Author Archives: Chanelle Hardy

Lifting our voices for Black History Month

Black History Month marks a special time each year when we celebrate the achievements and contributions of Black Americans, reflect on the trials and tribulations we’ve overcome and set our sights on making progress on the work that still lies ahead.

I’ve been fortunate to call the Washington, D.C. metro area home for most of my life. I grew up in a little town in Montgomery County, Maryland, went to state school for college, graduated from Howard University School of Law and taught fifth grade at a school in Anacostia. If it weren't for my connection to these culturally rich and complex communities, I wouldn’t be who I am today. It was these lived experiences that inspired me to pursue a career at the intersection of technology and social justice, and I’m honored to do that work everyday here at Google.

As I reflect on my time at Howard, I am both grateful and constantly reminded of the challenges and inequities Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) continue to face. This especially rings true in light of the deeply concerning threats made against the safety and security of several HBCU campuses across the U.S. over the last few weeks. But Google understands the immense talent and creativity these institutions help foster and want to ensure they continue to thrive for generations to come.

In that spirit, we're announcing a new $6 million investment in The Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF) and United Negro College Fund (UNCF), building on the momentum of our $50 million grant to 10 HBCUs last year. The unrestricted funding will support scholarships, faculty programs, research grants and curriculum development for their HBCU networks. We’ll also be giving $250,000 in donated search ads to UNCF, which will provide additional support to raise funds for college scholarships and further promote HBCUs.

We know there’s still more work to be done to ensure tech’s workforce better represents the communities that use our products every day. Together with organizations like TMCF, UNCF, NAACP and theNational Urban League, we’re eager to continue finding more ways to provide the tools, resources and opportunities necessary to make that goal a reality.

Supporting Black business owners and entrepreneurs

Black business owners and entrepreneurs are navigating uncharted territory with the compounding effects of the pandemic, supply chain disruptions and inflation. So whether it’s finding new ways to engage customers online or securing that much-needed round of funding, Google wants to be a resource for this community of business leaders.

Last week, Grow with Google began the statewide expansion of its Digital Coaches program, which provides digital skills training to help Black and Latino small businesses reach new customers and grow. Since 2017, Digital Coaches in 20 cities have helped train more than 100,000 business owners, and they will now offer training across their states to equip more Black-and Latino-owned businesses with digital skills.

In addition to this expanded training, Grow with Google and the U.S. Black Chambers, Inc. will host their second National Black-Owned Business Summit on Thursday, February 24, providing virtual trainings and guest speakers for 2,500+ Black businesses across the country. The trainings will focus on how to create a search-friendly website and how to reach more customers with Google Ads. Attendees will also have access to sign up for a limited number of one-on-one coaching sessions from Googlers. Business owners can register for the summit at g.co/grow/BlackOwnedSummit.

We’re also kicking off our third round of investments to the Google for Startups Black Founders Fund in the U.S., with another $5 million in funding. Over the last two years, we’ve welcomed 126 Black founders into our network and provided $10 million in non-dilutive funding, meaning founders do not give up any ownership in their company in exchange for funding. We’ve also expanded the Black Founders Fund globally to support founders from Brazil, Africa and Europe. In total, Black Founders Fund recipients have gone on to raise over $137 million in additional capital from outside investors as a result of the $16 million in non-dilutive funding.

Amplifying Black music, art and culture

Throughout the month of February, we’ll be spotlighting Black culture across our products and platforms, showcasing the trendsetters, history-makers and innovators that inspire us every day.

As part of our ongoing commitment to supporting underrepresented voices in entertainment, we recently partnered with Raedio to support its new Raedio Creators Program. Two emerging women artists and two composers will receive funding and other resources to create their own music, while retaining full ownership of their work. Submissions open on February 15 and recipients will be announced in March. And today, we announced a partnership with Motown Records where we’ll support its Motown Records Creator Program to provide an emerging women content creator an immersive, five-month fellowship assisting the label’s women executives and artists. Applications are open now through March 8.

We’ll also launch a series of music playlists in the YouTube Music app. This week’s playlist, titled “Lifting Voices…Strong,” celebrates voices in Black culture and history featuring Kendrick Lamar, Angela Davis and Beyoncé, among others.

Our Google Arts & Culture partners are releasing new content this month, bringing together local and global voices. Projects range from the Black legends of Detroit’s rock and roll scene shared by the The Carr Center to international artists from the Haiti Film Institute, as well as works created by artist Sonya Clark that showcase the power of the African Diaspora with help from the National Museum of Women in the Arts. With these new exhibits, our dedicated Black History Month hub now has over 11,850 images, artifacts, videos and stories from more than 85 global partners.

If you’d like to grow your knowledge about historical figures and key events, simply ask your Google Assistant “Hey Google, what happened today in Black history?” to get a daily dose of facts adapted from the Black Heritage Day Calendar created by author, lecturer and civil rights activist Dr. Carl Mack.

And if you haven’t seen it already, today’s Google Doodle pays homage to Toni Stone, the first woman and woman of color in history to play professional baseball in a men’s major baseball league. Guest artist Monique Wray’s animated illustration brings Stone’s legacy to life for new generations. She draws inspiration from baseball action photography while incorporating Stone’s sense of humor and signature curly hair. Monique also worked with us to redesign the YouTube logo on the homepage, alongside illustrator Sabrena Khadija, to celebrate the #YouTubeBlack creators and artists who are shaping and shifting culture.

There’s a lot of other great Black History Month content to explore throughout the month. That includes Google TV programming with TV, movie and music recommendations featuring Black voices from around the world and a special spotlight on Black women who have made a mark on culture. We’ll also be spotlighting some of the latest apps created by Black developers on Google Play, as well as a month-long video series highlighting Black Women in Tech as part of our Women Techmakers initiative. And for all the Pixel users out there, be sure to download the curated wallpapers from visual artist Aurélia Durand to help give your phone some added style.

Head over to g.co/blackhistorymonth2022 to stay up to date on all this and more during the month of February. And while Black History Month is officially celebrated for one month, the unsung heroes and historical contributions of Black Americans deserve to be celebrated each and every day.

Celebrating Black history in our lives today

Growing up, Black history lessons in school were limited to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., George Washington Carver and Harriet Tubman. It wasn’t until I found my local public library—and with guidance from friendly librarians—that I began to understand the full breadth and depth of the impact of Africans in America. As a little Black girl growing up in white suburban Maryland, these lessons at the library, reinforced by conversations with my parents, were necessary to shaping a healthy identity as a Black woman.

As I studied my history, I learned that Harriet Tubman overcame her small stature and birth into slavery as, not only a brilliant conductor on the Underground Railroad, but a strategist who led the first military maneuver executed by an American woman. I learned that Jesse Owensovercame his childhood as a sickly sharecropper’s son to become an Olympic gold medalist. I learned that Black Americans in the South left what was familiar to migrate by the millions toward opportunity in the North, Midwest and West Coast. And I fell in love with the poems of Langston Hughes, who articulated the pain and the beauty of the Black experience in words that perfectly expressed what I had—until then—only felt.

Today there are more resources than ever to understand and feel empowered by the lessons of the past. To make these resources available to everyone, Google Arts and Culture is adding to its extensiveonline collection of Black History and Culture. We’ve worked with cultural institutions across America to preserve and showcase artifacts, art, documents and stories honoring the legacy of Black Americans. And as a part of the collection, influencers pay homage to the historical icons and moments that inspire them today. Check out what Nas has to say about how his father and jazz music impacted his life:

Beyond the Arts and Culture collection, here are a few other ways our products are honoring Black history:

  • In a special video series, YouTube creators talk about the individuals creating Black history today. 
  • Learn from your Google Assistant. Just say, “Hey Google, share a story about Black history.” 
  • Take a journey in VR with Black history lessons in Google Expeditions.
  • Listen a YouTube playlist oficonic Motown artists curated by influencers like Lebron James, Bethann Hardison, Morgan DeBaun, Mellody Hobson, Veronica Webb and Van Jones.
  • Search “Black History Month” on Google and see posts by verified organizations like the NAACP.

We’ll share more about Black history on Google Arts and Culture throughout the month. If you’re a cultural organization that features Black history collections, reach out to Google Arts and Culture via this form—we’re always looking to expand the range of works of art, archives and stories available on our platform.

Confronting racial injustice 100 years after the Silent Parade

It was a mid-summer day in New York City. Nearly 10,000 African Americans—men, women and children—gathered on Fifth Avenue. The women wore white; the men dark suits. They were there to protest. Yet there were no songs or chants. They marched in silence, demanding an end to racial violence in America.

The date was July 28, 1917.

Organized by the NAACP, including leaders W.E.B Du Bois and James Weldon Johnson, the Silent Parade was one of the first mass protests against lynching and anti-black violence in America. Protestors demanded that President Woodrow Wilson take legislative action to protect African Americans, as thousands had been lynched since the end of the Civil War. Despite the silence of the parade’s participants, their signs spoke volumes. “Treat us so that we may love our country,” one sign read—a message that continues to resonate.

Today’s Doodle honors the 100th anniversary of the protest; a moment in American history that was critical in shaping both the impending civil rights movement and the world we live in today.
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A hundred years later, the fight for racial justice in the United States continues, especially in the criminal justice system. More than 60 percent of people in prison are people of color, and stories like Philando Castile’s continue to reveal the devastating consequences of racial bias. Google.org grantee the Equal Justice Initiative and Executive Director Bryan Stevenson are working to challenge these inequalities both in and outside of the courtroom. In their recent collaboration with Google, EJI created an interactive site, bringing together EJI’s in-depth research on the history of lynching with the stories behind it. Lynching in America is intended to inspire a conversation about our past and the work required to build a better future.

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The Myles/Dedman family visiting Shreveport, LA, where in 1912 their relative Thomas Miles, Sr., was lynched. This is one of many photos included in the Legacy of Lynching exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum.

The Equal Justice Initiative has also collaborated with Google on an exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum that further explores the impact of this history. The Legacy of Lynching (open now until September 3), presents EJI’s research—through film, oral histories and interactive maps—and aligns it with the work of notable artists such as Sanford Biggers and Kara Walker.

“There are times it's not really possible to confront the obstacles that many of us have to confront without a soundtrack or without an image,” Bryan Stevenson said at the exhibit’s opening this week. “The kind of inspiration that these artists bring, gives us the courage to do the exhausting things that have to be done to create justice. That's what I'm hoping we'll feel—a little bit of inspiration—to go tell these stories.To begin talking about this history. And to have the courage to do it, even when it's uncomfortable and unpleasant.”

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Bryan Stevenson in conversation with artists Sanford Biggers, Glenn Ligon and poet Elizabeth Alexander at the opening of the exhibit.

The Equal Justice Initiative believes that addressing this history of racial injustice is essential to better understanding our present. They are one of many racial justice organizations that we’re proud to support with Google.org grants, alongside partnerships with National Urban League, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and the Leadership Conference for Civil and Human Rights. Together we hope to build a more just and inclusive world for everyone.