Girls Rock Camp Fundraiser - Performing will be: Te Papaioea emo duo fruit juice parade, Ōtepoti singer and multi-instrumentalist Francisca Griffin of pivotal Flying Nun - buy tickets
El temporal y la covid marcan una temporada de rebajas con escasa afluencia heraldo.es - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from heraldo.es Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Iowa Arts Council awards Virtual Arts Experience grants Wednesday, January 6, 2021 3:35 PM The Iowa Arts Council announced $81,708 in Virtual Arts Experience Grants has been awarded to 14 nonprofit organizations and one school across the state. Funding through the grant program will help Iowans of all ages experience the arts through online learning, the Iowa Arts Council said in a statement. Recipients include ArtForce Iowa, City Voices, Civic Music Association, Girls Rock, and the Greater Des Moines Music Coalition of Des Moines.
| Credit: Courtesy of The Foundation for Black Women s Wellness
The founder of The Foundation for Black Women’s Wellness recounts the very personal journey that inspired her to change the discourse around Black women’s health.
“I grew up in a tight-knit, rural community in Virginia. My mother owned a hair salon called The Beauty Hut, where I was her shampoo girl from age 11 until I left for college. The salon was a haven. You walked in and felt engulfed in love. It was women telling their deepest secrets, their joys, their tragedies. Pedigree didn’t matter; these were maids, teachers, professors, factory workers. But when they came in, they were just women healing women.
Ingrid Fraham Getty Images
The world has always recognized Dionne Warwick as a living legend, thanks to her beloved hit songs such as That s What Friends Are For and the theme from
Valley of the Dolls. But the tail end of 2020 has revealed new dimensions to her talents. Not only is she
the Dionne Warwick musician, actress, television host, permanent pop culture fixture but she s also now @dionnewarwick, bona fide Twitter sensation.
Warwick s commentary is not the kind that can be optimized via algorithm or concepted by a social media consultant. The public frenzy over her tweets began with a simple question she posed to the Twitterverse. It read, Hi, @chancetherapper. If you are very obviously a rapper why did you put it in your stage name? I cannot stop thinking about this. She asked Abel Tesfaye, a.k.a. The Weeknd, a similar question.