Teen Football Player Collapses, Dies During Football Practice

Teen Football Player Collapses, Dies During Football Practice


A teen in Macon, Georgia, tragically died after collapsing during football practice. 

Joshua Ivory Jr., 15, was a team member at Southwest High School was practicing before he collapsed at around 6 p.m. on Monday, reported 13WMAZ. 

The teen was transported to the hospital and pronounced dead later in the evening. 

Monday was the first day of practice for teams across the state of Georgia. The protocol in place is for players to practice in helmets and shorts for five days in order to get used to the heat before they can practice in full gear. It was about 97 degrees in Macon on Monday. 

Deaths among teen football players, while not an everyday occurrence, still happen too often. Many states do not have an adequate heat safety training plan in place. With temperatures rising above average year after year, the risk of heat deaths among athletes also rises. 

Ivory’s coach noticed that he was in distress and immediately sprang into action, according to the county Athletic Director Barney Hester. He said that emergency services arrived within five or six minutes to assist the teen and that the coaching staff did a good job handling the situation. 

Ivory’s principal, A. Bernard Young, issued a statement in honor of the young man who seemed to have a lot of promise and would have turned 16 in the fall.

Joshua was a wonderful young man full of promise and zeal. He had an infectious smile and a very kind heart. He enjoyed sports and spending time with his family. Joshua’s personality made it easy for him to make a great impression and huge impact on his teammates, coaches, and the entire Southwest family. He was one of a kind. A great example of a Southwest High School Patriot,” he wrote. 

Counselors have been made available to students and practice was canceled on Tuesday to review how practices will be conducted in the future. 

‘Let Me Run!’, 6-Year-Old Detroit Girl Dresses Up Like Sha’Carri Richardson

‘Let Me Run!’, 6-Year-Old Detroit Girl Dresses Up Like Sha’Carri Richardson


A 6-year-old girl out of Detroit is making media rounds for her impersonation of U.S. track and field star Sha’Carri Richardson.

Mother Kenya White took to Facebook on Sunday to share an adorable video of her young daughter Rosie drawing inspiration from Richardson as she sprints down the street before introducing herself as the star athlete.

“I am Sha’Carri Richardson. I am an American track field sprinter,” Rosie says with pride after sprinting towards the camera. “I’m one of the fastest women in the world. I even qualify for the Summer Olympics. I’m sure you heard about that,” she adds.

The young girl closes the video by asking for her supporters to “pray for me like my grandma did when I qualified for the Summer Olympics.”

“Let me run!” Rosie shouts before running off into the distance.

When sharing the wholesome moment of her daughter on Facebook, White made reference to a phrase Richardson has used to describe herself.

“Guess who was sprinting through the streets of Detroit, Michigan. It’s “THAT GIRL!!!” White captioned the video.

Richardson isn’t the first prominent Black woman that her daughter has dressed up as. It’s something she says her daughter does quite often, Yahoo News reports.

“Rosie is known to make videos that portray famous black women. She saw She’Carri Richardson on the news and asked could we do her,” White told Storyful.

“I didn’t think twice before I said yes because she’s current news and has a distinctive look. Rosie nailed this impression as she does every time but this time she went in full character. I even noticed that Rosie is fast at running.”

There has been an ongoing debate over Richardson being suspended from the Tokyo Olympics after testing positive for marijuana. Amid the backlash over the decision, World Athletics President Sebastian Coe said that rules around the use of cannabis by athletes “should be” reviewed, Reuters reports.

Chicago’s Last Queer Bar Owned By Two Lesbians, Celebrates Black Queer Culture


Renauda Riddle and Angela Barnes wanted to rescue a Chicago-based bar called Joie De Vine, so they made it happen by becoming the new owners of it, according to NBC News.

The last bar in town for queer women was transformed into Nobody’s Darling — which is an inclusive cocktail bar. Bisexual or nonbinary individuals who would like to feel at home while grabbing a drink are not refused.

http://

The establishment which is located at 1744 W. Balmoral Avenue in Chicago began serving clientele in May. The second Black-owned gay bar in Chi-town’s name was inspired by one of Barnes’ poetic favorites called “Be Nobody’s Darling” by Alice Walker. Some of the cocktail bar’s alcoholic beverages are inspired by Black writers, activists and thinkers who embrace being queer, like the owners.

“We put our love into this bar, and people feel it,” Riddle said, according to NBC News. “The energy as soon as you walk in the door, people say they feel that energy. It’s a beautiful space.”

Riddle and Barnes aspire to make Nobody’s Darling a leading establishment to grab a cocktail in Chi-town. Their unique business fills a void which is evident in other U.S. cities. Lesbians who want to have a place to socialize and enjoy adult beverages do not always have the luxury.

When Rachel and Sheila Smallman made attempts to locate a lesbian-friendly bar in 2016 while traveling, they discovered that most establishments were “cisgender gay men” friendly, PBS News Hour reported.

Customers and workers in a gay bar located in New Orleans made their opinions known by yelling for them to leave because they were female. The experience led them to open Herz—which is the sole lesbian-owned bar located in Mobile, Ala., according to the article.

Riddle and Barnes are among revolutionary business owners who want their establishment to illustrate the idea that more “nightlife spaces catering to queer women” can be opened.

“I feel really strongly that this should be an inspiration for more women-centered or lesbian bars to open back up,” Barnes said to NBC News. “It’s just so important, and … very exciting.”

Renauda Riddle and Angela Barnes
Renauda Riddle and Angela Barnes (Facebook Nobody’s Darlings)

 

Sephora Updates DEI Plan, Adds More Black-owned Beauty Brands, Takes Cue From Its Owners On Marketing

Sephora Updates DEI Plan, Adds More Black-owned Beauty Brands, Takes Cue From Its Owners On Marketing


Sephora is rolling out new measures to increase the amount of Black-owned beauty brands in its stores, according to a progress report about diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, shared with BLACK ENTERPRISE.

Previously, BLACK ENTERPRISE reported how beauty companies like Sephora were working to foster more diversity and inclusion initiatives amidst negative criticisms from Black employees. Now the company says it is on track with reaching its goals to diversify its retail stores. At the time of the 15 Percent Pledge in June 2020, Sephora carried eight Black-owned brands, now it says it will add more than double their assortment of Black beauty brands overall, including achieving the 15% benchmark in prestige haircare by year’s end.

“The in-store experience depends on where brands are in their lifecycle,” said, Deborah Yeh, executive vice president and chief marketing officer at Sephora Americas.

Yeh said the retailer is learning from the founders of the Black-owned brands on how to market the merchandise.

“Many of them will appear in Next Big Thing, which is where we put all of our hot new brand launches, as well as in the main gondola areas. We have developed a Black-owned at Sephora seal they can choose to use, but it is optional to the founders as to how they want to tell their story. For consumers, we have a landing page and a number of digital resources to find those products. But within the in-store environment, it is still at the discretion of the brand founders. We believe it’s their right to choose how they want to represent themselves.”

Within the Action Plan share-out in January, Sephora pledged to establish new guidelines to ensure their campaigns, social media and marketing content included a diverse array of backgrounds, identities, ages, and body types.

Black-owned brands now comprise 15% of Sephora’s total social and digital content, up from 11% in June 2020. In addition, in 2021 Sephora implemented dedicated quarterly campaigns to drive awareness of Black-owned brands including a sephora.com landing page.

Sephora has also broadened its cultural appeal by launching campaigns for holidays such as Lunar New Year and Eid al-Fitr. It has included double the number of Spanish-language YouTube videos and added closed-captioning to all content shared via Sephora’s Instagram TV.

“These are things you can push forward into pretty quickly, and then there are other places where we are laddering into pipelines and building training and transitioning,” Yeh said. “Those places will have a massive impact, but we’re going to take a little bit longer.”

Since June of last year, Sephora has grown Black or African American leadership across its stores, distribution centers and corporate offices from 6% to 9%. The Black store Directors representation increased from 6 to 10%, according to the company.

“We’ve been able to make a huge amount of progress in the retail areas of the business, but quite frankly, we’re looking at our stores, distribution centers and corporate offices as places where we can further increase diversity across our work force,” Yeh said.

A Mother Who Lost Her Daughter to COVID-19 Urges Others to Get Vaccinated

A Mother Who Lost Her Daughter to COVID-19 Urges Others to Get Vaccinated


A mother named Kimberle Jones is living a nightmare, grieving the loss of her unvaccinated daughter, Erica Thompson.

Thompson was a beloved 37-year-old wife and mother of three sons, ages 8, 11, and 17 in St. Louis, Missouri, who spent some 50 days in the hospital after getting diagnosed with the coronavirus back in May. Thompson died of COVID-19 on July 4 and now her mother is saddled with remorse, saying the death could have been prevented if her daughter had gotten a COVID-19 shot.

“Had my daughter been vaccinated, I think she would still be here with us,” Jones told ABC News.

Thompson suffered from asthma and tested positive for COVID-19 in May after experiencing pains in her chest. After 50 long days of enduring infections, blood clots, resistance to treatment, and life support, Thomas died, leaving loved ones disappointed and in despite her belief.

Now, Jones is pushing the message for others to get vaccinated, because she believes that her daughter would be alive if the woman had taken the recommended step to protect herself.

http://

 

“Don’t be selfish. Get vaccinated because it’s not only showing you love yourself, you love your community … your neighbors, your employers, your co-workers,” Jones told ABC News.

Jones, who is vaccinated, was forced to endure funeral preparations for her daughter’s final day. She does not want her tears to fall in vain.

“That’s my prayer. I want everybody to get vaccinated. And especially African Americans,” she said to ABC News. “Use this as a way to help others.”

Although some Americans remain minimally concerned about COVID-19 posing life-threatening risks, a forthcoming surge could be on the way, according to CBS News.

“The Delta variant is highly contagious, yet “just 45% of Americans are fully vaccinated and only 16 states have fully vaccinated more than half of their populations,” CBS News reported.

Changes regarding the CDC’s recommendations of some fully vaccinated people not needing to mask up indoors could change, in addition to fully vaccinated pupils and educators being able to go mask free, according to NPR.

‘Barbershop Medicine’ Sits Down To Kick It With Dr. Anthony Fauci And Ask Pressing Questions Black Folks Want to Know

‘Barbershop Medicine’ Sits Down To Kick It With Dr. Anthony Fauci And Ask Pressing Questions Black Folks Want to Know


YouTube Originals kicked off a special week of programming centered on health including an exclusive COVID-19 Q&A with Dr. Anthony Fauci“Barbershop Medicine” from the #YouTubeBlack Voices Fund and season two of Emmy-nominated series “Glad You Asked.”

“Barbershop Medicine’ allows distrust, health equity and healthcare disparities to be discussed freely in a place we trust.  In some instances, we offer stories most of us never knew about American history and healthcare in the Black and Brown community,” said Dr. Jamie Rutland.

“Sometimes, the source matters — especially for communities that bear the major burden of illness, but historically haven’t had a reason to trust the healthcare system. As both a product of those communities and a physician, I understand that tug-of-war. We are the bridge between the health challenges they currently face, and the healthy lives they could lead,” said Dr. Italo Brown.

Launched on July 27 on the American Public Health Association (APHA) YouTube Channel, “Barbershop Medicine’s” Dr. Italo Brown and Dr. Jamie Rutland hosts an exclusive COVID-19 Q&A with guest Dr. Anthony Fauci to continue engaging audiences on the importance of the COVID-19 vaccine while also addressing vaccine hesitancy in Black and Brown communities.

On Thursday, July 29, YouTube Originals will launch “Barbershop Medicine” — a new special from the #YouTubeBlack Voices Fund in partnership with MACRO Television Studios serving to inform the public about mistrust surrounding the medical community, why COVID-19 has impacted the Black and Brown community at astonishingly high rates, and reduce hesitancy around the vaccine. In this special, a local barber invites our medical experts — Dr. Italo Brown and Dr. Jamie Rutland — to join unfiltered conversations happening with local patrons and celebrity guests, including musical guest Masego. “Barbershop Medicine” aims to cultivate dialogue and an open platform for common questions about the community’s health conditions and concerns, provide insight and clarity, and debunk any myths.

“These latest YouTube Originals projects centered around educating the public about their health are helping to create an honest dialogue about how we can improve the wellness of our Black and Brown communities,” says Dr. Garth Graham, YouTube’s Global Head of Healthcare and Public Health Partnerships. “We’re excited to see the positive impact these Originals have and are thankful to our partners for their incredible work to bring these to life.”

These projects join the previously announced second season of “Glad You Asked,” premiering premieres Wednesday, July 28, on the Vox YouTube Channel. The Emmy-nominated series is an ensemble-led exploration of topics driven by our curiosity about the world around us. Using Vox’s signature explainer format, the next five episodes for season two examine a broad range of timely topics such as, Do I want kids?Why can’t we sleep?Is city noise making us sick?Is therapy for everyone?, and How should doctors consider race? Bringing a number of diverse and varied backgrounds together, this season features new perspectives from five inquisitive hosts and the world’s foremost experts to offer an experiential journey that empowers audiences to better understand their world.

In Emotional Testimony, Black Capitol Police Officer Says Jan. 6 Rioters Used N-word Against Him

In Emotional Testimony, Black Capitol Police Officer Says Jan. 6 Rioters Used N-word Against Him


A Black Capitol police officer recalled the racism he experienced at the hands of an angry pro-Trump mob during the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Officer Harry Dunn testified Tuesday that he and other Black officers were called racial slurs by angry rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol in protest against Joe Biden being voted into office, Politico reports. Dunn says the n-word came after he felt prompted to admit that he voted for Biden.

“I do my best to keep politics out of my job, but in this circumstance, I responded: ‘Well I voted for Joe Biden. Does my vote not count? Am I nobody?’” Dunn told the House’s select committee.

Dunn recalled his response, leading a woman “in a pink MAGA shirt” to persuade other pro-Trumpers in the crowd to hurl the n-word at the Black officer.

“You hear that guys? This n—– voted for Joe Biden” Dunn recalled the woman saying. “No one had ever, ever called me a n—– while wearing the uniform of a Capitol Police officer,” he added.

He said about 20 others started to berate him with more racial epithets, NPR reports.

“Boo! F****** n*****!” Dunn grimly recalled.

The officer noted he wasn’t alone in the racism he experienced. He shared accounts from other Black officers who were also called racial slurs.

“Put your gun down, and we’ll show you what kind of n***** you really are!” Dunn said.

He recalled later that afternoon after the rioters had cleared when he sat on the bench and became emotional in front of his colleagues.

“‘How the [expletive] can something like this happen?! Is this America?” Dunn recalled saying. “I began sobbing, and officers came over to console me.”

Dunn says the experience has left him seeking therapy and peer-support services. He encouraged other Capitol officers to do the same.

“There is absolutely nothing wrong with seeking professional counseling,” Dunn said. “What we all went through that day was traumatic, and if you are hurting, please take advantage of the counseling services that are available to us.”

When asked about the reason the rioters were enraged, Dunn credited it to the state of the country after four years of a Trump reign.

“Frankly, I guess it is America,” he said. “It shouldn’t be. But I guess that’s the way things are. I don’t condone it. I don’t like it. … We [the testifying officers] represent the good side of America, human decency. We appeal to the good in people.”

Chicago Woman Dies in Police Shootout After Getting Upset Over Drive-Thru Being Closed

Chicago Woman Dies in Police Shootout After Getting Upset Over Drive-Thru Being Closed


A woman in Chicago lost her life after a shootout with police because she reportedly got upset over a restaurant drive-thru being closed.

Police responded to Baba’s restaurant around 1 a.m. on Tuesday over reports of an armed woman causing a scene over the restaurant being closed, WGN-TV reports.

“She wanted service, even though they were closed. … She appeared to be very upset that she couldn’t receive service,” village spokesman Sean Howard told the Associated Press.

Police reports say they asked the 19-year-old woman and the man sitting in the passenger seat to get out of their vehicle. The man complied, but the woman reportedly did not.

After attempting to flee the scene, the woman allegedly drove off with one officer holding on after he tried to remove her car keys. That officer was injured after being dragged for at least a block.

He was halfway in the vehicle trying to remove her. That’s when she took off,” Howard said.

One officer struck the woman three times while she continued to drag the officer attached to the car. The woman’s car also crashed into a bike shop and damaged the front entrance. The owner of the shop lives upstairs and described the moment he felt the impact of the crash.

“It shook the house. I was surprised to see this much damage,” the owner said.

“The damage is pretty bad,” said Cameron Williams, manager of Accurate Board-Up and Glass, Inc. “She took out a couple of beams. Steal beams. There’s over $100,000 worth of damage in there.”

The woman died on the scene while the officers were hospitalized with the one who was dragged being “in very, very serious” condition, Howard said. The Cook County medical examiner’s office identified the woman as 19-year-old Alexis C. Wilson, Chicago Sun-Times reports.

“This was unfortunate,” Howard said.

A Black Entrepreneur Seized Rare Opportunity And Raised Venture Capital, Started An Online News Outlet For Women


Sharmadean Reid is a London-based entrepreneur who discovered that a membership-based business model and the right target audience can offer a winning combination.

Reid started The Stack World, an online news publication that works to help female entrepreneurs level up their businesses in the area of beauty, business, culture, society, and wellness, according to Business Insider.

Also, Stack members enjoy the perks of exclusive access to virtual, curated happenings. It is also an online destination that reports on topics that interest females while including business and finance-related content, Business Insider reported.

Despite her success, Reid is just one of ten UK-based Black women entrepreneurs in the last ten years who acquired venture capital.

 

http://

Reid told the publication that despite an uptick in small business investments, a small portion of capital is secured by the UK’s women of color. Despite this, the 37-year-old was able to collect nearly $5.5 million in Index Venture’s funding round for another business BeautyStack, which she embarked on in 2017. The booking platform allowed 2,000 beauty professionals to link up with 20,000 clients, but the pandemic interrupted Reid’s business model. Lockdowns caused many beauty businesses to shut down. In response, Reid started The Stack World, after she decided to pivot from a beauty focused-business.

“It was coming to terms with how that felt as a leader — to let go of something you were so obsessed with,” Reid said to Business Insider. “I had to evolve and do something different.”

Instead of throwing in the towel, Reid stretched to make another leap of faith through launching The Stack World. The discovery of her niche has led to The Stack World attracting more than 1,000 members who invest in paid memberships, since it was launched. Additionally, over the last three months, business section visitors soared to the 90% mark. Two-hundred hosted events 200 have been held as growth evolves.

 

http://

 

Although The Stack World emerged because of lockdowns during the pandemic, Reid’s flexibility to  reassesses previous business model proved to be fruitful.

“Coming up with the product is only half the work,” Reid told Business Insider. “The most important thing is to think about customer acquisition.”

 

Simone Biles Says Gymnastics Not Everything, ‘We Also Have To Focus On Ourselves’


By Elaine Lies and Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber

TOKYO (Reuters) -In the end, Simone Biles decided to pull out of the Tokyo 2020 team gymnastics finals on Tuesday because things just did not feel right after her vault, saying mental health is more important than sports.

Biles, who wrote on her Instagram just a day before about feeling the weight of the world on her shoulders, decided that rather than risk injury – and a medal for the rest of the team – she needed to just stop.

“It’s like fighting all those demons and coming out here. I have to put my pride aside. I have to do it for the team,” she told reporters after the team competition, in which her teammates stepped up and took silver, one member only having a brief time to warm up before her routine.

“And then at the end of the day, it’s like ‘you know what, I have to do what is right for me and focus on my mental health and not jeopardize my health and my well-being,'” she said.

Biles, considered by many to be the greatest female gymnast of all time, kept open the possibility of still competing in Tokyo, but said she would take it a day at a time. Individual all-around and apparatus competitions still remain.

By stepping back, and speaking up about it, Biles joins Japanese tennis star Naomi Osaka, who earlier this year dropped out of the French Open, citing the need to prioritize her mental health over taking part in mandatory news conferences after she was fined for not appearing.

Osaka lost in tennis earlier on Tuesday and said she too had felt the weight of expectations. She was the final torch bearer to light the Olympic cauldron at Friday’s opening ceremony.

“I definitely feel like there was a lot of pressure, this time around,” Osaka said. “I think it’s maybe because I haven’t played in an Olympics before and for the first one to be here was a bit much.”

“But I think I’m glad with how I played… with taking that break that I had. I’ve taken long breaks before and I’ve managed to do well,” Osaka said.

FEELING ‘LOST’

After the vault, Biles had a hasty conference with her team at the side of the runway, looking upset, before walking off the floor with her bag. She reappeared in her warm-up suit, watched her teammates snag silver, and even clowned around dancing with fellow teammate Jordan Chiles.

But later she spoke of feeling “lost” after the vault and deciding that she needed to “call it,” stressing that she made the decision and not her coaches.

Prior to the Olympics, Biles said, she had been going through some things and using therapy and medicines to cope. But after coming into the Games, stresses began to build up.

Especially hard was the sense she was no longer doing gymnastics for herself, but for the rest of the world.

“It just sucks when you are fighting with your own head. You want to do it for yourself but you’re just too worried about what everybody else is going to say, think, the internet,” she said.

By turns calm, philosophical and even joking with her teammates, Biles did choke back tears at one point.

“I just don’t trust myself as much as I used to. I don’t know if it’s age, I’m a little bit more nervous when I do gymnastics. I feel like I’m also not having as much fun,” added the 24-year-old, owner of four Olympic gold medals, one silver and one bronze.

“I know that this Olympic Games I want it to be for myself,” she said, tearing up. “I came in and it felt like I was still doing it for other people, so that just hurts my heart that doing what I love has been kind of taken away from me to please other people.”

Robert Andrews, a mental training expert who worked with Biles for about four years from March 2013, told Reuters he suspected stress played a large factor in Tuesday’s turn of events.

“Gymnastics probably more than any other sport … requires laser, pinpoint focus,” said Andrews. “Being a global presence, the greatest of all time, all that starts creating interference.”

Biles cited Osaka as an inspiration and said she thought it was good to be talking about mental health in sports.

“We also have to focus on ourselves because at the end of the day, we’re human too. We have to protect our mind and our body rather than just go out there and do what the world wants us to do.”

(Additional reporting by Amy Tennery, Karen Braun and Leela deKretser, Writing by Elaine Lies; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

×