July 2020

By Charlotte Cowles Photo: Courtesy of Tiffany Aliche It’s hard to imagine someone more prepared for this year’s economic implosion than Tiffany Aliche. She’s spent the past decade recovering from the last recession, which left her jobless and $85,000 in debt. Now she’s a full-time financial educator and founder of The Budgetnista, a multimillion-dollar business that offers financial…

Read More How to Recover From Losing Everything

I’ve been making lemon meringue pie since my days as Miss Betty Crocker in high school. I finally have it right. Here is the recipe. Use a refrigerated crust or make your own. I’m feeling lazy, so premade it is! Bake the crust blind. What? Put the crust in the pie pan, crimp the edges,…

Read More Perfect Lemon Meringue Pie

If you are like many of us, living on a fixed income isn’t quite what you thought it would be. You envisioned travel, grandchildren perhaps, not having anything to worry about except what time you felt like getting out of bed. The reality is quite different, though. When you thought about retirement, you may not…

Read More Retired and Need More Money?

Simon & Schuster Names Dana Canedy New Publisher By Elizabeth A. Harris Since 2017, Ms. Canedy, 55, has been the administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes, overseeing a period when the awards have acknowledged an increasingly diverse body of work, including the music of Kendrick Lamar. Read more HERE.

Read More Dana Canedy

Historian details Donald Trump’s 6 weird tricks for authoritarian rule  Fact-checking seems antiquated in the face of a president who’s closing in on 20,000 false or misleading statements and a press corps that remains hopelessly befuddled in how to respond. But there is another way [people] can cut through the blizzard of disinformation. That’s explained in a forthcoming book…

Read More Trump’s 6 tricks for authoritarian rule

Podcasts for those who want to listen to talk about black culture, race, and identity 1619 chronicles the 400-year history of slavery in America, starting in the English colonies; put out by journalists at the NY Times. The Stoop covers stories from the Black diaspora Noire Histoir is a daily dose of black history Small…

Read More Race and culture related Podcasts

July 12 is pecan pie day King Arthur Flour Lyle’s Golden Pecan Pie This slight twist on pecan pie is more subtly flavored than those made with dark corn syrup. I made a few small changes. This is a great hurry-up pie, as it takes very little time to put together, and it can bake…

Read More Pecan Pie

At the end of May, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture launched Talking About Race, a new online portal designed to help individuals, families, and communities talk about racism, racial identity and the way these forces shape every aspect of society, from the economy and politics to the broader American culture. The online portal provides digital tools, online exercises, video instructions, scholarly articles, and more…

Read More Portal Helps People Explore Issues Of Race, Racism And Racial Identity

Today in History – June 10 On June 10, 1898, U.S. Marines landed at Guantánamo Bay. For the next month, American troops fought a land war in Cuba that resulted in the end of Spanish colonial rule in the Western Hemisphere.  In the Treaty of Paris of 1898, the United States gained sovereignty over Guam, Puerto Rico, and the…

Read More How Did We End Up With Puerto Rico?

Do you know Jazzmenia Horn? Jazzmeia Horn  is an American jazz singer and songwriter. She won the Thelonious Monk Institute International Jazz Competition in 2015. Horn’s repertoire includes jazz standards and covers of songs from other genres and artists such as Stevie Wonder. She has been compared to jazz vocalists such as Betty Carter, Sarah Vaughan, and Nancy Wilson.

Read More Jazzmenia Horn