Black Entrepreneurs Who Turned $2K into $2M Launch Masterclass on How to Start a Hair Business

Black Entrepreneurs Who Turned $2K into $2M Launch Masterclass on How to Start a Hair Business


Ashley Williams and Khat Brim, the two founders who successfully built a multi-million dollar brand called Hair Are Us, have now launched a virtual masterclass to help aspiring entrepreneurs get started in the industry. Their masterclass is called “Hair Game 101: How to Start Your Own Virgin Hair Business,” and it will be held online via Zoom on Thursday, February 10, 2022, at 9pm EST/ 6pm PST.

The two veteran entrepreneurs will use their 10+ years in both retail and e-commerce to teach everything that up-and-coming entrepreneurs in the hair industry need to know before getting started.

Topics will include:

1. Start-Up Budget
2. Communicating w/ Vendors
3. Sampling Hair
4. Branding & Marketing: Photoshoots, Ambassadors, etc.
5. Retail vs. E-Commerce: Merchant Services
6. Policies: Refunds/ Returns / Shipping
7. Customer Retention: Keep them Coming Back!
8. Building Your Team
9. Dropshipping vs Direct Shipping
10. Ways to Launch Your Business!

Ashley and Khat made headlines about ten years ago when they launched their company, Hair Are Us, with an initial investment of $1,000 each and yielded $2 million in revenue in less than two years. Since then, they have remained leaders in the virgin hair industry and are more than qualified to teach a course about it.

“We’ve had many ups and downs, but we have learned so much from starting, maintaining, and growing a business,” they comment. “We went from selling bundles out of the trunks of our cars in parking lots to having three retail stores and a thriving e-commerce business.”

Only 50 slots are available for the class.

To register now for the Masterclass, visit:
HairGame101.com

This story first appeared on Blacknews.com.

HBCU North Carolina Central University Gets $500K Gift From Widow Honoring Her Late Husband


Hellena Tidwell is honoring the memory of her late husband Isaiah Tidwell by donating half a million dollars to their HBCU alma mater.

After Isaiah died from cancer in August 2019, his widow and two sons took a big step to honor his legacy at NCCU’s Isaiah Tidwell Accounting Program.

On Thursday, Hellena and her two sons, William DeVane Tidwell and Damion Lamar Tidwell, donated $500,000 toward North Carolina Central University’s accounting program, named after her late husband, a trustee at the school, Q City Metro reports.

“Our family honors his memory with this gift which we hope will strengthen the School of Business as it strives to become a stellar program that provides opportunities for students seeking careers in business,” Hellena said in a statement.

The Tidwell’s donation is “the largest single contribution to date toward naming opportunities for the university’s new School of Business building,” NCCU said in a statement.

It was at NCCU when Isaiah and Hellena first met and exchanged their vows inside her dormitory in 1968, as noted by AJC. He graduated from the school in 1967 with a degree in commerce.

Isaiah received his MBA from the Babcock Graduate School of Management at Wake Forest University. He served as vice president and director of wealth management of Wachovia Bank for Georgia after rising up the ranks during his 32 years with the company.

During his time with the bank, Isaiah helped NCCU get funding to advance the HBCU. In 1993, Tidwell spearheaded a $500,000 donation from Wachovia to establish a chair at the school.

As an NCCU Board of Trustees member, Tidwell created a separate endowment named after his parents that sent dozens of students to college.

Leaving behind a lasting legacy at the HBCU where they met, Hellena remembers her late husband as a lifelong friend.

“He was not just my husband, but my best friend, partner and cheerleader,” Hellena Tidwell said after his passing. “He brought out the best in me.”

Daughter Of Ex-Broward Florida Mayor Sentenced To Prison For Stealing $300,000 In COVID Fraud

Daughter Of Ex-Broward Florida Mayor Sentenced To Prison For Stealing $300,000 In COVID Fraud


Damara Holness, the daughter of former Broward Mayor Dale Holness, has been sentenced to nearly two years in prison for COVID relief fraud.

On Monday, Damara, 28, was sentenced to 20 months in jail, five years of supervised release, restitution of $300,000, and a $100 special assessment, CBS Miami reported. Her sentencing came after she pleaded guilty in November to lying on a coronavirus relief loan application and receiving the same amount she now owes in restitution.

Damara claimed to have experienced financial hardship for her consulting business on the Payment Protection Program applications, where she claimed to employ 18 people. But upon further investigation, it was determined that Damara didn’t employ anyone.

“The defendant saw this as an opportunity to unjustly enrich herself by defrauding the program designed to help those struggling businesses,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Kaplan wrote in court records.

Now, Damara has 90 days to surrender to authorities and begin her 20-month prison sentence.

“I want to say I apologize to those I affected. I want to apologize to the community,” she said outside of court on Monday.

“This is a mistake that I made, not out of greed, but out of desperation as a pregnant woman trying to make a way for herself,” she said, “and I just want to move forward with my life and continue doing the work that I was doing before.”

Damara Holness’ lawyer, Sue-Ann Robinson, claims the fraud “was more an act of desperation than greed,” News 4 Jax reported. Robinson said Damara used some of the money toward “housing arrangements” and taxes.

Dale Holness attended his daughter’s sentencing and acknowledged his daughter’s “mistake” in committing the fraud, WSVN reported.

“She’s apologized to the community. She’s made a mistake. We’re humans; we make mistakes,” he said. “She accepts responsibility. Certainly, she will pay a price, and we’re just going to be here to help her rebuild her life.”

How this Sculpture Collector Brings African Culture to the Design Industry


Manny Beckles has a passion for collecting sculptures, but not just any sculptures – his expertise and interest lies in Shona sculptures and the rich history and contemporary cultural influence that they have within the home design industry. This passion is what led to the founding of Shona African Sculptures in 2005.

Growing up in an Italian neighborhood in Newark, New Jersey, in the 1960’s as the youngest of five to a Guyanese father and Virginia-born mother, Manny had quite a diverse upbringing. These rich cultures mixed with a strong preference for visual learning through language, art and expression provided Manny with the understanding of how people of all cultures relate to one another and set the groundwork for what would later inspire him to start a creative, culturally diverse and art-focused business.

In his efforts to share his knowledge and passion with others about the beauty and importance of Shona culture, as well as highlight and support talented Zimbabwean artists and their sophisticated, powerful and dynamic works of art, Manny founded Shona African Sculptures. This endeavor not only amplifies these skilled artists for their expertise in creating breathtaking and compelling sculptures, but also provides them with a source of income and stability.

On the most rewarding parts of his endeavor, Manny shared that it is, “…Producing and presenting a highly regarded program of exhibitions and events for sale of Shona sculptures from Zimbabwe. Also, providing a virtual internet platform across media disciplines, cultures and contexts highlighting Zimbabwean artists which have been celebrated worldwide for their creative talents in expressing contemporary images of family, love and wellness. Shona sculptures are contemporary and meaningful art that enhances and enlivens the physical environment of the community and supports its visual and diverse objectives by encouraging direct and daily contact with both public and private collectors within the interior design and arts community.”

With all businesses come challenges. Since founding Shona African Sculptures, Manny has seen firsthand how culturally influenced sculptures are not considered the norm within the marketplace and has had to diversify his offering to include more modern and abstract pieces to cater to a larger buying pool.

Despite this, Manny has created a vast network and brand recognition for himself through volunteering, sculpture gardens and partnerships with other local galleries before opening up his own. His perseverance has provided him with the confidence needed to push forward, learn and grow within the marketplace.

After years of success in the Dallas area, Manny is bringing Shona African Sculptures to New York City with the help of NY NOW, a wholesale market specializing in home design and retail; industry expert Patti Carpenter, who happens to be Manny’s mentor; and the newly instated Exceptional Black-Owned Emerging Talent Award.

Described as a “warm, charismatic and humble artist who is deeply passionate about African stone sculpture,” there was little hesitation for NY NOW in choosing Manny as the first winner of this award, which will give him a platform of home design experts, buyers and media to share his knowledge, passion and quality work with.

With a desire to recognize an emerging Black-owned brand or artist with exceptional products and provide them with the support needed for a successful trade show experience, the Exceptional Black-Owned Emerging Talent Award supplies winners with marketing exposure, mentoring, and a complimentary booth at both the Winter and Summer Markets

Questlove and Black Thought Partner With Disney Jr For ‘Rise Up, Sing Out’ Animated Children’s Series

Questlove and Black Thought Partner With Disney Jr For ‘Rise Up, Sing Out’ Animated Children’s Series


Questlove and Black Thought, co-founders of the iconic hip-hop band The Roots, have partnered with the Disney Channel and Disney Junior on a short-form animated series.

According to VarietyRise Up, Sing Out, which premiered yesterday, is an eight-episode series that will deliver empowering and optimistic messages about different cultures and celebrate differences in people.

The children’s series, executive produced by Questlove and Black Thought, is now available on Disney Plus after the first episode was presented on Disney Channel and Disney Junior.

Questlove and Black Thought appear as animated characters in the series and produced the music.

Disney describes Rise Up, Sing Out as shorts that “are designed to be inspiring, empowering, and optimistic about race, culture, community, and celebrating differences.”

“The ‘Rise Up, Sing Out’ shorts touch on a lot of real-world issues, especially for young Black kids, that just weren’t talked about when we were growing up. The beautiful thing about these shorts is that not only are they going to provide young kids the proper language to talk to their friends and family about some of the things that might be bothering them, but it’s also going to give parents the tools on how to respond,” Questlove and Black Thought said in a written statement.

“We feel this is the perfect moment and the perfect time for us to put this project out into the world to plant a seed about kindness that will hopefully have a lasting impact for generations to come.”

Walt Disney Records plans to release the music from Rise Up, Sing Out on Friday. .

Questlove took to his Instagram Tuesday to promote the shorts:

Presenting a brand new #Disney Jr series called “Rise Up, Sing Out” that will premier on @disneyplus and channel TOMORROW February 2nd!!”

 

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Country Music Singer Mickey Guyton Tapped To Sing The National Anthem At Super Bowl LVI

Country Music Singer Mickey Guyton Tapped To Sing The National Anthem At Super Bowl LVI


Country music star Mickey Guyton announced Tuesday that she would be performing the national anthem at Super Bowl LVI on Feb 13.

The “Black Like Me” singer’s 2021 debut album, “Remember Her Name,” earned her a Grammy nomination for Best Country Album. She made history as the first-ever Black solo female artist nominated in a country music category.

“Look at God,” Guyton tweeted about the Super Bowl news. “I am shook, I am grateful, I am praise dancing.”

Following her “Black Like Me” single release, the 38-year-old performer emerged as an outspoken voice discussing racism within the country music industry. She continues to speak candidly about the racism and biases she experienced throughout her life, both during childhood and while struggling to find success as a Black artist in Nashville.

The Super Bowl announcement comes following a recent social media incident involving Guyton and a racist message she received on Twitter.

The tweet read: “@MickeyGuyton We don’t want your kind in country music! All you people talk about is your god damn race and skin color! Don’t you effers have Rap, Hip Hop & R&B? Gotta ruin and destroy s – – t with your woke bs! Just like y’all did with MTV! Get the F out of our country music!”

She intentionally posted a screenshot of the message on Instagram in hopes of shedding light on the hate she and others in her community are often burdened with.

“Started off 2022 with a good ole batch of racism. I show you this so you guys continue the fight for equality and love and acceptance,” Guyton captioned the post.

This country star is rising above her haters and not allowing anyone to disrupt her Black Girl Joy.

The 56th National Football League Super Bowl championship game will feature the NFC Champion Los Angeles Rams hosting the AFC Champion Cincinnati Bengals at Inglewood, California’s SoFi Stadium. The game kicks off at 5:30 PM CST and will be aired via NBC.

Opinion: Brian Flores’ Racial Discrimination Lawsuit Highlights Decades of Mistreatment By The NFL

Opinion: Brian Flores’ Racial Discrimination Lawsuit Highlights Decades of Mistreatment By The NFL


Brian Flores is sick and tired of being sick and tired.

The Brooklyn native spent a decade and a half as an assistant coach with the New England Patriots before finally getting a head coaching gig with the Miami Dolphins.

However, after two seasons in Miami he was fired, but Flores did enough in Miami. He won eight of his last nine games this season to get other head coaching interviews this off-season, including one with his hometown New York Giants.

That experience and a text message his former boss, Patriots head coach Bill Belichick, accidentally sent him has led to Flores filing a class-action racial discrimination lawsuit against the NFL.

Among other claims, Flores’ lawsuit includes three bombshell accusations: Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross offered to pay Flores $100,000 for every loss the team recorded to give the Dolphins a better draft position; Ross pressured Flores to tank, or lose games on purpose; and texts Flores received from Belichick showed the Giants had already decided to hire Brian Daboll, a white candidate, before interviewing Flores.

In the lawsuit, Flores claims what millions of fans, most Black NFL players, current and former and coaches across the league know; Black coaches are discriminated against in the NFL.

While the Black players make up 75 percent of the NFL, currently there is one Black head coach, two Black general managers, and zero Black owners. The one Black coach, Pittsburgh Steelers Head Coach Mike Tomlin, has coached the team for the last 15 years largely because he’s never had a losing season.

In the last two years, there have been 16 NFL head coaching vacancies. Just one of those positions have been filled by a Black head coach when the Houston Texans hired David Culley.

Even when Culley was hired, many called it a stopgap move until a more desirable candidate came along. After finishing this season 4-13, Culley was fired a few weeks ago. The current frontrunner for that position is Josh McCown, a white former journeyman quarterback with zero head coaching experience at the NFL level.

Even the NFL’s Rooney Rule, which was adopted due to the late Johnnie Cochran threatening to sue the league in 2002 is a sham.

The rule requires an NFL team to interview at least one minority candidate before making a hire. However, owners and teams typically will interview one Black candidate to fill the requirement before hiring a White candidate, who the team has already decided on.

An example of this occurred when the Dallas Cowboys interviewed former Cincinnati Bengals Head Coach Marvin Lewis, before hiring Mike McCarthy, a white coach, days later in Sept. 2020. However, the Cowboys last week extended the contract of team executive Will McClay, a Black man who serves as the director of player personnel.

One of the factors that makes this whole situation truly disappointing is the fact that by treating Black coaches this way, NFL owners are hurting themselves.

The NFL is a revolving door of coaches, so much so, that the day after the regular season ends is well-known as Black Monday due to the number of firings that routinely occur. Since the end of the 2016 season 36 NFL coaches, including eight Black coaches, have been fired during, or at the end of, a season.

Many are comparing Flores’ lawsuit to the Colin Kaepernick situation in that many believe Flores is risking his career, something Flores acknowledged in a statement.

“God has gifted me with a special talent to coach the game of football, but the need for change is bigger than my personal goals,” Flores said in a statement. “In making the decision to file the class action complaint today, I understand that I may be risking coaching the game I love and that has done so much for my family and me. My sincere hope is that by standing up against systemic racism in the NFL, others will join me to ensure that positive change is made for generations to come.”

The fact that a Black coach has to sue the NFL in order to help its white owners make their teams better by potentially hiring more Black coaches is a true sign of how far America still has to go when it comes to racism.

Black Billionaire Robert F. Smith’s Nonprofit Partners With Prudential Financial To Help HBCU Students With College Expenses


According to the Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund, more than 75 percent of students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) are considered low-income, relying heavily on Pell Grants to meet their college expenses. However, a growing body of research confirms that for many of these students, those grants are not enough.

Their financial instability is also often compounded by unforeseen emergency expenses that when left unaddressed, threaten to derail their college careers altogether. Add to that, in order to secure financial support many of these students are often required to sign complex promissory notes that could indebt them well into their adult lives, yet many lack the fundamental financial literacy needed to make informed financial decisions. A new partnership between Black billionaire Robert F. Smith’s nonprofit Student Freedom Initiative and Prudential Financial is sending help their way, both literally and figuratively.

They’re launching the Handling Everyday Life Problems for Students (a.k.a HELPS) program during the spring 2022 academic year at participating HBCUs. Prudential is providing $1.8 million in microgrants to HBCU students in an effort to accelerate economic mobility and close the financial divide, furthering Student Freedom Initiative and Prudential’s shared commitment to helping close the racial wealth gap. Prudential will also provide paid internships and pro bono services to help improve financial literacy among HBCU students and their families.

“Student Freedom Initiative applauds the leadership of Prudential Financial and their support for our shared mission of eliminating barriers of access for underserved communities,” says chairman Smith, who founded the nonprofit in 2020, shortly after he famously snagged headlines by paying off the educational debt for the entire 2019 graduating class of Atlanta’s historically Black Morehouse College. “By enabling the launch of the HELPS Program, a vital component of our work is to address the holistic needs of HBCU students and families, Prudential’s gift will provide long-needed and often overlooked aid and support persistence of those most vulnerable in our community.”

Student Freedom Initiative Executive Director Mark A. Brown says the HELPS program will help empower financially vulnerable students and equip them with the resources they need to address unexpected, one-time expenses, which research has shown disproportionately adversely impacts Black students.

“One HBCU president told us about a student who was unable to fully participate on camera for class – as required – due to a damaged computer, which ultimately impacted that student’s grades,” remembers Brown, an alum of Alabama HBCU, Tuskegee University. “Another president described always having to keep petty cash in their office to help students, including once giving a student $300 to cover an unexpected expense. That student later told the president that they likely would not have graduated without that $300. So, the work that we’re doing through this partnership is impactful and helping to contribute to the long-term success of these talented and deserving students.”

Launching as a three-year pilot program with an initial cohort of HBCUs, the HELPS Program is also supplementing HBCU-provided resources. Students who qualify will receive supplemental funds to address emergent financial issues that present a risk to the student’s ability to matriculate, including issues that may cause immediate risk to a student’s health, life, property, or environment, requiring immediate attention.

And the support doesn’t end there. Prudential is also making good on its commitment to building a fully inclusive workforce within its own ranks, providing paid internships via the internX.org platform, which pairs highly qualified, rising sophomores through seniors across all majors with companies seeking diverse talent. There are more than 220 companies, more than 14,000 students, and 1,300+ Course Learning Management Systems on the internX.org platform. Additionally, Prudential will collaborate with Student Freedom Initiative and the participating institutions to prepare and conduct culturally inclusive, financial literacy education and training for students.

“At Prudential, we’ve spent decades working to close the financial divide, in part through partnerships that address systemic barriers to economic, social, and racial equity,” says Sarah Keh, vice president, Inclusive Solutions, at Prudential Financial. “As part of our multi-pronged strategy to support HBCUs, our partnership with Student Freedom Initiative will help us scale solutions so that more Black students will remain in college and ultimately graduate, putting them on a path to financial security.”

To learn more, visit StudentFreedomInitiative.org. Brown is available for interviews about the HELPS program and to share insights on the student debt crisis disproportionately affecting students of color.

About Student Freedom InitiativeA single-purpose nonprofit organization, Student Freedom Initiative provides a catalyst for freedom in professional and life choices for students attending Minority Serving Institutions (“MSIs”) by increasing their social and economic mobility using a student-centric, evidence-based, holistic, and collaborative approach. Initially focused on Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Student Freedom Initiative enables mobility through four transformational components: (1) Income-Contingent Alternative to Parent Plus and Private Loans, (2) Internships, (3) Tutoring/Mentorships/Other Services, and (4) Targeted HBCU Capacity Building. Student Freedom Initiative collaborates with community-based organizations, businesses, and governmental entities through public-private partnerships to make sustainable, systemic changes to support the entire HBCU ecosystem. To date, Student Freedom Initiative has received generous contributions from our anchor donors Robert F. Smith, Fund II Foundation, and Cisco Systems, and many others who have provided financial and/or in-kind services. The program has also been acknowledged and supported by the Business Roundtable’s Racial Equity & Justice Subcommittee on Education. To learn more, visit StudentFreedomInitiative.org or find us on Twitter @StudentFreedom.

This story first appeared on BlackNews.com

 

Vanessa Williams Gushes Over Daughter Jillian Hervey’s First Child—and Her First Grandbaby

Vanessa Williams Gushes Over Daughter Jillian Hervey’s First Child—and Her First Grandbaby


Actress, model, singer, and designer Vanessa Williams is a first-time grandmother and she’s elated about it.

Last week, she welcomed her daughter, LION BABE singer Jillian Hervey, to motherhood in an affectionate Instagram post.

“So proud to welcome my beautiful daughter @lionbabe into the wonderful, challenging and most rewarding role in life…motherhood,” the former Miss America captioned a heartwarming photo showing her embracing her daughter’s baby bump with bright smiles.

Williams, a mother of four, has been successful at balancing her career and motherhood for nearly four decades. She also has two daughters and a son—Sasha Fox, Devin Hervey, and Melanie Hervey.

She continued, “I’m always here to support, advise and babysit at any moment.”

The 32-year old songstress reportedly gave birth to a baby boy in December, alongside her partner, Lucas Goodman, the second half of Lion Babe. The couple managed to keep the pregnancy under wraps for the entire nine months. Now, behind-the-scenes footage from their maternity shoot is available online for fans.

 

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“Pregnancy for me was a huge reset,” Hervey told ESSENCE about her pregnancy experience. “Since the moment I discovered it was happening, I have been birthing new thoughts, feelings, intentions, and parts of myself.

According to the new mom, she was “anxious” and “overwhelmed” at first, but her attitude changed.

She said, ” I quickly shifted into embracing my path and surrendering to it. Being pregnant allowed me to reflect on appreciating the life I have lived, and it gave me a whole new perspective on how I want to move through the world. I knew I needed to make sure I did my best to create a calm, loving environment for my baby to grow.”

Hervey told the magazine that it was important for her to keep her pregnancy and her relationship with Goodman private. It was a family decision.

“My personal life, like my creative life, is sacred, but coming from the upbringing I have had, I never wanted to overshare,” she said.  “Although we are in the age of sharing everything, I am far more old-school and prefer to make sure that I have a life full of experiences that are just for me/us.”

 

‘Walking Dead’ Actor Moses J. Moseley Dead at 31 in Suspected Suicide

‘Walking Dead’ Actor Moses J. Moseley Dead at 31 in Suspected Suicide


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