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Husband-and-wife team Chef Greg and Subrina Collier have announced plans for the inaugural Black Food & Wine Festival happening October 22nd to 24th at Camp North End in North Carolina. The celebration was inspired by the Harlem Renaissance where the Black Food & Wine Festival seeks to educate and entertain.


The couple wanted to capture the Harlem Renaissance during the 1920s and 1930s to share a look inside Black life, identity and culture through the arts.


“Back then, there was a burst of creativity and cultural appreciation born out of Prohibition,” Greg said. “Now, one hundred or so years later, Black creativity has been unappreciated and unnoticed for a while. We want to shine that spotlight bright.”


The three-day festival will be a celebration of Black food and culture, with more than 75 chefs, artisans, farmers, brewers, and distillers already signed on to participate.


The Colliers, who own Uptown Yolk and the critically acclaimed “modern juke joint” Leah & Louise, leaned into their network for the lineup of notable chefs from across the country.


“Participating in other festivals, I saw how Black chefs and culinarians weren’t represented — not to the amount we should’ve been,” says Subrina, a 2020 James Beard Foundation Women’s Entrepreneurial Leadership Fellow. “I’m hoping to get people excited to keep supporting not only small businesses but Black businesses and Black chefs.”


Among the first to sign on to participate were Atlanta chef Todd Richards, James Beard-finalist chef Duane Nutter, Top Chef alums: Tiffany Derry, Chris Scott, and Keith Rhodes. Charlotte-area locals like Lindsay Williams of Davidson Wine Co., Greg Williams and Jamie Barnes of What The Fries, Whitney Thomas of The Grand Bohemian, and Michael Bowling of Hot Box Next Level Kitchen will also be part of the festivities.


The Colliers helped found Soul Food Sessions, a pop-up dinner series highlighting Black culinarians. In 2020, they opened Leah & Louise, a modern juke joint named one of the country’s best new restaurants by Esquire.


To kick off the festival on October 22nd, there will be a Chuckwagon Carnival with food trucks, amusement rides and family-friendly entertainment. Towards the end of the night there will be a Black Stork Chefs Dinner, a ticketed multicourse meal. The Stork Club was a famous New York City supper club that refused to serve Josephine Baker and learned the high cost of racism.


On October 23rd, the Cotton Club Festival anchors a day of events that include vendors, demonstrations and tastings before ending with The Harlem Nights Chefs Dinner, a reference to the 1989 film classic starring Eddie Murphy and Richard Pryor. The Cotton Club, which first opened as Club Deluxe by heavyweight boxing champion Jack Johnson before mobster Owen “Owney” Madden took it over, limited the audience to White patrons and revamped it into the popular cabaret that attracted an A-list of Black performers.


The Savoy Jazz Brunch will wrap up the celebration on October 24th with multiple chef stations and live music. The Savoy Ballroom was one of the first racially integrated venues in the country.


Tickets are expected to launch in June. For more information, including details about sponsorship, participation, and volunteering visit BlackFoodandWineFestival.com.



Founder of FUBU and The Shark Group, Daymond John is hosting Black Entrepreneurs Day, a virtual event occurring October 24 that will bring together Black business leaders and entrepreneurs.


“October 24th is the next step of many for supporting our entrepreneurs and is a tremendous endorsement that the world’s most celebrated entertainers, athletes, musicians, and brands will help lead the way.” Daymond John says.


Black Entrepreneurs Day will be highlighted by “Game Changer Conversations,” which will feature John in one-on-one conversations with numerous Black business leaders and cultural icons from Chance the Rapper, Gabrielle Union, Jamie Foxx, Shaquille O'Neal and many more.


Black Entrepreneurs Day will be a free global live-stream event beginning at seven p.m. during eastern time on Daymond’s Facebook page and will be broadcasted through LiveXLive across digital platforms including YouTube, Twitch, TikTok and Twitter.


The event was created to provide guidance and inspiration to the next generation of entrepreneurs. The event will award $175,000 through seven NAACP Powershift Entrepreneur Grants throughout the event. Entrepreneurs and small business owners can apply until October 12th online at Black Entrepreneurs Day website.


Derrick Johnson, president and CEO of the NAACP, says that the organization is thrilled to be partnering with John to deliver the Powershift Entrepreneur Grant and that the event will be free to future business leaders to imagine the possibilities in business through ingenuity, innovation and passion.




ESPN is partnering with the National Basketball Association and ESPN’s The Undefeated in a campaign to support Black-owned businesses during the 2020 NBA Finals. The campaign is titled #ChampionBlackBusinesses. Champion Black Businesses’ initiative is to raise awareness and elevate all entrepreneurs of color and to give them a platform for their voices to be heard.


ESPN is utilizing their platform to share the stories of Black businesses in the hometowns of the Western and Eastern Conference champions, the Los Angeles Lakers and Miami Heats.


Usually during the NBA finals majority of the local businesses in the area thrive tremendously. Due to the pandemic, there isn’t foot traffic with many businesses being closed and the NBA being virtual.


This opportunity will create greater economic opportunity and equity in the Black community. To provide additional nationwide exposure to additional Black-owned businesses, fans can use #ChampionBlackBusinesses hashtag to shout out their favorite Black-owned business.


Throughout the NBA finals, there will be a highlight shown from each city every thirty seconds on their social media pages. When the buzzer sounds in the last game of the seventh game, the network will debut the film spotlighting the businesses from the winning city on air at the conclusion of the championship series.


Shortly after the finals, The Undefeated will provide a list of other Black-owned businesses from each city to drive traffic to their places of business.


Dallas Mavericks owner, Mark Cuban and FUBU founder, Daymond John, who are both co-hosts of the popular TV series “Shark Tank,” will serve as mentors to the winning business.





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