Black History Month

The people gave some rather hilarious answers to some of D.L.'s questions and some you have to see and hear to believe.

Black History NOW Celebrates the paths paved by those who broke the mold in areas of film, sports, science, art and business. Today, we celebrate Titans of Sports: These icons of athleticism brought broke barriers and proved - while the world looked on - that passion, perseverance and dedication knows no color.

Black History Month

Today we honor Carter G Woodson. He was born in 1875. He was an American historian, author, journalist and founder of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History.

Last summer, two of the world’s biggest performers introduced a sound of music that many people in urban areas along the East Coast and Midwest are all too familiar with. When Drake dropped his highly anticipated seventh studio album, “Honestly, Nevermind” and Beyonce released her summer single “Break My Soul,” fans questioned what was this […]

  The Soar Women’s conference kicked off this past Saturday at the Philadelphia Loews hotel, and it was an event filled with love, networking, and a lot of Black girl magic!  Related:D4M $loan Teams Up With Millennial Christian to Crash West Philly Prom Send-Off Crystal Bailey, creator, and founder of the Crystal Bailey School of Event Planning […]

Award-winning actress Kerry Washington definitely took the cake for Black History Month with her month-long #BlackHERStory photo series on Instagram honoring female pioneers in the movement.

The emergence of Black women telling our stories behind the camera has a lineage dating back to the 1960s.

Black women have donned gymnastics gold at the Olympic games, changing the narrative of the sport in the process.

The late Jean-Michel Basquiat will be getting yet another Hollywood reincarnation, this time on the small screen with 'If Beale Street Could Talk' lead actor Stephan James starring as the troubled art tycoon.

Ebony paved the way for black stories to be told authentically, effortlessly, and unapologetically. 

As a result of her courageous efforts to uncover slave ships that sank during The Middle Passage, journalist-turned-pioneering-deep-diver Tara Roberts has now become the first Black woman to grace the cover of 'National Geographic' as a Nat Geo Explorer.