Your stylist will help you select the best hair types, including how long they will last and what maintenance steps to take. They only care about the part that they can relate to directly with Blige. Show Source Texts
The world is always saying, "Give me more, give me more, I need gossip, I need this, I need that" - I'm not going to tell you gossip. Blige is not at all afraid of the world: I have been through hell since childhood. I do what people face, what we face every single day. My brother Puff went through the same thing as him, and Blige went through the same thing as me. Show Source Texts
Then when I got something - love from people who didn't even know me - it was like, wow, okay. Blige felt that the labels were forcing him to do something that would take the shooter further, on the charts or elsewhere. Blige recalls the years of the late 2000s, early 10s, when she looked like R.&B R.&B. For this reason, when Blige was the only woman on the Super Bowl stage, it was very natural. Show Source Texts
Something about the color of this music, something about the keys, something that drives Blige crazy in a good way. You won't find out about me what I don't want you to know. Blige never had problems, fights, negativity with my male peers. The ends are rough and the hair isn't as good as it used to be, so I'm crazy about it. Show Source Texts
Blige received a scholarship from the National Endowment for the Arts and the American Academy in Berlin. The work of Ariel Bobb-Willis can be seen in a traveling exhibition and in the New Black Avant-Garde gallery book. Show Source Texts
In Georgia, black Americans fell from about 45 percent in 1910 to about 26 percent in 1970. Between 1910 and 1930, the African-American population in the northern states increased by about 40 percent due to immigration. Show Source Texts
This wave of immigration often leads to overcrowding in cities as housing exclusion policies keep African-American families out of developing suburbs. In 1900, only one-fifth of African-Americans living in the rural South of the United States lived in urban areas. African Americans from the South were also migrating to industrialized cities in the South, and from the North and West to war-prosperous cities. At the end of the Great Migration, more than half of African-Americans lived in the rural South of the United States, and less than half lived in the cities of the Northeast. Show Source Texts
For blacks, the Great Migration meant leaving their economic and social bases in America in search of new ones. The Great Migration went in a different direction as blacks traveled to the new South in search of economic opportunities. During the Second Wave (1940-60), Chicago's African-American population increased from 278,000 to 813,000. A map of the percentage of blacks in the African-American population in each state in 1990. Show Source Texts