Beyoncé Hates When People Sing 'Happy Birthday' To Her Just Like The Rest Of Us

Our lord and savior Beyoncé showed her human form this weekend at the Made in America festival to celebrate her birthday. Yes, it’s been 35 years since Tina Knowles gave birth to our queen, presumably swaddled in House of Deréon fabrics since day one. 

On Sunday, Bey and husband Jay Z made an appearance in Philadelphia at the two-day festival, which he founded in 2012. Performers included Rihanna, Coldplay and Lil Wayne, but it was Chance the Rapper who turned the tables on the superstar with a special birthday surprise.

A week after Beyoncé crashed his backstage interview at the MTV Video Music Awards, the Chicago rapper readily embarrassed the singer in return by singing his rendition of “Happy Birthday” to her as she stood in a crowd of thousands at the festival. 

“Auntie it’s your birthday, happy birthday Yonce,” he sang, as he encouraged concertgoers to join in on the celebration. 

Beyoncé, as it turns out, can perform in stadiums across the world, slay your faves on a regular basis, dismantle patriarchy with an album or two and still get embarrassed at being the center of attention.

In two videos shared on social media, we can see her reaction to those universally despised 20 seconds, when everybody sings at you and all you want to do is eat cake alone in your room. A clearly uncomfortable-looking Bey buries her head in Jay’s shoulder and hides behind him during the song, flushed and smiling the whole time. 

But by the end, it’s all good, as she emerges laughing and clapping with the rest of the crowd, while her bodyguard scolds people for photographing her. Isn’t life grand? 

Watch her reaction below: 

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Following Son's Suicide, The Bauer Fund Announces First Award Recipients

Dr. Bill Bauer, vice president of The J. Luce Foundation, announced today the first recipients of the foundation’s Bauer Fund. “My family is delighted to inform our first three beneficiaries that we are honoring them with grants in honor and memory of our son and Grant who passed away from suicide in 2014,” Bill stated.

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Grant Bauer, son of Dr. Bill and Mary Ella Bauer and sister to Maddie Bauer.
Photo courtesy of the Bauer Family.

The Bauer Fund is one of the foundation’s many initiatives to create a better humanity and world. The awards have been announced on the anniversary of Grant’s passing, September 5. The grants are to be used for promotion, prevention and/or research in the areas of suicide awareness and prevention, mental health issues, and or program development for people with intellectual disabilities.

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Grant Bauer as a child. Photo courtesy of the Bauer Family.

Grant had just turned 25 and, in the minds of his family, had his whole life ahead of him. He loved reading, swimming, and music and had the ability to make people laugh. His smile was infectious. Grant would not want his friends and family to continue to ask “Why” but instead to ask “How?” How can we help? How can we make a difference?

2016-09-05-1473085910-6159979-14138556_845589425613_1252981997_n.jpgGrant Bauer. Photo courtesy of the Bauer Family.

The Bauer Fund promotes the use of Random Acts of Kindness (RAK’s) throughout the year but is primarily focused on GRANT Day (September 5) and Grant Week (September 5-12). The J. Luce Foundation promotes young global leadership impacting positive social change and the NGOs that support them, particularly in the fields of the Arts, Education, and Orphan Care.

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Grant Bauer with sister Maddie. Photo courtesy of the Bauer Family.

Support includes microgrants and ‘spotlighting’ through social media and the Foundation’s Stewardship Report on Connecting Goodness, which features original and aggregated content. Last year the Luce Foundation declared September 5 be internationally known as GRANT Day and promote the use of Random Acts of Kindness all over the world.

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Grant Bauer. Photo courtesy of the Bauer Family.

The 2016 inaugural awards recipients are:

National: Fountain House

Fountain House developed the first successful working community to address the devastating social impact of mental illness. It was founded on the premise that people living with mental illness are active participants in their recovery. Each year, over 1,300 members come to Fountain House to contribute their talents, learn new skills, access opportunities, and to make new friendships.

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Fountain House is the premier organization working with New Yorkers
living with mental illness. Photo: Courtesy Fountain House.

Fountain House members, in partnership with staff, operate employment, education, wellness, and housing programs. They perform all vital community activities, including advocacy, communications, food preparation, administrative support and participation on the Board of Directors. Programs are designed to provide opportunities and to produce the desire and confidence to pursue them.

Fountain House creates a culture that transforms lives. Members experience fewer hospitalizations, improved overall wellness, a reduced sense of isolation and increased fulfillment, purpose, and stability.

Fountain House is a local working community with a global reach. Since 1948, Fountain House has inspired the creation of hundreds of programs worldwide, which serve more than 100,000 people. In 2014, the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation recognized Fountain House’s global influence and the efficacy of its evidence-based model with the prestigious Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize.

Regional: Mid-Ohio Valley Learning About Addiction (MOVLAA)

Initiated in 2016 as a result of the rising opiate and heroin epidemic in the area, the Mid-Ohio Valley Learning About Addiction (MOVLAA) has two distinct goals: To gather and disseminate quality information about local addiction resources and services and to bring addiction awareness to the Mid-Ohio Valley through community outreach.

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Mid-Ohio Valley Learning About Addiction (MOVLAA) brings addiction awareness
to the Mid-Ohio Valley through community outreach. Photo: MOVLAA.

J. Luce Foundation Scholar

Brendan Adkinson is a recent graduate of Marietta College where he majored in Biochemistry, Neuroscience, and Spanish. At Marietta, he was an active participant in the Pioneer Pipeline Program, an on-campus mentorship program that matches high school students who have intellectual disabilities with college students for vocational, academic, and social-recreational coaching. Brendan was also a letterman on the varsity football team before switching to the tennis team where he was a captain. He has a diverse range of multicultural experiences ranging from serving as a delegate to the 2014 U.S.-China Student Summit to supervising a tri-state mobile health unit that provided free health screenings in locations including migrant farmworker camps and inner-city neighborhoods.Brendan recently presented at the International Meeting for Autism Research and the Multiple Perspectives on Access, Inclusion, and Disability Conference.

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J. Luce Foundation Director Tony Abdelghany, the author, Luce Scholar
Brendan Adkinson of Yale University with Luce Fellow Xuan “Isaac” He of
Columbia University. Photo: The Stewardship Report/Mangala Weerasekera.

Brendan now has a two-year research position within the laboratory of Dr. Alan Anticevic, Co-Director of Yale University School of Medicine’s new Division of Neurocognition, Neurocomputation, and Neurogenetics. The laboratory harnesses the combination of task-based, resting-state, and pharmacological functional neuroimaging, as well as computational modeling approaches, in order to mechanistically understand neural circuit dysfunction in psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia. “I wake up everyday feeling blessed to be doing something that I love and excited to be making a contribution to efforts like these,” he says of his work in the Anticevic Laboratory. “The balance between one-on-one patient interaction and the other facets of our research is perfect for me.”

Brendan plans to apply to M.D.-Ph.D. programs and eventually pursue a career in clinical research centered around mental illness. He says his interest in mental health is rooted in the loss of his best friend, Matt, who took his own life after a secret battle with drug addiction before their senior year of high school: “This will forever remain the most tragic experience of my life – one that will follow me wherever I go. Yet, from it, I will be able to better serve others throughout my career in research and medicine. When people go through things like this I can tell them that I not only empathize with them, but that I truly understand.”

When he’s not carrying out research, Adkinson is taking steps to combat the social stigma surrounding mental health. “When it comes to issues like suicide, addiction, and mental illness, we live in a society plagued by stigma and silence. I want to be a major force in bringing these issues out of the darkness,” he says. He is currently looking to partner with a non-profit organization to raise funds for grants promoting in-school and on-campus mental health awareness and activism. Upon receiving word of this recognition, Brendan said, “I’m very humbled by the fact that the Luce Foundation and Bauer Fund would consider me for this award and I’m looking forward to taking further steps to embody the principles of young global leadership.”

See Stories by Jim Luce on:

Health | Ohio | Philanthropy

The James Jay Dudley Luce Foundation (www.lucefoundation.org) supporting young global leadership is affiliated with Orphans International Worldwide (OIWW), raising global citizens. If supporting youth is important to you, subscribe to J. Luce Foundation updates here.

Follow Jim Luce on Facebook, Twitter (@JimLuce), and LinkedIn.

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Megan Rapinoe Kneels During National Anthem To Support Colin Kaepernick

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U.S. women’s soccer star Megan Rapinoe took a knee during the national anthem before her match on Sunday as an act of solidarity with NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick.

In a postgame interview, Rapinoe, who came out as gay in 2012, told American Soccer Now that the decision was “very intentional” and she considered it a “little nod to Kaepernick.”

“I think it’s actually pretty disgusting the way he was treated and the way that a lot of the media has covered it and made it about something that it absolutely isn’t,” she said. “We need to have a more thoughtful, two-sided conversation about racial issues in this country.”

The San Francisco 49ers’ Kaepernick made headlines following a preseason game against the Green Bay Packers when he refused to stand during “The Star-Spangled Banner,” saying that he would not “stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color.”

The photo below shows Rapinoe, of the Seattle Reign, before her National Women’s Soccer League match against the Chicago Red Stars. 

Rapinoe added that, as a gay American, she knows “what it means to look at the flag and not have it protect all of your liberties.”

“It was something small that I could do and something that I plan to keep doing in the future and hopefully spark some meaningful conversation around it,” she continued. “It’s important to have white people stand in support of people of color on this. We don’t need to be the leading voice, of course, but standing in support of them is something that’s really powerful.”

Rapinoe later commented about the decision on Twitter.

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Today's Best Deals: Anker Anniversary Sale, Business Books, Labor Day Apparel Sales

Anker’s anniversary sale, Pepsi 1893, and dozens of cheap business books lead off today’s best deals.

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Watch This Crab Enjoy Human Food With Elegant Sophistication

Before I happened upon this video, I would’ve assumed that a crab would devour its meal haphazardly, primitively. Apologies for misjudging. Turns out crustaceans, much like stars, are just like us! Or at least they enjoy their food with the endearing precociousness of a human toddler.

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The 5 Best Compact SUVs Under $30,000

2015_NYIAS_2016_Toyota_RAV4_Hybrid_023Small crossovers and SUVs are among the most popular automobiles on the market, and it’s really no surprise. Practical and versatile, with enough storage space and passenger room to go above and beyond the day-to-day needs of most families, yet without the stodgy image of a minivan, sport-utility vehicles and their closely-related crossover cousins continue to do big business for … Continue reading

Wacom's latest smartpads marry pen and paper with digital notes

Despite the many high-tech devices on display here at IFA, sometimes all you want is a pen and paper to jot down notes or draw a quick sketch. Still, there’s no reason not to marry ink and tech, which is the driving idea behind Wacom’s latest line of…

Webcaster Gun turns you into a Spiderman

webcaster-gunWhen you were growing up, or even if you are an adult now, just which particular superhero do you wish to be? If you have answered Spiderman, did you ever willingly get bitten by a spider, hoping that it has been irradiated enough so that you gain Peter Parker’s arachnid powers? Unfortunately, the world does not work this way, and rather than come up with your own web shooters, you might want to consider picking up the Webcaster Gun.

The Webcaster Gun is the perfect tool to spruce up any Halloween party as the season comes upon us again. It will be able to spray 1.5 pounds of webbing in an hour, and will hook up to most shop vacuums without missing a beat. This innovative product allows you to decorate inside and out with cobwebs, and is perfect for just about anyone with a love of Halloween or spooky parties. The refill packs will include 20 sticks, and the Webcaster ships with 1 stick to help you get started right out of the box.
[ Webcaster Gun turns you into a Spiderman copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Standing Rock and the Forgotten History of Native American Activism

For the last few months, members of North Dakota’s Standing Rock Sioux tribe and allies from numerous other Native American tribes have protested the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline, a multi-billion dollar oil pipeline that would span four Western states and affect native communities and land in many ways. The community of protesters represents the largest gathering of Native Americans in more than a century, yet it has been largely ignored by the mainstream American media. (The protest’s significant social media presence might make it seem to some of us as if it’s receiving such attention, but outside of that bubble of insiders there has been shockingly little national coverage.)

The absence of Standing Rock from our collective conversations is troubling on its own terms, as this is a huge and compelling American story. It’s also a story that links to many other significant issues: from debates over energy policy to the movement against police brutality, the history of Native American sovereignty and land rights to 21st century social media and hashtag activism.

Yet by minimizing and ignoring the protests, we’re also replicating longstanding national narratives of native communities as “vanishing Americans,” tragic victims of oppression with no real voice, agency, or presence. And we’re likewise forgetting the alternative, vital histories of Native American resistance, protest, and activism through which native communities have responded to and often changed those darkest histories.

Both of those troubling trends can be traced back to the early 19th century era of President Andrew Jackson’s Indian Removal policy. The horrific Trail of Tears that was that policy’s most destructive result is perhaps the most frequently taught and remembered Native American history. Yet far less well remembered are the 1829 and 1830 Cherokee Memorials, collaboratively authored texts addressed directly to Congress through which the tribe responded to the removal policy with a stunning combination of legal and constitutional, historical and political, and rhetorical and emotional appeals. While the Memorials did not succeed in halting the tribe’s removal, they nonetheless comprise a vital moment and model of American protest and activism.

The same era also witnessed an equally inspiring and more successful moment of resistance: the Mashpee Revolt of 1833-1834. The Cape Cod (Massachusetts) tribe had been dealing with its own version of illegal white intrusions and settlements on their land, and with the help of the fiery native preacher, orator, and activist William Apess, the Mashpee fought back. Apess and tribal leaders drafted a formal resolution of protest, one quite parallel to (and perhaps even partially inspired by) the Cherokee Memorials; the document and the tribe’s subsequent protests gained the attention of Boston abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison and other sympathetic allies, and aided by their advocacy the tribe secured the state’s recognition of its right to self-governance within a new “Indian District of Mashpee.”

Our collective memories of Native Americans in the late 19th century, when they exist at all, similarly tend to focus on the most destructive and tragic histories: the Indian Wars and the final surrenders of leaders such as Geronimo and Chief Joseph; the horrors of the Wounded Knee massacre; the rise of the interconnected reservation and reform school systems. Those dark American histories certainly demand even fuller remembrance and engagement than we’ve yet given them.

Yet this was the same period in which Ponca chief Standing Bear and other members of the Nebraska tribe took part in an extensive speaking tour to argue for their tribal rights, culminating in Standing Bear’s stunning legal victory in 1879’s Standing Bear v. Crook, a case which established Native American personhood under the law. This was also the period in which Paiute chief and author Sarah Winnemucca resisted her tribe’s removal through a combination of legal petitions, written activism, and land occupation, helping return many Paiutes to their Oregon homelands.

The legacies of the Cherokees and Apess, of Standing Bear and Winnemucca, echo into our present moment. The construction of pipelines on native land can and must be read as yet another oppressive, destructive history unfolding against native communities. Yet once again those dark histories have produced inspiring acts of resistance and protest. When the Senate voted against authorizing construction of the Keystone Pipeline in November 2014, Lakota activist Grey Graycloud led a chant of celebration, a singular moment that illustrates the ongoing efforts by tribes in both the U.S. and Canada to protest and stop the pipeline.

Today, we see an even more collective and organized communal protest unfolding in Standing Rock. It’s quite possible that the Dakota Access Pipeline will be built nonetheless–the dark histories have too often overcome inspiring activisms. History tells us with certainty that more violence and discrimination will be directed at these native protesters and their allies. Yet what we cannot and must not do is extend and complement those oppressions by repeating our history of minimizing and ignoring Native American protest and activism. And if focusing our collective attention on Standing Rock helps us likewise remember those longstanding legacies of resistance, all the better.

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Meatless Monday: Go with the Grain — it's Whole Grains Month

Happy Labor Day and happy Whole Grains Month. From amaranth, the It whole grain of the moment, to old friends like brown rice and oats, they’re all winners. Celebrate them, enjoy them all September long. Your body will thank you.

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A new Harvard study links increased whole grain consumption with reduced mortality risk. The secret’s in the bran and the germ. That’s where grains offer complex carbs for good energy and a host of vitamins, minerals and nutrients. They have fiber to balance blood sugar, lower cholesterol and make your tummy happy. Up to a quarter of whole grains’ protein and nutrients and almost all of the fiber get buffed away in processing. You deserve the whole goodness of whole grains.

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The more grains you eat, the greater your health benefit. No wonder nutritionists and other experts love them.

You may love them for their flavor, and that makes the folks at Oldways Whole Grains Council happy. Back in 2003 when the Whole Grains Council launched, whole grains were hard to find or worse, hard to eat. The first wave of whole grain products were whole-hearted and earnest, but alas, tasted like pencil shavings.

In just over a decade, whole grain products have become more popular, more palatable and more accessible. Grab a cranberry oat scone with your morning joe. Upgrade your panini by swapping out white bread (how meh) for multigrain. Need an afternoon energy boost? Skip the latte and munch on a granola bar. Watching the game at your local bar? Have some whole grain pretzels with that beer. Or have some popcorn — that’s a whole grain, too. Whole grains are everywhere, in your favorite products and on the menu at your favorite restaurants. Look for them. You’ll be well-rewarded.

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During Whole Grains Month, spot a whole grain product when you’re out and about, snap a pic, post on Instagram with the hashtag #spotwholegrains and you could be a winner. Just like whole grains are.

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Kitchri

Another rice and beans recipe? You betcha. Rice and beans are, after all, the most important dish in the world. This one, kitchri, which means mixture, hails from India. It’s beloved in Ayurvedic medicine for its soothing, nourishing properties. One taste and you’ll agree.

And what a triple-header, it’s got brown rice for Whole Grains Month, mung beans for the International Year of Pulses and with made with staple ingredients that pretty much cook by themselves, it’s easy to make. Why should you struggle in the kitchen? It’s Labor Day, after all.

Serve with a fresh green salad, pair with a spicy curry, or give kitchri the bowl treatment — spoon 3/4 cup of kitchri into a bowl, top with any number of goodies, including:

  • curry-roasted vegetables and tofu
  • wilted greens with chili and garlic
  • chopped tomatoes
  • toasted cashews
  • mango chutney
  • lime pickle
  • coconut raita

Kitchri keeps covered and refrigerated for several days.

1 cup brown rice
1 cup mung beans soaked overnight and sprouted, if you like
1 tablespoon coconut oil
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
1/2 teaspoon turmeric
1 sprig curry leaves (optional)
6 cups vegetable broth or water
1 cinnamon stick
sea salt and fresh ground pepper to taste
chopped cilantro to serve

Rinse brown rice, pour into a bowl and cover with cold water. Let rice sit and soak for an hour. Rinse and drain well.

In a soup pot, heat the coconut oil over medium-high heat. Add the cumin seeds, turmeric and curry leaves. Stir to coat spices with oil and continue cooking, three to five minutes, until the spices are fragrant and the curry leaves start to frizzle.

Pour in the drained brown rice and the mung beans. Stir to combine with the spices. Raise heat to high, add the vegetable broth or water and drop in the cinnamon stick. Bring everything to a boil, then cover and reduce heat to medium.

Let kitchri cook for about an hour, stirring now and again, until thick, creamy and risotto-like but not soupy.

Let kitchri rest for five to 10 minutes. Season generously with sea salt and pepper. Remove cinnamon stick and curry leaves. Top with a handful of chopped cilantro and enjoy.

Serves 6 to 8.


More at soulfulvegan.com.

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