Red Tails: Behind the scenes of an Ebony cover story…

21 01 2012

Need something to do this weekend? I, ahem, humbly submit that you check out my cover story on the Red Tails, the George Lucas-produced and Anthony Hemingway-directed story of the Tuskegee Airmen. I got to hang out with the entire cast (Cuba Gooding Jr., Terrence Howard, Nate Parker, Michael B. Jordan, Leslie Odom, Tristan Wilds, Method Man, Elijah Kelley, David Oyelowo and many, many more, including Lucas and Hemingway.) I had a ton of fun too – and learned a lot in the process.

Lucas spent $93 million of his own money to make sure this film was made. Read more about that in February’s EBONY right here. (The movie opened this weekend, so I hope that you see the movie as well as buy the magazine to supplement the movie-going experience.)

Two weeks ago, the guys of Red Tails came to Chicago for a special screening at the AMC River East downtown. It was a swanky affair – sponsored by some of the city’s largest financial firms, and of course, Ebony mag. The read Red Tails came too, and they were given a tearful standing ovation at the end of the movie. Most of them are in wheel chairs and are so very happy to finally see this movie made. To celebrate the occasion, I donned a zebra-print dress and toasted with a lemon drop with my two favorite guys Anthony Hemingway (who also directs Treme) and Cuba Gooding Jr. (Yes, that’s Cuba below kissing me on the forehead.) Fun times.

We're at Lucky Strike after the movie and Cuba, for some reason, grabbed my purse. Fun Times.

Also, here is a slide show of what it was like to be at the Ebony photo shoot.

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And, here’s another one! I really enjoyed talking with Tristan Wilds, Leslie Odom Jr.,  Nate Parker, Method Man and Michael B. Jordan. Of course, interviewing George Lucas wasn’t too shabby either.

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Now… Even though there is a snow storm in Chicago, I know a ton of people who have already seen the movie. Have you? Hit me back with your thoughts.





A Life Well-Lived: Remembering Ronald Sherman Samuels

22 12 2011

My Pops passed away last Monday. While it wasn’t unexpected (as he’d had a stroke in late summer) it still hurts – especially since he was on the up and up before taking a turn for the worse. But what’s done is done, and in my Christian experience, I know that all he did was change clothes. As the pastor says, “to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord.” That sounds good to me. ;)

My Pops was the best.

Along with my siblings, I planned my father’s funeral. We had to buy a casket, select a burial spot, pick out a vault, order flowers, call our entire family, notify all the various bar associations, take care of our mother (and grandmother) and still somehow console ourselves. I wrote the funeral program and the obituary. My brother designed some of it. My sister sang at the funeral. My other sister wrote a poem. My husband read Invictus. All my uncles sang a medly of songs.

One hundred members of Kappa Alpha Psi came to my dad’s funeral and serenaded him. County Commissioner Bobbie Steele was there, as was Alderman Will Burns and all of the other politicians that my dad’s life touched. The church was so packed that people had to smush into the choir stands to be seated. The funeral procession from the West Side to the South Side was some 80 cars long – escorted by state troopers. Friends and family came from far and near to be with us and to stay with us. In fact, many are still here – opting to spend Christmas with our family in solidarity.

My own friends showed up and showed out. My sister’s friends showed up and showed out. My brother’s friends showed up and showed out. My father’s friends showed up and showed out. And my mother’s friends showed up en force and showed out. I’ve learned a lot about the traditions of the Black family and the Black church in these last few weeks. The “ladies who lunch” (i.e. my mother’s good friends, the other barrister’s wives) came armed with reams of toilet paper, paper towels, rotisserie chickens, boxes of tissue, flowers, stamps, mac and cheese, greens, pistachios, fresh salads, cookies, cakes, cobblers and laughter.

They mopped and cleaned and cooked and hugged and kissed. And then when they got tired, they were replaced by uncles and aunts and neighbors and godparents and church members from seven different congregations. Even my brother’s ex-wife showed up and stayed for four days.

Everyone brought their children. And inexplicably, every child under the age of seven that came into the big house ran straight into my arms and hugged me in the way that only a child can. What a sweet present, that toddlers told me that my Daddy was ok.

We asked God for comfort and he sent us friends.

It’s only been a week since my Dad died, and it hurts something fierce. But, time heals all wounds, and I honored my father while he lived. I will continue to honor him in this new transition.

I wrote his obituary. Here it is.

Attorney Ronald Sherman Samuels was born on June 17, 1941 in Chicago.  His parents, Peter Isaac and Lena Samuels, raised him to be a Christian, a man of strong moral fortitude and a force in the city’s political and legal communities. Ronald was one of seven children and came up in the Morgan Park neighborhood, where everyone simply called him Ronnie. He received Christ at an early age at Beth Eden Baptist Church, where his father was a deacon and today, much of the Samuels family still attends.

 

Ronnie, one of “the three babies” of the family, attended Esmond Elementary School and Morgan Park High School. His first job was as a paperboy, and he delivered to the nearby neighborhood of Beverly Hills. He determined that one day he would live there, in the area that at the time denied Black people the opportunity to purchase the pretty houses on the hill.

 

Ronald went on to graduate from Chicago Teachers College (now Chicago State.) He pledged Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Incorporated and was initiated on February 18, 1961. His line was known as “The Magnificent Seven” and he was called the “Beast of Iota.”    In 1969, Ronald graduated from the John Marshall Law School, finally fulfilling his destiny to become an attorney. He was known for his quick mind, dominating presence and biting humor, and those skills served him auspiciously as he entered private practice – becoming a partner with Washington, Kennon, Hunter & Samuels – and dedicated his life to helping the legally disenfranchised.

 

Ron wed the love of his life, his beauty queen and Chicago Public Schools teacher and librarian Melva Jean Bryant, on August 15, 1970. They had met at a party, where Ron impressed Melva, now a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha, with his Kappa moves. Ronald also loved the Lord, and after wedding Melva – also of Morgan Park – he joined her family church: Mt. Hebron Missionary Baptist. There, on the West Side, he later became a deacon with his Christian service including being a church trustee and a Sunday School teacher. To boot, he loved driving his big burgundy Cadillac brougham – with Samuels on the license plate – to church on Sunday.

 

The fight for Civil Rights was a major concern for Attorney Samuels and as such, he provided legal counsel for Operation PUSH, the NAACP, the Morgan Park Local School Council, the Progressive and National Baptist Conventions, Church of God in Christ and the United Methodist Church in addition to being the chief trial attorney for Dr. Martin Luther King’s Leadership Council for Metropolitan Open Communities. He was a key member of the election committees for Mayor Harold Washington, Cook County Commissioner Bobbie Steele and Appellate Court Justice William Cousins.  His work for the Leadership Council led to the landmark case – Holmgren vs. The West Side Times – that remedied certain housing discrimination issues in Chicago associated with “redlining” – a practice that denied mortgages to minorities.

 

Counselor Samuels played the leading roll in the Seaton v. Sky Realty case, which recognized racial discrimination as a tort. He became the first African-American supervisor in the Cook County States’ Attorney’s Office, where he also was chief of the Consumer Fraud Division under Bernard Carey. In 1982, along with the CCBA, he organized hearings on the conduct of the Chicago Police Department in what later became infamously known as the Jon Burge Case. He also represented the music group The Spinners.

 

From 1993 to 1995, Brother Samuels served as Polemarch of the Chicago Alumni Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi. Kappa League, for teens, was a cause close to his heart – as was the annual Kappa cook out. He served as president of the CCBA and was vice president of the National Bar Association for two terms, and a board member for seven years. (One of his beloved events was the annual Cook County Bar Auxiliary Christmas Party.) He was also a member of the American Bar Association, the Illinois State Bar Association, the Chicago Bar Association and the American Trial Lawyers Association.

 

Ronald played as hard as he worked and he loved Melva’s family. He was a founding member of their family group, “The W-Right Connection.”  He helped to spearhead many reunions, parties and fundraisers.  He was a key part of many family trips, including excursions to Memphis, Acapulco and his forever favorite place, Las Vegas.  The family could always count on him to demand excellence and require that absolutely everything be “in writing.”

 

Ronald received many awards and served on many committees during his life of service. His awards alone are too many to name in this short space. His was a tough, enduring, intellectual love that accepted nothing but the best and pushed all in his circle to try harder and to be better and to always do what’s right. His love was also honest – straight, no chaser. He suffered no fools, but he loved to laugh – as evidenced by his booming baritone that frequently rang through the big house in Beverly during his legendary Bid Whist tourneys, Super Bowl parties and family meetings.

 

Ronald lived as a soldier for God. And this poem, used as the benediction at Beth Eden, eventually became his creed: “I must live with myself and so I want to be fit for myself to know… I don’t want to come to the setting sun hating myself for the things I’ve done.”

 

Ronald leaves a family of hundreds to celebrate his memory.

– Lovingly written by Adrienne P. Samuels Gibbs, the baby girl

 

 

 

 

 

 

 





iPhone 4S: an unofficial review from an EVO user

8 11 2011

I bought the iPhone 4s only because I had a killer upgrade credit from Sprint because I’ve been a customer for over a decade. I’ve been happy with my HTC Evo, and before then the HTC Touch Pro. I thought I’d give the iPhone a try since folks rave about it. But to be clear, I do like the Blackberry that I use for work. It’s perfect for reading email on the exchange server.

Top observations:

1. iPhone4s is waaaay smaller than Evo and fits perfectly in a clutch bag- very important for fashion-oriented events. Also very important when you want to grab your phone and $10 and go out for lunch with phone in coat pocket.

2. iPhone4s is brand new and has bugs. It FROZE on me when I visited Mexico. I only owned it for three days and blam, it’s dead to the world. What a WASTE because my EVO always worked in Mexico – especially Mexico City.

3. iPhone4s unfroze itself upon return to the U.S. Still, I almost returned it today. We’ll see how it goes from here. If it stays unstuck I’ll keep it. Otherwise, return to Apple immediately.

4. iPhone4s isn’t as intuitive to use as the droid, imho. My Evo synced easily with gmail and exchange mail contacts. iPhone makes you go through extra hoops. Boo. Hiss. BUT, I do like synergy with the bank applications, yahoo mail and exchange server. I really like the gmail-esque grouping of emails in one conversation. GENIUS.

5. Had to get used to the 4s touch screen. Not my favorite, but the auto-fill for the letters works well for me. Not a fan of NOT being able to move that cursor inside of a long word. Rather, you have to delete the entire word rather than just one letter. Time consuming. But then again, maybe there’s something I’m not doing right. Anyone? Help here?

6. I haven’t had the opportunity to use Siri much because the damn phone flipped out. If Siri doesn’t start working right soon, then what’s the point? Although, Siri did set a 5 a.m. alarm for me after I asked, oh, only about 7 times for the alarm to be set. Then today, Siri started reading all my text messages out loud. BUT I didn’t ask for this service! Then as suddenly as Siri freaked out, she went dead silent. So yes, there are bugs. And no, you can’t update your own 4S because the Apple website doesn’t actually have any updates yet for this device. I checked.

7. Battery power is good. Waaaaaay better than the Evo. Waaaay better.

8. I’m not a fan of having to use iCloud to sync contacts. It’s like one more thing you have to do and register for in order to be efficient. So new users should set aside four hours or so to get it all together. This bad boy is not lock and load. You must lock, download, upload, fill out, check boxes and whatnot before you get any true functionality.

9. Going online is SLOOOOOW. Sprint doesn’t offer 4G capability for this phone. boo. Hiss. Evo is faster – although Evo’s battery DOES die in like, three hours. So it’s six in one hand half a dozen in the other when it comes to which one is better. I think I might go for a slower browser if the phone lasts longer than three hours. In fact, I am definitely a fan of the 4S regarding the batter life issue versus the sucky battery life of the EVO.

10. This 4S sure is purty. Really purty, but it’s first generation. So I think bugs are expected.

Final analysis? Two weeks into my iPhone 4s experience the best thing that I can honestly say about it is that iPhone folks who see you carry it think it’s a status symbol. They see it and say “oooh and aaaah” but honestly, the damn phone broke three days after I turned it on. That makes me feel rather peculiar about the whole business of owning such an expensive device. Even in Mexico, the waiters were like: “ooooooh! is that the new iPhone?” so yes, everyone wants it. On the flip side,my HTC Evo cost $400 and was FAST. Meanwhile, Jermaine Dupri told me he paid $700 for his iPhone4S. Wowzers# I had a good upgrade, so I only paid $200 for the 32 GB 4S.

I’m going to give it one more week. My cousins tell me that I will fall in love with it once I get more used to the platform. I wish I could have a way to just turn on my contact list without having to tell it to switch between “all contacts” “yahoo contacts” “exchange contacts” and “gmail contacts.” (and no, I won’t entertain any questions about why I have so many various contact lists. It’s just that way when you’ve been the game for a while.)

Bottom line: I figure it can only get better from here right? As long as it doesn’t freeze again, I’ll be happy. BUT, now that sprint has offered me $90 for my EVO, I’ve decided that I’ll be holding onto it in case this 4S conks out again. I also think the 4S will be fun to use in the long run, and, as long as these bugs are ironed out, will be a good device to own – especially since Sprint has the unlimited data plan.

Wish list? Wish I could sync it or have it beam directly with my EVO for the address book.

Do you have the 4S? What are your thoughts?





A Listening Party, Chicago-style, with Tyrese

20 09 2011

Tyrese stopped through Chi Town last week on his multi-city listening tour. He played five songs off his new album for a packed, yet select, crowd at the Hard Rock Hotel. I heard part of the album before I interviewed Tyrese (earlier this summer) for his turn as the July cover boy for Ebony mag. The brother hasn’t lost his swag or his singing voice. The album features plain ol R&B and one or two club bangers. Tyrese said he wants there to be a distinctive difference between his love-making music and his dance music, hence the two easily discernible sounds on the album.

Free Heinekens made the rounds. I appreciated the beer, even though I don’t drink it. I also appreciate the Bulls player who shall go unnamed who let me and my fractured toe self (wearing a boot, to boot) crash his VIP table for the night.

As always, a picture (more tk once my cell phone charges back up.) And big ups to my friend Kev Ross, the EMI rep who pulled this swank event together.

 





Hanging with Zoe Saldana…

31 08 2011

I know. I know. Some of you aren’t happy with Zoe telling me that she won’t be complaining about a lack of roles for Black women in Hollywood. And yes it’s true that other actresses, in other cover stories, have told me that there IS a problem.

Before you cast too much more judgment, why not read the entire piece? Find it in September’s Ebony.

And to answer some of those Twitter questions: yes, she’s fun; yes, she’s tall; and yes, we really did talk about birth control. #newlywedchat





Taking Care of Business…

16 07 2011

I went to Maxine’s funeral last night.

She was, as I always say “extremely good people.”

What was great, in a weird way, about Max’s funeral was that she took care of everything herself. She paid for her casket, arranged for her own flowers, selected a church, took care of the entombment and even hired a chef to create an elegant repast in the church’s break room.

When you really think about it, it was pretty amazing that Max had the foresight and wherewithal to plan out every element of her homegoing services. God bless her for it because it’s an indication of how she lived her life: Max always had a plan. And when she decided to do something, she made sure that it happened.

I’m rarely inspired by funerals, as usually I leave a funeral bereft and puffy with tears. But Max’s funeral made me think about taking care of business. There’s something very comforting about knowing that Max has been and will always be  practical – in this life and the next.

 





Twitter Overshare?: “I was raped…”

30 05 2011

By now you all have likely read about the Tampa lady who tweeted about her alleged rape. Police have not identified the young woman, but say that she lived in a renovated bus in the Ybor City area and was allegedly raped after a man broke into her bus. Police, of course, asked her to stop tweeting about the incident, stating that it could get in the way of an investigation.

Last week I blogged about a would-be intern who decided to tweet about the interview process. Most of you agreed that such tweeting is, in fact, oversharing. That said, what do you think about tweeting about crimes?

I think it’s interesting that the Tampa lady so casually tweeted about her assault. And since she regularly tweets about living in this renovated bus, some Tampa residents believe she made herself a mark by being so open about her living space. I don’t agree with that. Don’t blame the victim.

However, the victim did tweet that her alleged rapist was a black man with tan shorts. As a former police reporter and as a black woman married to a black man who owns tan shorts, I think that’s not a very helpful description. There’s  a reason why journalism students are taught to fully identify crime suspects. It’s kind of a “go hard, or don’t go at all” approach to journalism. By only partially ID’ing a man, you indict all of them.

But I digress. Tweeting about crime is the question. Now, I tweeted after my car was broken into. I’ve also tweeted about being witness to a situation where I saw a guy physically intervene when he saw a girl screaming and running away from a man in an alley.  (That’s dangerous stuff, by the way, since the hero didn’t have a gun and the criminal might have been packing. Normally I’d say just call the police, but in this instance, the random man looked the hero up and down and decided he didn’t want nothing to do with an enormous black man asking the young lady if she needed some help.)

People are all a-Twitter about Sean Kingston’s accident and lots of people tweet about smoking weed.

Perhaps over sharing comes in when the topic is sexual or too closely related to money. I’m not sure. What do you think? If you were a victim of rape, would you tweet about it? If your house was broken into, would you tweet about it? If you got into a car accident, would you tweet about it? What exactly is off limits? I’d love to hear your thoughts.





Rules of Twitter Engagement: Discretion is key

21 05 2011

I can usually figure out if someone belongs to a secret society or a Greek letter organization by looking at their social media profile. Folks who provide too much information or inappropriate information are usually GDIs. Folks who are strategic in what they post? Usually they’re very savvy and are also likely a member of a social or professional organization that modeled for them the best ways to communicate.

I’m a member of Delta Sigma Theta, and my prophytes definitely taught me the value of good sense and good judgment. They also taught me when it’s best to say nothing at all.

Consider this: Someone on Twitter said that he had a job interview with a friend of mine. This guy said that he walked into the office, sat down with my friend and later received an email stating that my friend was very impressed with his work.

Another person on Twitter said she wanted an internship and she then proceeded to Tweet every step of the job interview process – even stating that the interviewer (me!) was late for the interview. That is, until she realized that she and I were not in the same time zone.

Need I go on?

Twitter is cute and fun and all that, but it’s dangerous when used without discretion or without plain old common sense. I showed my friend the tweets about the job interview that he allegedly conducted. My friend says that he never interviewed that individual and in fact, has no idea who that person might be. #interestingaintit

As far as the person who tweeted that I was late for interview? Well, the person later tweeted that she was wrong. But the damage was done. I can’t use someone who doesn’t know when and how to keep her mouth shut. And I really can’t use someone who has a demonstrated ability to make bad decisions (and no clue about time zones to boot!)

And liars? What’s the point? What could possibly come from lying about a job interview on Twitter? The person still doesn’t have a job and now they will never get a job at that company because my friend flagged the name. (Turns out the person had, in fact, submitted a resume for consideration.)

Job seekers of a certain age don’t seem to understand that they are being watched. They think they are beating the system.  I see them congratulate themselves by openly stating that they aren’t drinking the Kool-Aid. Yet, they’re tweeting day and night.

Newsflash: Twitter IS the Kool-Aid.





Lent is over, but the fast continues…

24 04 2011

It’s Easter Sunday, and after a mini break from blogging, I’m back.

Let’s update you on what’s going on with me. I’ve returned from the Tom Joyner Fantastic Voyage, where I taped two episodes of Washington Watch with Roland Martin. Those two episodes aired two weeks ago, and I’m getting record response to discussing how to get a man, how to keep a man and why women need to get rid of their “list.” Click here to listen and watch.

I also just returned from Los Angeles, where I witnessed Tyler Perry personally tell his critics to back off. Click here to read what happened.

But back to Lent. One of my friends said that she gave up worry and anxiety for Lent. Another gave up beef. Another gave up pop. To me, those all seem like worthy items to give up, and I sometimes wonder if God didn’t intend for us to start with a little bitty fast that might turn into a lifetime change.

Just a thought. Happy Resurrection Sunday.





Irish Day: Oh the memories…

12 03 2011

My parents were the first black people to move into the South Side Chicago neighborhood of Beverly Hills. It’s a higher income, Irish Catholic area flanked by houses on hills, ancient oak trees and mansions that sit on major acreage for a city property. At the time, there was virtually no diversity “west of the train tracks.”

We lived on top of the hill, in a colonial style red brick home with a carriage house in the back that had been converted into a garage. We had several bedrooms, a fireplace and enough room – finally – for my piano. A grand piano. My neighbors had a ballroom on their first floor. A Frank Lloyd Wright house stood two lots down. A lovely children’s park was across the street and the best school in Chicago was a mere five block walk from my front door.

I was a baby when they moved in, but my sisters and brother tell me the stories of how the racism was extraordinary. And then, in 1985,  I remember going to church (on the West Side) on St. Patricks Day and returning home to find that our stellar neighbors had painted all over our storybook house with the following words: “Niggers go back to Africa.” They painted the windows too and they destroyed the white wooden columns in front of the house.

My parents house was  – and is – along the route of the Chicago Home Tour. This fact prompted Mayor Daley to ask my dad to remove the nasty words from the first, second and third floors of our hill-perched house. My dad, an attorney who was working with Harold Washington and Operation PUSH, said “hell no.” I’m paraphrasing, but essentially he said that if your cousins did it, your cousins should clean it.

To add insult to injury, Pops refused to cut the grass too. So when the home tour approached, the house looked ridiculous.  And I was still asking “Daddy, where’s Africa? Is that near Madear’s house? I thought we were from Chicago and you were from Michigan and Mommy was from Little Rock.”

I knew our neighbors didn’t like us. I knew the Irish boys would chase us home from school but I didn’t understand why. I simply ducked when they threw rocks and dodged when they pulled out their pellet guns. One time when I was practicing my piano, someone even shot into the window by my piano seat. I was home alone, waiting for my mom to get off work. It was pretty early, around 3 p.m. or so. And I got under my piano and stayed there until Mom got home. I was too terrified to move.

But I digress. Back to that home tour.

We went to church the Sunday before the tour and upon our return found city crews sandblasting our crib and repainting our columns. They even had cut the grass. Dad threatened to sue the city for tresspassing on personal property, but we all had to admit that they did a good job cleaning up the mess of their fellow countrymen.

Beverly got a bit better after that. I got to know our new neighbors, the Lanahans. They had a bunch of kids, and I’m pretty sure there were eight boys and a few girls. Patrick and Daniel decided that they would walk us home from school – even though they went to the Catholic school and we went to the public school. Their mom would sit on the porch and make sure we got in. And our other new neighbors, who I now know were Chicago mob bosses, also looked out – though at the time I didn’t understand why.

Still even with our new protectors, it was hard blending into Chicago’s Irish mecca. Even harder on St. Patrick’s Day, where the world’s largest parade would parade down my block, leading to more acts of drunken terrorism. Interestingly, now, the city has pulled the plug on Beverly’s parade. It had gotten to be too much- even for the Irish.  The only parade to be found now is downtown Chicago, with plenty of police.

And though the Lanahan boys (who grew up to be supa, dupa fine) tease me about going to the new parade, they know I never will. I’m not mad, but I’m all set.








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