Mr. Mayor ♥️🖤💚
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Mr. Mayor ♥️🖤💚
@MAYORCOOLEY
Creative Brotha from South Central. Founder of The Black Love Party. Creator of the I Am Black History. t-shirt. Host of Next Things Next podcast @things_next


After this dropped in Dec 1996 you could not convince me any rapper alive was better than Reggie Noble.


Dallas Cowboys best players of all-time tier list.

On Super Bowl Sunday, we’re honoring a moment that changed the game. In 1988, Doug Williams made history as the first Black quarterback to start, win, and be named MVP of the Super Bowl, leading the Washington Redskins to a 42–10 victory in Super Bowl XXII. He threw for 340 yards and four touchdown passes, including four scores in a single quarter, delivering one of the most dominant performances the Super Bowl had ever seen. A proud Grambling State University alum, Williams’ breakthrough helped shift how Black quarterbacks were viewed, trusted, and given opportunities. In the years since, Black quarterbacks have gone on to become franchise leaders, Super Bowl starters, and league MVPs. His Super Bowl performance wasn’t the end of the story. It was the beginning of a new one that helped rewrite what is possible today on football’s biggest stage. 🖤

Who’s your favorite coach of all time? A) Nick Saban B) Eric Taylor C) Lou Brown D) Phil Jackson E) Gordon Bombay F) Bill Belichick G) Jack Lengyel H) Gregg Popovich I) Ken Carter J) Herb Brooks K) Jimmy McGinty L) Norman Dale M) Bud Kilmer N) Comment another coach ✍️

Share some lesser known black history from your region

Oh I love BTS tidbits. Lauryn Hill took the tribute task to heart. “The original ask was four, four and a half minutes … She came back with, ‘I’ll do it, but I want to pay real tribute to these two icons.'” rollingstone.com/music/music-fe…



#BlackHistoryMonth Day 3 book 3: “Kings and Pawns,” Howard Bryant’s latest contribution to untangling intersections of race, politics, sports and celebrity. Robeson and Robinson, both strong Black men caught in the crosshairs of US-style white supremacy.

📺NBC Primetime, February 3, 1990: — ‘227’ — ‘Amen’














