporate America and broader society. The one-day event will delve deeply into critical issues facing corporations and African American professionals, ranging from the effectiveness of employee resource groups (ERGs) to the current status of corporate pledges made in the wake of the murder of George Floyd.

“We are approaching two years since many corporations made pledges to challenge systemic bias in the wake of George Floyd’s murder,” says BLACK ENTERPRISE CEO Earl “Butch” Graves Jr.

“Now is the time to take an unflinching look at what has actually been done to fulfill those pledges. With rare exceptions, Black people have been historically and chronically underserved by corporate D&I efforts. Our latest Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Summit will deal with this reality head-on, addressing what is working and what is not in terms of actionable and impactful solutions.”

Confirmed speakers for the Diversity, Equity & Inclusions Summit include Nationwide SVP/Chief Diversity and Talent Acquisition Officer Angela Bretz, McDonald’s VP/Global Chief Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Officer Reginald Miller, The Diversity Org. Founder and CEO Joshua Pierce, JPMorgan Chase Head of Community Impact Alice Rodriguez, Walmart VP/Constituent Relations and Racial Equity Tony Waller, Creative Investment Research CEO Michael Cunningham, Comcast Cable President/Special Counsel to the CEO Steve White, Merck Global Co-Lead of the League of Employees of African Descent Penelope Morman, Toyota National African American ERG (BPG) Group Chair Charmin Spencer, and Verizon Director of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, Workforce/Workplace Initiatives Natalie Renae Williams.

Registering for the Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Summit will enable attendees to explore:

  • How chief diversity officers infuse DEI as a critical part of corporate cultures
  • Have business leaders effectively implemented the next stages of corporate equity commitments?
  • How employee resource groups, or ERGs, help facilitate real opportunities for Black executives
  • Has white allyship been effective in advancing Black talent?
  • …And MORE!

The Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Summit occurs from noon to 2:45 p.m. EST on Thursday, Feb. 17, 2022. For complimentary registration and more information about sessions and speakers, visit www.diversity.blackenterprise.com.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Interested press should contact Darcel Church via e-mail at churchd@blackenterprise.com.

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BLACK ENTERPRISE is the No.1 Black media brand, with more than 8 million monthly unique visitors. Since 1970, BLACK ENTERPRISE has been the premier business, career, investing, and wealth-building resource for African Americans. BLACK ENTERPRISE produces video and podcast programming, virtual and in-person business and lifestyle events, other digital media. Visit www.blackenterprise.com for more information.

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Getting Fired May Be The Best Thing For Your Career


Steve A. White, President, Special Counsel to the CEO of Comcast, is considered one of the cable TV industry’s most dynamic leaders. The oldest of three sons, he rose from humble beginnings in Indianapolis helping his single mother clean rooms at a local Quality Inn.to eventually becoming a corporate leader and board member of some of the nation’s largest companies. Among his crowning achievement included his 11-year stint as head of Comcast’s West Division where he led more than 30,000 employees, served 12 million customers and produced more than $18 billion dollars in annual revenues.

White, a speaker at the Black Enterprise Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Summit, has written a new book on his career journey complete with his guiding principles on how to achieve professional and personal success on your own terms: Uncompromising: How an Unwavering Commitment to Your Why Leads to an Impactful Life and Lasting Legacy.

 In the following excerpt, find out how his being fired as a young executive became a life-transforming experience and may offer you guidance on finding the “why” that gives you meaning and direction.

Why Getting Fired Was a Good Thing for My Career

The following is an excerpt from Steven A. White’s new book, Uncompromising: How an Unwavering Commitment to Your Why Leads to an Impactful Life and Lasting Legacy.

By Steve White

I’ll never forget the three words that were as comforting as a two-by-four to the bridge of my nose: “You are fired,” my boss said.

How could this be? How could he fire me? Yet that’s exactly what he did. He was fairly new to the role of being my supervisor, so I figured I was getting a pep talk, maybe some advice on how to jump-start my team, perhaps another promotion. But there was no pep in his talk and definitely no promotion.

In retrospect, it became clear that I had a lot to learn about leading people. I had found personal success early in my career by taking care of my supervisors and winning business for the company. Those assignments typically had one thing in common: I was responsible for my results, not the results of others.

So when I arrived at Ann Arbor on the heels of my latest promotion, I wasn’t fully prepared to lead a team. I figured I was the big cheese, and my ten direct reports would go to work making me look good. They didn’t, and who could blame them? I didn’t show them the way or give them the support they needed to do their best work. I didn’t understand that the most fundamental aspect of leadership is serving others. And that is why I was fired.

I wanted to crawl in a hole and hide from the world. I had never lived in the same room with failure, and I wasn’t sure how to treat him. But he wouldn’t go away. He just sat there laughing and saying, I told you so!

Then the phone rang. “How you doing, man?” It was Darnell Martin. He was a vice president in the distribution division, and I was in a products division, so he had learned through corporate channels that I had been released. As an older high-ranking African American leader in the company, he had taken an outsider’s interest in my career.

“How you think I’m doing?” I said, still frustrated and hurt. The next words from his mouth, however, changed everything. “I got you,” he said.

Darnell hired me for a temporary position and moved me to Chicago, where I watched and learned from Darnell and Gary (my new boss). They were leaders who took care of the people they led; they taught by example what it looked like to serve others. Soon I put those lessons into action.

I had no supervisory responsibilities in the job, and I had no quotas to hit. Instead, I was an individual contributor working on special projects, but my success was tied to my ability to work with other people in a collaborative fashion. The more I learned to serve the team around me, the more I learned what it meant to really lead. An uncompromising mindset about this approach to leadership became the basis of my fight.

The foundation for success in my early life was laid by people who encouraged me, such as my mother, my teachers, and mentors, but I had to get knocked down to find my fight. Once I found it, everything changed for one simple reason: my success became others-focused rather than self-focused.

For years, my why was all about escaping poverty, making money, and earning the trappings of corporate success. My goals and dreams weren’t necessarily bad, but they also weren’t particularly honorable. Your fight is what brings virtue, energy, and direction to your purpose for going through life. It’s what gives meaning to your why.

When we find our fight, our fight and our why become one and the same, and it changes our mindset and approach as we pursue our purpose. Meaningful success follows—as long as we never relinquish the power that comes from an unwavering commitment to why we exist.

Released Audio Reveals Ta’Neasha Chappell Begged Jail Staffers For Medical Aid Before Her Death

Released Audio Reveals Ta’Neasha Chappell Begged Jail Staffers For Medical Aid Before Her Death


Audio released last month revealed how 23-year-old Ta’Neasha Chappell begged jail staffers for medical assistance for nearly 16 hours before she died on July 2021.

In recordings provided by Chappell’s family attorney, Sam Aguiar, staff at the Jackson County, Indiana, jail can be heard growing irritated by Chappell’s pleas for help. She repeatedly told staff that she was throwing up blood and felt extremely sick, to no avail, Courier-Journal reports.

“I don’t know what you want me to do unless you’re coughing up something crazy,” one staffer told Chappell at 1:33 a.m. on July 16. By 6 p.m. that day, Chappell was dead.

“You can hear the decline,” Aguiar said of Chappell’s ailing health heard in the recordings.

“You could have put any rational human being on the other end of that intercom and they would have known that something was incredibly wrong.”

The audio confirms that Chappell let officers know she was throwing up blood at least 12 hours before an ambulance was called, Wave 3 reports. Video also shows that Chappell was lying on her cell room floor for hours, unclothed and crying for help.

Video clips show that Chappell was unable to stand and sat in her own waste at times. While correction officers were seen opening the cell door, nothing was done to aid Chappell.

Shortly after being taken to the Schneck Medical Center, Chappell went into cardiac arrest and died. Doctors noted the possibility of Chappell being poisoned and recommended she be checked for ethylene glycol, an ingredient found in common cleaners.

While an autopsy found toxicity in her system, no determination was made as to the exact substance. Chappell’s official cause of death was listed as “undetermined.”

Journalist Roland Martin recently highlighted the mystery that remains around Chappell’s death.

Prosecutor Jeffrey Chalfant says there was no evidence supporting that Chappell was purposely poisoned. In December, prosecutors declined to file any charges related to Chappell’s death.

Chappell’s family has since filed a federal lawsuit against Jackson County Sheriff Rick Meyer, Jail Commander Chris Everhart, and seven other jail employees. The suit is ongoing.

Salt-N-Pepa Talk Megan Thee Stallion’s ‘Push It’ Sample And Tease Their New Music and Tour


Over 35 years later and Salt-N-Pepa’s “Push It” still has the iconic rap duo cashing in checks!

Super Bowl LVI viewers were reminded of the song’s continued relevancy after hearing it included in Frito-Lay’s Flamin’ Hot spot for both Doritos and Cheetos.

Grammy award-winning rapper Megan Thee Stallion and singer Charlie Puth are both included in the upbeat commercial that features Salt-N-Pepa’s 1986 smash hit, “Push It”.

Speaking with BLACK ENTERPRISE, the rap icons opened up about Frito-Lay reimagining their hit “Push It” for the 2022 Super Bowl.

With Megan Thee Stallion being among the new wave of hip hop and the latest musical artist to sample “Push It” on her new “Flamin Hottie” single, Salt-N-Pepa also shared their bond and mutual love for Megan Thee Stallion. Pepa takes pride in her Jamaican heritage and fully embraces Megan carrying on Salt-N-Pepa’s”hot gyal” legacy.

Megan’s “Push It” sample is only the latest of a long line of artists that have sampled Salt-N-Pepa’s original version over the years. With so many samples, it’s hard for the rap veterans to keep up. But they acknowledge the history of hip hop and how they also sampled other music when crafting the 1986 hit.

“Push It”s new sample and Super Bowl feature come a little over one year after the successful response to their 2021 Lifetime biopic Salt-N-Pepa. The longtime friends still possess youthful and playful energy that is reflective of what made them the first female rap duo to gain worldwide fame.

In addition to the checks they’re cashing from artists sampling their music, Salt-N-Pepa also have new music on the way for the hip hop community and an upcoming tour with fellow 80s pop stars New Kids On The Block.

Press play below for Salt-N-Pepa’s full breakdown on their new music and upcoming tour!

Video Shows Black Teen Slammed By White Police Officers as White-Looking Teen Fighting Him Placed on Couch

Video Shows Black Teen Slammed By White Police Officers as White-Looking Teen Fighting Him Placed on Couch


A video has gone viral after a Black teen involved in a fight with a white-looking teen at an NJ mall is seen being tackled to the ground by police officers.

The teen, who is Latino but was labeled and appears to look white, is handled with kid gloves and told to sit on a sofa as the cops jump on the Black teen, kneel on his back, and arrest him as the white teen sits by and watches.

According to WPIX, a video showing preferential treatment toward the white-looking teenager after he engaged in fisticuffs with the Black teenager has caused controversy.

The video shows the two teenagers fighting and two white police officers immediately breaking up the fight,  throwing the Black teen on the ground and handcuffing him. Meanwhile, a white female officer is seen “directing” the white-looking teen to take a seat, uncuffed and left alone, while the Black teenager is down on the ground with the added pressure of the white female officer placing her knee on his neck as he lays on the floor.

The incident occurred at the Bridgewater Commons Mall in Bridgewater Township, New Jersey.

In the video, a witness can be heard saying, “It’s cause he’s Black. Racially motivated.”

The Latino teen spoke to WPIX about the incident. He stated that it was unfair for the police officers to attack the Black teen and not place him in handcuffs since both of them were fighting.

“I knew it was wrong, and I knew there was gonna be problems when they did that,” the 15-year-old teen named Joey, who was involved in the fight, said. “They didn’t go for me.”

He also stated he didn’t understand why he wasn’t placed in handcuffs, although he offered to be.

“I didn’t understand why,” the teen said. “I even offered to get handcuffed as well.”

Bridgewater Township Mayor Matthew Moench made a statement posted on the Bridgewater Township Government Facebook page.

“The Township Administration is aware of a video circulating on social media involving some young people and officers of the Bridgewater Police Department.
“The rules governing the use of force by police officers in New Jersey are codified by the Office of the Attorney General. In order to absolutely ensure that these policies and regulations were upheld in this instance, Chief Payne has requested that the Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office conduct an independent review of the incident, with the unqualified support of the BPD.”
“It is not appropriate for me or any other Township official to comment any further on the details of this incident while an investigation is ongoing, except to say that I am completely confident that the Prosecutor’s review will be impartial, objective, and thorough.”
Snoop Dogg Calls Sexual Assault Allegations ‘Simply Meritless’

Snoop Dogg Calls Sexual Assault Allegations ‘Simply Meritless’


After allegations of sexual assault were leveled at him last week for an incident that took place almost 10 years ago, Snoop Dogg has issued a statement to the lawsuit filed against him.

According to Reuters, a spokesperson for the rapper, who just came off a halftime performance at last weekend’s Super Bowl responded that the entertainer “has never had any sexual encounter” with the accuser and the allegations were “simply meritless.”

“They appear to be part of a self-enrichment shakedown scheme to extort Snoop Dogg right before he performs during this Sunday’s Super Bowl halftime show,” the spokesperson said in a written statement.

According to NBC News, a lawsuit was filed lastWednesday against the new owner of Death Row Records, accusing him of sexually assaulting a young woman nearly 10 years ago. The woman, identified as Jane Doe, claimed the act occurred after she went to a Snoop Dogg show in May 2013. The papers were filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.

According to the lawsuit, the woman, along with a friend of hers, went back to Snoop’s studio with him and Donald Campbell, also known as Bishop Don Magic Juan.

Last week, the plaintiff made a final attempt to settle the issue in private mediation, but the dialogue was “unsuccessful.”

The accuser’s attorney, Matt Finkelberg, said the woman “refuses to be silenced and intimidated any longer.”

The Hill reported that the woman “worked as a professional dancer, model, actress, host, and a spokesmodel for Muse Ink Festival, Comedy Central, and CNN in the lawsuit.” Snoop and Juan also employed her as a dancer for concerts.

The woman claimed she asked Don MagicJuan to take her home after her friend left the studio, but he brought her back to his house and convinced her to go with him to Snoop’s studio despite her not wanting to. She stated that she did not feel well, and after getting to the studio, she went to the bathroom. She then says Snoop came in the bathroom where he told her to place his genitals in her mouth and later masturbated on her before leaving the bathroom.

Meet Fani Willis, Who Is Conducting One of Three Investigations Against Donald Trump

Meet Fani Willis, Who Is Conducting One of Three Investigations Against Donald Trump


Fani Willis, Atlanta’s district attorney, has remained steadfast in investigating former President Donald Trump.

Willis is the first Black woman to be named Fulton County district attorney. The Howard University and Emory University graduate is best known for prosecuting the Atlanta Public Schools cheating scandal, which led to jail time for nine of the 11 educators involved.

USA Today reported on her first day in the position, she was still unpacking her boxes while considering the legal implications of a phone call between the former president and Georgia’s Chief Elections Officer Brad Raffensperger that was leaked on Youtube. During the call, which was made Jan. 2, Trump pressed Raffensperger to “find” more votes to overturn Joe Biden’s win in the state.

“I knew an investigation may be warranted on day one…the literal physical day I walked into the office,” Willis told USA Today in a recent interview. Willis added Trump’s phone call was “enough to raise eyebrows and even cause grave concern that it was already necessary to at least preliminarily look at other facts.”

Last month Willis sent a letter to Fulton County Superior Court Chief Judge Christopher Brasher asking him to impanel a special grand jury, writing her office “received information indicating a reasonable probability that the State of Georgia’s administration of elections in 2020, including the State’s election of the President of the United States, was subject to possible criminal disruptions.”

Basher granted Willis the grand jury.

The investigation into Trump has led to Willis receiving death threats. After a firebomb was thrown into Fulton County Commissioner Marvin Arrington‘s office and Trump calling for the protests of prosecutors trying to lock him up, Willis requested federal protection for her and her staff, but added the threats and incidents do nothing to change her mind about the investigation.

“I don’t care. It doesn’t bother me, I don’t lose one hour of sleep over it,” Willis told the FOX 5 I-Team.

‘”The rhetoric quite frankly, almost 95% of the time is racist in nature and I want to make sure we stay safe.”

Willis is one of three investigations into the former President and one of two being conducted by a Black woman. New York Attorney General Letitia James is also conducting an investigation into Trump and his organization.

Joesph H. Rainey, First Black Congressman In U.S. History, Honored At U.S. Capitol

Joesph H. Rainey, First Black Congressman In U.S. History, Honored At U.S. Capitol


Joseph H. Rainey (1832-1887), who was born into slavery but worked his way to become the first Black congressman in U.S. history, was honored at the U.S. Capitol last week, CBS News reported.

At the ceremony, held earlier this month, room H-150 in the Capitol where Rainey frequently worked, was dedicated to the congressman. A plaque describing Rainey and his career was placed at the entrance. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi was joined by Minority Whip Steve Scalise, Congresswoman Joyce Beatty (D-OH), and Congressman Tom Rice (R-SC.).

Rainey was elected on Dec. 12, 1870, after winning a special election. During his time in office, Rainey fought for the rights of his constituents, the freedmen, Chinese railroad workers, and Native Americans.

“Study the history. Know their history,” Rep. Jim Clyburn told CBS News, noting that when he was elected in 1992, he was only the ninth Black American from South Carolina elected to Congress.

“The problem is there are 95 years between No. 8 and No. 9,” said Clyburn, the Majority Whip and third-most powerful member of Congress. “Anything that’s happened before can happen again. Jim Crow happened once and it can happen again. Study the history.”

Rainey has a remarkable story that is not well known. He became a free man when his father, who worked as a barber, bought his family’s freedom with his savings. When the Civil War started, Confederate soldiers in South Carolina put Rainey to work. However, he escaped to Bermuda, where slavery was abolished. Rainey’s wife soon joined him and the two stayed until the end of the war.

Rainey came back to the United States determined to help his newly freed people and entered politics. Last year, the U.S. House unanimously approved legislation to rename a post office in Rainey’s hometown of Georgetown S.C. after him.

After leaving politics, Rainey spent two years as a federal agent for the U.S, Treasury Department for internal review. Rainey retired in 1886 and returned to his home state of South Carolina. At the age of 55, he contracted malaria and died less than a year later.

Valerie Boyd, Renowned Biographer of Author of Zora Neale Hurston, Dies At 58

Valerie Boyd, Renowned Biographer of Author of Zora Neale Hurston, Dies At 58


Valerie Boyd, the highly revered educator, editor, and author who wrote the renowned Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston, has died at 58.

The Washington Post reports that Boyd passed away on Feb. 12 due to pancreatic cancer, according to her friend and power of attorney, Veta Goler. She was an associate professor and writer-in-residence at the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism, where she taught magazine writing, arts reviewing, and narrative nonfiction.

 

Boyd was born in 1963 in Atlanta. She earned a bachelor’s degree from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University in 1985 and an MFA in Creative Nonfiction Writing from Goucher College in 1999.

A distinguished journalist and cultural critic, Boyd spent nearly two decades as a reporter and arts editor at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Her articles and essays have appeared in numerous anthologies, magazines, and newspapers such as Essence, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, Creative Nonfiction, African American Review, and more.

Her journalistic excellence led to her founding of EightRock, a groundbreaking journal of Black arts and culture, in 1990. In 1992, she co-founded HealthQuest, the first nationally distributed magazine focusing on African American health.

Simon & Schuster

Among her many achievements, Boyd became well-known for her five-years worth of gathered research about Zora Neale Hurston’s life. Released in 2003, the Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston was hailed by Alice Walker as “magnificent” and “extraordinary” and received wide critical acclaim from various outlets.

In recognition of her laudable research, she received the Georgia Author of the Year Award in nonfiction as well as an American Library Association Notable Book Award.

At the time of her death, Boyd was at work on the anthology Bigger Than Bravery: Black Resilience and Reclamation in a Time of Pandemic. She also edited the upcoming April 12 release of Gathering Blossoms Under Fire, The Journals of Alice Walker 1965-2000, which will be published by Simon & Schuster.

“Valerie Boyd was one of the best people ever to live, which she did as a free being,” Alice Walker said in a statement issued through Simon & Schuster.

“Even though the illness was stalking her the past several years, she accompanied me in gathering, transcribing, and editing my journals. … This was a major feat, a huge act of love and solidarity, of sisterhood, of soul generosity and shared joy, for which she will be remembered.”

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