Not So Fast! Kim Kardashian Accused of Trying to Steal Black Woman’s SKKN Trademark

Not So Fast! Kim Kardashian Accused of Trying to Steal Black Woman’s SKKN Trademark


Kim Kardashian’s latest business trademark filing got slapped with the “aht aht” by one Black business owner who says she had the name first.

The reality star has been in the process of rebranding her KKW Beauty company and started things by filing a trademark for the names SKKN and SKKN by KIM, Page Six reported.

However, shortly after Kardashian filed the paperwork, she was slapped with a cease-and-desist letter from Beauty Concepts LLC, a company that claims to have been using the name since 2018.

The company’s owner, Cyndie Lunsford, submitted a July 21 letter where she explains how she has operated a salon with skincare, and spa services under the SKKN+ brand name for the last three years. Lunsford’s company claims to have filed to trademark the SKKN+ name on March 28, two days before Kardashian’s March 30 trademark filing.

Kardashian’s hopes for the SKKN brand including releasing a series of skincare, haircare, nail care, perfumes and candle products as part of her beauty brand’s relaunch. But now Beauty Concepts wants Kardashian’s trademark filing to be tossed out claiming it will confuse consumers from differentiating between the two competing beauty brands.

“I have painstakingly built my successful small business with my own sweat equity, hard work, and research,” Lunsford said, “It’s clear that I established my brand first.”

The 28-year-old New York- and Washington, D.C.-based Black business owner works as an aesthetician and entrepreneur. She already has social media pages using the SKKN+ name.

But being the superstar beauty mogul that she already is, Kardashian’s lawyers are barking back, saying they did nothing to warrant the legal threat from Lunsford.

“We certainly appreciate and support small businesses, and our hat is off to Ms. Lunsford. But the question at hand is one of trademark law and we’ve not done anything deserving of legal action by her,” Kim’s attorney  Michael G. Rhodes told TMZ.

“We are disappointed that she has chosen to run to the media knowing that we were scheduling a call for tomorrow, requested by her attorney,” he added. “So while disagreeing with the letter, we’re hopeful that we can smooth things over once both sides speak.”

COVID-19 Hospitalizations Skyrocket As New York Urges Businesses To Push Vaccinations

COVID-19 Hospitalizations Skyrocket As New York Urges Businesses To Push Vaccinations


Reuters – New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo urged businesses to turn away unvaccinated customers while Florida is grappling with a surge in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, both sparked by rising cases of the Delta variant that could result in new restrictions on daily life.

Florida, whose governor has resisted mask or vaccine mandates, has one of the worst outbreaks in the nation and about one-quarter of the country’s hospitalized COVID-19 patients, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (Graphic on U.S. outbreak) https://tmsnrt.rs/2WTOZDR

The head of Florida’s hospital association said the current surge sent COVID-19 hospitalizations skyrocketing to 10,000 from 2,000 in less than 30 days, although deaths have remained well below the previous peak.

“It is a much younger population that is being hospitalized today,” Mary Mayhew told MSNBC on Monday. At one Jacksonville hospital, the average age is 42, she said. “We have 25-year-olds in the hospital in intensive care on ventilators,” she told the cable network. “We’ve got to convince 25-year-olds, 30-year-olds, that this is now life-threatening for them.”

Cuomo also sounded the alarm, urging but not mandating bars, restaurants and other private businesses to require all customers be vaccinated before entering. The Democratic governor also said that vaccines could become mandatory for nursing home workers, teachers and healthcare workers if case numbers do not improve.

“Private businesses – I am asking them and suggesting to them to go to vaccine-only admission,” Cuomo told a briefing Monday. “I believe it’s in your best business interest. If I go to a bar and I want to have a drink and I want to talk to the person next to me, I want to know that that person is vaccinated.”

Cuomo also announced that all employees of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which runs the trains and subways, and all the workers from his state for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees the region’s bridges, airports, and tunnels, would need to be vaccinated by Labor Day on Sept. 6 or submit to weekly testing.

“If you are unvaccinated the Delta variant should be a major concern to you and you should be worried about it,” Cuomo said.

The push by Cuomo marks the latest attempt by government leaders to spur reluctant Americans to get vaccinated as the Delta variant of the coronavirus surges nationwide, infecting mostly unvaccinated people.

Cuomo’s announcement comes on the heels of a decision by President Joe Biden to require millions of federal workers and contractors to show proof of vaccination or be subject to weekly or twice-weekly COVID-19 tests.

Even as cases have exploded, Governor Ron DeSantis has resisted mask mandates. Earlier this year, he and the Republican-controlled state legislature limited local officials’ ability to impose COVID-19 restrictions, and on Friday he issued an executive order barring schools from requiring face coverings when classes resume this month.

That order came days after the Broward County school board voted to require masks for students and staff. The superintendent of Miami-Dade schools had also said the district would reconsider whether to require masks in light of the surge.

Some local governments have also sought to impose public health measures despite DeSantis’ opposition. The village of Key Biscayne began requiring masks on Monday for all employees as well as any visitors to government buildings.

Both Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties last week said that all adults would be required to wear masks when inside county facilities. Orange County, home to Disney World, has ordered all employees to get vaccinated, with an Aug. 31 deadline for the first dose.

(Reporting by Joseph Ax in Princeton, New Jersey and Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

Black Women Hockey Players Celebrated In LeBron James-and Drake-Led ‘Black Ice’


A new documentary about one of the many ways that Black athletes have contributed to sports is being produced by LeBron James and Drake. The film, Black Ice, chronicles the experiences of marginalized Black hockey players, Deadline reported

James’ production company Spring Hill and Drake’s DreamCrew, and others have come together to offer a feature-length film on the history, importance, and even racial contexts of Black hockey players on and off the ice. 

“This project presents a rich opportunity to explore a remarkable part of sports history,” said Vinay Virmani, chief content officer at UNINTERRUPTED Canada, an athletics-based storytelling platform that will lead Black Ice.

The film will follow the Black players’ journey from the Colored Hockey League of the Maritimes through the National Hockey League. One of the things that makes this film even more special is its emphasis on Black women in hockey–a demographic that rarely makes it into the public consciousness when the sport is discussed.

There is a list of Black women in hockey who have contributed both on the ice and behind the scenes as scouts, owners, and even grassroots organizers that promote the sport to Black female fans. For example, Angela James was the first and only Black woman inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

Black Ice will include and profile the journey of many prominent and up-and-coming Black female players and their contributions not only to the game but the impact they are making at the grassroots level,” said Virmani in a statement provided to NBC Sports via email. 

This news comes as a bill to honor Willie O’Ree, the NHL’s first Black player, with a Congressional Gold Medal was passed in the Senate. 

Willie O’Ree (Twitter)

Black Ice will be released by Canadian broadcaster Bell Media. A stateside distribution deal for the film is still in talks. 

 

All Black Caramel Curves Motorcycle Club Is New Face Of Savage X Fenty Lingerie Campaign

All Black Caramel Curves Motorcycle Club Is New Face Of Savage X Fenty Lingerie Campaign


Rihanna is known for integrating diversity into her popular Fenty brand. This time, she is doing it through her new campaign featuring a motorcycle club.

According to Vogue, the singer and beauty mogul has cast the all-Black Caramel Curves club for her Savage X Fenty lingerie line.

Caramel Curves, a motorcycle club based in New Orleans, has 10 members that meet up on Sundays. Part of their flair is that they dress in a way that nobody can miss with rhinestones, strappy heels, and helmets with mohawks. Of course, they use lots of bright colors as well. 

Their style caught the eye of Rihanna and now, they are the models of the newest Savage X Fenty campaigns. 

“The Caramel Curves show the world what being a badass boss is all about, while bringing sexiness along for the ride,” Rihanna said in a press release.

Caramel Curves, motorcycle, Savage X Fenty, campaign
Caramel Curves Motorcycle Club (Image: Courtesy of Savage X Fenty)

In the campaign, the motorcycle club is photographed at different locations around New Orleans. They are dressed in body-hugging lingerie, fishnets, embroidered bras, and even opera gloves. Of course, they are posed with noticeable accessories–namely, their motorcycles.

Women aren’t usually associated with motorcycling so the Caramel Curves were already attention-grabbers. Their unique style really catapulted their visibility. Nakosha Smith, one of the founders, purposely chose clothing with more panache as the club’s trademark.

“I didn’t want to go shop for basic clothes because I didn’t dress like that. I always wore sparkly, blingy stuff all the time,” Smith said. “So that pretty much started the trend for the Caramel Curves that ‘This is our look.”

The club believes that their creative merger with the Fenty brand was the perfect match. Along with being fans of the brand, their undeniable brio meshes well with the reputation for swagger for which the brand has become known. 

 “When this comes out, I feel like a lot of people are going to be like, ‘I am not surprised that Rihanna picked the Caramel Curves because those girls stay fly,’” Smith said. 

The items can be shopped on the Fenty website.

Sha’Carri Richardson Shouts Out Jamaican Runners Who Swept Olympic 100-Meter Race


U.S. sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson missed the Tokyo Olympics after being left off the team following her suspension for marijuana use. But she’s definitely tuned in to the games and holds no ill will as she took to Twitter to congratulate the runners from Jamaica who swept the 100-meter race.

According to USA Today, Jamaica’s Elaine Thompson-Herah won Saturday’s final with a time of 10.61 seconds to actually break an Olympic record that no one had beaten for 33 years. Her fellow Jamaicans and Olympic mates Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce and Shericka Jackson rounded out the top three to make a clean sweep when they came in second and third place, respectively.

With her explosive running power, the 21-year-old Richardson was expected to be among the top runners heading into the Tokyo Olympics. But she is currently a spectator after being left off the United States squad, stemming from a failed drug test at the U.S. Olympic track and field trials in late June.

Before congratulating the trio of Jamaican runners, Richardson asked her Twitter followers a simple question, speculating that she was asking about her non-appearance at the Olympics.

At the time of Richardson’s failed drug results, the USATF (USA Track & Field) had finalized its decision, saying:

“While USATF fully agrees that the merit of the World Anti-Doping Agency rules related to THC should be reevaluated, it would be detrimental to the integrity of the U.S. Olympic Team Trials for Track & Field if USATF amended its policies following competition, only weeks before the Olympic Games,” USATF said.

“All USATF athletes are equally aware of and must adhere to the current anti-doping code, and our credibility as the National Governing Body would be lost if rules were only enforced under certain circumstances.”

 

“The USATF praised Richardson for taking and offered her “our continued support both on and off the track.”

Spelman, Clark Atlanta University, and FAMU Among HBCUs Clearing Tuition Balances


With the coronavirus pandemic changing the course of our lives over the past 18 months, the disruption has taken its toll on just about everyone.

Luckily, despite the negative impact of COVID-19, three HBCUs have recently announced that they have cleared the debts of students covering the 2020-2021 academic year.

Last week, Spelman College announced to its students and on its Facebook page the magnanimous gift.

“To address the financial hardships that have taken a toll on students and families over the last year, Spelman College cleared outstanding student balances from AY 2020-2021, an action made possible by the receipt of funds from the federal government.”
“This reset to the lower tuition rates of four years ago will have a long-term impact on affordability,” said Mary Schmidt Campbell, Ph.D., president of Spelman. “Spelman’s in-depth study into the financial aid needs of our students several years ago reinforced our understanding of one of this country’s fundamental inequities: high performing, high need students are drastically underfunded,” said Campbell.
“If 2020 taught us anything, it is that racial fault lines continue to make the lives of African Americans quantitatively harder than those of non-Black Americans.”
Clark Atlanta University also announced its plans to lighten the financial burden of its students:
“Clark Atlanta University President Dr. George T. French, Jr. announced today that student account balances for Spring 2020 – Summer 2021 will be canceled and cleared. The university is canceling all student account balances for the Spring 2020, Summer 2020, Fall 2020, Spring 2021, and Summer 2021 semesters by bringing them to a zero balance.
“We understand these past two academic years have been emotionally and financially difficult on students and their families due to the COVID-19 pandemic. That is why we will continue to do all we can to support their efforts to complete their CAU education,” said President French. “Their academic and professional future is important to me and the entire Clark Atlanta University family. We care about students and want to lighten their individual and family’s financial load so they can continue their journey in pursuing and attaining their educational and professional goals.” 
Adding to the recent good news of the other HBCUs, Florida A & M University (FAMU) released a statement announcing the parting gifts of clearing students’ tuition balances:

“Florida A&M University (FAMU) spent more than $16 million to cover fees, tuition, and unpaid student account balances during the 2020-2021 school year, President Larry Robinson, Ph.D., has announced.”

“Over the last year and a half, the University provided over $16 million in student support and debt relief as a result of the federal Cares Act,” Robinson said at the commencement ceremonies for 2020 graduates Saturday morning. “This is an indication of our commitment to student success and our hope that your time on the “Hill” has been transformative as you take on the challenges of the day, go out and make a difference,” Robinson told School of Business & Industry (SBI), College of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Institute of Public Health (COPPS, IPH) and School of Environment graduates.”

Simone Biles To Compete In Balance Beam Finals


TOKYO (Reuters) -Simon Biles will compete in the balance beam competition, officials said on Monday, in what would be the U.S. superstar gymnast’s last chance for gold in Tokyo after pulling out of other events citing mental health issues.

Biles, who shocked the world last week when she withdrew from the team and several individual events, has brought athletes’ mental health into the spotlight at a pandemic-affected Games which has had its share of controversy.

Belarusian sprinter Krystsina Tsimanouskaya walked into the Polish embassy, a day after refusing to board a flight in Tokyo that she said she was taken to against her wishes by her team.

She will seek asylum in Poland, according to a member of the local Belarus community who was in touch with her.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) is meanwhile looking into the gesture U.S. shot putter Raven Saunders made after the silver medallist raised her arms in an X above her head on Sunday, IOC spokesperson Mark Adams told a briefing.

Saunders later said the gesture was intended as a sign of support for the downtrodden, while the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) said it did not breach IOC rules.

On the track, Puerto Rico’s Jasmine Camacho-Quinn dazzled in the 100 metres hurdles, while Miltiadis Tentoglou of Greece won the men’s long jump in a spectacular final leap.

Biles’ decision to take part in the balance beam final delighted USA Gymnastics. She is reigning world champion on the beam and picked up an Olympic bronze on the apparatus in Rio.

“We are so excited to confirm that you will see two U.S. athletes in the balance beam final tomorrow – Suni Lee AND Simone Biles!! Can’t wait to watch you both!” USA Gymnastics said in a statement.

The 24-year-old Biles, who won four golds at the 2016 Rio Games, dropped out of the all-around, floor exercise, vault and asymmetric bars finals in Tokyo.

The Games are taking place without spectators and under strict measures to prevent the spread of the pandemic, an unprecedented event in the history of the modern Olympics.

China has pulled ahead on the medals tally with 28 golds, followed by the United States with 21 and Japan on 17.

The Tokyo Olympics have already been complicated by public opposition, as polls have shown that most Japanese oppose holding the Games amid the worsening pandemic.

SPORT AND POLITICS

While the IOC forbids overt political expression or interference, last month it relaxed its Rule 50 that prevented athletes from protesting. Athletes are allowed to make gestures on the field, providing they do so without disruption and with respect for fellow competitors.

However, the threat of sanctions remains if any protests are made on the podium during the medal ceremony.

“Let them try and take this medal,” Saunders said in a late night post on social media in an apparent reference to the IOC’s rules restricting protests.

Athletes, however, continue to dazzle with their performances, with Camacho-Quinn winning the first Olympic gold medal in athletics for Puerto Rico at the Games.

On Monday, she exploded off the blocks to finish in 12.37 seconds despite hitting one hurdle, beating American world record holder Kendra Harrison who came in second with 12.52.

“At this point I was really running for the world record. I hit the hurdle, but everything happens for a reason. I came through with the gold. My first gold medal,” said Camacho-Quinn, who broke the Olympic record in her semi-final a day earlier.

‘INCREDIBLE JUMP’

In the men’s long jump, Tentoglou won in spectacular fashion as he leapt 8.41 metres in his final attempt to snatch the gold medal from Cuba’s Juan Miguel Echevarria.

Tentoglou was the world leader coming into Tokyo with an 8.60 metres leap at a domestic competition in May, but struggled to find his form and was outside the medals positions as he hit the runway for the final time.

“What an incredible competition. What an incredible jump, the last jump,” the Greek said after winning his country’s first ever gold for the long jump.

Dutchwoman Sifan Hassan staged a brilliant recovery https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/sports/athletics-hassan-confirms-quest-games-treble-tokyo-2021-08-01 after falling in her 1,500 metres heat, pushing hard to win and keep alive her dream of an unprecedented treble by progressing in the 1,500m event to add to her 5,000m and 10,000m competitions.

The World Cup-winning United States suffered a surprise 1-0 defeat by Canada women’s soccer tournament semi-finals, with Jessie Fleming grabbing the winner with a 75th minute penalty.

In cycling, China retained their Olympic women’s team sprint title by defeating Germany in the final as the track cycling programme got under way at the Izu Velodrome.

(Reporting by Reuters Olympics Team; Writing by David Dolan; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Ken Ferris)

Tulsa Race Massacre Victims’ Reinterment Of Exhumed Bodies Met With Protests

Tulsa Race Massacre Victims’ Reinterment Of Exhumed Bodies Met With Protests


An Oklahoma plan for the reinterment of the exhumed bodies of victims of the Tulsa Race Massacre was met with protests by last week.

According to the McAlester News-Capital, archaeologists and other Oklahoma officials planned a private ceremony to reinter the bodies that were exhumed as part of an investigation into the Tulsa Race Massacre. That ceremony took place on July 27. 

The reinterment came months after investigators exhumed the bodies from Oaklawn Cemetery to collect DNA evidence. In total, 19 bodies were reburied. 

Protesters gathered outside of the cemetery to voice their consternation over the reinterment of bodies. Several of them were angry that the bodies would not receive a proper re-burial. 

“This is totally disgusting and disrespectful that those are our family members and we’re outside the gate instead of inside that gate where they are,” said Celi Butler Davis. Davis said she is a descendant of one of the riot victims. 

Officials blocked access to the public for the reinterment ceremony. 

Another reason for the protests was concern that the forensic examination of the exhumed bodies was not enough and that a criminal investigation should have been the next step due to some of the injuries that were apparent in the bodies. This issue of criminal charges is something that state Rep. Regina Goodwin has been vocal about. 

Forensic anthropologist Phoebe Stubblefield acknowledged that one of the exhumed bodies did have a bullet hole through its skull and said that none of the remains had been confirmed victims of the Tulsa Race Massacre. Collected DNA has yet to be fully analyzed. 

Stubblefield also said that identification could take years, although the city plans to identify descendants of the riot victims and establish a memorial in the future. 

The riot occurred in 1921 after a white mob attacked the prosperous Black enclave of Greenwood following the arrest of Dick Rowland, a teen suspected of raping a white woman. The allegation was false, and Rowland was released from jail, but not before the mob decimated the neighborhood in Tulsa where Black economics had flourished. 

The survivors and descendants have fought for reparations throughout the years but have largely been ignored or offered impotent gestures such as a commission to consider reparations. 

The city plans to place temporary markers on the graves until permanent ones can be installed. It is also looking at two other cemeteries that may have Tulsa Race Massacre victim remains. 

 

New Film Sheds Light On Kendrick Johnson’s Mysterious Death, Jenifer Lewis Narrates

New Film Sheds Light On Kendrick Johnson’s Mysterious Death, Jenifer Lewis Narrates


The death of Kendrick Johnson and the unanswered questions surrounding it is getting new life in a documentary that was released on July 30. 

Blackfilm reported that the documentary entitled Finding Kendrick Johnson is the product of a four-year investigation into the baffling death of the high school athlete at his school in Georgia.

In January 2013, Johnson was found dead in a rolled-up gym mat in his school’s gymnasium. The state ruled his death an accident due to positional asphyxia from diving into a mat to grab his sneakers. However, what the state called an accident became a grave mystery after his family hired their own pathologist.

According to the Johnson family’s expert, Kendrick had suffered non-accidental blunt force trauma, which was the cause of his death. Furthermore, his organs were missing. His organs have never been found, and nobody knows who is responsible for them missing. 

All of these unanswered questions about Johnson’s death are explored in the film. 

Director Jason Pollock, who made the documentary Stranger Fruit about Michael Brown, believes it is beyond time for Johnson’s story to be told.

“The case of Kendrick Johnson is one of the most important in U.S. history. KJ deserves justice, and hopefully, our film will help his family get one step closer to that outcome,” Pollock said. 

In March, a local sheriff reopened Johnson’s case. The decision to do so came after the department received long-awaited documents from the Department of Justice that closed the case in 2016. 

Two of Johnson’s white classmates were considered persons of interest by the FBI. However, their father was an FBI agent who resigned after a raid on their home, searching for evidence for Johnson’s case. The classmates were never arrested. 

The film is being distributed by Gravitas Ventures and is in select theatres and on-demand. 

Henrietta Lacks’s Family Retains Benjamin Crump For Lawsuits Against Pharmaceutical Industry

Henrietta Lacks’s Family Retains Benjamin Crump For Lawsuits Against Pharmaceutical Industry


The family of Henrietta Lacks has retained popular civil rights attorney, Benjamin Crump, to represent them in a lawsuit against the pharmaceutical industry, reported BET. 

Lacks was diagnosed with cervical cancer and died at the age of 31. However, before her death, doctors at Johns Hopkins collected samples of her cells and turned them over to researchers. Because of this, medical advancements for the development of vaccines and treatments for major illnesses, such as AIDS and even COVID-19, have been made. Her cells were also the first cells to be successfully cloned. 

 Now, her family is demanding remuneration. 

Crump intends to get that compensation for Lacks’s family saying that the pharmaceutical industry made millions off of her “HeLa” cells. Working with lawyer Christopher Seeger, the team is investigating lawsuits into a possible 100 defendants. It is also possible that they will pursue litigation against Johns Hopkins Hospital. 

Crump said the way that Henrietta Lacks’s cells were taken without her consent and went on to propel both the medical and pharmaceutical industries is an example of the exploitation that Black people have long been subjected to.

Never was that more apparent than with the tragedy of how they exploited Henrietta Lacks,” he said.

Lacks’s family members had discussed legal action against the myriad companies who used her cells for years. On Thursday, they appeared at Greater Faith Baptist Church in North Baltimore with Crump to publicly endorse their decision to pursue the lawsuits. 

Seeger said that he plans to begin flailing the lawsuits on Oct. 4, the day that Henrietta Lacks died 70 years ago. 

Benjamin Crump has represented the families of George Floyd, Michael Brown, and other individuals who were victims of police brutality. Christopher Seeger is a trial attorney who has won billion-dollar lawsuits against Volkswagen and the pharmaceutical company responsible for the drug Vioxx. 

Henrietta Lacks would have turned 101 on Aug. 1. Her family, including her two eldest sons, is keeping her memory alive and gathered over the weekend to celebrate her birthday, wearing t-shirts that said, “Say Her Name.”


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