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Friday 15 January 2016

Alicia Keys Pens Open Letter for Justice Reform


"Let’s release people who have made dumb mistakes in their past into a more compassionate America. We should strive to live in a country where your worst deed no longer defines you."



(Grant Lamos IV/Getty Images)

Alicia Keys wrote an open letter to encourage fans to sign a petition to reform the Justice system. In the note, the GRAMMY winner explains a need to “scale back overly harsh sentences for nonviolent drug offenders” adding the broken system is “destroying families.”

She adds, “Rather than treating drug addiction and mental illness with compassion and treatment, we punish and incarcerate mothers, fathers and children. Our prisons have become warehouses for the poor, addicted, and mentally ill. We have to change this.”

The call to arms comes following President Barack Obama‘s State of the Union speech yesterday (Jan. 12), in which he called for Justice reform.

Read her entire letter below:
Every night, nearly three million children go to bed with a parent behind bars.

We sell ourselves as the land of the free, but we have more people in prisons and jails than the whole Western world combined.

Is this our America?

On a recent trip to Baltimore, I saw firsthand how the prison system is destroying families. I spoke with an eight-year-old boy about his father, his hero, who “used to take him everywhere.” But now, his father is incarcerated. Sadly, his story is all too common across our nation: children are left to grow up without their heroes, who are also often their mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers.

As a parent myself, I’m asking you to help us fix this system.

Rather than treating drug addiction and mental illness with compassion and treatment, we punish and incarcerate mothers, fathers and children. Our prisons have become warehouses for the poor, addicted, and mentally ill. We have to change this.

President Obama has asked Congress to pass a bill as soon as possible. Both the Senate and House Judiciary Committees have passed versions of a bipartisan bill that would scale back overly harsh sentences for nonviolent drug offenders. But a version of this bill still needs to pass the full Senate and House, which means it needs your support.

Alicia Keys on self esteem and harassment

Alicia Keys is opening up about a problem many people have: Self-esteem.

In a very candid blog post posted to herwebsite called "A Revelation," the Grammy-winning artist talked about how the way men treated her on the streets of New York affected the way she dressed, acted and even her own self-esteem:


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“I started to notice a drastic difference in how men would relate to me if I had on jeans, or if I had on a skirt, or if my hair was done pretty. I could tell the difference, I could feel the animal instinct in them, and it scared me. I didn’t want to be talked to in that way, looked at in that way, whistled after, followed. And so I started hiding. I chose the baggy jeans and timbs, I chose the ponytail and hat, I chose no makeup, no bright color lipstick or pretty dresses. I chose to hide. Pieces at a time. Less trouble that way.”

This problem did not go away as Keys gained fame for her music:

“I became comfortable hiding, my intelligence, my physical appearance, my truths, my thoughts, myself. To this day, every time I get out of the shower to get dressed, I swear the first thought that comes into my head is, what can I wear that won’t cause too much attention when I go pick up Egy, or head to the store, or go shopping, or visit a friend etc."

But recently the singer had the "revelation" she describes in the post's title:

And just the other day it hit me! OMG! Alicia!!! Why are you choosing to be that person?? That is so old and outdated!! STOP!!

You are allowed to be smart
You are allowed to be beautiful
You are allowed to be radical and have strong thoughts that others might not agree with
You are allowed to be tough
You are allowed to be sexy
You are allowed to be bold
You are allowed to be shapely
You are allowed to be kind
You are allowed to be yourself!!

She ended the post with an affirming message referencing her own 28,000 Days:

"I only got 28,000 of those days. So what the (expletive) am I waiting for?? And (expletive) that’s what I’m doing!!!!"

Alicia Keys Takes On Mass Incarceration



The concert on A&E, Shining a Light, starring Alicia Keys, comes equipped with a serious call to action.

On top of being an acclaimed singer, songwriter, mother, and marathon-runner, Alicia Keys has partnered with the #cut50 initiative to create a groundbreaking petitioncalling for an end to racially motivated mass incarceration.

The campaign, #wearehere 4 #JusticeReformNOW, seeks 1,000,000 signatures to empower the singer and activist to present it before Congress and the White House and urge them to pass meaningful criminal justice reforms.

Keys’s campaign is emboldened by a real sense of urgency, with aims to make these bold moves by the end of the year. In a speech delivered to Capitol Hill earlier this month, the singer emphasized the impact of mass incarceration on women and children.

It’s practically common knowledge at this point that the United States’ corporatized prison system overwhelmingly, disproportionately keeps people of color behind bars (freshly-minted National Book Award winner Ta-Nehisi Coates wrote the be-all, end-all on this subject in The Atlantic).

But one statistic the petition mentions strikes us as especially tragic: "2.7 million American children currently have at least 1 incarcerated parent."

“Too many families — and our communities — are being destroyed by mass incarceration,” Keys said in a statement, “mothers stripped of their sons, husbands and fathers, entire neighborhoods torn apart by the war on drugs, and families struggling to stay together. We need policy reforms that can keep people out of prison who don’t need to be there, and ensure that our justice system helps to heal communities, families and individuals.”

The project began with We Are Here, the social justice movement Keys founded that aims to use culture to create meaningful change in some of the most dire issues our country and world faces today. The campaign launched with a video from a briefing held on Capitol Hill, it can be viewed on Alicia’s Facebook page.

8 things you didn't know about Alicia Keys




It's official! Alicia Keys will be a guest star on "Empire" Season 2, Episode 9.

In "Sinned Against," the sultry singer will act as Skye Summers, a pop star who connects with Jamal and produces a unique hit song.

Here are eight things you might not have known about the popular singer.

1. Her "MTV Unplugged" album debuted at No. 1.

The live record topped the Billboard 200 chart in 2005, making her the first female artist to have an "Unplugged" album do so well and making the LP the most successful "Unplugged" release since Nirvana's 1994 record.

2. She once controlled the colored lights of the Empire State Building.
In 2012, Keys performed "Empire State of Mind" at the Empire State Building in New York. While she sang, the building's ESB lights blinked in sync with the songs she performed.

3. She adopted an African village.
Keys, a supporter of HIV/AIDS awareness, prevention and eradiction, adopted a village in Soweta, South Africa. She and her husband pledged to help build schools, train individuals to gain important skills and give other forms of support to the villagers.

4. She designed her own line of Reeboks.
Keys has said she grew up wearing Reebok 5411s, and her husband, Swizz Beats, has worked with the brand in the past. She partnered with the sneaker brand in 2012.

5. Beyonce is her childhood friend.
Alicia Keys and Beyonce were both signed to Sony Music when they were teenagers, so the girls ran into each other often. Keys has said that her son, Egypt, and Beyonce's daughter, Blue Ivy, have gotten together for play dates.

6. She created a mobile app.
Keys' app, The Journals of Mama Mae and LeeLee, is an educational storytelling app that explores the relationship between a young girl and her mother. In it, a young character from New York guides children through stories, games and music Keys created exclusively for the app. Keys has said she was inspired by her own relationship with her grandmother and her relationship with her son.

7. Dr. Deepak Chopra played a part in her wedding.

When Keys married producer Swizz Beats, health guru and family friend Dr. Copra presided over the wedding, acting in place of a minister or judge. The two were married in a private home on the Mediterranean Sea.

8. She was on "The Cosby Show."
She acted as one of Rudy's friends at a sleepover when she was a child.

Alicia Keys Biography

Kết quả hình ảnh cho about Alicia Keys

Alicia Keys is a multiple Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter whose debut album, Songs in A Minor, went platinum five times over.

Alicia Keys - Mini Biography (TV-PG; 3:03) Born and raised in New York City, Alicia Keys began piano lessons at age 7. After graduating from the Professional Performance Arts School, she signed a deal with Clive Davis. Her debut album "Songs in A Minor" earned her five Grammys.
Synopsis

Born in 1981, in New York, Alicia Keys began piano lessons at age 7. After graduating from the Professional Performance Arts School, she signed a deal with Clive Davis, the head of Arista Records. Davis left Arista to start J Records and Keys followed. Her debut album Songs in A Minor (2001) went platinum five times over and earned her five Grammys. She followed up with hit albums such as The Diary of Alicia Keys (2003), As I Am (2007) and Girl on Fire (2009), all of which won the artist Grammys.

Early Life
Musician and actor Alicia Keys was born Alicia Augello Cook on January 25, 1981, in New York, New York. Growing up, Keys was raised by her mother, Nikki Augello—a part-time actress and paralegal. She began piano lessons at age 7 and Augello's dogged insistence that her daughter stick with the instrument led Keys to attend Manhattan's prestigious Professional Performance Arts School, where she majored in choir. Having excelled academically, Keys was allowed to graduate at the age of 16.

Keys had already attracted the attention of record company executives while in high school years, and after what amounted to a bidding war for her talents, she signed with Arista Records in 1998. While she was accepted to Columbia University on a full scholarship, after a four-week stint at the school Keys departed to devote herself fully to her music.

Early Career
In 1999, Clive Davis—head of Arista Records—left the prominent record company where he worked to start J Records. Keys decided to follow Davis, who had engineered the careers of soul luminaries such as Aretha Franklin, to his new label. Unlike many of her pop-music contemporaries, the precocious Keys not only sings, but writes and produces her own music. At J Records, Keys found the freedom to complete her debut effort, which included material she had started work on years prior.

Davis carefully orchestrated a media blitz before the release of the album, including a series of television and small venue appearances, including an appearance on Oprah the day before the album hit shelves. When it was finally released, Keys' debut album, Songs in A Minor (2001), went platinum five times over.

Critics roundly praised the album not only for its musical polish, but also for its lyric maturity. At the 2002 Grammy Awards, Keys took home awards for Song of the Year, Best R&B Song, Best R&B Album, Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and Best New Artist.

Continued Success
After a very successful debut, Keys released her second album, The Diary of Alicia Keys, in 2003. She proved that her success as a new artist two years prior wasn't a fluke, with the album debuting at No. 1. Keys also took home several Grammys for her sophomore album, including Best Female R&B Vocal Performance, Best R&B Song, Best R&B Album and Best R&B Performance by a Group or Duo with Vocals for her duet with Usher on the song "My Boo."

Keys' seemingly unstoppable career continued in 2007 with the release of As I Am. The album also debuted at No. 1, selling more than 740,000 copies in its first week—the best sales that she ever received during the first week of an albums release. The album garnered her two more Grammys. It was during this time that Keys also began to collaborate with more artists. In 2008, she recorded "Another Way to Die" with Jack White, which was featured as the theme song for the James Bond film Quantum of Solace (2008). She also recorded the hit single "Empire State of Mind" with fellow New Yorker Jay-Z the following year.

By the end of 2009, Keys released her fourth studio album, The Element of Freedom. Although the album didn't fare nearly as well as her previous albums—debuting at No. 2 with the lead single, "Doesn't Mean Anything," reaching No. 60 on the Billboard Hot 100—the album did become Keys' first to reach No. 1 in the United Kingdom. Her fifth studio album, Girl on Fire(2012), put Keys back at her top spot, debuting at No. 1. She won the Grammy for Best R&B Album in 2014 for her work.

Acting Career
Outside of music, Keys has also ventured into acting on television and film. In 1985, a 4-year-old Keys appeared as one of Keshia Knight Pulliam's friends on The Cosby Show (1984-92). She appeared on several other series years later, including Charmed (1998-06), American Dreams (2002-05) and The Backyardigans (2004-), and made her film debut in 2006, appearing in the action film Smokin' Aces as Georgia Sykes. She went on to appear in The Nanny Diaries (2007) and The Secret Life of Bees (2008), alongside renowned actresses Queen Latifah and Jennifer Hudson.

Personal Life

In July 2010, Keys married hip-hop producer Swizz Beatz and the couple welcomed their first child together in October 2010, a baby boy named Egypt Daoud Dean. In December 2014, they welcomed their second son, Genesis Ali Dean.
 
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