Tom Perez Nabs DNC Chair Endorsement From Disability Rights Pioneer

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WASHINGTON ― Tony Coelho, the pioneering disability rights advocate and former Democratic congressman from California, is endorsing former Labor Secretary Tom Perez to chair the Democratic National Committee.

Coelho, a chair of the DNC Disability Council, is one of the 447 voting DNC members who will elect the party’s next chair in Atlanta on Saturday.

“In the race for leadership of the Democratic Party, we are blessed with some impressive candidates, but one stands out as a longtime champion of working families and people with disabilities: Tom Perez,” Coelho said in a Monday statement announcing his endorsement. “Over the many years in which I’ve known Tom, I have seen him take on fight after fight on behalf of vulnerable Americans and win.”

As majority whip of the House, Coelho, who has epilepsy, introduced the Americans with Disabilities Act, a landmark 1990 law barring discrimination against people with disabilities.

In his statement, Coelho pointed to Perez’s advocacy for disability rights as labor secretary, and tough enforcement of the Olmstead decision as head of the Department of Justice’s civil rights division. The 1999 Supreme Court ruling required states to integrate people with disabilities into their communities, rather than institutionalize them, whenever possible. 

Coelho is one of several prominent disability rights activists who have embraced Perez’s candidacy based on his disability rights record.

With just a few days left before the contentious election, Perez and the other eight remaining candidates are pulling out all the stops. On Saturday, New Hampshire Democratic Chair Ray Buckley announced that we was dropping out of the contest and endorsing Perez’s chief rival, Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.). 

In addition to Ellison and Perez, other candidates vying for the top post are South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg; Idaho Democratic Party Executive Director Sally Boynton Brown; South Carolina Democratic Party Chair Jaime Harrison; media strategist Jehmu Greene; Robert Vinson Brannum, Veterans Committee chair of the NAACP’s Washington, D.C., branch; Milwaukee attorney Peter Peckarsky and Ohio activist Sam Ronan.

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Josh Gad, Chris Pratt And J.J. Abrams Really Want Daisy Ridley To Spoil 'The Last Jedi'

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Josh Gad, Chris Pratt and J.J. Abrams really want answers about “Star Wars: The Last Jedi.” 

On Monday, Gad shared a video on Twitter in which Pratt, Abrams and fellow members of Hollywood, such as Bryce Dallas Howard and Penelope Cruz, bombard Daisy Ridley with their questions about the upcoming film in the “Star Wars” franchise. But Ridley, who will reprise her role as Rey in the next installment, keeps mum on the subject.

Gad, who’s currently filming “Murder on the Orient Express” with Ridley, has been trying to get answers since January. He’s even enlisted help from Dame Judi Dench, but still, Ridley kept quiet.

To Gad’s dismay, Ridley hasn’t given him the answers he so desperately wants. And while she sometimes appears annoyed, her giggles in the clips lead us to believe she’s probably in on the joke. 

You can check out a compilation of all the clips below: 

We guess Gad and everyone else will just have to wait until Dec. 15, when “The Last Jedi” hits theaters.

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The Pressure Is On For Trump Administration To Denounce Anti-Semitism

Anti-Semitic hate crimes comprise the largest portion of religiously motivated attacks in the United States. In New York City alone, such attacks have more than doubled already in 2017. But President Donald Trump has yet to address the issue.

In press conferences last week, the president had two opportunities to address concerns over rising anti-Semitism. And in both instances, he downplayed or altogether denied the issue.

During a joint press conference with Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday, Israeli journalist Moav Vardi asked what the U.S. president would say to those in the Jewish community who “believe and feel that your administration is playing with xenophobia and maybe racist tones.”

Trump responded not by addressing anti-Semitism and xenophobia, but rather by bragging about his election victory. “Well, I just want to say that we are, you know, very honored by the victory that we had: 306 Electoral College votes,” Trump said.

He went on to say that “we are going to have peace in this country,” vowing to stop crime and “long-simmering racism and every other thing that’s going on.” He added that he has lots of Jewish friends, including his daughter, Ivanka, and her husband, Jared Kushner.

The following day, Jewish journalist Jake Turx asked Trump about the 48 bomb threats have been made against Jewish centers around the country in recent weeks and what the administration was doing to combat anti-Semitism.

Before Turx could finish his question, though, Trump cut him off and told him to sit down. “See, he said he was going to ask a very simple, easy question, and it’s not,” the president said.

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Trump went on to tell the Jewish reporter: “I am the least anti-Semitic person that you’ve ever seen in your entire life.” The president seemed to interpret Turx’s question as a personal jab, saying, “I hate the charge. I find it repulsive.”

Pressed later on the issue by another journalist, Trump implied that reports of anti-Semitism were being manufactured by his political opponents.

While the president weighs the validity of reported anti-Semitic attacks, at least five more Jewish communities around the country received by bomb threats on Monday.

Jewish leader Malcolm Hoenlein, speaking at a conference in Jerusalem on Sunday, indicated that the U.S. Jewish community was holding Trump accountable to finally address the issue. “I think that the president helps set the tone for a country,” Hoenlein said. “I’m hopeful that what he said about … addressing hate and racism of all kinds in American society will be translated into clear action.”

That same day ― in what may be the clearest “action” on anti-Semitism thus far ― Vice President Mike Pence paid a visit to the former Nazi concentration camp at Dachau, Germany. Pence tweeted about the “moving and emotional tour” afterward, saying: “We can never forget atrocities against Jews and others in the Holocaust.”

Trump’s failure to adequately address anti-Semitism ― compounded by his Holocaust Remembrance Day statement, which unlike Pence’s tweet made no mention of Jewish victims ― has worried some Jewish leaders.

American Jewish Committee CEO David Harris said in a Feb. 16 statement that with anti-Semitism on the rise in the U.S. and around the world, the government needs to respond.

“That’s why the questions are being asked at press conferences,” Harris said. “But if every such question elicits either no substantive response or, mistakenly, is taken personally, then what are people of good will supposed to conclude?”

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Saga's Lying Cat Is the Official Mascot of 2017

Last year, as everything seemed to catch on fire all around us, it was clear that K.C. Green’s iconic “This is fine” dog was the animal totem of 2016. Now, we are already in desperate need of a new icon that can help us navigate the swift-moving, danger-filled reality of 2017, and I know what it is: Lying Cat.

Read more…

AT&T LG G5 Nougat Update Released


There’s good news for LG G5 owners on AT&T because the country’s second largest mobile carrier has now started rolling out Android 7.0 Nougat update for this handset. It goes without saying that many LG G5 owners have been waiting for this update to arrive and provided that they are on this carrier, they will soon find themselves running the latest iteration of Google’s mobile platform.

The AT&T LG G5 Nougat update is rolling out now. It may be a holiday Monday in the United States but the carrier is certainly giving many of its subscribers something to look forward to.

It’s predictably a huge file. LG G5 owners will find themselves downloading build number NRD90U which not only bumps up the core Android OS to version 7.0 but also includes the January security patch.

Everything that has been promised with Nougat is part and parcel of this release so users will get the multi-window mode, an enhanced Doze mode, enhanced quick settings, user interface tweaks aside from overall performance and stability improvements.

AT&T requires that subscribers are connected to Wi-Fi prior to downloading software updates so make sure that you’re connected. Since updates like these are rolled out in stages it may be a while before the AT&T LG G5 Nougat update becomes available for all users.

AT&T LG G5 Nougat Update Released , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Fire Emblem Heroes launch celebration continues with new maps and quests

Fire Emblem Heroes fans know that orbs (and sometimes feathers) are what make the world go ’round, but they’re not always easy to obtain. If you’ve burned through the free orbs the game gives you by progressing through the story, then you’ll definitely want to participate in a new promotion this week. Assuming you play through all the content this … Continue reading

Microsoft's next-gen HoloLens reportedly won't arrive until 2019

If you’ve been hoping for a cheaper, smaller HoloLens to come out soon, you might be disappointed. Microsoft-focused news site Thurrott reports that the company is eschewing a more incremental follow-up device in favor of something with significant u…

The sequel to 'Alto's Adventure' arrives this summer

Last week, Snowman — developer of beloved snowboarding game Alto’s Adventure — announced that its next game, Where Cards Fall, would be out this fall. However, we’re going to get another game from the studio before that. Alto’s Odyssey, the sequel…

What It's Like To Exist And Date Outside Of The Gender Binary

What’s it like to navigate the world while embodying a gender identity that falls outside of a cisgender male/female binary?

While no experience is universal, these five people who all identify outside of the gender binary are opening up about their lives in a new video. Called “Beyond Binary,” the two-part series comes from Canadian queer news source Daily Xtra and seeks to create space for people who lack visibility in media.

“It’s important to create space for all people across the gender spectrum because everyone should be able to see themselves represented in the world,” Graeme Coleman, associate producer for Daily Xtra, told The Huffington Post. “There’s a validation that comes with visibility. We want this series to be a resource for anyone who wants to learn more about the realities people face when they identify outside of the gender binary.”

The first episode of “Beyond Binary” (above) deals with dating at attraction, while the second focuses on the idea of representation. Check them out for yourselves and head here to see more from Daily Xtra.

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Museums Celebrate The Black Women Artists History Has Overlooked

On the first day of Black History Month, the good people at Google blessed the internet with a doodle honoring Edmonia Lewis, the first woman of African-American and Native American descent to earn global recognition as a fine arts sculptor.

Lewis, who grew up while slavery was still legal in the United States, became known for her hand-carved, marble sculptures of influential abolitionists and mythological figures. In part because Lewis made all of her sculptures by hand, few originals or duplicates remain intact today. She died in relative obscurity in 1907, and, to this day, remains lesser known than many of her white, male contemporaries. 

This well-deserved tribute to Lewis got us thinking about the other black women artists whose contributions to the history of art have been similarly overlooked or undervalued. So we reached out to museums across the country, asking which artists past and present deserve our attention, too. Below are nine of those artists: 

1. Pat Ward Williams (b. 1948)

Pat Ward Williams is a Los Angeles-based contemporary photographer whose work explores the personal and political lives of African-Americans. Initially, the artist set out to disrupt the homogenous way black life was captured on camera. “We always looked so pitiful, like victims,” she told the LA Times. “I knew I was a happy person. There were aspects of the black community that weren’t being shown.”

Attempting to break past photography’s tendency to linger on surfaces, Williams incorporates other media and methodology into her process, yielding mixed media collages that collapse past and present, history and imagination.

Her most famed work, featured above, features a photo of a bound black man chained to a tree, pulled from a 1937 issue of Life magazine. “Who took this picture?” Williams writes in the margins of the photo. “How can this photograph exist?”

Jamillah James, a curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, wrote to The Huffington Post: “Pat Ward Williams’ prescient, complex meditations on race, history, and representation, such as her landmark “Accused/Blowtorch/Padlock” (1986), resonate with a particular urgency and relevance in today’s cultural climate. Her combination of photography, found materials, and text engages viewers in a perceptual tug of war between what they see, their own associations, the artist’s voice, and the weight of history.” 

Shared courtesy of the Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.

2. Loïs Mailou Jones (1905–1998)

Loïs Mailou Jones was a Boston-born painter whose plentiful, 70-year art career spanned North America, Europe and Africa. Her eclectic style shifted over time, taking inspiration from African masks, French impressionist landscapes and bright Haitian patterns. An active member of the Harlem Renaissance, she used vibrant visuals to heighten the urgency of her politically charged works, which addressed the joys and challenges of black life. 

Mine is a quiet exploration,” the artist famously said, “a quest for new meanings in color, texture and design. Even though I sometimes portray scenes of poor and struggling people, it is a great joy to paint.”

Throughout her career, Jones experienced discrimination as a black artist. For example, when she first began showing her artwork, she reportedly asked white friends to deliver her works to exhibitions in an effort to hide her black identity. She did so with reason ― according to The New York Times, she’d had an award rescinded when the granter learned she was black.

After teaching at an African-American art school in segregated North Carolina, Jones eventually took a position at Howard University in Washington, D.C., where she taught for 47 years. Upon retiring, she continued to paint and exhibit her work until she died at 93 years old. Despite not being a household name to some, her art lives on in esteemed institutions like the National Museum of American Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Fine Art in Boston.

Shared courtesy of the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Museum of Women in the Arts.

3. Alma Thomas (1891–1978)

Alma Thomas, born in Columbus, Georgia, moved to Washington, D.C., with her family as a child to avoid the racial violence in the American South. Interested in art from a young age, Thomas was the first student to graduate from Howard University with a degree in fine art. There, she studied under Loïs Mailou Jones while adopting an aesthetic of her own. 

Thomas’ style pulls elements from Abstract Expressionism and the Washington Color School, drawing from the splendor of nature to create nonrepresentational canvases that sing with soft vitality. Famously, Thomas was most inspired by her garden and would watch with fascination as the scenery changed around her. 

I got some watercolors and some crayons, and I began dabbling,” she said. “Little dabs of color that spread out very free … that’s how it all began. And every morning since then, the wind has given me new colors through the windowpanes.”

Jones taught at a junior high school for most of her life, making work on the side. She had her first exhibition at 75 years old, later becoming the first woman to have a solo exhibition at The Whitney. 

Shared courtesy of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

4. Laura Wheeler Waring (1877–1948)

Laura Wheeler Waring, raised by a pastor and teacher in Hartford, Connecticut, was interested in art as a child. In 1914, she travelled to Europe, where she studied the old masters at the Louvre and specifically the works of Claude Monet. When she returned to the United States, due to the encroachment of World War I, Waring went on to teach and lead the departments of art and music at the Cheyney Training School for Teachers. 

Although Waring worked in landscapes and still lifes, she is most celebrated for her paintings, which depicted accomplished black Americans with dignity and strength. Her most well-known series is the 1944 “Portraits of Outstanding American Citizens of Negro Origin,” which featured depictions of individuals including W.E.B. Du Bois, Marian Anderson and James Weldon Johnson.

During the Harlem Renaissance, Waring also contributed pen and ink to the NAACP magazine The Crisis, working alongside activists to address probing political issues. An exhibition of Waring’s work showed a year after her death at the Howard University Gallery of Art.

Shared courtesy of the Brooklyn Museum and Smithsonian American Art Museum.

5. Barbara Chase-Riboud (b. 1939)

Born in Philadelphia, Barbara Chase-Riboud began taking art classes at a young age. As a student at Temple University’s Tyler School of Art, she sold a woodcut to the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. By the time she graduated from Yale with an MFA, she had a sculpture on view at the Carnegie Mellon Institute.

The artist is known for her larger-than-life sculptures made from cast metal and shrouded in skeins of silk and wool, the strange lovechildren of a suit of armor and a ballgown skirt. At once strong and fluid and feminine and mechanical and natural, the stunning works became a symbols for feminine strength, as well as a visual manifestation of transformation and integration. 

I love silk, and it’s one of the strongest materials in the world and lasts as long as the bronze,” the artist said. “It’s not a weak material vs. a strong material […] the transformation that happens in the steles is not between two unequal things but two equal things that interact and transform each other.”

Chase-Riboud, who currently lives between Paris and Rome, is also an award-winning poet and novelist, known for her 1979 historical novel Sally Hemings, about the relationship between former President Thomas Jefferson and his slave Sally Hemings.

Shared courtesy of theThe Studio Museum in Harlem.

6. Nancy Elizabeth Prophet (1890–1960)

Nancy Elizabeth Prophet was raised in Rhode Island by an African-American mother and a Narragansett-Pequod father. She attended the prestigious Rhode Island School of Design where she studied painting and drawing, notably portraiture, and worked as a housekeeper to pay tuition. She graduated amidst the burgeoning Harlem Renaissance. 

In 1922, Prophet moved to Paris, in part frustrated by the racism rampant in the American art scene. Despite being broke and exhausted, she was creatively invigorated by the change of scenery and began creating sculptural portraits from materials including wood, marble, bronze, plaster and clay. Of the works, art historian James Porter wrote (quoted in Notable Black American Women): ”The pride of race that this sculptor feels resolves itself into an intimation of noble conflict marking the features of each carved head.”

Despite the fact that her sculptures were exhibited at high-society salons, Prophet herself remained impoverished abroad, eventually forcing her to move back to the States. There she continued to submit her sculptures to galleries and competitions, while also teaching art at both Atlanta University and Spelman College. (She was rumored to bring a live rooster to class for her students to sketch.)

Eventually, Prophet moved back to Rhode Island ― in part, again, to escape segregation ― at which point her career slowed down dramatically. Although few of her sculptures are accounted for today, one is housed in the permanent collection of The Whitney in New York City.

Shared courtesy of the Brooklyn Museum.

7. Maren Hassinger (b. 1947)

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Maren Hassinger began dancing at the age of 5. She intended to continue studying dance as a student at Bennington College, but ended up switching to sculpture. In 1973, she graduated from UCLA with a master’s degree in fiber art. 

In her work, Hassinger combines elements of sculpture, performance, video and dance to investigate the relationship between the natural and industrial worlds. Her commonly used materials include wire, rope, garbage, leaves, cardboard boxes and old newspapers, often arranged to encourage movement, as if the sculptures themselves are engaged in a dance. 

Hassinger’s work explores personal, political and environmental questions in an abstract language that allows viewers to come to their own conclusions. “All the pieces with boxes are about our gross need to consume, and where it leads us,” she once told BOMB. “Where is the bleeding heart in all of this? I don’t think my work has so much to do with ecology, but focuses on elements, or even problems we all share, and in which we all have a stake.”

Since 1997, Hassinger has served as the director of the Rinehart School of Sculpture at Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore. 

Shared courtesy of the Hammer Museum.

8. Nellie Mae Rowe (1900–1982)

Nellie Mae Rowe was born in rural Georgia, one of nine daughters. Her father, a former slave, worked as a blacksmith and basket weaver; her mother made quilts and clothes. She married at 16 and, when her husband passed away, married another widower at 36. When he died, Rowe was 48 years old and began a new life as an independent woman and an artist. 

Rowe referred to her blossoming interest in art as a chance to re-experience childhood. She began to adorn the exterior of her house, which called the “playhouse,” with stuffed animals, life-sized dolls, animal-shaped hedges and sculptures made of chewing gum. 

Along with her installations, Rowe created vibrant and flat drawings from humble materials like crayon, cardboard and felt-tip markers. Her images normally consisted of humans and animals swallowed by colorful, abstract designs and often referenced personal struggles in her own life. When she was diagnosed with cancer in 1981, Rowe channeled her emotions into her work, grappling with her changing body and attitudes towards death through bold, symbolic imagery. 

I feel great being an artist,” Rowe famously said. “I didn’t even know that I would ever become one. It is just surprising to me.”

Shared courtesy of the American Folk Art Museum.

9. Senga Nengudi (b. 1943)

Senga Nengudi was born in Chicago, Illinois, and moved to Los Angeles, California, soon after. She studied art and dance at California State University, where she received her BA and MFA. In between degrees, she spent a year studying in Tokyo, where she was inspired by Japanese minimalist tradition as well as the Guttai performance art groups. 

In the 1960s and ‘70s, Nengudi was an elemental force in New York’s and Los Angeles’ radical, avant-garde black art scenes, though her acclaim never quite spread to the mainstream. Along with artists David Hammons and Maren Hassinger, she formed Studio Z, an artist collective that shared a love for abandoned materials and overlooked spaces. The collective often wore costumes and carried instruments to improvise performances at unlikely locales like freeway underpasses or abandoned schools. 

Nengudi’s most iconic sculptural performance project, called “R.S.V.P.,” featured pantyhose as a central material. Exploring the everyday object’s relationship to skin, constriction, elasticity and femininity, Nengudi stretched and warped the sheer undergarments so they resembled sagging body parts and abstract diagrams. She’d often recruit collaborator Hassinger to activate the sculptures by dancing through them, privileging improvisation as the mode of ritual. 

When we were kicked off the boat, improvisation was the survival tool: to act in the moment, to figure something out that hadn’t been done before; to live,” Nengudi told Hyperallergic. “And the tradition goes through Jazz. Jazz is the perfect manifestation of constant improvisation. It has to be in place at all times. Constant adjustment in a hostile environment, you have to figure something out right away.”

Shared courtesy of the Hammer Museum.

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