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Category: News
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Sweden to open Avicii museum to commemorate his life and music in 2021
Stockholm has announced it will open a museum dedicated to the late Electronic artist, Avicii. According to Rolling Stone, next year, the museum will have “a mix of memorabilia and previously unseen photographs and video”. For fans and anyone interested in learning more about his creative process and his collaborations, you’d be able to have that experience. ‘The Avicii Experience’ is said to be part of a new facility called ‘SPACE’ in Sweden. Also, an undisclosed portion of the earnings will get donated to the Tim Bergling Foundation, an organisation that the artist’s family launched after his passing.
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Top Dawg Entertainment and the Think Watts Foundation present ‘Above and Beyond’
Top Dawg Entertainment and the Think Watts Foundation are proud to present ‘Above and Beyond’, a special free food distribution event for the Watts community.
Sponsored by Beyond Meat, The Harold Robinson Foundation and HACLA, the event focuses on community enrichment through providing healthy food options and nutritional education for residents in all of the Watts public housing projects. Additional sponsors will include Aqua Equity, Community Healing Gardens, GodissLove and Primestor.
The event will take place on Wednesday, June 10, 2020, and it will include several thousand boxes of Beyond Meat food products, fresh produce and cases of water for all residents of the Nickerson Gardens, Jordan Downs, Imperial Courts, Gonzaque Village and Avalon Gardens. The day will begin in the Jordan Downs community and conclude at the Nickerson Gardens.
This one-day event is the latest of many efforts to improve Watts by TDE and Think Watts Foundation, who both found their start in this neighbourhood and are committed to giving back. We look forward to seeing you there.
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Killer Mike responds to Drew Brees’ comments on ‘disrespecting the flag’
During the past few weeks, tensions have been high and it appears that everyone is “taking sides.” Recently, Quarterback Drew Brees stated in an interview last week with Yahoo Finance, “I will never agree with anybody disrespecting the flag of the United States of America or our country.” He immediately faced a backlash from not only teammates but the public. Rapper and activist Killer Mike responded to the comments Brees made on ‘disrespecting the flag’ on ESPN’s show Jalen & Jacoby yesterday moring.
Killer Mike had harsh words yet educating words for the quarterback at one point in the interview saying, “You’re an intelligent football player, but that was an incredibly stupid thing to say.” Check out the entire clip below.
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eOI79mt1pCc&h=315]
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Pusha T launches ‘Feed Your City Challenge’ to help Virginia locals affected by COVID-19
This Saturday (June 6), Pusha T is hosting a ‘Feed Your City’ challenge with former NBA athlete Ricky Davis, and Suave House Records CEO Tony Draper in Norfolk, Virginia. Kicking off his ‘Feed Your City Challenge’, I think it is to not only feed 3,000 people but to inspire his fellow others who can afford to do it. I look forward to seeing who else he inspires.

If you didn’t know, Heir Wave Music Group is Pusha T’s record label. It is the initiative he is using to spread goodness in the world this time as a result of COVID-19. If you’re in the area, stop by. They plan to “provide fresh groceries and essential PPE supplies” for 3,000 members of the community. How will the food and items get distributed? Through non-contract drive-thru lanes, which are following all CDC social distancing guidelines. Local station 103 Jamz will also be there to provide the tunes and give a helping hand where it’s needed.
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Meghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex, spoke to graduating teens at her former high school: ‘George Floyd’s life mattered’
In a speech given to the graduating class at Immaculate Heart High School, which is her former high school, Meghan Markle mentions the murders of George Floyd, and the many other Black people who have died in police custody. Looking to connect with the students, the Dutchess shared that when she was eleven or twelve, during her time, it was the LA Riots. Not before signing off from her five-minute speech, she recommended that her fellow alumni should lead with love, compassion, and to use their voice. I’ve included the full speech and video for your reading and viewing pleasure.
"George Floyd's life mattered and Breonna Taylor's life mattered and Philando Castile's life mattered and Tamir Rice's life mattered."
Duchess Meghan has shared a powerful video with @IHPandas Immaculate Heart High School’s class of 2020 for their graduation.#BlackLivesMatter pic.twitter.com/BzUmfnKICb
— Omid Scobie (@scobie) June 4, 2020
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
Immaculate Heart High School graduating class of 2020.
For the past couple weeks, I’ve been planning on saying a few words to you for your graduation. And as we’ve all seen over the last week, what is happening in our country and in our state and in our hometown of LA has been absolutely devastating. And I wasn’t sure what I could say to you. I wanted to say the right thing, and I was realIy nervous that I wouldn’t or that it would get picked apart. And I realized the only wrong thing to say is to say nothing, because George Floyd’s life mattered, and Breonna Taylor’s life mattered, and Philando Castile’s life mattered, and Tamir Rice’s life mattered, and so did so many other people whose names we know and whose names we do not know. Stephon Clarke, his life mattered.
And I was thinking about this moment when I was a sophomore in high school. I was 15. And as you know, sophomore year is the year we do volunteer work, which is a prerequisite for graduating. And I remember my teacher at the time, one of my teachers, Ms Pollia, said to me before I was leaving for a day above volunteering, “Always remember to put other’s needs above your own fears.” And that has stuck with me through my entire life and I have thought about it more in the last week than ever before.
So the first thing I want to say to you is that I’m sorry. I’m so sorry that you have to grow up in a world where this is still present. I was 11 or 12 years old when I was just about to start Immaculate Heart Middle School in the fall, and it was the LA Riots, which was also triggered by a senseless act of racism. And I remember the curfew, and I remember rushing back home and on that drive home, seeing ash fall from the sky and smelling the smoke and seeing the smoke billow out of buildings, and seeing people run out of buildings carrying bags and looting, and I remember seeing men in the back of a van just holding guns and rifles. And I remember pulling up to the house and seeing the tree, that had always been there, completely charred. And those memories don’t go away.
And I can’t imagine that at 17 or 18 years old, which is how old you are now, that you would have to have a different version of that same type of experience. That’s something you should have an understanding of, but an understanding of as a history lesson, not as your reality. So I’m sorry that in a way we have not gotten the world to the place that you deserve it to be.
The other thing though that I do remember about that time was how people came together. And we are seeing that right now. We are seeing that from the sheriff in Michigan or the police chief in Virginia. We are seeing people stand in solidarity. We are seeing communities come together and to uplift. And you are going to be part of this movement.
I know that this is not the graduation that you envisioned. And this is not the celebration that you imagined. But I also know that there is a way for us to reframe this for you, and to not see this as the end of something but instead to see this as the beginning of you harnessing all of the work, all of the values, all of the skills that you have embodied over the last four years, and now you channel that. Now all of that work gets activated. Now you get to be part of rebuilding, and I know sometimes people say, ‘How many times do we need to rebuild?’ but you know what, we are going to rebuild and rebuild and rebuild until it is rebuilt. Because when the foundation is broken, so are we.
You are going to lead with love, you are going to lead with compassion, you are going to use your voice. You are going to use your voice in a stronger way than you’ve ever been able to. Because most of you are 18, or you’re going to turn 18, so you’re going to vote. You are going to have empathy for those who don’t see the world through the same lens that you do because with as diverse and vibrant and open-minded as I know the teachings at Immaculate Heart are, I know you know that Black lives matter. So I am already excited for what you are going to do in the world. You are equipped. You are ready. We need you, and you are prepared.
I am so proud to call each of you a fellow alumni and I am so eager to see what you are going to do. Please know that I am cheering you on all along the way. I am exceptionally proud of you and I am wishing you a huge congratulations on today, the start of all the impact you’re going to make in the world as the leaders that we all so deeply crave. Congratulations ladies, and thank you in advance.
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Watch Apollo Theatre’s musical event ‘Let’s Stay (In This) Together’ exclusively on TIDAL
Tonight, TIDAL will stream a musical event by The Apollo Theater called, ‘Let’s Stay (In This) Together’. The event is in celebration of Black Music Month, the iconic black culture institution, and the pioneers who paved the way for today’s creatives. You can watch it at 7:30 PM Eastern Standard Time. The show features special appearances from Dionne Warwick, Ziggy Marley, Doug E Fresh, Roy Wood Jr, Teddy Riley, Warren Haynes, and more.
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K-Pop fans co-opt #WhiteLivesMatter hashtag in solidarity with the #BlackLivesMatter movement
If you’re a White supremacist and you excitedly saw #WhiteLivesMatter trending on Twitter for the past few days, I bet you got the disappointment of your life when you realized that it wasn’t exactly what you thought. K-Pop fans all over the world have united to drown out the racist messages that are traditionally attached to the #WhiteLivesMatter hashtag, a rallying cry used to disregard and discredit the #BlackLivesMatter movement.
Here are some of our favorites:
*sipping tea and quietly enjoying k-pop stans hijacking dumb racist hashtags* #WhiteLivesMatters pic.twitter.com/hMJJmZVpdu
— Kim Hannah (@KimHann97341767) June 3, 2020
#WhiteLivesMatters psych !! you thought. pic.twitter.com/V0hczDBrfx
— F (@ohwowokaycooll) June 4, 2020
https://twitter.com/haych2x/status/1268203563886546944
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Read President Obama’s essay ‘How to Make this Moment the Turning Point for Real Change’
The murder of George Floyd has changed our lives forever. In the absence of America’s sitting President, President Obama wrote an essay and published it on Medium. If you missed it, read it via this link. It’s an essay about turning protests into real change. To read it in full, please click the following link.
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Listen to Brooklyn singer-songwriter Alex Mali’s second single ‘I Know’ with lyrics
Always bringing us carefree Black girl vibes through her music, Alex Mali, like fellow fierce Caribbean artist TeaMarrr, shows us why she’s unapologetically emotional, expressive, and innovative. Listen to the track below, which has a unique lyric video that portrays her with signature neon green hair. If you’ve ever been overlooked, misused or played, unfortunately, you can relate to ‘I Know’. It’s the second single from her forthcoming EP ‘Phenom’ out mid-July.
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nehtyFEk5iY&h=315]