2018-09-27

WATCH: Donald Trump's Sexual Predator Friends

Commentary/Video by film maker Michael Moore

This morning, the Senate Judiciary Committee will hear testimony from Dr. Christine Blasey Ford about the night she was sexually assaulted by Brett Kavanaugh, the judge nominated to the Supreme Court by a president who is a self-admitted sexual predator. She believed she was about to be raped and thought she might die.

How did we end up here? How does a man with multiple, credible allegations of sexual assault make it this far, on the brink of a lifetime appointment to the nation's highest court?

First of all, we've always been here. Forever. None of this is new. Women have had to suffer this since the beginning of time. And men have always had friends in high places and systems set up to make sure they've never had to face any consequences for their actions.

The media, over the decades, have failed to confront this issue and have supported, hired and defended their male sexual predator friends. In my new film, "Fahrenheit 11/9", I name names and show how not only did the male media CEOs sic their male stars on women (like Hillary Clinton) who would dare to seek power, they abused the very women who worked for them. Here's a brief clip from my movie about these sexual predators who control the news and information we receive.


In a clip from Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit 11/9", Donald Trump's close relationships with the male-dominated media elite was a major advantage during his presidential campaign against Hillary Clinton.

But what if we've reached a turning point? What if the women of the U.S. Senate, backed by millions of women around the country, grabbed them all by the collar and gave them the heave-ho? And what if millions of male allies did the right thing and stood strongly behind them?

The Republicans are on a mission to outlaw abortion. Two or four or six allegations of rape and abuse will not get in the way of the government claiming authority over one gender's reproductive organs. They have no shame, no decency and will use use any means necessary to get their way.

We must not let this confirmation go through. We must fight back even harder.

-Michael Moore

Kavanaugh hearing opens with Ford’s account of alleged assault


Professor Christine Blasey Ford, who has accused Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of a sexual assault in 1982, listens while testifying before a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday. (Photo: Reuters/Jim Bourg)

Story by Yahoo News
Written by Christopher Wilson

Fighting back tears, Christine Blasey Ford accused Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexual assault in an opening statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

“I am here today not because I want to be,” said Ford, reading in a trembling voice from a prepared statement. “I am terrified. I am here because I believe it is my civic duty to tell you what happened to me while Brett Kavanaugh and I were in high school.”

Ford went on to describe a house party in the early 1980s when a drunken Kavanaugh allegedly sexually assaulted her in a bedroom, with his friend Mark Judge in the room. Ford said she escaped after she and Kavanaugh tumbled off the bed.

Kavanaugh has denied the accusation, and Judge said via an attorney that he had no memory of the alleged incident.

“During my time at the school, girls at Holton-Arms frequently met and became friendly with boys from all-boys schools in the area, including Landon School, Georgetown Prep, Gonzaga High School, country clubs, and other places where kids and their families socialized,” said Ford. “This is how I met Brett Kavanaugh, the boy who sexually assaulted me.”

Ford detailed the alleged assault and how it has affected her life, including the threats she’s received since her identity became public. She insisted she was not a political operative, stating, “I am no one’s pawn” and said that she wanted the senators to hear her story before they voted to confirm Kavanaugh.

“When I got to the small gathering, people were drinking beer in a small living room on the first floor of the house,” said Ford. “I drank one beer that evening. Brett and Mark were visibly drunk. Early in the evening, I went up a narrow set of stairs leading from the living room to a second floor to use the bathroom. When I got to the top of the stairs, I was pushed from behind into a bedroom. I couldn’t see who pushed me. Brett and Mark came into the bedroom and locked the door behind them. There was music already playing in the bedroom. It was turned up louder by either Brett or Mark once we were in the room. I was pushed onto the bed and Brett got on top of me. He began running his hands over my body and grinding his hips into me. I yelled, hoping someone downstairs might hear me, and tried to get away from him, but his weight was heavy. Brett groped me and tried to take off my clothes. He had a hard time because he was so drunk, and because I was wearing a one-piece bathing suit under my clothes. I believed he was going to rape me. I tried to yell for help. When I did, Brett put his hand over my mouth to stop me from screaming. This was what terrified me the most, and has had the most lasting impact on my life. It was hard for me to breathe, and I thought that Brett was accidentally going to kill me. Both Brett and Mark were drunkenly laughing during the attack. They both seemed to be having a good time. Mark was urging Brett on, although at times he told Brett to stop. A couple of times I made eye contact with Mark and thought he might try to help me, but he did not.”

The Republicans on the Senate Judiciary committee — all white men — ceded their time to a female outside counsel to do the questioning. Kavanaugh was also scheduled to testify Thursday. In the room, most of the senators were listening intently, although Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., looked bored and annoyed. Graham has been outspoken in his belief that Kavanaugh will be confirmed.

Alex Nazaryen contributed reporting to this story from the hearing room

2018-09-26

A Tribute to Johnny Morris



Story by Felicia "The Poetess" Morris

We pay tribute to radio legend and broadcast pioneer, Johnny Morris, who passed away on August 31st. 2018.

He shared his knowledge of broadcasting and was a generous man who encouraged and assisted the dreams of many who crossed his path.

He was a teacher by nature and broadcast genius by trade. We, here at Morris Media Studios will continue his legacy by setting the foundation for Morris Broadcast Academy.

To learn more, please visit: https://www.gofundme.com/morris-broad... - Video and sound design by AMP! Special thanks to Alex Mejia #djalexmejia for putting this beautiful tribute together. #morrismediastudios

Jesse Jackson: Trump's stump speech is a con job



Story by Chicago Sun-Times
Commentary by Jesse Jackson

President Donald Trump is back on the stump, promising to campaign “six or seven days a week” until the general election to try to keep Republicans in control of both Houses of Congress.

His stump speech is characteristically bombastic, filled with the exaggerations, insults and flat-out lies that people have come to expect.

Trump’s speech is at its core a con job. Republicans’ tax cuts went to the rich and the corporations, and the promise that everyone would get a $4,000 raise went up in smoke. Republican efforts first to repeal and then to lacerate Obamacare will deprive millions of health care, even as prices spike this fall because of the damage they’ve done.

Trump has ushered in the most corrupt administration in memory, appointing corporate lobbyists to rig the rules and roll back protections for workers and consumers and the environment.

Trump can point to a strong economy, but he inherited a growing economy from President Barack Obama. Working families still haven’t benefited from the so-called recovery. Trump has broken his promise to invest in rebuilding our dangerously decrepit and uncompetitive infrastructure. Inequality is worse than ever, with Trump’s tax cuts adding to the divide.

College tuitions continue to rise, and the student debt crisis gets worse and worse. Drug costs continue to soar, despite Trump’s promises to do something about it. The opioid epidemic claimed 72,000 lives last year, as the administration floundered in responding to the crisis.

Even as catastrophic climate change ravages the U.S. from California to Houston to North Carolina and Puerto Rico, Trump remains in denial, with mere mentions of global warming erased from government web sites. As the crises accumulate, FEMA’s woeful performance in Puerto Rico makes President Bush’s disastrous operation after Hurricane Katrina look efficient in comparison.

The administration’s war on workers makes it harder for them to share in the benefits of the good economy. Republican governors and state legislatures work to block cities from raising the minimum wage within their own boundaries. The first vote of Trump’s appointee to the Supreme Court was to gut labor rights for public employees, as Republicans continue to undermine the right of workers to organize and bargain collectively.

Despite all of Trump’s tough talk, new data show the U.S. trade deficit in July grew at its fastest rate since 2015, as monthly deficits with China and the European Union both reached new records.

Given all this, the content of Trump’s stump speech is predictable. It is designed to distract and divide, not inform and unite.

As illustrated by his recent speech in West Virginia, his themes have an ugly racial cast. He began that speech by slandering NFL players, describing their protest against police brutality as “defaming our flag” and our “beautiful, beautiful national anthem.” He railed against Democrats, suggesting that they would make America safe for criminal aliens, take away the Second Amendment and rewrite our Constitution.

The “beating heart of this election,” he argued, “is border security.” He roused his audience against the “Russian witch hunt” on the same day his personal lawyer pleaded guilty and his campaign manager was convicted by that same investigation.

Americans need to decipher the Trump bombast. He boasts about adding billions to our military –—that already consumes over one-third of the world’s military spending — without admitting that he wants to slash investment in education, in clean energy, in Medicare and Medicaid.

He boasts of his tax cuts, without admitting that the next round will be to savage programs for the most vulnerable to help pay for the tax cuts larded on the rich and corporations. He brags about repealing the Clean Power Plan and abandoning the Paris climate accord, without mentioning that he’s opening the door to fouling our water and air and ignoring the greatest threat to our national security.

He trumpets record low black and Hispanic unemployment, without noting that he’s ended efforts to curb police brutality and racial profiling, gutting enforcement of civil rights laws, and encouraged efforts to suppress the right to vote.

I believe in passion in politics. Passionate stump speeches don’t offend me. Hyperbole, wit and humor have their place. But Trump is peddling division and fostering fear. He wants Americans to think that they are threatened most by immigrants and burdened most by the vulnerable.

But immigrants and the vulnerable don’t rig the rules to benefit the few. Trump is betting he can use our fears to divide and distract us to blind us from his con.

I believe that America is better than that. The election this fall will tell us who is right.

2018-09-24

SiriusXM Buying Pandora For $3.5 Billion.

Story by INSIDE RADIO

SiriusXM Radio says it is buying Pandora in an all-stock deal valued at $3.5 billion. The satcaster says acquiring the pureplay webcaster will allow it to expand its service beyond cars and into homes and other mobile areas. The combination creates an audio entertainment powerhouse with more than $7 billion in expected pro-forma revenue in 2018.

SiriusXM says there will be “no immediate change in listener offerings” after the deal closes. Instead, it is initially focused on creating cross-promotional opportunities between the satcaster's 36 million North American subscribers and Pandora's 70 million monthly active users.

In a press release announcing the deal, the companies pointed to their complementary business models. SiriusXM derives the vast majority of its revenue from paid subscriptions while Pandora relies mostly on ad dollars from its free streaming service, although it has made progress in building subscription products. The companies plan to leverage each other’s audiences and content to create new audio packages, while also using SiriusXM's automotive relationships to drive Pandora's in-car distribution.

SiriusXM says it will continue to make investments in content and technology to expand revenue opportunities through both ad-supported and subscription services in and out of the vehicle. It also plans to build a promotional platform for emerging and established artists.

SiriusXM says the deal will allow Pandora to benefit from its scale, industry expertise and financial resources while the satcaster will gain from Pandora's mobile strength and ad capabilities.

SiriusXM already owns a 15% stake in Pandora after making a $480 million investment in June 2017. Under terms of the deal announced Monday (Sept. 24), Pandora shareholders will receive 1.44 newly issued SiriusXM shares for each share of Pandora they hold. Based on the SXM’s 30-day average share price, Pandora’s stock is valued at $10.14 per share for a 13.8% premium.

The merger includes a "go-shop" provision in which Pandora can solicit other offers from third parties.

SiriusXM CEO Jim Meyer said he sees “significant opportunities” by combining the businesses. “The addition of Pandora diversifies SiriusXM's revenue streams with the U.S.'s largest ad-supported audio offering, broadens our technical capabilities, and represents an exciting next step in our efforts to expand our reach out of the car even further,” Meyer said in a statement. “Through targeted investments, we see significant opportunities to drive innovation that will accelerate growth beyond what would be available to the separate companies, and does so in a way that also benefits consumers, artists and the broader content communities.”

Pandora CEO Roger Lynch said merging with SiriusXM will better position the webcaster to grow its ad business and expand its subscription offerings. “This transaction will deliver significant value to our stockholders and will allow them to participate in upside, given SiriusXM's strong brand, financial resources and track record delivering results,” Lynch said.

2018-09-15

Paula Abdul

2018-09-14

Tennis Legend Billie Jean King says Serena Williams was wronged by sexism and 'an archaic rule' at US Ope


Serena Williams protests the umpire at the 2018 US Open

Story by CBS Sports
Written by Cody Benjamin

Serena Williams may have been fined $17,000 for a trio of code violations at the US Open, and her on-court arguments with chair umpire Carlos Ramos may have overshadowed an otherwise memorable Grand Slam win for 20-year-old Naomi Osaka.

She does, however, have the support of one of the greatest female tennis players of all time.

Four-time US Open champion Billie Jean King opened up on this weekend's controversy in a piece for The Washington Post, and her opinion was clear: Serena was right to stand up to Ramos' calls, which penalized her for breaking a racket, receiving hand signals from her coach and then defending those violations to Ramos. And King was adamant that it wasn't Williams' debate with Ramos that took away from Osaka's victory so much as it was "an archaic rule" and an "abuse of power."

"If tennis would catch up with the 21st century and allow coaching on every point," King wrote, "the situation on the court would never have escalated to the level of absurdity that it did."

Even worse than the rules, however, King identified Ramos as the main culprit in Saturday's incident.

"He made himself part of the match," she wrote. "He involved himself in the end result. An umpire's job is to keep control of the match, and he let it get out of control. The rules are what they are, but the umpire has discretion, and Ramos chose to give Williams very little latitude in a match where the stakes were highest."

King admitted that Williams could have done more to control her emotions, but she also noted that male tennis players haven't always been given such a short leash when it comes to expressing themselves on the court.

Did Ramos treat Williams differently than male players have been treated? I think he did. Women are treated differently in most arenas of life. This is especially true for women of color. And what played out on the court yesterday happens far too often. It happens in sports, in the office and in public service. Ultimately, a woman was penalized for standing up for herself. A woman faced down sexism, and the match went on.

King isn't alone in defending Williams, who has six US Open singles titles under her own belt.

As Deadspin reported this week, the U.S. Tennis Association and the Women's Tennis Association have released statements backing Williams and calling out a "difference in the standards of tolerance" by officials -- even with another governing body, the International Tennis Federation, defending Ramos for acting with "professionalism and integrity." Famed author J.K. Rowling, meanwhile, has voiced her support for Williams amid backlash to a cartoon depicting Serena's feud with Ramos, as CBS News reported, calling Williams "one of the greatest sportswomen alive."

2018-09-11

Family searches for answers after man shot dead in his home by Dallas officer


Dallas grand jury to hear police shooting case

Story by CBS News

A white Dallas police officer is free on bond this morning, after being charged with manslaughter in a bizarre shooting that left a black man dead inside his own home. Off-duty police officer Amber Guyger is accused of killing 26-year-old Botham Jean.

The officer allegedly told investigators she mistook his apartment for her own, and shot and killed him after she went inside. Dallas police were seeking a manslaughter charge against Guyger, who lives here at the apartment complex where the shooting took place.

But the investigation was handed off to the Texas Rangers to avoid the appearance of any bias.

After coordination with the Dallas County District Attorney, Guyer was arrested last night nearly three days after the fatal encounter with Jean.

There are questions about what happened on the fourth floor of the South Side Flats apartment complex, reports correspondent Omar Villafranca. Also: Why did a sheriff's department 30 miles away arrest Guyger when she was two blocks from Dallas Police headquarters? And why did it take almost three days before she was arrested?

Jean family attorneys, including Benjamin Crump, and local politicians rallied against the Dallas Police Department for failing to make a timely arrest in the case. "You or I would be arrested if we went to the wrong apartment and blow a hole in a person's chest, killing them," said Crump.

Texas State Senator Royce West said, "We gotta make sure that in Texas, there is no separate standard as it relates to police officers when they commit these types of crimes."

Dallas Police say officer Amber Guyger (left on photo), who has been with the department for four years, told them she mistakenly entered Jean's (right on photo)apartment after her shift, thinking it was her own.

"She was still in uniform when she encountered Mr. Jean in the apartment," said Police Chief U. Renee Hall. "At some point she fired her weapon, striking the victim."
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Amber Guyger identified as Dallas officer who fatally shot man in his apartment (CBS News)https://www.cbsnews.com/news/amber-guyger-dallas-police-officer-who-shot-killed-botham-jean-updates-today-2018-09-08/
_________________________________________

Details surrounding what happened directly before the shooting remain unclear. But Jean's family members continue to search for answers.

"He was my pride and my joy," said his mother, Allison Jean. "There are times when you feel like giving up. I could not give up because of Botham. And right now, in his death, I can never give up."

Officer Guyger has been placed on paid administrative leave.

2018-09-10

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar on Jazz


KAREEM ABDUL-JABBAR'S Keynote Address at JAZZ CONGRESS 2018

Watch Kareem Abdul-Jabbar touch on growing up around jazz legends in Harlem, how music influenced his basketball game, and signing Dizzy Gillespie to his last record deal in his keynote address at Jazz Congress 2018.

On January 7-8, 2019, the global jazz community will once again gather for Jazz Congress 2019. The two-day event will convene artists, media, and industry leaders to exchange ideas in order to nurture and grow the jazz community and the underlying business and organizations that promote, produce, present, market, and support the music. Join us for another mind-expanding, unforgettable meeting of talent and vision!

2018-09-08

Story of Public Enemy


Song: Public Enemy - By the time I get to Arizona

Song: Public Enemy - Fight The Power

Song: Public Enemy - Can't Trust It

Public Enemy Documentary

Song: Self Destruction

Song: Public Enemy - Shut Em' Down

Black Panthers Documentary

Song: Public Enemy - Party for your right to fight

Song: Public Enemy - 911 is a joke

Song: Public Enemy - Welcome to the Terrordome

Arsenio Hall Show interview with Chuck D and Flava Flav

Song: Public Enemy - Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos

Song: Public Enemy - Louder than a Bomb

Hard Knocks interview with Chuck D

Song: Public Enemy - He Got Game

Song: Public Enemy - So What Gone Do Now

2018-09-01

The Story of Aretha Franklin becoming the Queen of Soul in the 1960's


Aretha Franklin, in the late 1960's, freshly crowned "The Queen of Soul", speaks of the transition to secular music. Aretha also talks about her very supportive father C.L. Franklin, Husband/Manager, Gospel roots, the love of the stage, feel of the piano, the studio sessions, and the love and desire to reach young people. Watch! (Video by ABC News).