Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Asian American Anna May Wong

 


What Was Anna May Wong's Legacy as the First Chinese American Film Star? | The New York Historical







Amari Cooper and Da'Raidahs are Back!

Oh Well! 
So much for that revitalized #89 "Coop" jersey.

NFL UPDATE 9/04/2025: 

Better now than during the season  .  .  .

So Long Poop!


In 2018, just six months after my winning an Amari Cooper #89 Oakland Raiders Jersey, the wide receiver was traded to the Dallas Cowboys for a 2019 NFL Draft first-round pick. News of the then two-time NFL Pro Bowl receiver was gut-wrenching to me and all Raider Nation. But as with all tragic Raiders news, we man up and soldier on.

Two days ago, to the surprise of myself and Raider Nation, Amari Cooper, the now five-time NFL Pro Bowl receiver, signed a one-year, $3.5 million contract with the Las Vegas Raiders. It is truly a reunion made for the rebuilding Silver & Black. Although many Raiders fans were put off by how the wide receiver stiff-armed the Raiders in mid-season 2018, we welcome back the 31-year-old receiver as it seems he still has some gas in the tank.

And, like myself, it gives us fans with Raiders Cooper Jerseys a chance to wear it proudly once again come game day.

Welcome Back to the Dark Side "Coop"!
We ain't all mad at cha . . .  as long as you produce
Are you ready for some football???



Amari Cooper Career Stats - NFL - ESPN

Amari Cooper Shares Why a Raiders Reunion Was Always 'in the Back of My Mind'

Raiders 2025 Season Preview Show

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Lost and Found: Beacon's Black Community 1850 - 1930



Author Dan W. Pruitt has done a community proud in researching and shining a light on past accomplishments and contributions of a Black village and its main employer, a brickyard.

Reading this book was a true treat. Anyone who loves not just Black history, but American history, will enjoy its well-researched, chronological narrative. Maybe I am biased, being a descendant of some of the folks mentioned. But I find narratives like this help bridge a gap in my understanding of the rough times and discriminatory practices my peoples somehow survived. It also shows the love and comradery of families that made up an isolated and disenfranchised community. Brockway, New York. 

The story of Brockway is a story of migration driven by industry and economic opportunity. It is peopled with southern black men and women who traveled north to settle in this little New York enclave with hopes of building a better life for them and their children. Brickmaking was hard work. But these men were conditioned to hard manual labor from generations of working the southern agricultural fields. 

What they likely were not expecting was the frigid climate along with bouts of hardship and poverty due to low pay and economic crisis such as the stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression that followed. And yet these humble black folks found ways to adapt, overcome, provide for their families and answer the call of military duty and such when its country came calling. All at a time when America's "separate but equal" doctrine perpetuated a system of racial inequality and discrimination that lasted for decades. For blacks it was a time where the saying "one becomes what one's society allows them to be" applies. Although mostly poor, this Black community thrived in family love, lasting friendships and communal responsibility. 

What I took away from reading this engaging book is not that strong efforts were likely made to keep these peoples and their stories from ever rising to the top, but how the strength and fighting spirit of such peoples cannot be hidden, brushed aside or silenced when it continues to beat in the hearts of their descendants. For even out of a pot of poverty and oppression, the cream rises to the top.

The author's chronicling of the untold Brockway story before, during, and after his family's arrival, is testament to the unconquerable spirit of a people who have not surrendered to past injustices nor current gentrification. As long as stories are being told of once predominantly Black communities succeeding in spite of challenging environments and unequal incomes, their legacy of pushing onward toward accomplishing and contributing great things to society will feed those marginalized today who continue the struggle against injustice and unequal practices.  It's their fighting spirit and love of community that lives on.

Bravo Dan!