
With a brighter light shed on police brutality in the killings of unarmed black men and women including George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, communities have rallied worldwide to protest, raise awareness, donate funds, and sound off. There's so much information going around, both via TV news and on the Web, and with some being credible---some not-so-much---it's good to have a resource to help you make sound decisions on how to further the cause and show support.
Though laws have been enacted, offenders have been jailed and charged, and legislators continue talk on police reform, there's still work to be done. Consider these 9 advocacy groups and organizations to keep the fight going:
NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund
The NAACP is definitely an OG in the civil rights game and has a proven track record of being a pivotal part of some of America's most landmark civil rights legislation. Their legal, educational, and advocacy impact is wide-reaching. You can even check out their track record for results here.
Color of Change
With more than 1.7 million members, this advocacy and rights organization puts action behind words to get results. Recent victories include gathering more than 40,000 members in calling for the further investigation in the death of Breonna Taylor, an unarmed woman who was shot by police in Louisville, Kentucky. They were also successful in garnering 35,000 supporters to advocate for cybersecurity protections against racism related to Zoom. Subsequently Zoom hired its first chief diversity officer to address issues of hate related to cyberbullying. They've also been active in fighting against predatory loan practices, cyber discrimination and racism, and discriminatory practices related to COVID-19 resources. Find out how you can join, create a campaign or support an existing one here.
ACLU
This is another organization that has a long-standing history (more than 90 years) and proven track record of sparking legislative and organizational change in the realm of human rights. They have provided legal resources, resource and support issues of women's, LGBT's, and criminal justice rights. They have been active in advocating for victims of police brutality and their families by actively supporting protesters, initiating legal action and facilitating hearings to demand reforms. For more information on their work and how you can help, click here.
The LGBTQ Freedom Fund
Brutality and discrimination against the LGBTQ community is real and has affected millions around the world. Communities of color are disproportionately impacted. The LGBTQ Freedom Fund provides resources, advocacy, and financial aid to those who have been held in jails or immigration detention centers awaiting trial. It also raises awareness about issues of poverty, criminal sentencing, homelessness, and sexual assault against LGBTQ individuals. For more information on how you can volunteer at a chapter near you or donate, click here.
National Bail Fund Network
Celebrities and activists alike have put their money where their mouths are in the form of giving to bail funds. This is indeed important because protest leaders and participants can face arrest and the possibility of criminal charges. The National Bail Fund Network platform provides a quick and easy way to find local organizations that are providing bail fund services to those in need. Check out their listing to see how you can make a targeted impact here.
COVID-19 Mutual Aid Network
With the added challenge of COVID-19-related hardships, especially for minority communities, this area of activism goes hand in hand with human rights. This network, sparked by the efforts of two medical students who saw the need well before the pandemic hit, is made up of volunteers who fight for healthcare access equity for underserved communities by providing educational, financial, and skills resources. It's very clear that the more one can empower communities, the stronger communities are to sustain activism efforts in other areas. For more on how you can donate or find a chapter near you, click here.
Equal Justice Initiative
Fighing to end mass incarceration, racial inequity in the legal system, and excessive punishment for crimes in the U.S. is what this org is all about. Add to that that it's run by savvy lawyer Bryan Stevenson, who was depicted by everyone's fantasy bae, actor Michael B. Jordan in Just Mercy. More than 130 wrongfully condemned death-row inmates have found relief, conviction reversals, or release with the help of this organization, and hundreds more who have been wrongly convicted or sentenced have gotten justice. For more on how to support, visit their website.
Loveland Foundation Therapy Fund
It's true that lack of access to qualtiy mental healthcare is a major problem in communities of color, so empowering women and girls through connecting them to mental health education and resources is not only commendable---it's literally an act of divine love. Founder Rachel Cargle turned a birthday wish into a widespread movement and now has a nationwide collaborative network of mental health professionals, experts and advocacy groups to offer services to those in need. To find out how you can donate to help someone get the counseling and resources they need or how you can become a local advocate, click here.
Black Voters Matter Capacity Building Institute
This organization not only fights against voter suppression, it also provides organizational training for advocacy groups and movements, policy initiative advocacy for changes in legislation and practices, and support resources for organizers fighting for voting rights. Visit their website to find out more about how to donate or volunteer.
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Sleek & Heat-Proof: Straightened Hair, The Summer It List Way
This article is in partnership with SheaMoisture.
The world may try to convince you that straight hair is a no-go for the summer heat, but if you’re an It Girl, defying the odds is embedded in your DNA.
When it comes to achieving sleek strands for the summer, xoNecole and SheaMoisture have your blueprint for smooth, frizz-free, humidity and heat-damage-resistant hair throughout this season!
From hair styling oils to bond repairing products, and strengthening shampoo and conditioner, SheaMoisture offers a range of products that help you achieve the perfect silk press without worrying about the heat damage, thanks to formulas that moisturize, reduce breakage, and more.
We want your silk press to stay pressed, not stressed, so here’s our quick, three-step guide featuring SheaMoisture products from our xoNecole Summer It List for straightened hair all summer long.
Step 1: Keep Your Hair Strong
Like everything in life, if the foundation is rocky, things won’t last, and the sentiment remains when it comes to your hair.
SheaMoisture’s Hair Styling Oils are a must-have when preparing and protecting your strands before getting them pressed. The Bond Repair Oil is perfect reinforcement that your hair needs from within to prevent breakage and dryness when using heat-forward tools to achieve your look.
Protecting the hair before adding heat with SheaMoisture’s Bond Repair Leave-In helps guard against styling damage. The product also ensures hair bonds are repaired and essential proteins are replenished, resulting in less breakage. It also provides a boost of hydration and 24-hour control against frizz.

Courtesy of SheaMoisture
Step 2: Seal The Deal With Some Shine
Whether you’re preparing to attend a summer wedding or hitting a rooftop with your girlfriends, finishing the look with SheaMoisture’s Manuka Honey & Yogurt Lightweight Oil serves you and your hair right by adding luster, locking in moisture, and taming flyaways.
Step 3: Repair Your Hair Following The Heat
Before jumping into your next style, a moisturizing cleanse is a great repair duo to put the life back into your hair after a silk press.
The SheaMoisture Jamaican Black Castor Oil Shampoo and Conditioner offers damage-repairing benefits that will have your hair thanking you. It restores, nourishes, and strengthens hair, eases detangling, and brings damaged hair back to life with shine and movement, while most importantly, restoring moisture.
Who said that straight hair was off the table during the summer heat wave? With SheaMoisture and a plan, you’ll hit the scene like the It Girl you are for every summer festivity.
Consider your It Girl era unlocked. Shop all of our beauty and lifestyle must-haves on The It List.
Featured image courtesy of SheaMoisture
"I Don't Necessarily Long For That From Him": Kendrick Sampson Opens Up About His Father
We've all heard the phrase, "Men don't talk." Well, on the xoMAN podcast, they most certainly do.
When Kendrick Sampson joined Kiara Walker for this week's episode of the xoMAN, the Insecure actor peeled back layers of his childhood in Houston, his love for stories, and the complicated relationship he shares with his father.
Kendrick Sampson On Nurturing His Love For Stories
Before Kendrick became the actor and activist we all know today, he was just a kid in Houston who loved stories. So much so, he'd fall asleep most nights surrounded by books instead of stuffed animals. He admitted to Kiara that he was "super, super steeped in story" from the beginning. By the time he was in the fifth grade, he'd discovered acting through school plays. There, he found his lane.
When he told his mother he wanted to take acting seriously, she didn't discourage him or his newfound interest. Instead, she made him responsible for his dream.
"She said, 'Okay, here's a newspaper. Find an agent. I'm not going to do the work, but if you do the work, then I'll take you to class or whatever it is.'"
So the then-ten-year-old Kendrick picked up the newspaper, called an agent, and jump-started his acting career in Texas, booking commercials and auditions in Houston, Austin, and even NOLA, baby. The early encouragement gave Kendrick the confidence to pursue his calling before he had even started middle school.
On His Relationship With His Father, Distance & Feeling His Pride From Afar
While his mother's support in his dreams felt tangible, his father's was more complicated. Not one to sugarcoat anything, Kendrick kept it all the way real about the men in his life who helped shape him. After talking about the support he felt from his brothers, he shifted the focus to his father.
"My dad, my dad, my dad, my dad..." he repeated like a mantra as he searched for the right words to describe him. A Vietnam vet who grew up before segregation started in rural Louisiana, Kendrick's father was equal parts provider and enigma
"'Supportive' is a really interesting... I don't know if I could characterize it as 'supportive,'" Kendrick admitted in xoMAN. "He wasn't against it. He's very, he's very proud."
That pride, however, might've felt more elusive than anything as it didn't always show up directly.
The article continues after the video.
"He had a rough life, a very rough life. And he like fought in Vietnam. Was born in '47," he added empathetically before continuing, "He had a difficult... he was drafted, you know, orphaned... He took that into his relationships and his communication. Sometimes it was, you know, fucked up. So, you know, I wouldn't say like 'supportive,' but you know, he wasn't out of my life."
More often than not, Kendrick would hear about his father's admiration secondhand, be it from siblings or relatives that pass along stories.
"He's one of those people--and I have to watch myself because I'm kind of like this--where I'll brag about you all day, talk about you 24/7 to everybody and be like, 'Man, so and so is doing so good.'... I might not talk to you for two months... It's not no love loss. I'm not mad at you. I'm a Pisces... To me, I'm still, you're on my mind all the time. So my dad would brag about me to my siblings and other people, like he doesn't talk to me and we ain't talked in a year or whatever."
Kendrick On Learning To Understand His Father To Understand Himself
Even with the emotional distance he has experienced in loving his father and being loved by his father, Kendrick speaks about it all with a level of empathy that speaks to his wholeness and his own healing work. The complicated love he has for his father fuels his own self-awareness and shows in his ability to see it as a mirror.
"I still love him and I understand him and I wanna understand him more and more so I understand more about myself and where my flaws are, where can go, how bad my relationships can get, how harsh I can be when I say certain things and talk to people that I love and not think about it, so it makes me be more conscious."
And while he admits he probably speaks to his father more than some of the people in his father's life, what he ultimately craves from his father runs deeper.
"I don't necessarily long for that from him. I just want to know who he is at his core and what drives him and what brought him to how he was was and what I could learn from that."
Want more real talk from xoMAN? Catch the full audio episodes every Tuesday on Spotify and Apple Podcasts, and don’t miss the full video drops every Wednesday on YouTube. Hit follow, subscribe, and stay tapped in.
Featured image by Ray Tamarra/Soul B Photos/Shutterstock














