‘Your Black Card Is Revoked’: Naomi Osaka Faces Harsh Criticism Playing For Japan In Olympics

‘Your Black Card Is Revoked’: Naomi Osaka Faces Harsh Criticism Playing For Japan In Olympics


On Thursday, Netflix premiered a docuseries about award-winning tennis player Naomi Osaka. As with all celebrity documentaries, viewers were made privy to some of the uglier happenings that go on out of the public eye. For Osaka, it was apparently having her “Black card” revoked after she chose to play for Japan in the Olympics.

Osaka is biracial. Her mother is Japanese and her father is Haitian. She was born in Japan but raised in the United States. For some people, that meant that her loyalty should have been with the USA.

“I’ve been playing under the Japan flag since I was 14. It was never even a secret that I’m going to play for Japan for the Olympics,” Osaka said. 

Osaka’s mother, Tamaki, told The Wall Street Journal that playing for Japan was the natural choice because although her children were raised to know both of their racial heritages, they resonated more with the Japanese side.

“Quite simply, Naomi and her sister Mari have always felt Japanese, so that was our only rationale,” her mother said. 

Osaka revealed that people revoked her “Black card” but struggled with the logic of it and felt those individuals were confused about how Blackness transcends country of origin.

“I don’t know, I feel like people really don’t know the difference between nationality and race because there’s a lot of Black people in Brazil, but they’re Brazilian,” she said. She also noted that African-American is not the only presentation of Blackness.

Despite the backlash, her star keeps rising. Naomi Osaka is the first Asian player to rank No. 1 in tennis singles categories.

On July 12, a Barbie doll modeled after Osaka sold out within hours of its release. She has also begun working on a skincare line for ethnic skin tones called KINLÒ and opened a tennis workshop in Haiti. 

And she’s making the racket, slaying on the cover of Vogue Hong Kong with over-sized tennis racket earrings.

 

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As further proof that she still holds a “Black card”, Piers Morgan verbally attacked her after she exercised her agency to take care of herself and her mental health back in June. 

The three-part Netflix docuseries entitled, “Naomi Osaka,” is currently available and chronicles her life, struggles, and sacrifices to get to the top. 

Keyshia Cole’s Mother Dies From Drug Overdose On Her 61st Birthday

Keyshia Cole’s Mother Dies From Drug Overdose On Her 61st Birthday


The family of R&B singer Keyshia Cole has been left grieving after her mother Frankie Lons succumbed to her battle with drug addiction on her 61st birthday.

Cole’s family confirmed Frankie passed away from an overdose after decades of battling with addiction, TMZ reports. Cole’s brother Sam shared how Frankie overdosed at her Oakland home on Sunday. She was partying and celebrating her birthday when she apparently took drugs after relapsing on her journey to sobriety.

Frankie was best known for her appearances in Keyshia’s reality TV shows over the years and would be transparent about her substance abuse issues. Cole has shared her rough upbringing over the course of her career. She was given up for adoption by Frankie and her biological father, Virgil Hunter.

After being raised by family friends, Cole was able to reunite with her birth parents as an adult after she gained fame and success in music.

After becoming a fan favorite, Frankie landed her own spin-off series Frankie & Neffe, alongside Cole’s sister Neffeteria Pugh, Yahoo News reports.

In recent years, Sam and others would check on Frankie daily to help motivate her to stay clean. They would document the journey on television and social media.

Elite Noel, Cole’s sister, announced Frankie’s passing on Instagram, saying “Worse pain ever. To see my mama in a body bag on her birthday! My heart so fuc*in broke,” The Source reports.

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Another family member also announced Franki’s passing on social media saying, “happy birthday beautiful and rest in heaven.”

In 2018 Cole shared a transparent Instagram post about her mother’s relapse at the time.

“Every time my mom relapse, it breaks my heart more than it’s already been broken,” Cole shared. “I’m hoping, if any of u are dealing with a family member who’s battling with drug addiction, that you, yourself are learning how to cope with the struggle of it all. And all the pain it brings to see a loved one constantly relapsing.”

Cole’s family wants the world to remember Frankie as a loving mother who wanted nothing more than to have her children together despite their turbulent family history.

Colin Kaepernick To Release First Children’s Book About His Experience As A Transracial Adoptee

Colin Kaepernick To Release First Children’s Book About His Experience As A Transracial Adoptee


In 2022, the public can expect to hear more from Colin Kaepernick. The former NFL quarterback and Scholastic have announced a multi-book deal that will produce a set of children’s books dealing with topics of race, self-esteem and other social justice themes. 

The first book from the set is somewhat autobiographical. I Color Myself Different, a 40-page book for readers ages four through eight, explores Kaepernick’s own experience as a transracial adoptee. 

“This story is deeply personal to me, and inspired by real events in my life. I hope that it honors the courage and bravery of young people everywhere by encouraging them to live with authenticity and purpose,” said Kaepernick.

In his premier offering, Kaepernick highlights the first time he drew his White adoptive family with a yellow crayon and chose a brown crayon to draw himself. He was in kindergarten at the time and noted that that was when he first noticed differences, not only between himself and his family but the differences across the human race. 

“We knew instantly that we wanted to share his stories, which will be impactful messages of identity and belonging for Black and Brown children,” said Debra Dorfman, vice president and publisher, Scholastic Global Licensing, Brands & Media 

Kaepernick gained notoriety when in 2016 he began speaking out against unfettered police brutality toward Black people and knelt during the National Anthems at games. In the years subsequent to his initial outcry, he fought the NFL as it administratively ostracized him. 

In the midst of his growing activism, he created Kaepernick Publishing. The company’s site says it aims to give voice to writers with diverse views and voices and spans all genres. The imprint’s first book will be released in October and is titled, Abolition For The People: The Movement For A Future Without Policing And Prisons. A Kaepernick memoir is also planned. 

The set of children’s books, published through the Kaepernick Publishing and Scholastic partnership, will be multilingual, offered in print and electronic formats, and will make use of Black talent such as artist Eric Wilkerson for and Scholastic executive editor Andrea Davis Pinkney. 

I Color Myself Different is set for release on April 5. 

 

Oklahoma’s  ‘Most Wanted’ Woman Arrested, Asked For Reward Money On Tulsa Police Facebook Post

Oklahoma’s ‘Most Wanted’ Woman Arrested, Asked For Reward Money On Tulsa Police Facebook Post


An Oklahoma woman proved that common sense certainly isn’t common at all when the wanted woman decided to make a comment on a Facebook post about her and inadvertently helped cops capture her.

Lorraine Graves, who was wanted in connection with the deadly shooting and murder of Eric Graves, was arrested last week after she posted a comment on the Tulsa Police Department’s post looking for her after they named her the “Weekly Most Wanted.” It was an easy capture since she responded to the post by asking, “What’s where’s the reward money at.”

According to KFOR, police officers in Tulsa, Oklahoma, was able to make an arrest of an accessory to murder suspect because after they displayed their weekly most wanted post on its social media page, she actually responded to the post asking about the reward money.

Last week, the Tulsa Police Department posted on its Facebook page that they were searching for Graves, who they believe was involved in the killing of Eric Graves, who was shot and killed at the St. Thomas Square Apartments earlier this year. Police officials had already arrested two other suspects, Jayden Hopson and Gabriel Hopson for the killing of Eric Graves, but they were still actively looking for Lorraine Graves, who has been charged with accessory to murder.

The post was made on Wednesday and on Thursday afternoon, police detectives had arrested Lorraine Graves in north Tulsa near 36th Street N. and Garrison Avenue. Her bond has been set at $500,000.

Weekly Most Wanted arrested after commenting on our post about her
On Wednesday, we posted Lorraine Graves as the Weekly Most Wanted for Accessory to Murder in the homicide of Eric Graves earlier this year.
Shortly after that, Lorraine Graves started commenting on our post asking about reward money.
On 7/15/21 around 4:30 p.m., detectives with our Fugitive Warrants unit arrested Graves in north Tulsa near 36th St. N. and Garrison Ave.
Graves is charged with Accessory to Murder. Her bond is set at $500,000.
This is an arrest, not a conviction.”
Man Arrested After Attempted Kidnapping of 5-Year-Old In New York City

Man Arrested After Attempted Kidnapping of 5-Year-Old In New York City


An attempted kidnapping in New York City last week was caught on surveillance cameras, shocking residents.

One of the suspected kidnappers, 24-year-old James McGonagle, has been arrested and charged in the bizarre attempt of kidnapping a 5-year-old child right from the child’s mother. The suspects are also being charged with assaulting an officer while in custody.


According to New York’s ABC7,  McGonagle punched an NYPD officer in the face when the officer attempted to take his fingerprints while he was in custody inside Brookdale Hospital.

McGonagle was taken into custody last Friday for the attempted kidnapping of the boy in Queens, which occurred last Thursday. Police officers had originally charged him with attempted kidnapping, reckless endangerment, and acting in a manner injurious to a child. After the incident at the hospital, McGonagle was additionally charged with assaulting an officer while in custody.

The other suspect who is wanted in the incident has been identified as James’ father, also named James.

Diaz Lopez, the mother of the boy the McGonagles’ tried to kidnap, says she doesn’t know either man. “I don’t know why that happened. I didn’t see those people, ever.”

She was walking with her children, as they were going to visit her husband at work when McGonagle grabbed her son, Jacob.

“I said, ‘Oh my God my kids, oh my God my boy,” Lopez said.

The suspects drove off southbound on Hillside Avenue and then westbound on Jamaica Avenue.

“I don’t know why that happened. I didn’t see those people, ever,” Diaz Lopez said. “You have to do what’s necessary, no matter what,” Lopez said in Spanish. “The car was just parked there. I would never have imagined that a man would get out of the car and grab my son. You always have to be aware of your surroundings and not be on your phone.”

NFL Plans To Move The Needle On Systemic Racism By Playing Black National Anthem At 2021 Games

NFL Plans To Move The Needle On Systemic Racism By Playing Black National Anthem At 2021 Games


The National Football League, desiring to do its part to end systemic racism, has decided that all games played during its 2021 season will include the Black National Anthem before “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

First Office Sports first reported that in addition to field signage, helmet decals, and public service announcements, each game will come with a side of “Lift Every Voice And Sing,” in an effort to fulfill its 10-year, $250 million project to combat racism.

The Black National Anthem was written by James Weldon Johnson in 1900 and his brother, John Rosamond set it to music in 1905. The NAACP coined it the “Negro National Anthem” due to the song’s emotional pull toward freedom, hope and exhortation for Black people.

This decision, though impotent in the grand scheme of racial justice, is a bit of a leap for an organization that constructively expelled former quarterback Colin Kaepernick from the league after he expressed his views on systemic racism and knelt during the National Anthem before games.

Further, the NFL boasts zero Black owners, few Black general managers, and even their front office lacks a healthy Black presence. However, Black players make up nearly 60% of the league’s employees.

Thankfully, the league reached out to rapper and businessman, Jay-Z, to help them turn the corner on their lack of diversity and seeming indifference to social justice. The “Inspire Change” initiative instituted by the NFL has led to several non-profit organizations receiving grants and other noteworthy milestones such as 103 Op-Eds and letters written to local politicians and 153 meetings and events.

Of course, the NFL has received some backlash. Random white people who have much more audacity than money, such as Sean Hannity and Tomi Lahren took to Twitter to decry the decision.

We simply ask that the NFL select people who can actually sing.

Civil Rights Pioneer Gloria Richardson Dies At Age 99


Fearless civil rights trailblazer Gloria Richardson died peacefully in her sleep on July 15. 

She was 99-years old, the Associated Press (AP) reported. One of the most iconic images of the civil rights movement showed an unbothered Richardson pushing a National Guard soldier’s bayonet away from her. 

Richardson was a pillar in the Maryland Eastern Shore area and a leader and organizer of the Cambridge Movement. The Cambridge Nonviolent Action Committee (CNAC) was established in 1962. The organization fought to end segregation and racism inside the city. Richardson was instrumental in the federal government taking action.

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Although the woman was a fearless activist, she didn’t seek the limelight. Her granddaughter, Tya Young, told the publication, “She did it because it needed to be done, and she was born a leader.”

“The Struggle is Eternal: Gloria Richardson and Black Liberation” author Joseph R. Fitzgerald expressed to AP that Richardson was instrumental in building the foundation of the Black Power Movement.

“I say that the Cambridge Movement was the soil in which Richardson planted a seed of Black power and nurtured its growth. Everything that the Black Lives Matter movement is working at right now is a continuation of what the Cambridge Movement was doing,” he said.

The Baltimore native also believed that Black people should defend themselves outside of peaceful protesting. 

Richardson’s admission into Howard University at age 16 cemented her civil rights work in Washington D.C. It was the woman’s diligence that allowed her to meet with then-U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy to negotiate the “Treaty of Cambridge.” 

The treaty spawned a change for the Black residents of Cambridge.

Her activism influenced young Black women during the 1960s and 70s.

Richardson is survived by her daughters, Donna Orange and Tamara Richardson, and granddaughters Young and Michelle Price.

Damon Dash Files Lawsuit Accusing Jay-Z of Wrongfully Taking Streaming Rights to ‘Reasonable Doubt’ Album

Damon Dash Files Lawsuit Accusing Jay-Z of Wrongfully Taking Streaming Rights to ‘Reasonable Doubt’ Album


It’s safe to say that there’s “reasonable doubt” that these two former partners will be doing any business any time soon or ever again!

According to The Hollywood Reporter, two-thirds of the trio who started and operated Roc-A-Fella Records, Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter, and Damon “Dame” Dash, are not seeing eye-to-eye as Dame Dash is accusing his former partner of wrongfully taking streaming rights to the first Roc-A-Fella album released by Jay-Z, “Reasonable Doubt” for himself.

According to the legal documents filed by Dame Dash, Jay-Z, without proper authority, has transferred the streaming rights to the album, “Reasonable Doubt” from Roc-A-Fella to his company, S. Carter Enterprises LLC. Dame Dash is claiming unjust enrichment, breach of fiduciary duty, and other claims. In this suit, the executive is seeking at least $1 million in damages.

“This is nothing more than a frivolous stunt,” Alex Spiro, a lawyer for Roc-A-Fella and Jay-Z, said in a statement to Rolling Stone.

This lawsuit comes on the heels of a legal action that Jay-Z filed recently due to an auction of an NFT (non-fungible token) that was being proposed by Dame Dash regarding the same album, the iconic “Reasonable Doubt” album that set off the billionaire’s career.

According to an earlier report on The Hollywood Reporter, based on the lawsuit filed by Jay-Z’s attorney, Dame Dash wanted to sell off the copyright to the “Reasonable Doubt” album. A judge stopped the sale from happening, at least temporarily. But Dame Dash had stated that he had planned just a sale of his one-third share in Roc-A-Fella Records. Attorneys for Jay-Z based their lawsuit when investor platform SuperFarm made this announcement: “SuperFarm is proud to announce, in collaboration with Damon Dash, the auction of Damon‘s ownership of the copyright to Jay-Z’s first album “Reasonable Doubt.” This marks a new milestone in the history of NFT’s, entitling the new owner to future revenue generated by the unique asset.”

Black Dolla Indy Group Highlights Black Businesses In Cities Across U.S.


More can be accomplished on Facebook than getting entangled in keyboard drama and gossip wars.

Carmen Davenport—who is the founder of the private the Black Dolla Indy (BDI) Facebook group—knows the value of using the “Book” to network with a productive purpose. She began her popular group in 2020. It now boasts more than “37,000 members” who are able to seek Black-owned services or businesses, according to the Indianapolis Recorder. They range from “hair care, household projects, therapists, nail technicians and even bounce house services, according to the article.

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BDI was originally created as “a social networking platform” for “African American residents living in the Indianapolis area,” according to details provided on Black Dolla Indy’s website. However, usage has expanded. Individuals who are located in “Atlanta, Florida, Chicago and Ohio” are also members.

“It’s a consumer page with Black businesses at the forefront,” Davenport said in the Indianapolis Recorder interview. “If you’re looking for plumbing, in no time you’re gonna have over 10 referrals. Black Dolla is the one-stop shop for everything.”

Helping Consumers Stay Connected And Find Black-owned Businesses

Target goals are specific though. Helping the consumer find the best Black-owned businesses Indy has to offer, encouraging opportunities for improved business practices, bringing consumers and businesses together to create the perfect Black experience, expanding circulation of the Black dollar within the Black community, developing an educational program to aid business readiness and offer scholarships to BDI’s members for attending business enrichment classes are core goals, per Black Dolla Indy LLC’s website.

Group admins assist Davenport with requests to join the private group which was started because Davenport wanted to highlight Black businesses all year long, while staying connected “with other Black businesses,” according to the Indianapolis Recorder.

How effective is using the Black networking group?

“We have received 90% of our customer base from Black Dolla,” Brittani Buford-Towner, owner of Maxx Beauty Supply, told the Indianapolis Recorder. “If it wasn’t for them, I don’t know how we would’ve gotten the word out so fast.”

Click here to find the link to the private Facebook group.

Ask A Celebrity: Alexa’s Got New Voices, Including Shaquille O’Neal’s Baritone Vocals

Ask A Celebrity: Alexa’s Got New Voices, Including Shaquille O’Neal’s Baritone Vocals


You may be sick of how Amazon‘s Alexa sounds when commanding the device to look something up for you or to find your favorite movie or television show. If that’s the case, then you’re not alone.

Amazon has decided to mix things up a bit and introduce two familiar voices that you can hear and speak to.

Amazon has announced that it is adding two alternate voices to your Alexa experience. Pro Basketball Hall of Famer and current TNT sports announcer Shaquille O’Neal, as well as movie star and television personality, Melissa McCarthy have “joined” the voice of Alexa in your artificial intelligence experience. Oh, you can still utilize the voice of the first celebrity who “lent” his voice to the Alexa experience, Samuel L. Jackson.

“It’s on! Shaq is in the house to make your speakers bounce. Boomshakalaka!” said Shaquille O’Neal. “I’m so excited to be a part of the Alexa experience.”

“That’s right folks, get ready for the vocal stylings of this nasal Midwestern gal!” said Melissa McCarthy. “I am so excited to join the Alexa family. It’s been such a fun experience working on this project. I hope you all enjoy all my dad jokes! Fun fact — if you hear a slide whistle, it’s my personal one that I brought with me to the recording studio!”

These two voices will not appear in your Alexa experience without a price!

The new celebrity personalities are available for purchase for $4.99 each.

“Customers have had a lot of fun with the Samuel L. Jackson experience on Alexa, and when customers love something, we look for ways to give them more of it,” said Toni Reid, vice president of Alexa Experience & Echo Devices in a written statement. “We’re thrilled to add two new celebrity personalities to Alexa and had a great time working with Shaquille O’Neal and Melissa McCarthy on this project. We can’t wait to see what customers think.”

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