About the session: Talking starts the healing process. This is a weekly session to give one another moral support. We talk and express our views on the Black experience. We provide each other non clinical friendly advice on how to cope and deal with our shared challenges. No health and wellness topic is off the table.
Enter your email address then click on the 'Sign Up' button.
Our mission is to be the ultimate media platform where black people can speak freely and share ideaswithout fear of censorship. Let’s huddle together to share knowledge, to believe in our greatness and to inspire others towards unity.
We are the only black-owned networking platform in the world where you are rewarded for promoting black culture, pride and excellence.
Hi everyone I am a student seeking for your help I need money to pay my hostel and schools fees. Please I need help and the registration will be closed tomorrow morning
"The demands of urgent care responders - Medical Director/Ambulance Service"
In this series, we will be conversing with professionals from different industries, discussing their journey on how they became 'The Professionals You Should Know'.
n today's episode, we will be talking with Agatha Nortley-Meshe who is a
Medical Director (Urgent Care) London Ambulance Service. She will give us an insight into the demands of such an important role and disclose her journey on how she got to where she is toda
R3 Physiotherapy: The demands of urgent care responders - Medical Director/Ambulance Service
Teachers details the struggles of everyday people in extraordinary circumstances—war, revolution, natural disasters and yes, life. Fletcher’s writing is uplifting as he examines the truth of resilience despite hardship. These are the people he sought out in his international reporting, detailing their woes while celebrating their will to survive and recover.
Black Enterprise is a black-owned multimedia company. Since the 1970s, its flagship product Black Enterprise magazine has covered African-American businesses with a readership of 3.7 million.[2] The company was founded in 1970 by Earl G. Graves Sr. It publishes in both print and on digital, an annual listing of the largest African-American companies in the country, or "B.E. 100s", first compiled and published in 1973.[3][4] In 2002 the magazine launched a supplement targeting teens, Teenpreneur.[5] Black Enterprise also has two nationally syndicated television shows, Our World with Black Enterprise and Women of Power.
The magazine was founded by Earl G. Graves Sr.[6] In January 2006, he named his eldest son, Earl G. Graves Jr. (known as "Butch"), the company's chief executive officer.[7] Butch joined the company in 1988 after earning his M.B.A. from Harvard University; he received his bachelor's degree in economics from Yale University in 1984. He also sits on the board of directors of AutoZone, serving as lead director and chairman of the compensation committee.
Black Enterprise has been profitable since its 10th issue. The company, headquartered in New York City, has 58 employees and had revenues of $22 million in 2017.[citation needed]