Tumgik
#DRU DAVIS
Text
Link to contestants page.
3 notes · View notes
kwebtv · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Burke’s Law -  List of Guest Stars
The Special Guest Stars of “Burke’s Law” read like a Who’s Who list of Hollywood of the era.  Many of the appearances, however, were no more than one scene cameos.  This is as complete a list ever compiled of all those who even made the briefest of appearances on the series.  
Beverly Adams, Nick Adams, Stanley Adams, Eddie Albert, Mabel Albertson, Lola Albright, Elizabeth Allen, June Allyson, Don Ameche, Michael Ansara, Army Archerd, Phil Arnold, Mary Astor, Frankie Avalon, Hy Averback, Jim Backus, Betty Barry, Susan Bay, Ed Begley, William Bendix, Joan Bennett, Edgar Bergen, Shelley Berman, Herschel Bernardi, Ken Berry, Lyle Bettger, Robert Bice, Theodore Bikel, Janet Blair, Madge Blake, Joan Blondell, Ann Blyth, Carl Boehm, Peter Bourne, Rosemarie Bowe, Eddie Bracken, Steve Brodie, Jan Brooks, Dorian Brown, Bobby Buntrock, Edd Byrnes, Corinne Calvet, Rory Calhoun, Pepe Callahan, Rod Cameron, Macdonald Carey, Hoagy Carmichael, Richard Carlson, Jack Carter, Steve Carruthers, Marianna Case, Seymour Cassel, John Cassavetes, Tom Cassidy, Joan Caulfield, Barrie Chase, Eduardo Ciannelli, Dane Clark, Dick Clark, Steve Cochran, Hans Conried, Jackie Coogan, Gladys Cooper, Henry Corden, Wendell Corey, Hazel Court, Wally Cox, Jeanne Crain, Susanne Cramer, Les Crane, Broderick Crawford, Suzanne Cupito, Arlene Dahl, Vic Dana, Jane Darwell, Sammy Davis Jr., Linda Darnell, Dennis Day, Laraine Day, Yvonne DeCarlo, Gloria De Haven, William Demarest, Andy Devine, Richard Devon, Billy De Wolfe, Don Diamond, Diana Dors, Joanne Dru, Paul Dubov, Howard Duff, Dan Duryea, Robert Easton, Barbara Eden, John Ericson, Leif Erickson, Tom Ewell, Nanette Fabray, Felicia Farr, Sharon Farrell, Herbie Faye, Fritz Feld, Susan Flannery, James Flavin, Rhonda Fleming, Nina Foch, Steve Forrest, Linda Foster, Byron Foulger, Eddie Foy Jr., Anne Francis, David Fresco, Annette Funicello, Eva Gabor, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Reginald Gardiner, Nancy Gates, Lisa Gaye, Sandra Giles, Mark Goddard, Thomas Gomez, Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez, Sandra Gould, Wilton Graff, Gloria Grahame, Shelby Grant, Jane Greer, Virginia Grey, Tammy Grimes, Richard Hale, Jack Haley, George Hamilton, Ann Harding, Joy Harmon, Phil Harris, Stacy Harris, Dee Hartford, June Havoc, Jill Haworth, Richard Haydn, Louis Hayward, Hugh Hefner, Anne Helm, Percy Helton, Irene Hervey, Joe Higgins, Marianna Hill, Bern Hoffman, Jonathan Hole, Celeste Holm, Charlene Holt, Oscar Homolka, Barbara Horne, Edward Everett Horton, Breena Howard, Rodolfo Hoyos Jr., Arthur Hunnicutt, Tab Hunter, Joan Huntington, Josephine Hutchinson, Betty Hutton, Gunilla Hutton, Martha Hyer, Diana Hyland, Marty Ingels, John Ireland, Mako Iwamatsu, Joyce Jameson, Glynis Johns, I. Stanford Jolley, Carolyn Jones, Dean Jones, Spike Jones, Victor Jory, Jackie Joseph, Stubby Kaye, Monica Keating, Buster Keaton, Cecil Kellaway, Claire Kelly, Patsy Kelly, Kathy Kersh, Eartha Kitt, Nancy Kovack, Fred Krone, Lou Krugman, Frankie Laine, Fernando Lamas, Dorothy Lamour, Elsa Lanchester, Abbe Lane, Charles Lane, Lauren Lane, Harry Lauter, Norman Leavitt, Gypsy Rose Lee, Ruta Lee, Teri Lee, Peter Leeds, Margaret Leighton, Sheldon Leonard, Art Lewis, Buddy Lewis, Dave Loring, Joanne Ludden,  Ida Lupino, Tina Louise, Paul Lynde, Diana Lynn, James MacArthur, Gisele MacKenzie, Diane McBain, Kevin McCarthy, Bill McClean, Stephen McNally, Elizabeth MacRae, Jayne Mansfield, Hal March, Shary Marshall, Dewey Martin, Marlyn Mason, Hedley Mattingly, Marilyn Maxwell, Virginia Mayo, Patricia Medina, Troy Melton, Burgess Meredith, Una Merkel, Dina Merrill, Torben Meyer, Barbara Michaels, Robert Middleton, Vera Miles, Sal Mineo, Mary Ann Mobley, Alan Mowbray, Ricardo Montalbán, Elizabeth Montgomery, Ralph Moody, Alvy Moore, Terry Moore, Agnes Moorehead, Anne Morell, Rita Moreno, Byron Morrow, Jan Murray, Ken Murray, George Nader, J. Carrol Naish, Bek Nelson, Gene Nelson, David Niven, Chris Noel, Kathleen Nolan, Sheree North, Louis Nye, Arthur O'Connell, Quinn O'Hara, Susan Oliver, Debra Paget, Janis Paige, Nestor Paiva, Luciana Paluzzi, Julie Parrish, Fess Parker, Suzy Parker, Bert Parks, Harvey Parry, Hank Patterson, Joan Patrick, Nehemiah Persoff, Walter Pidgeon, Zasu Pitts, Edward Platt, Juliet Prowse, Eddie Quillan, Louis Quinn, Basil Rathbone, Aldo Ray, Martha Raye, Gene Raymond, Peggy Rea, Philip Reed, Carl Reiner, Stafford Repp, Paul Rhone, Paul Richards, Don Rickles, Will Rogers Jr., Ruth Roman, Cesar Romero, Mickey Rooney, Gena Rowlands, Charlie Ruggles, Janice Rule, Soupy Sales, Hugh Sanders, Tura Satana, Telly Savalas, John Saxon, Lizabeth Scott, Lisa Seagram, Pilar Seurat, William Shatner, Karen Sharpe, James Shigeta, Nina Shipman, Susan Silo, Johnny Silver, Nancy Sinatra, The Smothers Brothers, Joanie Sommers, Joan Staley, Jan Sterling, Elaine Stewart, Jill St. John, Dean Stockwell, Gale Storm, Susan Strasberg, Inger Stratton, Amzie Strickland, Gil Stuart, Grady Sutton, Kay Sutton, Gloria Swanson, Russ Tamblyn. Don Taylor, Dub Taylor, Vaughn Taylor, Irene Tedrow, Terry-Thomas, Ginny Tiu, Dan Tobin, Forrest Tucker, Tom Tully, Jim Turley, Lurene Tuttle, Ann Tyrrell, Miyoshi Umeki, Mamie van Doren, Deborah Walley, Sandra Warner, David Wayne, Ray Weaver, Lennie Weinrib, Dawn Wells, Delores Wells, Rebecca Welles, Jack Weston, David White, James Whitmore, Michael Wilding, Annazette Williams, Dave Willock, Chill Wills, Marie Wilson, Nancy Wilson, Sandra Wirth, Ed Wynn, Keenan Wynn, Dana Wynter, Celeste Yarnall, Francine York.
8 notes · View notes
yngsuk · 2 years
Text
It is important to note the role played by abolitionist and antislavery reformers in the conceptualization and dissemination of repressive free labor ideals. In examining the relation between slavery and the discourse of labor management in early industrial England, David Brion Davis argues that Jeremy Bentham’s vision of the model prison was a parodic intensification of the ideals of plantation management. If Bentham’s panopticon is the model of discipline, the exemplary exercise of a modern power that is mild-lenient-productive, then how does our understanding of the carceral society change if, in fact, the carceral is a derivative or offshoot of the plantation and presumes continuities between the management of slave and free labor? If this totalizing vision of managing labor had one eye directed toward slavery and the other toward freedom, it then becomes necessary to consider the way discipline itself bears the trace of what Foucault would describe as premodern forms of power, but which perhaps are more aptly described as “discipline with its clothes off.” None of this is surprising when slavery is contextualized within a transatlantic capitalist system that traded information and strategies of labor management between the plantation and the factory. Not only did the crisis of industrialization—problems of pauperism, underemployment, and labor management—occur in the context of an extensive debate about the fate of slavery, but also slavery informed the premises and principles of labor discipline. As Davis notes, the focus on the coercion and barbarism of slavery and the whip as the only incentive to work “lent sanction to less barbarous modes of social discipline. For reformers, the plantation offered the prospect of combining virtues of the old agrarian order with new ideals of uplift and engineered incentive.” The terror and violence of the plantation, too, would shape the contours of the new racial order. The forms of compulsion used against the unemployed, vagrants, beggars, and others in the postbellum North, as Amy Dru Stanley notes, mirrored the transition from slavery to freedom. The contradictory aspects of liberty of contract and the reliance on coercion in stimulating free labor modeled in the aftermath of the Civil War were the lessons of emancipation employed against the poor. Many of the architects of scientific charity (a bureaucratic campaign to assist the poor by transforming their behavior, whereby idleness and dependence on charity, rather than poverty, were identified as the enemy of the poor), vagrancy statutes, and compulsory contracts were leading abolitionists—Edward Pierce, Josephine Shaw Lowell, and Samuel Gridley Howe, to name a few. Stanley writes: “The experience of war and emancipation not only honed efficient techniques of philanthropy but also schooled Yankees in schemes for forcing beggars to work. The endeavor of reconstructing the southern labor system and installing contract practices recast conceptions of dependency, obligation, and labor compulsion. Just as the ideal of free labor was transported south, so its coercive aspects—articulated in rules governing the freed people—were carried back north.” The compulsion and intimidation necessary to dominate the ex-slave licensed the additional force wielded against the poor. Duress would steer them into the world of exchange.
Saidiya Hartman, Scenes of Subjection: Terror, Slavery, and Self-Making in Nineteenth-Century America
14 notes · View notes
goalhofer · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Famous 1922 births.
Bishop José De Jesús Sahagún De La Parra (Mexican Catholic bishop)
Albert Lamorisse (French movie director & producer)
Betty White Ludden (American actress)
Agathe Poschmann (German actress)
Joanne Dru Wood (American actress)
Daniel Macnee (British-American actor)
Haskell Wexler (American cinematographer & movie producer)
Audrey Meadows Six (American actress)
Kathryn Grayson (American actress & singer)
Archbishop Hilarion Capucci (Syrian Catholic archbishop)
Ralph H. Baer (German-American inventor & video game designer)
Cyd Charisse Morris (American actress & dancer)
Karl Kordesch (Austrian-American inventor)
Carl Reiner (American actor & director)
Russ Meyer (American movie director & producer)
Richard Kiley (American actor & singer)
Doris Day (American actress & singer)(pictured)
Josephine Cottle Masterson aka Gale Storm (American actress & singer)
Michael Ansara (Syrian-American actor)
Barbara Hale Katt (American actress)
Jack Klugman (American actor)
Roscoe Brown (American actor & director)
Darren McGavin (American actor)
Bea Arthur (American actress)
Sir Christopher Lee (British actor & singer)
Baroness Sheila Sim Attenborough (British actress)
Judy Garland DeVinko (American actress & singer)(pictured)
Eleanor Parker Hirsch (American actress)
Howie Schultz (American baseball & basketball player)
Jason Robards; Jr. (American sailor & actor)
Rory Calhoun (American actor)
Friar Jules Wieme (Belgian Catholic lay brother & missionary)
Margaret Middleton aka Yvonne De Carlo (Canadian-American actress)
Isaac Caesar (American actor & writer)
Jackie Cooper; Jr. (American actor & director)
Mervyn Hamilton (American movie director)
Janis Paige Gilbert (American actress & singer)
Cardinal Roger Etchegaray (French Catholic cardinal)
Noémi Ban (Hungarian-American holocaust survivor & lecturer)
Lizabeth Scott (American actress & singer)
Dr. St. Gianna Beretta Molla (Italian doctor & Catholic saint)
Fr. Luigi Giussani (Italian Catholic priest)
Coleen Gray Zeiser (American actress)
Ruby Dee Davis (American actress & poet)
Michel Galabru (French actor)
Iancu Țucărman (Romanian engineer & holocaust survivor)
Barbara Bel Geddes Lewis (American actress & artist)
Dorothy Dandridge (American actress & singer)
Kim Hunter Emmett (American actress)
Constance Ockelman aka Veronica Lake (American actress)
Stanford R. Ovshinsky (American engineer & inventor)
Charles M. Schulz (American cartoonist)
Redd Foxx (American comedian & actor)
Maila Syrjäniemi Mioni aka Maila Nurmi (American actress)
Paul Winchell (American actor & ventriloquist)
Ava Gardner (American actress)
Stan Lee (American comic book writer & editor)(pictured)
12 notes · View notes
cyarskj1899 · 1 year
Text
15 Totally Accurate Tweets About ‘Power Book II: Ghost’ Season 2 Ep. 8
Xaviera BryantJanuary 24, 2022
Tumblr media
The shizznit hit the fan on “Power Book II: Ghost” on Sunday night and Monet (Mary J. Blige) was left in the cold with a thin sweater.
Diana (LaToya Tonodeo) dropped more bombs at the dinner table than Funkmaster Flex when he’s on the airwaves of Hot 97 doing thee absolute most!
The streets of Twitter are ablaze as fans of the show react to the episode that was so explosive that it felt like a season finale.
Read totally accurate tweets about “Power Book II: Ghost” season 2 episode 8 below.
As always these tweets contain spoilers, so I suggest you hold off on reading them until you are all caught up on the show.
That wasn’t even the season finale SHEESHHHHH #PowerBookII #PowerGhost pic.twitter.com/fFPwD6yaai
— Woody McClain (@WOODY_THEGREAT) January 23, 2022
Those birth certificate on the table
Monet: #PowerGhost pic.twitter.com/KLFEffFBOk
— tami roman stan account (@Bassicallyme_) January 23, 2022
Even Zeke’s baby picture looks like he confused Lmfaoo #PowerGhost #PowerBookII pic.twitter.com/zNhjQYb43f
— Danagain (@d_graham11) January 23, 2022
Guap after Dru pointed that gun at his head#powerghost #PowerBookII pic.twitter.com/SbnhDssWFz
— ????️ (@notreallyhimm) January 23, 2022
Diana after she blew up the whole family dinner with secrets and lies being brought out:#PowerBookII #PowerGhost pic.twitter.com/1qoRm78kIG
— 28 Years of Bullshit (@WeirdGuyJay) January 23, 2022
Zeke in 6th grade. #PowerBookII #PowerGhost pic.twitter.com/8f9jJzAl3a
— Jas (@IamJasMonet) January 23, 2022
Diana after Monet brought up her fucking Tariq #PowerGhost pic.twitter.com/UEfhcz78Um
— Neon Boudeaux (@Carnage45__) January 23, 2022
Cane, every time Tariq got a good idea ???? #PowerGhost pic.twitter.com/bfPA5GT7cK
— Jessica Scissorhands (@JesScissorhands) January 23, 2022
Monet had Zeke in school like #powerghost pic.twitter.com/syAeym0UJD
— Tyler (@Tsteve93) January 23, 2022
Diana: I ain't the only one fuckin somebody ain't suppose to MA
Monet:#PowerBook2 #PowerTV #PowerBookII #powerghost pic.twitter.com/Mvcz2XAdiK
— PY®️3️⃣❌ (@Reno_childs) January 23, 2022
Cane thinking he got away with that.
Mecca:#PowerBookII #PowerGhost pic.twitter.com/KimVps9HAo
— tami roman stan account (@Bassicallyme_) January 23, 2022
Davis: Professor Milgrim didn’t you sleep with Reynolds, the Lead Detective, Zeke AND me?!!
Carrie:#PowerBookII #powerghost pic.twitter.com/BtOO5Gvxi9
— tami roman stan account (@Bassicallyme_) January 23, 2022
Tariq should know by now , this man only purpose is to surprise him with bad news #PowerGhost #PowerBookII #PowerTV pic.twitter.com/dF0vTjsr50
— Courtney (@alysecourtney) January 23, 2022
How Monet was trying to whoop Diana ass #PowerGhost pic.twitter.com/XvGGZFDcye
— Depressed nets fan (@KobeLebron11) January 23, 2022
watching this episode like #PowerGhost #PowerBookII
pic.twitter.com/RFoRkoWPka
— ????????✨ (@iam_claudia_) January 23, 2022
What was your favorite moment from the episode?
Sent from my iPhone
2 notes · View notes
biggoldbelt · 5 days
Text
Lovell Adams Gray Interview "Dru Tejada" | Power Book II: Ghost Season 4
Lovell Adams Gray Interview by Big Gold Belt Media Lovell Adams Grays as “Dru Tejada”–Synopsis:New alliances have been formed with each faction and Tariq and Brayden must find a way back into the game. But Brayden starts flirting with a new, reckless lifestyle, leaving Tariq to wonder if there really is room for two at the top. With Monet left for dead, Davis facing potential disbarment, and…
0 notes
brookstonalmanac · 8 months
Text
Birthdays 1.31
Beer Birthdays
William Hoffmeister (1827)
George Hauck (1832)
William Wenzel (1854)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Connie Booth; actor, "Monty Python" (1944)
Don Hutson; Green Bay Packers WR (1913)
Terry Kath; rock guitarist, "Chicago" (1946)
Grant Morrison; comic book artist (1960)
John O'Hara; writer (1905)
Famous Birthdays
Shirley Babashoff; swimmer (1957)
Tallulah Bankhead; actor (1903)
Ernie Banks; Chicago Cubs 1B (1931)
Eddie Cantor; actor, singer (1892)
Carol Channing; actor, singer (1923)
Vernon Davis; San Francisco 49ers TE (1984)
Minnie Driver; actor (1970)
Joanne Dru; actor (1922)
James Franciscus; actor (1934)
Dick Gephardt; politician (1941)
James Gibbons Huneker; music critic (1860)
Philip Glass; composer (1937)
Zane Grey; writer (1872)
Bobby Hackett; trumpeter, bandleader (1915)
Mario Lanza; singer, actor (1921)
Anthony LaPaglia; actor (1959)
Alan Lomax; musicologist (1915)
Kelly Lynch; actor (1959)
Norman Mailer; writer (1923)
Charley Musselwhite; blues musician (1944)
Phil Manzanera; rock musician (1951)
Robert Morris; signer of the Declaration of Independence (1734)
Anna Pavlova; dancer, choreographer (1882)
Suzanne Pleshette; actor (1937)
Theodore Richards; chemist (1868)
Jackie Robinson; Brooklyn Dodgers 2B (1919)
Portia de Rossi; actor (1973)
Johnny Rotten; punk singer (1956)
Nolan Ryan; New York Mets P (1947)
Franz Schubert; composer (1797)
Jean Simmons; actor (1929)
Justin Timberlake; singer (1981)
Patricia Velasquez; model, actor (1971)
Jessica Walter; actor (1940)
Ken Wiilber; writer (1949)
0 notes
albumaday2024 · 8 months
Text
January 9: MONO
K. Flay
September 15, 2023
Tumblr media
Produced by: 
Kristine Flaherty
Jeoff Harris
Dru DeCaro
Kyle Buckley
Rob Nelson
Paul Meany
David Haddad
Label: Giant Music
-Alternative Rock, Pop Punk, Indie Rock-
Vocals & Instruments: Kristine Flaherty
Drums: Aric Improta
Mixing: Michael Freeman and Kristine Flaherty
Mastering: Joe LaPorta
Writers: Kristine Flaherty (K. Flay), Jeoff Harris, Jason Suwito, Daniel Armbruster, Bradley Hale, Caroline Pennell, Dru DeCaro, Victor Fuentes, Kyle Buckley, Rob Nelson, Matthew Koma, Taylor Goldsmith, Paul Meany, Sara Keden, Davis Haddad
This album was largely inspired by K. Flay losing hearing in her right ear leading to a diagnosis of labyrinthitis. 
"All the doctors said the cause was just some mystery unknown
Then they charged me thirteen thousand
And the fuckers sent me home"
- "Are You Serious?" (Track 1)
********************************************
1 note · View note
ai-satires · 1 year
Video
Different view where Davis (Method Man) brother shot Saxe in New York East River. This was his brothers favorite spot where helicopters land & take off before he went to jail! After he shot Saxe he killed himself. Tariq & Davis witnessed it all. Power Book II: Ghost Season 3.
#PowerBookIIGhost #PowerBookIIGhostseason4 #PowerBookIIGhostseason5 #powerbook2 @powerbookstarz1140  
#MichaelRaineyJr #TariqJamesStPatrick
Michael Rainey Jr. Tariq James St. Patrick
Paige Hurd Lauren Baldwin LaToya Tonodeo Diana Tejada Alix Lapri Effie LightSkinKeisha BruShandria Carmichael Joseph Sikora Tommy Egan Mary J. Blige Monet Method Man Davis MacLean Melanie Liburd Woody McClain Cane Daniel Bellomy Ezekiel Caroline Chikezie Noma Daniel Sunjata Mecca Andrea Lee Christensen Riley Saxe-Merchant Gianni Paolo Brayden Weston Monique Gabriela Curnen Blanca Rodriguez Moriah Brown Keke Travis Lauren Vélez Evelyn Castillo Lovell Adams-Gray Dru Tejada David Walton Lucas Weston Naturi Naughton Tasha St. Patrick Petey McGee Salim Ashe Freeman Shane Johnson Cooper Saxe Paris Morgan Yasmine St. Patrick Paton Ashbrook Jenny Sullivan Larenz Tate Councilman Tate
0 notes
quotes121sworld · 1 year
Link
0 notes
jvlewis77 · 1 year
Text
TV Show Tracker - trakt.tv client
Power Book II: Ghost - S03E04 - The Land of Opportunity : https://trakt.tv/shows/power-book-ii-ghost/seasons/3/episodes/4
0 notes
worldspotlightnews · 1 year
Text
What to watch on Friday: ‘Tiny Beautiful Things’ premieres on Hulu
Comment on this storyComment Lopez vs Lopez (NBC at 8) George and Rosie blame Mayan and Quinten’s parenting for Chance getting into a fight at school; Rosie goes to therapy and learns George isn’t the source of all of her problems. Power Book II: Ghost (Starz at 8:02) The Tejadas and Davis figure out how to handle Whitman; Dru, with the help of a family friend, sets up a risky deal. S.W.A.T.…
View On WordPress
0 notes
kley-blog · 2 years
Link
All very well . . .
With the exception of the weird twist at the end . . .
I’ll leave you to work out your own interpretation of that . . . ??
Enjoy . . . !!
0 notes
dykerachelsummers · 4 years
Text
screech - 2004-2009 ( x / x )
(credit to @flashhwing for the name of the band)
dinah laurel lance (she/her) - vocalist & guitarist. this is her first band! she moved to seattle to get a new start. majoring in music theory & composition.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
andrew “dru” tristan davis (he/they) - guitarist. met dinah in a college freshman music theory class and became friends. they decided to start a band together and dru recruited izzy, their best friend since elementary school. dru has a very calming influence on their friends, but is also always the life of the party. majoring in asl studies.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
isabella “izzy” estefanía álvarez larrieu (she/her) - bassist. izzy is a five foot nothing ball of anger. she’s an amazing friend and the world’s biggest ride or die. the scar on her lip is from decking an asshole who was making fun of tash. majoring in communications.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
natasha “tash” jamie moore (ze/zir) - drummer. tash has three (3) special interests: drumming, music, and frogs. tash and izzy started dating soon after the band formed. majoring in zoology.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
9 notes · View notes
redcarpetview · 2 years
Text
KID ‘N PLAY, 112, RAHEEM DEVAUGHN, PJ MORTON, TASHA PAGE-LOCKHART, CARL THOMAS AND MORE TAPPED FOR THE 7TH ANNUAL BLACK MUSIC HONORS TO CELEBRATE LEGENDARY TRAILBLAZERS
Tumblr media
Black Music Honors' Performer Crystal Aikin
The 7th Annual Black Music Honors announces its incredible roster of performers for a star-studded celebration of influential music legends with a live studio audience taping at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre in Atlanta, Ga. on Thursday, May 19 (tickets available at BlackMusicHonors.com and Ticketmaster.com). 
There will be a special Juneteenth highlight recognizing the national federal holiday.
Performers gracing the stage at this year’s power-packed televised show includes popular late 80’s Hip-Hop Duo Kid N’ Play; GRAMMY-Award-Winning Supergroup 112; Multi-Award-Winning Music Veteran Carl Thomas; Three-Time GRAMMY-Nominated, “The Love King,” Raheem DeVaughn; Compton-Bred Actress and Songbird Amber Riley; Multi-GRAMMY-Award-Winning-Artist PJ Morton; Multi-Hyphenate Crooner and Penman Eric Bellinger; Powerhouse Songster and Serenader Avery Wilson; Multifaceted Entertainer and Rising Artist Jade Novah; Viral Vocal Teen Prodigy Keedron Bryant; Gospel Sweethearts Ajah and Rhea Walls from Multi-GRAMMY-Nominated and Stellar-Award-Winning The Walls Group; Multi-Talented Vocalist and Sunday Best Season Six Winner Tasha Page-Lockhart; Gospel Songstress and Sunday Best Season One Winner Crystal Aikin; NAACP-Image-Award-Nominated Singer and Actress Sheléa; Billboard-Chart-Topping Singer-Songwriter Kevin Ross; and Two-Decade-Spanning Independent Artist and GRAMMY-Award-Nominee Eric Roberson. 
Tumblr media
Black Music Honors' Performer Kid N' Play
Kicking off the 2022 BMH Honorees is Award-Winning Singer-Songwriter Keri Hilson who is tapped to receive the Music and Songwriter Icon Award. Multi-Award-Winning Gospel Duo Mary Mary will be presented with the Gospel Icon Award; Five-Time GRAMMY Nominee Tevin Campbell is set to receive the R&B Icon Award; Award-Winning Supergroup Dru Hill  to be recognized with the Urban Music Icon Award and a planned special performance in celebration of their 25th anniversary; NAACP Image Award-Winning Singer Karyn White is being honored with the Soul Music Award; and the Legendary R&B Group The Whispers will take home the Legends Award for their incredible nearly six decade music career. Two-Time GRAMMY Winner LeToya Luckett and Comedian DeRay Davis are co-hosting the show. 
Tumblr media
Black Music Honors' Performer PJ Morton
National Broadcast Syndication will air June 4 - July 3 and on Bounce TV June 25. For live-taping tickets go to www.blackmusichonors.com or you can purchase by clicking here.
For more information about Black Music Honors, visit www.blackmusichonors.com or connect on social media @blackmusichonors on Facebook and Instagram or @blackmusichonor on Twitter. 
# # #
0 notes
musiculture-fr · 3 years
Text
Variations Sur Le Même Thème : "Juicy Fruit"
Tumblr media
Venez lire l'article sur Le Site Des Musiques Métissées Et Urbaines.  En 1983, l’artiste "James Mtum" écrivait et enregistrait un titre qui allait marquer au fer rouge plusieurs générations. http://www.musiculture.fr/variations-sur-le-meme-theme-juicy-fruit/
0 notes