What is a "GOOGLE LIVE ON AIR BROADCAST"?

First we should start with the question,"What is a Google Plus Hangout?"

A Google Hangout is a face to face video chat between you and up to nine people. So there a total of ten seats on a first come first serve basis. You send an invite and people respond. The first nine people that accept the invite are on the video chat. When someone drops out then another person can be added to the video chat. You must have a google plus account to participate.

People are using Google Hangouts in their circles to do cooking classes, language lessons, needle point, concerts, business collaboration, etc.

You can do a Google Hangout from your mobile phone, your Ipad, or your computer.

Google has enhanced the Hangout feature to allow the face to face video chat to be broadcast to the world. Anyone can have TV show with  Google On Air Live Broadcast.

Some examples of successful Goggle Live On Air Broadcast are President Obama, Sarah Hill - News Anchor, Conan O'Brien and Tyra Banks.

KOMU News @ Noon Goggle Plus Hangout Video Tutorial






African Festival of the Arts Chicago #AFA2012 hosts its premiere Google Hangout Live On Air Broadcast on Thursday, August 30, 2012 from 6 pm to 8 pm CST. You can watch the #AFA2012 LIVE On Air Broadcast here on The Skychi Travel Guide website at www.skychitravels.com. Participants can chat live with Dwele & Kahil on Youtube at www.youtube.com/skychitravels or Google Hangouts. Search Google Plus Hangouts for “#AFA2012 LIVE” . You must have a Google Plus Account to join us on Google Hangouts.  Tune in 10 minutes prior to the broadcast at 6 p.m. CST.
 If you wish to participate please circle me on google plus below and email me here.


 Written by Janice Temple The Skychi Travel Guide http://www.skychitravels.com
Twitter http://twitter.com/skychi_travels
Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/TheSkychiTravelGuide


African Festival of the Arts Chicago #AFA2012 Tweet Chat

www.africanfestivalchicago.com/2012/site/Purchase_Tickets
What is a twitter tweet chat?

A twitter tweet chat is an online conversation or chat that happens on twitter. The participants of the chat use a hashtag such as #AFA2012 to follow the online conversation on twitter. You must have a twitter account to participate.


RT Join Tweet Chat this Tues. 12:30 pm 1:30 pm CST w/ Celebs @AfricanFestChi follow 


The African Festival of the Arts Chicago #AFA2012 Tweet Chat is scheduled for Tuesday, September 28, 2012 from 12:30 pm to 1:30 pm. This is an one-time event.


You can use www.tweetchat.com which is a third-party twitter application which helps followers separate tweets to make it easier to follow. A few minutes before the chat begins go http://tweetchat.com/room/AFA2012 to participate in the chat.

You can type your questions and answers without the hashtag because TweetChat will add automatically.

Invite other to the chat with this link "Join me for a #AFA2012 TweetChat at: http://tweetchat.com/room/AFA2012."



Moderators Twitter Handles to Follow:
@AfricanFestChi #AFA2012
@TheAriesGeek
@Aweinclusive



Tweet Chat Questions #AFA2012 

Q1: Have any pictures from previous years at the festival? Tweet them to us, we will share them on our Twitter feed and Facebook account!

Q2:  AFA is the cheapest ticket to Africa built around African culture, art, music, history and activities? 

Q3: Did you know AFA takes place every Labor Day Weekend in Washington Park?

Q4: People come from all over the Midwest to enjoy the festival! It's a tradition for a lot of families! What's ur 
favorite Labor Day tradition?


Q5: This year's festival theme is "Reflection of Our Culture." What do you love most about your culture?



Q7: What are you most excited about with the festival this year?


Q8: What's your favorite @george_clinton and Parliament Funkadelic song?


Q9: Did you inivite your friends and family to the festival this year! Children under 14 and Senior 62+ tickets are only $5!

Q10: Have you bought your festival tickets? Only $10 for advance tickets thru Aug. 28th - $20 at the gate, $5 for seniors 62+  Our line up is quite amazing! George Clinton, Lyfe Jennings, Dwele, VaShawn Mitchell and more.

Bonus Question: Want to win a free pair of tickets? We are giving out a free pair on 1-Day tickets to our follower who gives us the most retweets. 

African Festival of the Arts Chicago #AFA2012 Contest

http://www.africanfestivalchicago.com/2012/site/Purchase_Tickets.html

WIN! A free TWO WEEKEND PASSES and a chance to win an expense paid trip to Las Vegas, Cancun, or a Caribbean Cruise!

Official rules:
1) To qualify to win users must first like the Facecebook page of The African Festival of the Arts.
2) Users must share above image on their wall. 
3 ) Users must get their Facebook friends to like the picture they shared on their wall. 
4) The top two users with the highest number of likes will each receive two complimentary VIP seats to the 2012 AFA Festival, and a chance to win an expense paid trip to Las Vegas, Cancun, or a Caribbean Cruise!

5) Contestants must be 18 and up to win.

African Festival of the Arts Chicago #AFA 2012

 Invitation by Kahil El'Zabar

Dee Parmer Woodtor Main Stage
 BEST DEAL IN TOWN
ADVANCE TICKETS $10
IF PURCHASED BY TUES. AUGUST 28, 2012

www.africanfestivalchicago.com/2012/site/Purchase_Tickets

Purchase Tickets


Friday, August 31 thru Monday, September 3, 2012

Please pick up your tickets at the main gate at 51st and Cottage Grove Ave.

Any ticket can be used on any day between August 31 and Sept 3



AFRICAN FESTIVAL TICKETS

Tickets can be purchased at the main gate at 51st and Cottage Grove Ave.

Advanced Tickets $10.00 thru August 28th

Daily Admission $20.00 at Gate

Family / 2 Adults & 4 Children – $30.00

Weekend Pass – $30.00

www.africanfestivalchicago.com/2012/site/Purchase_Tickets

 

Follow on African Festival of the Arts:



Written  by Flight Attendant Black Travel Blogger  Janice Temple  Flight Attendant American Eagle Airlines
The Skychi Travel Guide http://www.skychitravels.com



Looking for Lifestyle, Politics and Culture Bloggers!


Karamu with Dr. Richard Cooper   Radio Program Fridays 4 to 7 pm EST Listen Live to WWW.900AMWURD.COM


BTB Black Travel Bloggers Live Interview



Janice Temple of The Skychi Travel Guide


Greg Gross (Yaya Colley) aka IBIT I 'M BLACK AND I TRAVEL

Karamu with Dr. Richard Cooper show airs live Fridays from 4 to 7 PM EST and can be heard live at  WWW.900AMWURD.COM so followers and friends  can hear the show live just by clicking on listen live. 
Call in with questions or comments to 866-361-0900

Also we can be heard live on your cell phones by downloading the apps at :  http://900amwurd.com/index.php?mact=News,cntnt01,detail,0&cntnt01articleid=230&cntnt01returnid=39


We're looking for some lifestyle, politics and culture bloggers! 
Share your opinion with our growing online audience! DM/MSG for deets!



http://www.facebook.com/900amwurd

  •  A Professor at Widener University - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • Radio talk show Host WURD 900 AM at WWW.900AMWURD.COM 


  • Please email me at drrichardcooper@gmail.com 
  • Contact me through the main number at Widener University 610-499-4000 for speaking engagements.




Written by Janice Temple  Flight Attendant American Eagle Airlines
The Skychi Travel Guide http://www.skychitravels.com





Gabby Douglas Hair - Why are Black Women in an Uproar?



Janice Temple in Paris, France with my "relaxed" hair styled
Janice Temple in Paris, France with my "relaxed" hair styled
As a flight attendant, I miss a lot of news and on purpose. I try to stay away from negativity, however I just had to stop to try understand this. Why is there a controversy about Gabby Douglas and her hair?
Janice Temple as a newborn with "good hair placenta" as they say
Janice Temple as a newborn with "good hair placenta" as they say
The first time someone posted it on facebook, I ignored it. Now a few days later everybody and their mama are writing articles trying to explain black hair. It is amazing the value of this controversy. Apparently to brands, it is worth $90 million dollars. Incredible!
Janice Temple in Rome, Italy with ex-hubby Big Mike (wearing relaxed hair)
Janice Temple in Rome, Italy with ex-hubby Big Mike (wearing relaxed hair)
First of all, I want to send greetings and positive love to Gabby Douglas. You are a beautiful dark chocolate sister with an accomplishment of Gold Medals. We are proud of you, that you are African American child of God. Kudos to you, Gabby Douglas. You are special and unique. God turned this embarrassing moment of black self-hatred into an opportunity for dialogue about a taboo subject for Black women into a historic financial abundance for you.
Janice Temple the hair model age 18 "fried, dyed and laid to the side"
Janice Temple the hair model age 18 "fried, dyed and laid to the side"
Now I wish to share my story of my journey to freedom from what black women think about my hair.
I was born and raised in a beauty salon, as my mother was a cosmetologist. She would press my hair until about age 5 years when she gave  me a perm. My hair was half way down my back. The women in the salon would come and watch my mother do my hair. They reasoned that if my mother could grow my hair that long that she could grow their hair that length too. So the women lined up to get their done by my mother, I was the child hair model.
Janice Robinson wearing an "Afro" for the third time
Janice Robinson wearing an "Afro" for the third time
Shirley Temple was a popular child actress during the time that I was growing up. Everyone loved her singing, dancing, and her beautiful curly blonde hair. As child, I wanted to be Shirley Temple particularly since my last name is Temple. I identified so strongly with that blonde, blue-eyed child star. My parents were furious when I asked them if I could have blonde hair and blue eyes. This foolish child desire made my mother cry and father scream at me. I was having an identity crisis and my parents could not cope with it.
My Cosmetologist Mother who dyed her hair blonde in the late 80's and wore blue contact lenses
My Cosmetologist Mother who dyed her hair blonde in the late 80's and wore blue contact lenses
This happened during the 1960"s Black Panthers and Dr. Martin Luther King's civil rights movement. This was also the era of  Johnson & Johnson Products explosion in the Black Hair Care Market with Relaxers and accompanying products. The money was very good during the 1960's as women began to rush into beauty salons to get their hair permed and conditioned. My mother made a very good living from making African American women feel beautiful and growing their hair.
Janice Robinson wearing twists
Janice Robinson wearing twists
I have often wondered about the myth of the tall, blonde, haired beauty. It seems so Aryan to me. I mean Hitler was defeated for trying to create a master race of blonde hair, blue-eyed men and women, then how did it creep into the American psyche? Why is the standard of beauty from Hitler Germany, the American standard of beauty?
Janice Robinson with hair blow-dryed straight in Istanbul
Janice Robinson with hair blow-dryed straight in Istanbul

The issue of Gabby Douglas' hair runs deep into the White standard of beauty. This standard of beauty is cultivated in Black Salons with the discussion and brainwashing of a Black woman's locks. It is goes something like this, "Girl what would want me to  do with them naps? We can't have you running around all over town looking like this". These were conversations that I heard regularly while being in  my mother's salon from age 3 to age 24 years when I left to live in Paris, France. The hairstylists would talk about the women's insecurities their "naps", and their "kitchens" to increase their sales. Black women trust their stylist, their beauty maker with ultimate confidence. If they have a good stylist, they give them their ultimate trust.  I never heard anyone in a beauty salon disagree with stylist about having their hair called "nappy" or "kinky".
Janice Robinson passport photo with short kinky twists
Janice Robinson passport photo with short kinky twists

There was this phrase during my teen years to describe processing Black hair - "fried, dyed and laid to the side." Well I have worn my hair "fried, dyed and laid to the side". When I was about 12 years old Beverly Johnson and Naomi Sims wigs became popular. My sister and I had plenty of hair, because it was the latest fashion we had wore wiglets and "I Dream of Jeannine"  ponytails in the summer heat. I detested wearing those wig pieces which made my scalp hot, itchy and sweaty. About age 15 to 16 years old, my mother dyed my hair red, brown, and added gold highlights ( not all at the same time).
Janice Temple with Blonde Locs
Janice Temple with Blonde Locs
Then a little after my 16th birthday, I became curious about what my natural hair looked and felt like. I started asking my mother about another way to wear my hair, because at that point I had done everything possible to my hair except to wear it naturally. I begged her to cut it off into an afro. We argued about several times. One day I won and I forced her into cutting my long relaxed hair off in front of her clients. She was in tears as she cut my locks off. Her friends and clients were furious with me. They turned on me with a vengeance. They berated me. "How could you do this to your mother?" "You look like a boy."  "You look like you are twelve years old." Those women tore my self-esteem down. They made me conform to wearing a relaxer. They made me feel so ugly for wearing an afro. They truly damaged my psyche. I was struggling to find my self and my concept of beauty. I had grown weary of being the hair model and the hair, growing, moneymaker. Whatever, my mother told me to do with my hair, I did it. I was not expected to think or have an opinion.
Janice Temple with relaxed hair
Janice Temple with relaxed hair

So I was forced to conform to the status quo of wearing my hair in a relaxed manner and do hair shows until I left for Paris, France at age 24 years old. My mother gave me a bon voyage party and invited all of her customers plus friends and family. They gave me money plus tons of gifts. It was an incredible outpouring of love to my mother as sent her oldest daughter off to Europe.
Janice Robinson in Istanbul with blow-dryed hair
Janice Robinson in Istanbul with blow-dryed hair

As I packed my international luggage, I had one suitcase for  my clothes and another suitcase for my hair products and tools. My hair suitcase included salon size products of relaxers, conditioners, setting lotions, blow dry conditioner, scissors, curling irons, rollers, steam rollers, hair twists, combs, detangling combs, boar brushes, portable hair dryer, and blow dryers. It was amazing I moved to Paris with a beauty salon in my suitcase. My values and priorities were all about keeping my hair looking good. I am sure I had to pay overcharge to check those beauty items on Sabena Airlines to Brussels. It didn't matter the cost, I was fully indoctrinated into the straight  hair beauty concept.
Janice Robinson with braid extensions
Janice Robinson with braid extensions
While in Paris, I met my ex-husband who was an internationally basketball player for Stade Francais, the Paris basketball team. We raised our family in France, Belgium, Venezuela, Argentina and Turkey. As we journeyed from country to country it became cumbersome to  carry  and pack a beauty salon in a suitcase.  Besides I had babies to raise, my priorities shifted from my hair to my family. I didn't have the time to spend doing my hair. I also began to admire the hairstyles of my African sisters. My desire to wear my natural hair returned with my travels.
Janice Robinson with twists
Janice Robinson with twists
In Paris, one day I found myself homesick. I decided to to go the African beauty salons near Sacre Coeur. I walked from one salon to another until I settled on a salon where four African sister were braiding the hair of one woman. I sat in that salon until nightfall, not speaking word, just watching them do hair. It is funny the things you miss when you live overseas. I had wanted to get away from my mother's beauty salon, but when I was homesick I found comfort sitting in a salon all day. Isn't that weird?
Janice Temple with twisted locs
Janice Temple with twisted locs
My "Aha" moment regarding my hair happened while I was living in Istanbul with my ex-husband and my first two children. One day I went to Akbank to make a deposit and the teller looked at my daughter Cendrine's hair which was in braids. Then she looked at my relaxed hair. She asked "Niye"? That means "why". She was asking me why did I perm my hair. Then she pointed to my daughter's hair. She said, "Cok Guzel" which means very good. The Turkish bank teller told me that my daughter had good hair, that natural hair was good.  My pscyhe and self-esteem awakened by those three simple Turkish words from that young Turkish bank teller. If only she knew, how much of an impact that she had one me.
Janice Temple with twisted locs
Janice Temple with twisted locs
After we left Turkey, we moved to Argentina where I went into a salon to have my hair cut into an afro. it was the first time I wore my hair in a natural since age 16 years old. I was finally liberated. There were no old women to chastise me into conforming. The wonderful thing about living and traveling the world is self-discovery. Travel teaches you about yourself.
Janice Temple with twisted locs
Janice Temple with twisted locs dyed blonde at the tips
Every since that moment in Turkey, I have been a trendsetter in my hairstyles on my own terms. I have worn an afro, twists, cornrolls, natural hair straight blow dry, and now locks. I have created my own beauty. I am trendsetter with my hairstyles. I know who I am. I know what image I wish to portray. I am proud of my natural, curly, kinky, nappy hair.
Janice Temple with twists (second to left)
Janice Temple with twists (second to left)
Gabby Douglas you are an international citizen of the world now. You are a trendsetter. The women who tried to make you conform to their standard of beauty will now conform to your standard of beauty. God has lifted you above them and their condescending conversations. Those women do not know who they are. If they were comfortable with their beauty, they would not have attacked your beauty.
Janice Temple with twisted locs
Janice Temple with twisted locs
Gabby Douglas know that whatever hairstyle you wear that millions of little girls will want to be you. They will want to wear their hair like yours. So Gabby be proud of your beautiful dark chocolate skin and your beautiful hair. Do not allow others to define you. For God has uplifted you and set you apart, you are blessed to be a role model.
Photo courtesy of www.money.cnn.com "Gabby Douglas is presented with the first box of Corn Flakes."
Photo courtesy of www.money.cnn.com "Gabby Douglas is presented with the first box of Corn Flakes."

Gabby Douglas just do you!



Written by Janice Temple  Flight Attendant American Eagle Airlines
The Skychi Travel Guide http://www.skychitravels.com
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