Steven Williams is a believer/photographer/publicist & author. Celebrity client base and a foundation that assists the homeless & re-entry. Living to Lift Other
God makes it All Possible. I am grateful and blessed to have worked with so many beautiful people on this journey of life. God took a wretch like me and turned my life around. All things are possible never give up (inmate-E52773) #ReginaKing#Magicjohnson#destinychild#darkchild
It means so much to Barack and me to open up the Obama Presidential Center on the South Side of Chicago. This is where I grew up, where Barack got his start, and where we raised our girls. So having a place where kids from our community can see themselves, connect with each other, and channel their hope—there’s nothing more powerful than that.
Jalen Brunson hugs his father after leading the Knicks past the Spurs to win the NBA championship.
Knicks assistant coach Rick Brunson witnessed his son make history 27 years after reaching the NBA Finals as a player himself.
Each chapter of my life has given me experience working across various areas of community and government, building relationships and navigating complex institutions. Those experiences inform how I approach public service and the work of changing Los Angeles.
Join me in building on the progress we’ve made together.
I’ve been thinking a lot about the extraordinary outbursts of the President of the United States against female journalists... well, actually against journalists in general and journalism. But it feels like he saves his most childlike behavior and irrational language for female reporters, calling them all kinds of names that kids in kindergarten are given times out for. It’s stunning to me to witness such behavior from any leader, any CEO, any person of influence or importance. I’ve never witnessed someone like this raging, this weekend with @meetthepress host @kwelkernbc, just last week in the Oval Office with @cnn’s @kaitlancollins, calling women stupid or piggy, telling them to “smile”, calling them darling, demeaning their credibility. Every good man should denounce this behavior. Every person should be able to stand up for their colleagues and say “No more.”
Imagine this man screaming like this at your daughter, your wife, your sister, your mother... would you stand for it? No, you wouldn’t! And neither should any of us. It’s unacceptable and undignified. Period. End of story.
Angela Bassett, who earned an Oscar nomination for playing Tina Turner in the movie What’s Love Got to Do with It, was recently spotted singing Tina Turner’s hit song “Proud Mary.”
(🎥 Lena Waithe/IG)
متداول :
عبرت أنثى الموظ (احد انواع الغزلان) الطريق السريع، لكن أحد توأميها حديثي الولادة عجز عن تجاوز الحاجز الأوسط ومع تزايد الازدحام، بادر أحد السائقين بحمله برفق إلى الجهة الأخرى، حيث كانت أمه تنتظره ❤️!
He didn't break the law out of greed. He broke it out of love. Standing in court, head in his hands, shivering in an orange jumpsuit, he looked like just another criminal facing fraud charges. But the file on the judge's desk told a different story. He'd written a bad check for thousands of dollars. Not for a new car or a vacation, but at a pharmacy counter. When the insurance company denied his mother's life-saving medication, panic took over. He knew the check would bounce, but he also knew it was the only way to get the medicine she needed to survive the week. Now, he faced prison time for that desperation. And as he stood there weeping, his only thought wasn't about jail, but about who would take care of her if he was gone. He braced himself for sentencing. But the judge didn't bring down his gavel. In a moment that stunned the entire room, she stood, leaned across the bench, and wrapped her arms around him. She didn't see a con artist; she saw a loving son pushed to the brink. Holding his face in her hands, she looked him in the eye and delivered the life-changing verdict: 'It's over. I'm dropping the charges. You deserve a second chance, and I believe you can take advantage of it.' She didn't just give him back his freedom; she gave him the challenge of going home, taking care of his family, and making this mercy matter. Sometimes, justice isn't just about punishment. It's about understanding. Do you think the judge made the right decision by looking at the 'why' instead of just the 'what'?