Johnson, best known for being the founder of Johnson Products Company (JPC) in 1954, which manufactured premium Black hair ...
It’s been a life. And yet Johnson, as he insists in his new memoir, “Afro Sheen: How I Revolutionized an Industry with the Golden Rule, from ‘Soul Train’ to Wall Street,” never thought ...
Hollywood star Michael Sheen has cleared debts of 900 people worth a total of £1m. The actor used £100,000 of his money to start debt acquisition company to help the people living in South Wales.
He and writer Hilary Beard are now telling the story of how Johnson built his business from scratch in a new book called “Afro Sheen: How I Revolutionized an Industry With the Golden Rule, From Soul ...
In a new book called Afro Sheen. How revolutionize an industry with the Golden Rule from soul train to Wall Street. And joining us now are the books Co authors. We are honored to have George ...
“Losing Angie Stone isn’t just losing a voice in R&B—it’s losing one of the last true bastions of SOUL,” April Watts, entertainment maven and radio personality, told the AFRO.
A Soul Train Lady of Soul winner, Stone went on to showcase her acting chops with film roles in "The Hot Chick" starring Rob Schneider, "The Fighting Temptations" which starred Cuba Gooding Jr.
the company that gave us Afro Sheen and Ultra Sheen – and sponsored “Soul Train.” Johnson writes about his road to becoming a successful self-made man and the head of the first Black-owned ...
showcasing her unique blend of soulful vocals and Hip-Hop influences. Stone was a three-time Grammy Award winner and two-time Soul Train Lady of Soul Award recipient.
Angie Stone, neo-soul singer and member of the pioneering all-female hip-hop group the Sequence, has died at the age of 63. The singer’s rep Deborah R. Champagne told TMZ that Stone died in a ...
A long awaited report on the investigation into Greece’s deadliest train crash was released on Thursday. The report blames human error, outdated infrastructure and major systemic failures for ...
Johnson’s Afro Sheen commercials envisioned Black people as world leaders, flight attendants, physicians, artists and figure skaters — a departure from the subservient caricatures portrayed in the ...