Former Harlem Globetrotter continues changing lives through Choo Smith Youth Empowerment (LAS VEGAS – July 11, 2026) – There are some people you interview. Then there are people you have the privilege of watching over time. Charles “Choo” Smith Jr. is one of those people. For two decades, I’ve watched him pour himself into Baltimore’s young people—not for publicity, not for applause, but because that’s simply who he is. I first met Choo at a gathering inside a beautiful home in Baltimore County. Before I knew anything about his basketball résumé, before I learned he had traveled the world with the Original Harlem Globetrotters, before I knew he would one day become Chairman of the National Basketball Retired Players Association—now publicly known as Legends of Basketball—one thing stood out. The man was impeccably dressed. Head to toe. Confident without being flashy. Successful without needing to announce it. That was my first impression. My second impression came in a gymnasium. Gone were the tailored clothes. Instead, there were sweats. Basketball shoes. A whistle. And dozens of young people looking to him not simply as a coach, but as someone they trusted. Over the years, I’ve watched Choo in both worlds. The public figure. And the servant. The second one impresses me far more. One memory has stayed with me. A young man in Choo’s program had lost his brother to gun violence. Like far too many children growing up in Baltimore, tragedy could have become the defining chapter of his life. Instead, basketball became part of his healing. I watched that young man grow. I watched him mature. Eventually, I watched him announce the college he had chosen to attend. What I’ll never forget, however, was the look on his mother’s face. It wasn’t simply pride. It was relief. Hope. Gratitude. It was the face of a mother who understood that someone else had helped carry her son through one of the darkest periods of his life. That’s easy to say. It’s much harder to do. Choo Smith has been doing exactly that for more than twenty years. Changing trajectories. One young person at a time. Just last week, I wrote about James Mosher Baseball and men like William Neal and Tom White, who have devoted generations of their lives to neighborhood children. As I reflected on Choo’s work, I realized I was looking at the very same tradition. The tool is different. One uses baseball. The other uses basketball. The mission is exactly the same. Saving lives in Baltimore. That is why I have always admired Choo. His heart is pure. I intentionally use that word because during a recent conversation, Choo paid me one of the greatest compliments I’ve ever received as a journalist. “You write from the purity of what it is,” he told me. I appreciated the compliment. But the more I thought about it, the more I realized those same words describe him. He coaches from the purity of what it is. He mentors from the…

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Black Wall Street Summit: National Black Business Month Edition Comes to Baltimore with Doni Glover Show LIVE & Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards

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AFRAM 2026: Don’t Blame Black Youth for Poor Planning at Baltimore’s Biggest Festival

(BALTIMORE – June 22, 2026) – On Saturday, I walked with my wife and our four small children to the AFRAM Festival at Druid Hill Park. Living close by, we wanted to soak up the sights and be among people we know for the 50th Anniversary of one of the largest free celebrations of Black culture on the East Coast. My wife suggested we go to let the kids run and play with our friend’s kids in the children’s area while we listened to some of the artists on stage. When we arrived, it was a beautiful sight: Black folks…

Why Are Trump’s Kushner Allies Investing in Izzy Patoka?

(PIKESVILLE – June 21, 2026) – I’ve known both Izzy Patoka and Julian Jones going back to the early days of BMORENews.com. I’ve shot hoops with Izzy. I’ve worked on just about every campaign Julian has ever run, including his very first. I know these men—not just their slogans. And I’ll be honest: there is no way I can trust Izzy Patoka to treat my community in northwest Baltimore County fairly. I see it already. Under his leadership, we will get what he deems “adequate.” Sure, a handful of Black folks will get favor, titles, contracts, photo ops. But if…

BLACK WALL STREET DC: THE VOICES IN THE ROOM

(SOUTHEAST DC – June 17, 2026) – Ron Busby is from Oakland, and, of course, I’m from Baltimore. We agreed, as we sat in Busboys & Poets in Southeast, DC, that Southeast has that certain je ne sais quoi. That pop. That “you know you’re in the Black community” kind of vibe — especially having traveled places where our numbers aren’t as strong. When I travel, I want to see my people. Brooklyn. Southeast DC. Southwest Atlanta. I love to go and see the vibe I know so well. I assure you some music will be coming out of some…