Ye, Kanye West, Kamala Harris, Trump

Ye Banned From U.K. Over Past Antisemitic Remarks

UK officials thwarted Ye's controversial headlining slot by refusing his entry.


Ye has been banned from entering the United Kingdom to perform as a festival headliner.

The Associated Press reported that Ye’s entrance into the European country was denied over his past antisemitic remarks. Before the legal issue, Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, was scheduled to perform at the Wireless Festival this July. He also recently released a new project, “Bully,” which was pushed amid Ye’s reformed spotlight.

However, news that he had been barred from entry left the festival without its headliner. With just months before the festival’s scheduled programming, Wireless organizers confirmed that Ye’s visa had been denied, prompting them to cancel the festival.

The BBC detailed that UK officials refused Ye’s entry April 7 because it would not be “conducive to the public good.” The country’s Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, also confirmed Ye’s denied authorization in a post on X.

“Kanye West should never have been invited to headline Wireless,” wrote the elected official. “This government stands firmly with the Jewish community, and we will not stop in our fight to confront and defeat the poison of antisemitism.”

However, news of his anticipated performance had already sparked backlash across the country.

Ye’s now-axed performance in front of 150,000 attendees at London’s Finsbury Park drew major criticism. The controversial rapper previously promoted antisemitic ideals through his commentary and songs, including one track titled “Heil Hitler” with accompanying t-shirts featuring a swastika.

Ye has since apologized for his antisemitic remarks. He released a public apology to the Jewish community in January as he hopes to turn over a new leaf. Amid the pushback to his return to music, Ye offered to speak with the UK Jewish community “to listen” to their concerns about his past behavior.

“I know words aren’t enough — I’ll have to show change through my actions,” he said. “If you’re open, I’m here.”

However, a prominent UK-based Jewish organization agreed to only meet with Ye if he pulled out of the festival.

“The Jewish community will want to see a genuine remorse and change before believing that the appropriate place to test this sincerity is on the main stage at the Wireless Festival,” expressed Phil Rosenberg, president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews.

Despite their request, Ye planned to proceed with the headliner slot until the government’s intervention. The festival’s organizer also upheld their stance to include the infamous artist. The statement emphasized that his platform would focus only on his beloved music catalog, not on his past opinions.

“We are not giving him a platform to extol opinion of whatever nature, only to perform the songs that are currently played on the radio stations in our country and the streaming platforms in our country and listened to and enjoyed by millions,” shared Festival Republic’s managing director, Melvin Benn, in a statement.

Despite his international disgrace, Ye has reclaimed the stage in the United States, recently performing at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.

RELATED CONTENT: Ye’s Scheduled Appearance At London Festival Raises Concern

Jake Paul

Jake Paul Considers Blackface In Response To Druski’s Conservative Women Skit, ‘We Should Make Fun Of Each Other’

Jake Paul admits to considering blackface in response to Druski's controversial conservative white women skit.


Jake Paul is facing backlash after suggesting he might appear in blackface in response to a recent Druski skit in which the comedian portrayed a white conservative woman.

The YouTuber-turned-boxer recently joined Theo Von on his “This Past Weekend” podcast, where he voiced support for Druski’s latest skit and criticized the backlash from Republicans who found the video offensive.

“Honestly, it’s fu–ing hilarious. I loved it,” Paul admitted. “I’m obviously Republican, and all the Republicans being mad about this sh-t is like a fu–ing L for Republicans because this is fu–ing hilarious. And even though it’s fu–ing dark and twisted, this is what comedy fu–ing is—that we are fu–ing humans. Let’s make fun of ourselves, and there’s truth in this. An extreme truth, and people weren’t ready for that.”

Paul said he enjoyed Druski’s skit so much that he has even been reaching out to makeup artists for a response video.

“I want to ask you something because I’ve been, over the last couple of days, calling makeup artists, and I was going to do a response to this [Druski’s video] and like go and do like the full on,” Paul said in a clip shared online.

“Darker?” Von asked, and Paul confirmed that was exactly what he had in mind.

“And do it and just do it back, because why not?” Paul said. “Like, are we on the same playing field?”

When Von suggested the bit would need “some Black support”—like involving Druski or Charles Barkley—to land properly, Paul pushed back, arguing that relying on that would be a cop-out.

“That’s pu–ying out,” Paul insisted. “Doesn’t that make us more prejudiced? … That makes us [prejudiced] if we have to partner with someone. Duski just dropped this.”

He continued, “We should fu–ing make fun of each other. And I don’t see in color, I see in truth and comedy. So like, what are we talking about? What era are we living in?”

Paul’s comments quickly ignited debate online, with some supporting his idea as a response to Druski’s skits, while others pushed back, arguing that any use of blackface is inherently racist and reflects a need for greater understanding of its history.

“And yes, that will be racist. The fact people don’t understand why blackface is bad, and different from what Druski did, is proof of our poor education system and racism,” one X user wrote.

“Fake a– victims yo. They should try slavery on for size too,” another user quipped.

RELATED CONTENT: Anthony Joshua Set to Lose $66M Despite Knocking Out Jake Paul

beer, craft beef, Black Woman-owned Brewery, Minnesota, brewer

Have A Cold Brew At A Black-Owned Brewery For National Beer Day

National Beer Day pays homage to the most-drunk alcohol beverage worldwide.


National Beer Day is upon us and what better way than to celebrate with Black brewers.

BLACK ENTERPRISE is focusing on modern industry access and ownership. Namely, a handful of brewers and beer brands that operate between Atlanta and Los Angeles, creating beer while simultaneously establishing diversity in taste, transforming industry, and broadening craft beer participation.

The beer industry’s growth continues through these brands that demonstrate that Black ownership in brewing remains vital to both the cultural development and the industry’s future prospects.

Atlantucky Brewing (Atlanta)

Atlantucky Brewing emerged from the combination of musical talent and business acumen between Nappy Roots members Skinny DeVille and Fish Scales, and brewer Brandon Garnett. Atlantucky Brewing functions as a contract brewing brand while developing its own brewing facilities. Atlantucky creates its market position through a cultural approach that uses music industry connections to access a brewing space with scarce Black ownership. The brewery, which joined the national “Black Is Beautiful” initiative to connect its product with social impact efforts, regularly hosts cultural events.

Beale Street Brewing Co. (Memphis)

Beale Street Brewing Co. was founded by Kelvin Kolheim to integrate Memphis musical traditions into its brewing processes and to promote diversity within the brewing industry. The brewery concept pairs specific beer styles with musical selections to create a sensory experience that pays tribute to Beale Street’s musical roots in Memphis. Each product showcases Memphis through its blues-themed packaging and narrative-driven taste profiles.

Black Beauty Brewery (Bowie, MD)

The Black Beauty Brewery was founded in 2020 by Sheldon and Brittany Goins, a married couple, who faced financial challenges due to the coronavirus pandemic. After losing his job, Sheldon turned his homebrewing hobby into a commercial business, which became the first Black-owned brewery in Bowie, Maryland. The brand began with limited production runs but now sells its products throughout Maryland.

Black Horizon Brewing Company (Willowbrook, IL)

Charles St. Clair established Black Horizon Brewing Company, a small-batch community-focused brewing operation in the Chicago suburbs. The company combines taproom operations with intentional partnerships that generally involve working with Black brewers to increase their exposure and focusing on local community connections and partnerships to create sustainable growth.

Brown Girls Brew (New York City)

In 2021, Christina Thomas created Brown Girls Brew to create a space where Black women would lead and engage with craft beer culture. The NYC-based brand uses pop-ups, partnerships, and community events to operate instead of running a traditional brewery. Thomas saw the small number of Black women in craft beer and wanted to build community events that put inclusion front and center.

Grown Folks (Los Angeles)

In 2024, Danica Dias launched Grown Folks, a Black- and woman-owned beverage brand, after developing it throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. Dias, a hospitality professional, founded the company to showcase the cultural and culinary heritage of her Louisiana Creole background. The brand combines craft beer with ready-to-drink innovation through its Front Porch American light lager, and soul food-inspired hard seltzers, including Peach Cobbler and Ambrosia flavors. 

Kitsune Brewing Co. (Phoenix)

Tyler Smith established Kitsune Brewing Co. as a craft beer brand which distinguishes itself through its worldwide branding approach and story-based marketing strategy that integrates Japanese elements. Smith’s approach shows how Black-owned beer brands have begun to investigate conceptual global influences and markets beyond standard traditional markets.

RELATED CONTENT: 9 Soulful Spots Keeping Black Culinary Legacy Alive

Washington Wizards Apologize For Misleading Fans With April Fools’ Prank

Washington Wizards Apologize For Misleading Fans With April Fools’ Prank

"We apologize for last night’s April Fools’ joke that left many wondering if we had misled a fan."


The Washington Wizards have apologized for a halftime April Fools’ Day prank that left fans of the NBA team confused and upset.

Fans at the Capital One Arena for the April 1 game against the Philadelphia 76ers were led to believe that a man at center court was randomly chosen at halftime to win $10,000 if he made a half-court shot blindfolded.

With his eyes blindfolded and a basketball in hand, he heaved the ball toward the hoop, but was off by a mile. But the arena exploded in excitement, leaving everyone (who wasn’t in on the joke) confused when the staff made it seem like the shot had been made.

The personnel on the floor reacted with glee, approaching the man as if the shot had been successful, and even presented him with a $10,000 check, giving the impression that the shot had gone in.

After they gave him the check, they showed him the actual shot by rolling back the video.

The NBA team issued a written statement about the prank, which upset many people who felt it wasn’t appropriate to have misled fans. The Wizards admitted that the fans at the game were being pranked. Everyone else was in on the joke, including the fan who took the shot.

“We apologize for last night’s April Fools’ joke that left many wondering if we had misled a fan. The skit involving our mascot and other members of our performance team was scripted and intended to celebrate the day. All participants were in on the joke, but we missed the mark. Our fans are our priority, and we continue to be committed to providing a positive experience to all who attend our games.”

RELATED CONTENT: Bam Adebayo Scores 83—Second-Most Points in NBA History—In Miami Heat Victory

Morgan State, Miss New Jersey, Miss USA

Carrie Everett, First Miss North Carolina To Attend An HBCU, Dies At 24 After Cancer Battle

Everett was a champion for women of all backgrounds to take part in the pageant world.


Carrie Everett, the first HBCU student to win Miss North Carolina, died Easter Sunday from a rare and aggressive form of gastric cancer, her family confirmed. She was 24.

“Carrie Everett transitioned on Easter Sunday with her family and friends surrounding her with love,” wrote the family in a statement to WRAL News. “The family is spending time together as they celebrate her memory. They ask that you continue to pray for them [and] celebrate her memory.”

According to HBCU Gameday, Everett made HBCU and pageant history when she won the crown for North Carolina in 2024.

Everett was a student at North Carolina Central University, an HBCU in Durham, when she competed. The Seattle native captivated the judges with her leadership, talent, and advocacy for young women in her footsteps.

She did not shy away from addressing the financial obstacles she faced while pursuing this dream. As pageants often come with hefty costs, from gowns to makeup and hair, Everett leaned on her community to help her get to the crown.

Upon her win, Everett aimed to have her achievement spark hope for others like her. She wanted HBCU scholars to use their education to uplift, and not limit, their ambitions.

“I can be the first but not the last,” Everett previously told CBS 17, as reported by HBCU Gameday. “I want young women from all over the state and throughout the country attending HBCUs that this opportunity is for them.”

During her reign as Miss North Carolina, Everett championed equity in the pageant scene. She used her platform to highlight her community service initiative, We Need Equity to Build Communities. The organization broke barriers in pageantry, encouraging all women to take advantage of their scholarship opportunities.

“We are advocating for recruiting more girls from different backgrounds into this organization,” she said. “I am advocating for wardrobe classes funding for accessibility in this organization.”

The avid gospel singer still chased her academic goals. She hoped to graduate from NCCU with a degree in vocal performance by 2027. But Everett received a life-altering diagnosis of metastatic signet ring cell carcinoma in July 2025.

In a tribute message, NCCU chancellor Karrie G. Dixon expressed gratitude for the life and service of their “fallen eagle.”

“A native of Seattle, Washington, Carrie will be remembered as a trailblazer who shared her inspirational talent and leadership with so many,” Dixon wrote. “Her ambition, grace, tenacity and talent will be deeply missed.”

RELATED CONTENT: ICE Will Be On Base For Marine Graduation Ceremony

offset, Baltimore, donation, high school students

Offset Hospitalized After Being Shot In Florida

The rapper is listed in stable condition.


Rapper Offset was reportedly shot in Florida after a confrontation outside of a casino in Hollywood.

According to ABC News, the former Migos rapper is currently hospitalized and listed in stable condition. The incident took place outside in the valet area of the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino after 7 p.m. April 6. A spokesperson for the man, born Kiari Kendrell Cephus, confirmed it was him who was shot.

“We can confirm Offset was shot and is currently at the hospital receiving medical care. He is stable and being closely monitored,” the spokesperson said.

No further details have been released by the Seminole Police Department beyond the authorities stating that two people were detained, as the investigation is ongoing.

“The site is secure, and there is no threat to the public,” police said.

Offset, who is currently separated from his wife, Cardi B, is not the first member of the now-defunct hip-hop group, Migos, to be shot. The group disbanded after one of the members, Takeoff, was shot to death in Houston at a bowling alley Nov. 1, 2022. According to TMZ, while attending a birthday party for Jas Prince, the son of long-time legendary music executive, J Prince (Rap-A-Lot Records), the rapper was shot, allegedly playing dice while at 810 Billiards & Bowling at approximately 2:40 a.m that morning. Takeoff, real name Kirshnik Khari Ball, was there with his uncle, Quavo, nee Quavious Keyate Marshall.

The group members all grew up in Georgia and made a name for themselves in the music industry after scoring a hit in 2013 with “Versace.” Migos scored numerous platinum hits, including “Bad and Boujie” featuring Lil Uzi Vert, “T-Shirt,” “MotorSport” featuring Cardi B and Nicki Minaj, “Walk It Talk It” featuring Drake, “Pure Water” featuring Mustard, “Need It” featuring YoungBoy Never Broke Again, “Stir Fry,” “Straightenin” and “Narcos.”

RELATED CONTENT: Suspect Charged In Takeoff’s Death Released on $1 Million Bond

Donald Trump, Black, female reporter

Trump Threatens To ‘Take Out’ Iran ‘In One Night’ As War Goes Into Week Six

As the threats increased, fear on social media started to spread, concerned if the president is considering leveling the country with a nuclear weapon.


President Donald Trump made a bold claim on how the U.S. can “take out” the entire country of Iran in “one night” ahead of April 7 at 8 p.m. ET – the deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, Fortune reports.

The escalation came during a White House press conference that celebrated the combat rescue of two downed F-15E airmen during the Easter weekend and ended with Trump saying that the U.S. is going to be the one charging tolls in the Strait of Hormuz. Heightening his final ultimatum –open the strait or lose your infrastructure, Trump said, “After that, they’re gonna have no bridges. They’re gonna have no power plants, Stone Ages.”

As the threats increased, fear on social media started to spread, concerned if the president is considering leveling the country with a nuclear weapon.

Most feel Trump is likely talking about disrupting Iran’s electrical grid as the U.S. has a weapon designed for such purposes called the graphite bomb, nicknamed the “blackout bomb.” However, his Truth Social post seemingly paints a different picture. “A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will,” the president of the United States wrote April 7 at 8:06 a.m.  

“However, now that we have Complete and Total Regime Change, where different, smarter and less radicalized minds prevail, maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen, WHO KNOWS? We will find out tonight….”

The president also indicated what military forces are considering, referencing the January 2026 raid that resulted in the capture of Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro.

“If you look at what we did with Maduro, we went into a military compound, massive, with thousands and thousands of soldiers, and within a matter of minutes … he was in the back of these planes,” Trump said. 

However, the U.S. isn’t the only one making threats. According to CNN, senior Iranian officials issued threats of their own, saying the strait will remain blocked until Iran receives payment for war damages. 

Since Trump has already declared that the US is the “winner” in the war so far, another senior Iranian security source, said the country  has provided him a strategic defeat and that his increased rhetoric toward Iranians simply reflects a loss of control over the conflict.

The source also said Tehran has made it “clear” that the Strait of Hormuz “will not return to its prior condition unless the war is permanently stopped.”

RELATED CONTENT: U.S. ‘Double-Tap’ Airstrike On Iranian Bridge Sparks Global Backlash

Deanna Hoskins, president of JustLeadershipUSA (JLUSA), incarceration

From ‘Second Chances’ To ‘Fair Chances’: DeAnna Hoskins Pushes America To Rethink Reentry After Incarceration

The JustLeadershipUSA CEO is transforming how we think about incarceration, opportunity, and who gets access to a future.


As communities across the country recognize Second Chance Month, DeAnna Hoskins, president and CEO of JustLeadershipUSA (JLUSA), is taking the conversation a step further by challenging it.

“I always ask the question, ‘Is using the word ‘second chance’ unintentionally limiting?’” Hoskins tells BLACK ENTERPRISE. “When in reality, we’re asking for fair access, fair access to employment, fair access to housing.”  

Hoskins has spent years advocating for people returning home from incarceration. Her perspective is shaped by lived experience, one that continues to inform how she approaches policy, power, and public safety.

Before she was advising at the highest levels of government, Hoskins was navigating the very system she now works to change.

“Part of my story is that I struggled with drug addiction,” Hoskins says. “I’ve been clean and sober for 27 years now. I needed drug treatment, not incarceration. But the system did not look at that. The system looked at the charge and sentenced me according to the charge, which detached me from my kids. At the time, my daughter was 8 months old. A person has to be held accountable for the crime, but should we take the person into consideration during that crime?”

Hoskins says her “a-ha” moment came after hearing a podcast that included a courtroom recording of a judge who paused before sentencing a defendant to ask, ‘I want to know what happened to you, that you ended up committing this crime?’

“She saw a human, she didn’t just see a charge,” Hoskins recalls. “That’s where it drove home for me.”

That realization proved pivotal. Hoskins began asking to see the official policy after employers tried to deny her jobs because she was on probation. 

“They were like, ‘DeAnna, we want to hire you, but based on our policies we can’t because of your felony,’” she says. “I asked one company for the policy and they didn’t have it. That’s when I started researching policy.”

What she uncovered was not just misunderstanding but systemic inconsistency.

“I realized not only the myths, but the policy violations,” she says. “People were just blanket refusing to hire people with criminal backgrounds. The judge sentenced you to community supervision, and one of the conditions is to get a job.”

That contradiction became a turning point. 

“I just really picked up this daredevil attitude of, I’m just going to push back on the system. I was so broken from incarceration that I felt, what did I have to lose? 

Second Chance Month traces back to the Second Chance Act, signed into law in 2008 under President George W. Bush to support reentry programs and resources.

But Hoskins says the reality of reentry still falls short.

“If I’m sentenced and that’s my punishment, when is the punishment over?” she says. “Why do you have all these systemic consequences if you believe in that system?”  

For many returning citizens, those consequences show up immediately as barriers to housing, employment, healthcare, and basic stability.

“We have been so oppressed and entrenched on what we can’t do,” she says. “Nobody told me what I could do.”  

Through JLUSA’s advocacy work, Hoskins and her team have identified widespread misinformation about what people with criminal records are legally allowed to access.

From voting rights to housing eligibility, she says many restrictions are not federal mandates, but local policies or outright misconceptions.

“These barriers aren’t always legal,” she says, pointing to the organization’s “MythBusters” work aimed at correcting false narratives.  

That misinformation doesn’t just confuse people, it limits opportunity.

“We’ve been entrenched to believe what our limitations are,” she says.  

For business leaders and entrepreneurs, Hoskins says creating fair access starts with rethinking hiring practices.

Rather than eliminating background checks altogether, she advocates for transparency. Employers should clearly outline which convictions are disqualifying and delay background checks until later in the hiring process.

“Initially, people are being screened based on their knowledge, skills, and abilities,” she says.  

That shift not only reduces bias. It expands the talent pool.

“I may have a crime, but I’ve been home 10 years with no interaction,” she says.

Hoskins also challenges how public safety is defined, arguing that it extends far beyond policing.

“Public safety is affordable housing. Public safety is access to healthcare. Public safety is access to mental health,” she says.  

When people with lived experience are included in shaping those systems, she says, the result is more effective and more humane policy.“ You get systems that no longer traumatize, systems that engage and give agency to people.”  

At the same time, Hoskins is clear about the economic forces behind mass incarceration.

“Incarceration is a billion-dollar business,” she says, pointing to the industries tied to everything from prison communications to commissary systems.  

Because of that, she believes meaningful change requires more than reform. It requires reducing reliance on a system built on profit.

“We have to create fair opportunities so people don’t default to incarceration,” she says.  

For Hoskins, one of the biggest misconceptions about people with lived experience is that their stories are meant to inspire, rather than inform.

“I don’t want my story to inspire you,” she said. “I want my story to inform how you do policy.”  

It’s a distinction that reframes not just Second Chance Month, but the broader national conversation. Because, as she sees it, the issue isn’t whether individuals deserve another opportunity.

“This isn’t about giving people a second chance. It’s about whether the system offers a fair chance at all.”  

RELATED CONTENT: New York Man Freed After Spending 19 Years In Prison For Robbery He Didn’t Commit

Geno Auriemma Apologizes For Running Up On Coach Dawn Staley—But Not Directly

Geno Auriemma Apologizes For Running Up On Coach Dawn Staley—But Not Directly

"I have not heard from Geno."


After a public, testy exchange between University of South Carolina women’s basketball head coach Dawn Staley and UConn head coach Geno Auriemma following a South Carolina victory in the Women’s NCAA Final Four, Auriemma apologized—but not to Staley.

Cameras captured Auriemma shouting at Staley, who fired back. The two coaches had to be separated. The incident happened after South Carolina ended the University of Connecticut’s undefeated season with a 62-48 victory on April 3.

“There’s no excuse for how I handled the end of the game vs. South Carolina. It’s unlike what I do and what our standard is here at Connecticut,” he said in a written statement the following day. “I want to apologize to the staff and the team at South Carolina. It was uncalled for in how I reacted. The story should be how well South Carolina played, and I don’t want my actions to detract from that. I’ve had a great relationship with their staff, and I sincerely want to apologize to them.”

He stated that he was peeved because Staley did not shake his hand before the contest.

Staley’s response: “For me, no distractions at this time. I’m concentrating on winning a national championship, that’s it. That’s a little disheartening. This is sports; sometimes things like this happen. Continue to focus on my team and ability to advance in this tournament and hopefully win another national championship.”

The South Carolina Gamecocks lost to UCLA, 79-51, in the championship game.

According to USA Today, during the broadcast of that game, former UConn basketball player Rebecca Lobo, an ESPN analyst, said Auriemma apologized to Staley privately.

“Geno Auriemma certainly wrong in that moment, which he acknowledged in that apology yesterday,” Lobo said. “I know he has also since reached out personally to Dawn to apologize. It’s unfortunate that it happened.”

Staley said that did not happen.

“That’s a Geno question … I have not heard from Geno,” Staley said after the loss. “I don’t know if he texted or not, but … it’s UCLA’s day, right? Let’s keep (the conversation) on UCLA, them winning the national championship. I will address all of that at another time.”

But Staley’s reaction in the moment shows that not only was she fed up with Auriemma’s antics, but she expressed herself as most of us would in a similar situation.

https://twitter.com/EmmanuelAcho/status/2040253947571748973

Others reacted to what Staley had to endure for just doing a better job than her white counterpart.

RELATED CONTENT: Dawn Staley Urges Prayers For Former Gamecocks Players Trapped In Israel Amid Airstrikes

Tina Knowles, fifteen Percent Pledge

Tina Knowles Is The Ultimate ‘Matriarch’ In Kurt Geiger’s Mother’s Day Fashion Campaign

The famous mother and grandmother stars in the campaign celebrating Mother's Day.


Tina Knowles, the mother of Beyoncé and Solange Knowles, takes center stage in the campaign for London-based Kurt Geiger’s spring/summer 2026 Mother’s Day collection.

The 72-year-old trailblazing matriarch unveiled the pink-themed commercial in a shared post with the brand. The clip features Knowles in a light pink suit opening gifts from her grandchildren, all of which are pink Kurt Geiger purses, of course.

“Proof that Moms don’t have favorites. Just a lot of love to carry,” she wrote in the caption.

The doting grandmother revealed the gifts came from many of her famous grandchildren, even shouting out the “twins,” assumed to be Rumi and Sir Carter. The video highlighted that grandmothers never play favorites, they just get more purses and children to love.

The adorable commercial celebrates the Matriarch author as a public figure in her own right. It puts the elder Knowles in the spotlight for a celebration of mothers across generations.

While being the grandmother to Blue Ivy Carter and her famous siblings and cousins, the woman known by the Beyhive as “Miss Tina” has built her own lane in entertainment. When she’s not on Mother’s Day dates with her grandkids, Knowles co-owns haircare brand Cécred with daughter Beyoncé and showcases her world-famous gumbo at the Houston Rodeo.

The Kurt Geiger collaboration also emphasizes how grandmothers deserve extra love on Mother’s Day. The new collection, features a dazzling pink array of crystal and bright-colored sneakers, totes, heels, and handbag.

The Tina-approved collection is now available on the brand’s website.

RELATED CONTENT: Tina Knowles Whips Up ‘Mama Tina’s Gumbo’ for Houston Rodeo

×