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Letter from the Editor: On Black Male 'Sensitivity' and Losing the Race

A new Harvard study finds that 40 percent of black boys who are raised wealthy end up poor as adults.

Letter from the Editor: It's Time to let the Children Lead

Millennials are the first generation to openly reject racially motivated beliefs and binary gender identifications; they are the first generation prepared to just love.

Letter from the Editor: The Time Has Come

Has the internet become our master? Are we chained to it? Dear BK Readers, So, you've all heard the news: The news industry is facing difficult times, and BK Reader is no exception. No, we're not closing our doors.

Letter from the Editor: Push!

Altgeld Gardens Housing Project in Chicago Photo: peopleforcommunityrecovery.

'She's Gotta Have It' Returns!... To a Very, Very Different Brooklyn

"She's Gotta Have It" Director Spike Lee and Actress Dewanda Wise give BK Reader the skinny on the reboot of the iconic 80s flick, launching as a series on Netflix Thanksgiving Day (l to r): Dewanda Wise, actress and Spike Lee, director of "She's Got

Letter from the Editor: Local News is NOT Dead

Dear Brooklyn Readers, As some of you may have heard, hyperlocal news just took a major hit last week with the sudden closing of DNAinfo, Gothamist and its sister sites in California, Chicago and Washington, DC.

Brooklyn Born and Braised!

Brooklyn Braised is a new farm-to-table, prepared meals food delivery service, using fresh ingredients sourced weekly through a network of local farmers Christa Lynch (r), founder of Brooklyn Braised, with her husband, at the Richard Beavers Gallery
Letter from the Editor: When Mental Illness Hits Home

Letter from the Editor: When Mental Illness Hits Home

Approximately one in five people ages 13 or older experiences mental illness in a given year. That’s 20 percent!

Letter from the Editor: The Racism Next Door

Sign photographed in the window of a brownstone on Saturday, September 16, 2017, on Carlton Ave. in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn. By Sunday, the sign had been taken down.

Letter from the Editor: Go Rosie! It's Your Labor Day!

President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the National Labor Relations Act on July 5, 1935. Looking on, from left, are U.S. Rep. Theodore A. Peyser, U.S. Labor Secretary Frances Perkins and U.S. Sen. Robert F. Wagner Photo: cseany.