


Say It Loud! This week’s shirt celebrates those 1960s and 70s where there was a surge in Black Pride. To do this right, you have to pump your fist in the air and shout.
You can order Say It Loud!







Homage pays tribute to African American history of slavery while winking at Harlem Renaissance Artist Aaron Douglass.

Buy this shirt so you will remember Jesus Over Everything
When 2020 gets out of hand, remind yourself who is really in charge.





It is time to do the things that need to get done. It is time to Act. African Americans did not wait to be free, they continuously fought for it. So vote and do the work needed to make life better for all of us.


In September we will celebrate Street Art. Chicago is loaded with amazing work around the city. This work is on a building at the corner of 63rd and Cottage Grove.

Destiny’s Dilemma
An African American woman moved home to take care of her dying mother giving up the opportunity to experience a world beyond segregation. Zoraida Hughes Williams finds that some things have changed about her hometown of Fort Worth, Texas while some have stayed the same, like Hell’s Half Acre, an area where saloons, prostitution and gambling runs wild. Like most of the residents, she wants to keep her head down and stay away from trouble, but it comes in the unlikely form of an Anglo Baptist preacher. He messes up everything and almost gets them killed.
Available on Amazon.com
or Books2read.com which include Barnes & Noble, Apple, Indigo and more

Excerpt:
She had just picked up her first newspaper when she heard.
“Miss Zoraida Williams, you are looking lovely today.”
She turned to see the man who had rescued her at the train station on the day she first arrived. She could not remember his name, but she remembered his smile and his playful big brown eyes. He was a big dark skinned man with a solid build. He had on a nice pair of pants and a suit jacket that didn’t quite match it, but looked good on his build. He looked like a business man, not a farmer.
“Mister?”
“Andrew Forrest. My friends call me Drew.”
“I just want to thank you for your help the other day.”
When Zo arrived in Fort Worth off the train, she was confronted by a big smoky black colored man who the locals called Big Bull. He was notorious for meeting colored women who were fresh from the country and putting them to work in his prostitution houses. It had become an acceptable practice among the white and colored whore house establishments. He saw Zo at the train station and tried to grab her. Andrew Forrest interrupted Big Bull’s plans.
“Now Miss Zo, it is not safe for you to be walking about by yourself. You need to let me know when you need a ride. “
“Andrew, I can take care of myself. I am not as helpless as I look.”
“Girl, I know you ain’t helpless. I know your daddy.”
She couldn’t help but laugh.
We talked about two shows that each had a hint of royalty. Sanford and Son which featured Redd Foxx who was comedy royalty. Midsomer Murders which featured detectives from the Crown’s constabulary. If it has comedy or murder, you got us.
Episode 1 The King of Comedy and the Crown’s Constabulary

The first issue of 2020 Fill in the Gap Magazine is coming soon.
In the meantime, you can read last year’s issues at uppcreative.com/fill-in-the-gaps/
