Category: Service

  • Our Dear One, the Black Church

    Essence Magazine:

    Our Dear One, the Black Church By Noel Cody ·February 10, 2021February 10, 2021

    Empowerment comes from within, but it is only achieved when you feel fully supported emotionally, spiritually and holistically.  A symbol of our community, family, justice, freedom and faith, you, the Black church, is where we go to celebrate God and each other.

    Now more than ever, we look to you to bring us together as you always have, since your humble beginning as secret gatherings for enslaved Africans brought to the Americas. We know that many of the first churches were started by freed slaves, and today, we stand on their shoulders to preserve these safe havens for our black brothers and sisters. As a congregation, we raise our voices each week, singing the same spirituals that our ancestors did. We feel their energy and use it to break down barriers that separate those with different economic or social backgrounds, uniting us as a whole in joy, love and hope. We honor the generations of the past who paved the way for us, those who stood in these same churches and called of positive change across our communities.

    Even now, you, the Black church, continue to speak truth to power, even in the face of systematic racism. During the civil rights movement, you became the gathering point for rallies and marches, all while providing the emotional, physical, and spiritual support that we needed then and still need now. We look to church leaders from the past, like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. who preached at Atlanta’s Historic Ebenezer Baptist Church, and from the present, like Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Jr., the minister from Chicago’s Trinity Church, and those of the future, like the pastors at our local church. They offer wisdom, knowledge and the Word of the Lord, transforming our communities through engagement and service.

    You also create a safe space for self-expression that extends beyond the pulpit and into the congregation. Within your walls, parishioners are free to show themselves as they truly are, whether that means dressing to the nines in their Sunday best, complete with hats and crowns, or more casually, through an ensemble that allows their true self to shine through without fear of prejudice or racism.

    And where would we be without the music that you so graciously and passionately give to us? People come far and wide to experience the electrifying and transformative energy that is felt as choirs minister worldwide. Not bound by language, even without understanding the words one sings, the vibrations transcend the English language and are undeniably relished by all. This space continues to birth many major artists from various genres, crediting God and citing the Black church as the breeding ground and sharpening of their musical talents and careers.

    We know your value and weave your story of faith, community and healing into our biggest moments and yearly events, as you are an integral part of the Black experience for many.

    Black church, we along with PBS, celebrate you this Black History Month and give you the flowers that you truly deserve.

    On February 16 at 9/8c, PBS will premiere The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song, a new series examining your lasting influence on nearly every chapter of the African American story.  Black church, we thank you and we honor you.

    Watch The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song on February 16 at 9/8c on your local PBS station (check local listings) or the PBS Video app. For a closer look, preorder the companion book written by Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., — available everywhere books are sold on February 16.

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  • ESSENCE Appoints Executive Team To Lead Company’s Strategic Realignment, Innovation Focus And Community Impact

    ESSENCE Appoints Executive Team To Lead Company’s Strategic Realignment, Innovation Focus And Community Impact

    Essence Magazine:

    ESSENCE Appoints Executive Team To Lead Company’s Strategic Realignment, Innovation Focus And Community Impact From left: Caroline Wanga, Latraviette Smith-Wilson, Avani Patel, Cori Murray and Stephanie Hodges-Dunivan By ESSENCE Editors ·February 9, 2021February 9, 2021

    February 9, 2021 (New York, NY) – ESSENCE, the leading and only 100% Black-owned media, technology and commerce company at scale dedicated to Black women and communities, today announced updates to its executive leadership team. These appointments are part of the final phases of the restructuring process aimed at positioning the company for continued growth and maximum impact following its acquisition from Time Inc. 

    To date, this transformation has included, among other focus areas, building critical operational infrastructure across finance, human resources and technology; making significant investments across ESSENCE magazine, digital, e-commerce and experiential platforms—resulting in the brand almost doubling its reach over three years; expanding platforms for other culturally-rooted entrepreneurs and businesses that create economic opportunities for Black communities; introducing heightened capabilities, technology, products and touch points that super-serve the interests of Black women locally and globally— including the launch of ESSENCE Studios streaming platform; refining organizational culture and accountability; and developing a new strategic framework and targeted partner engagement approach—with more to come. 

    ESSENCE’s January/February 2021 print issue featuring Rihanna by Lorna Simpson, Photographic collage, Dimensions variable © Lorna Simpson, Courtesy of the artist and Hauser & Wirth

    In continuation of the critical work that they have been leading, Essence Communications, Inc. (ESSENCE) has appointed the following to its C-suite and senior leadership team, effective immediately:

    Caroline Wanga, Chief Executive Officer, ESSENCE and Chief Growth Officer, Essence Ventures

    Wanga, who has served as Interim CEO of ESSENCE for seven months, has been officially appointed as Chief Executive Officer. She joined Essence Ventures, parent company of ESSENCE, as Chief Growth Officer in 2020 from Target Corporation, where she served as Chief Culture, Diversity and Inclusion Officer. Wanga began her Target career in supply chain, serving in a variety of transformational leadership roles, including modernizing Supply Chain, Business Intelligence, Digital and Strategy capabilities.

    Caroline Wanga, Chief Executive Officer, ESSENCE + Chief Growth Officer, Essence Ventures | Photo courtesy of subject

    Prior to that, she held several non-profit roles. Among other accolades, Wanga has been named Top Executive in Corporate Diversity by Black Enterprise and recognized at Savoy Most Powerful Women in Corporate America, as well as is a member of the Executive Leadership Council (ELC), the Talladega College Board of Trustees and the American Airlines Community Council. She previously served on the Intersectionality, Culture, and Diversity Advisory Board for Twitter and as co-chair of the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) Diversity & Inclusion Initiative. Wanga, who was born in Kenya, is an innovative and inspirational thought leader and public speaker and earned her bachelor’s degree from HBCU Texas College. 

    Latraviette D. Smith-Wilson, Chief Strategy & Engagement Officer

    Smith-Wilson, who also serves as Chief Strategy Officer for Essence Ventures (parent company of ESSENCE), has joined ESSENCE as Chief Strategy & Engagement Officer. In this newly-created role, the following teams will report to her: Business Development/Sales, Marketing, Content, Creative, Experiential, Video, and Stakeholder Engagement (PR, talent, and strategic partnerships). With 20-plus years of global experience building brands through a lens of purpose, social impact and inclusion and a career spanning journalism, marketing & communications, DEI and business strategy, Smith-Wilson has worked and held senior leadership roles across newsrooms, agencies, Fortune 100 companies, and entrepreneurial ecosystems, including Sundial Brands/Unilever, American Express, Edelman, Deloitte and National Urban League. 

    Latraviette D. Smith-Wilson, Chief Strategy & Engagement Officer, ESSENCE | Photo courtesy of subject

    She has been recognized by Black Enterprise–Next Generation Women of Power, Café Mocha–Powerhouse Award/Outstanding Business Leadership, Ebony– Women Up, and Forbes–Black Women Leaders to Follow, among others. Smith-Wilson is a board member and the immediate past Chair of the Board of Harlem United and has previously served on the board of the PRSA Foundation and as the Diversity & Inclusion columnist for PRWeek. She is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. and received her double-major bachelor’s degree from Wake Forest University and her Master’s Degree from New York University.

    Avani Patel, Chief Operating Officer

    Patel, who previously served as Chief of Staff & Vice President in the Office of the CEO, has been promoted to Chief Operating Officer. In this role, she will lead the Technology, Finance, and Human Resources functions. A veteran of the technology industry, her career spans product launch, management/operations and consulting across Fortune 500 companies and start-ups.

    Avani Patel, Chief Operating Officer, ESSENCE | Photo courtesy of subject

    Patel previously led technology at Sundial Brands/Unilever, as well as professional services at Verizon/Totality Corp. She has PMP and Six Sigma Black Belt certifications and received her bachelor’s degree from Rutgers University.

    Cori Murray, Deputy Editor

    Murray, who joined ESSENCE in 1999 and has held various editor roles across the organization, has been promoted to Deputy Editor. In this role, she will lead the brand’s editorial content team across print and digital, as well as magazine operations. Murray led the team behind the January/February 2021 Rihanna + Lorna Simpson cover, and most recently served as Entertainment and Talent Director, curating and editing the celebrity and culture content for ESSENCE’s editorial and digital platforms. She also cohosts the brand’s leading podcast – Yes, Girl! – which is a two-time Webby Award-nominated podcast and has received 5+ million downloads. 

    Cori Murray, Deputy Editor, ESSENCE | Photo: Michael Rowe

    Murray has served as a cultural critic for numerous outlets, including CNN, MSNBC, and Access Hollywood, had articles published in outlets including the Associated Press and Vibe, and been featured on Stoop Talks (Luminary) and Going Through It with Tracy Clayton (Mailchimp) podcasts. She was also featured in the OWN documentary, Light Girls and Ava DuVernay’s My Mic Sounds Nice: A Truth About Women in Hip Hop, and contributed to the anthology, He Never Came Home: Interviews, Stories, and Essays from Daughters on Life Without Their Fathers (Agate Bolden). Murray received her bachelor’s degree from HBCU Hampton University.

    Stephanie Hodges-Dunivan – Vice President, Experiential, Branded Content & Video – Hodges-Dunivan (aka NöNe), who most recently served as Executive Producer, has been promoted to Vice President, Experiential, Branded Content & Video. With nearly 20 years experience in television and digital production, she joined ESSENCE.com in 2017 to lead the charge for video production for ESSENCE Festival and events and took over ESSENCE Video in 2018, leading the team to develop programming that has since catapulted video performance to record-breaking levels in the company’s 50-year history, including a 145% increase in video views in 2020.

    Stephanie Hodges-Dunivan, Vice President, Experiential, Branded Content & Video, ESSENCE | Photo courtesy of subject

    Hodges-Dunivan also led the video production for the first-ever virtual Essence Festival of Culture in 2020, which garnered 70 million views of Festival-related content, with more than 45 million full streams across all platforms. She has previously worked at Inside Edition and BET, where she was Senior Producer at 106 & Park and produced Red Carpet Specials for the BET Awards and Soul Train Awards. While there, she also produced the first-ever live game show in a mobile app. Hodges-Dunivan received her bachelor’s degree from Hunter College–The City University of New York.

    Wanga said, “Since the beginning of time, Black women have been changing lives, changing communities, and changing the world – and most often have not been recognized for it. While we may still be fighting for the C-Suite in Corporate America, we have held practically every seat in the C-Suite of our lives: Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Chief Marketing Officer, Chief Communications Officer, Chief Wellness Officer, Chief Strategy Officer and the list goes on. It is what we do, and for the past 50 years, the evolution of Black women’s history—and thus, the evolution of the Black woman—has been captured and curated in one place and one place only: ESSENCE.”

    She continues: “I could not be more excited for the opportunity to serve this cornerstone of Black culture into its next phase of growth, innovation and impact alongside this incredible team of accomplished women. ESSENCE has at our disposal some of the most recognized, trusted and treasured assets through which to engage Black women and our communities in service to not just surviving, but thriving, and we are grateful for our broader teams across the organization who demonstrate commitment every day to ensuring that we are building our capabilities in service to that purpose. Moving forward, we will be bringing this to life through a three-pillar focus—Culture, Equity and Celebration—and are driving each of those through a prioritized set of goals that include engaging the global Black diaspora, leveraging an inclusive and multigenerational approach, optimizing our 360-integrated capability including virtual and live agility, capitalizing on our first-party data and research to uncover key insights and more.”

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    Smith-Wilson added, “When ESSENCE was founded 50 years ago, it had a very clear mandate – to show, empower and celebrate the many facets of Black women and to do so understanding the power of media images and the importance of controlling our own narrative. Today, in a season where almost everyone professes to care about the needs of Black women and particularly in this time of national and global reckoning on the systemic injustices that we face as Black women and as a Black community, this mandate is ever-more clear and critical as we put an even deeper stake in the ground that our culture is not a trend or a marketing opportunity. Today, more than 31 million Black women globally call ESSENCE home. Home is the place where we lay our heads, our hearts, our insecurities, our fears, our aspirations, and our dreams. It is where we return to be renewed and restored. That is ESSENCE – equipping her with what she needs to lead in all areas of her life. Black women are speaking. Black women are leading. Black women are continuing to change the world as we know it. We always have, and we always will.”

    ABOUT ESSENCE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.

    Essence Communications is the number one—and only 100% Black-owned—media, technology and commerce company at scale dedicated to Black women and communities.  With a community of more than 31 million Black women, ESSENCE inspires a global audience through diverse storytelling and immersive original content rooted in Culture, Equity and Celebration.  The brand’s multi-platform presence in publishing, experiential and online encompasses its namesake magazine; digital, video and social platforms; television specials; books; and signature live events, including Black Women in Music, Black Women in Hollywood, Street Style and the ESSENCE Festival of Culture. 

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  • ESSENCE Essential Heroes Awards: Join Us As We Honor Extraordinary Service In 2020

    ESSENCE Essential Heroes Awards: Join Us As We Honor Extraordinary Service In 2020

    Essence Magazine:

    ESSENCE Essential Heroes Awards: Join Us As We Honor Extraordinary Service In 2020 By Essence ·November 6, 2020November 6, 2020

    As 2020 nears its’ end, one of few things that have been consistent about this tumultuous year is the dedication we’ve seen from essential workers across the country.

    From healthcare to retail to food service to education and so many other industries, we’ve seen millions our family, friends and neighbors continuously persevere to remain on the frontlines through a worldwide pandemic, global unrest and arguably the most exhausting presidential election cycle the country has ever seen. Not only have they been putting their lives on the line to provide crucial services for our country, they’ve done so with pride.

    In honor of these extraordinary individuals and on the heels of the 2020 ESSENCE Festival of Culture Essential Heroes Awards, where we spotlighted our beloved healthcare workers, ESSENCE is proud to partner with Disney, AT&T Dream In Black and Hyundai to bring you the second installment of our 2020 ESSENCE Essential Heroes Awards. Streaming Wednesday, November 18 on essence.com beginning at 6PM EST, the awards will spotlight a total of 20 honorees across 4 categories:

    Community Change MakersIndividuals who work in or volunteer in work that changes the direction or state of their community through activism, civic engagement, social change or vocational & financial training.

    Educators Teachers, professors or administrators who have done extraordinary work during this unprecedented time to inspire students to keep going.Mental Health Individuals who work in, or do work, that advances mental health support in our community.

    Parents & FamilyParents or children who have pushed forward during this time against extraordinary odds.

    Be sure to tune in to essence.com on November 18 as we salute, honor and celebrate our ESSENCE Essential Heroes!

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  • Bevel Offers Free Mental Health Services To Black Community

    Essence Magazine:

    Bevel, the grooming brand specializing in products tailored for the textured hair and melanin-rich skin of Black men, will be providing free mental health services to several people in the Black community. The brand is offering complimentary 30-day passes to premium programs from Headspace, an app that provides guided meditations to help improve focus, temper anxiety, relieve stress and more.

    “We recognize that during these turbulent times, Black women and men are under an enormous amount of stress due to COVID-19 and the decades-long fight against systemic racism, police brutality, and inequality,” Walker & Company’s Vice President Tia Cummings tells ESSENCE.

    “And we also know that Black women and men don’t always take the time to focus on their own mental health. That’s why we’re providing free, 30-day memberships to Headspace Plus; so our community can more easily access helpful tools and tips for managing stress and anxiety in a healthy way,” she continued.

    Black people across the country also often go without necessary mental health services due to a lack of health care and resources. And in many instances where health care is available, mental health services come with out-of-pocket costs.

    So Bevel’s initiative will be crucial in helping a lot of people just clear their head space. Simply talking about caring for our mental health also opens up a necessary dialogue in the Black community that has, for a long time, held a stigma with it. It creates a safe space where men and women (and children) can feel okay telling their friends, family and colleagues that they’re not okay and that they need help.

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    There is much work left to do. As we continue to stand side-by-side with our brothers and sisters in the fight against systemic racism and injustices toward Black people across America, taking care of ourselves mentally is more important than ever before. Now and always, Bevel stays committed to the mental wellness of our community.⁠⠀ ⁠⠀ Starting today, we’re providing a LIMITED NUMBER of #BevelFam with 30 days free of @Headspace Plus, the mindfulness and guided meditation app to help you deal with stress, anxiety, and more. ⁠⠀ ⁠⠀ Claim your free 30 days of Headspace Plus today by going to the link in bio or to getbevel.com/headspace. (US only. Offer not available thru in-app registration.)

    A post shared by BEVEL (@bevel) on Jun 22, 2020 at 3:53pm PDT

    To redeem, visit getbevel.com/headspace, create a login online, download the app, and start using Headspace. The offer is valid in the United States only, through June 29.

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  • Conservative Journalist Exposed After Faking Community Service

    Essence Magazine:

    “Good job guys, BLM!” is what journalist Fiona Moriarty-McLaughlin said after staging an act of community service in Santa Monica, Ca., on Monday.

    Moriarty-McLaughlin hopped out of her car and asked a man who was boarding up a building after Sunday’s protests turned into looting. She then took a hammer and fake nailed something, while her boyfriend took a photo.

    McLaughlin, who writes for the Washington Examiner, was outed by New York Times reporter Taylor Lorenz on Twitter shortly after the video clip started going viral with a post from actor Johnny Sibilly.

    .@factswithfiona stopped someone boarding up a store in Santa Monica so she could hold the drill for a picture, then drove away. The video is now all over influencer tea accts. She’s since gone private but said nothing pic.twitter.com/K23qssYl0x

    — Taylor Lorenz (@TaylorLorenz) June 2, 2020

    Shortly after going viral, Moriarty-McLaughlin made all of her social media accounts private to avoid the backlash, but private accounts don’t interrupt a good social media dragging.

    this is what some of y’alls activism looks like pic.twitter.com/z14HmcGFOa

    — JOHNNY SIBILLY (@JohnnySibilly) June 2, 2020

    You know what? I’m… I think I’m gonna put Twitter away for a few minutes before I throw this phone across the room. pic.twitter.com/IfbFv1HvR2

    — Ava DuVernay (@ava) June 2, 2020

    Corporate America and Silicon Valley right nowpic.twitter.com/WZIKFcDiIP

    — Dan Price (@DanPriceSeattle) June 2, 2020

    Fiona Moriarty-McLaughlin and people of her ilk are exactly what’s wrong when you mix “influencer” and activism together when it’s all for the ‘gram.

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