Saturday, November 15, 2008

The Labelle Interview: Patti, Nona & Sarah


Hello Cupcakes!
Who doesn't know the song Lady Marmalade? Even before it was re-immortalized with new fierceness by P!nk, Christina Aguilera, Mya, Missy Elliot & Lil Kim, the song was/is a dance floor staple. The entire week before our conversation I was buzzing about getting to interview Miss Patti and talk about soul music, food and good living.

Isn't Patti Labelle everyone's imaginary aunt?


I knew vaguely in the back of my mind that Patti Labelle had come from a girl group but when I began to research these ladies I found so much more.

The group Labelle were trendsetters in fashion, music and politics. I thoroughly enjoyed speaking with each of them about their musical influences and complex lives. Then guess what? Patti Labelle told me that I was "a good interviewer!!" And then she said that our "conversation was very uplifting." What, I ask you, can be better than that? Thanks Aunt Patti.

Our lesson from Labelle? Don't be afraid of innovation and you are never to old to live your dreams. At 65 these ladies are on and poppin' and not afraid to work with true musical mavericks (let's reclaim the word) like Lenny Kravitz and Wyclef Jean. Thank you Sarah Dash, Nona "Style Diva" Hendryx and Patti Labelle.

Hail to the goddess queens! WATCH THE INTERVIEW BELOW.

xo,
a.



If you enjoyed my Labelle interview, you may enjoy these videos:
*Interview with Teen Gospel Singer Spensha Baker
*Hue Man Harlem Bookstore Tour
*Green Fashion Designer Jill Danyelle


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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Is Your Money Funny?


If you're like me, you instinctively reach for your bank card and it's not your first instinct to carry cash. However in this market, it’s time to de-stress your finances!

With the turmoil in the global economy it's understandable that people are worried about their money. MP Dunleavey explores some of the ways you can get a grip on your financial emotions and de-stress a bit. There are 3 steps, but I want you to read her entire article HERE so I just posted Step 2. Oooh, and guess which goddess she mentions halfway through the article? ;-D And check out Lakshmi, Goddess of Riches...





THREE STEPS BACK to the SANITY OF CASH by MP Dunleavey


The second step is switching to a cash-based mindset. That doesn't mean giving up all forms of plastic. It means learning to think and spend based on how much money you actually have.

That's how your grandma did it, and my grandma, and anyone's grandma who lived back in the 1930s, '40s or '50s -- before you could borrow yourself into oblivion. Grandma (and Grandpa) somehow managed to furnish a house, raise and feed a family, procure a car and save for emergencies -- all with cash. Why? Because credit as we know it today did not exist. Actual credit cards became common in the 1970s. When you bought something, you paid for it and then got the item, not the reverse.

What was it like, living on cash -- and why is it so powerful that it can turn your financial life around, even now? Some of the Women in Red have been living in a cash-only world to get their financial lives on track. Nancy Munro, a consultant in West Palm Beach, Fla., said she often thinks about her paternal grandmother, who died at age 100 in 2006, with $250,000 in savings.

"Her secret? She made do, or did without things, all her life, knowing that the responsibility for taking care of herself rested with no one but her," Munro said in an e-mail. Munro says that she and her husband are "still taking the grandparent mindset and applying it." They have no mortgage, no car loans, no personal debt. They save their spare change, rarely eat out, comparison shop for everything, make automatic transfers to savings -- "and no holiday buying on plastic!"

Alas, "living within your means" is just a giant personal finance cliché at this point. People have lost track of what it signifies. LWYM has come to mean that you're fine if you spend every dime you make. If you have to use plastic to cover a few gaps here and there -- your vacation, the holidays, some groceries -- that still counts as "living within your means" because you eventually pay it all back. Probably.

So let's rename "living within your means" for the modern era. We'll call it "real-income living." It means, obviously, making the hard choices necessary to live and save on what you earn. So it's really about spending a small portion of your income to live, and saving a large chunk of it -- for emergencies big and small, for the unexpected and for a warm, cozy, secure and happy future.

Real-income living involves thinking differently and spending differently, talking to your friends differently -- and driving right past Ikea without blinking.

It means making do with what you have. ABIOLA ABRAMS, a host on the television network BET (and novelist), said for her it was about putting an end to the disposable lifestyle. Recently, she says, she wanted new boots. "Then I went into my closet and found a pair of terrific boots from last year that I was going to get rid of because the soles were worn."

In the spirit of the new frugality that's trickling down to so many of us, Abrams had her boots repaired.


That's real-income living. Cash is finite. If you buy stuff you don't really need (or stuff you think you need because you didn't stop to think), you end up putting what you do need on a plastic noose called a credit card. You don't have to aspire to Depression-era frugality, as several readers have warned me. Those were desperate times, when some people starved to death and many struggled for survival.

"Gram made nearly every piece of clothing the family wore," writes Megan Williams, a Women in Red reader who recalls her grandparents' fortitude with a mix of admiration and skepticism. "During the Depression, my Grandfather's underwear (yes, underwear!) was made from chicken feed sacks."

You're not going to turn Tupperware containers into shoes. And I'm not suggesting you grow a bailout garden and can green beans (unless you're so inclined). As scary a time as this is, we as a country are unbelievably wealthy compared to those who survived the 1930s. But we all need to come down to earth, to a more solid and sensible way of living, with cash as the anchor.






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Monday, November 10, 2008

Icon Remix: Abiola's Version of Miriam Makeba



Last Night, Cupcakes, Miriam Makeba passed away on stage. She was an African freedom singer in the vein of Fela Kuti. If you don't know about them, google them. I learned about her in undergrad when I was studying apartheid because she was so influential in their political culture in Southern Africa. How powerful that a pop culture figure used her voice to raise it in empowerment. Take note, my pop culture buddies! You can be fierce, fabulous, outrageous and have a clear decisive voice on the issues that alter our world.
xoxo


Related Icon Remix Posts:
*Lenny Kravitz
*Donna Summer
*Zora Neale Hurston
*Assata Shakur


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Thursday, November 6, 2008

MY LL COOL J INTERVIEW: HOT AS HELL

Hey Cupcakes,
Okay, maybe not "hell!"
;-)

My video interview with LL Cool J is below. Feel free to revel and indulge.

LL Cool J definitely lives up to the hype. I bit my tongue and didn't tell this man that I have had a crush on for two plus decades that I met him as a tween in Green Acres Mall in Long Island. My best friend Ginger and I summoned up the nerve to step up and he smiled. Ginger then blurted out, "I can't believe this sh*t." Then LL got offended and turned to attend to other more attentive autograph seekers. Damn her!! lol

Then two summers ago I hiked with my friends Angel and Ibrahim into Brooklyn for an outdoor LL concert. I kicked off my heels and danced and sang in the sweaty August heat for hours. My main character Maya in Dare is not surprisingly totally obsessed with Cool J!! However, upon finally interviewing him I was not struck by his handsomeness which is apparent to even Stevie Wonder. I was struck by his intelligence, patience and sensitivity.

My team had technical difficulties that were INSANE that day, and while his team completely freaked out and watched the clock, he was like, "Yo. It's all good." And we shared a private convo about writing, goals etc. I look forward to hanging with the self-proclaimed Greatest of All Times again soon. I am pleased that my childhood crush faded into genuine peer respect.

Watch & enjoy,
Abiola




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© 2008 by ooruc