Author: Aminah Hanan

  • PHOTOS: Michelle Obama Arrives In Mexico City

    U.S. first lady Michelle Obama smiles as she is greeted by children upon her arrival at Benito Juarez International Airport in Mexico City

    Primera señora Michelle Obama ha llegado en Ciudad de México!!! That’s right, First Lady Michelle Obama has arrived in Mexico City. In true First Lady form she started giving children hugs upon her arrival at Benito Juarez International Airport. So I’m betting that she’ll probably give out no less than a 100 hugs during her south of the border visit. Mrs Obama’s trip to Mexico would have marked her first solo international trip as First Lady. However, her surprise visit to the Caribbean nation of Haiti will go down in history as the first.  To view the First Lady’s itinerary click here.   I must say I’m loving the blue and what looks like ivory print of her dress and the bangles to match.  

     

    U.S. first lady Michelle Obama arrives at Benito Juarez International Airport in Mexico City

      

    U.S. first lady Michelle Obama arrives at Benito Juarez International Airport in Mexico City

       

    U.S. first lady Obama is received by Mexican U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Pascual during her arrival at Benito Juarez International Airport in Mexico City

     

    U.S. first lady Michelle Obama arrives at Benito Juarez International Airport in Mexico City

       

    U.S. first lady Michelle Obama waves during her arrival at Benito Juarez International Airport in Mexico City

      

    U.S. first lady Michelle Obama kisses a child upon her arrival at Benito Juarez International Airport in Mexico City

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

     

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  • Michelle Obama Covers Good Housekeeping to Celebrate 125 Years

     

    Can you believe that Good Housekeeping has been around for 125 years? When I read that the magazine was celebrating 125 years in publishing I was surprised. Since 1885 many women have been consulting Good Housekeeping for tips on everything from fashion to time-saving recipes. My only memories of the magazine was a quick glance I would give it every once in a while as a child when my Grandmother had a subscription.

    In this age of digital media the magazine is beckoning a new generation of readers with its website and featuring the ultimate game changer, First Lady Michelle Obama, on the May cover of their 125th anniversary issue. In an interview with the magazine’s editor-in-chief, Rosemary Ellis, Mrs Obama chats about raising the weeMichelles with the help of the First Grandmother, her private time with the President, keeping in touch with girlfriends, Mother’s Day, and one of her favorite foods.

    One of my favorite parts of the interview is her response when asked about how she deals with the constant scrutiny of her marriage.

    RE: …Let me ask you about another aspect of your life: It can’t be easy to have your marriage under such scrutiny. How do you separate yourself from the really nasty criticism?

    MO: I just don’t take it in. It’s like anything — you know, I take in the healthy stuff in my life, and there’s a lot of it. There’s an abundance of it. And then you chalk everything [else] up to, Not everybody’s gonna love ya. You know? We learned that when we were kids. That was one of the messages my mom said: “You’re not on this earth to make everybody love you. You do what you think is right, you treat other people well, and then you keep living your life.”

    How nice it would be if  everyone lived under that same tenet. Maybe then we could stop getting emails about how many aides the First Lady has and maybe just maybe people would stop asking how much her trip to Haiti cost.

    The First Lady is number 6 on the magazine’s list of “125 Women That Changed History”. Mrs Obama is joined by 1. Oprah Winfrey, 2. Hillary Rodham Clinton, 3. Mother Teresa, 4. Rosa Parks, 5. Eleanor Roosevelt, 7. Amelia Earhart, 8. Princess Diana, 9. Marie Curie,and 10. Margaret Thatcher to name a few. The women were chosen by a reader’s poll. That kind of explains the bizarre order of the list. To view the complete list of 125 visit Good Housekeeping. com.

    The May issue is available now on newsstands.

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • First Lady Michelle Obama Lands in Haiti

    For all of you that have been wanting First Lady Michelle Obama to visit Haiti, your wish has come true. Mrs Obama landed in Haiti a short while ago en route to Mexico. According to White House Pool Reporter, Jacqueline Charles, Caribbean Correspondent for the Miami Herald…

    First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden arrived in a quake-battered Port-au-Prince, Haiti Tuesday. The two landed at 10:40 am, taking a helicopter tour of the Haitian capital where more than a million people are homeless, many living underneath tents and tarps.

    Their visit comes a day after Haitians acknowledged the three-month anniversary of the Jan. 12th, 7.0-magnitude earthquake that ripped through the capital and four smaller southern cities.

    The Obama administration released this statement about the visit, which was kept hush until the landing:“First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden are visiting Haiti to underscore to the Haitian people and the Haitian government the enduring U.S. commitment to help Haiti recover and rebuild, especially as we enter the rainy and hurricane seasons, and to thank the women and men across the whole of the U.S. government for their extraordinary efforts in Haiti during the past three months. They will also reach out to the UN and international relief communities in recognition of the truly global effort underway to help Haiti.

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • Michelle Obama Graces Cover of Conde Nast Traveler

    First Lady Michelle Obama has the honor of being yet again another first. Mrs Obama will grace the  May cover of Conde Nast Traveler. It is the first time in the magazine’s 23 year history that a First Lady has been featured on the cover. In the article the First Lady speaks about some of the Obama Family’s favorite DC sights.

    According to Concierge.com

    When Barack and Michelle Obama moved to Washington, she found an embracing city of vast vitality and beauty. Now she wants Americans to see the capital she loves, from the intimate majesty of the White House to the restaurants that the President and she visit on their date nights. “There are many Washingtons,” Mrs. Obama tells David Michaelis, “and I want people to share in that, to experience all of those Washingtons.

    All-in-all the article gives us many more reasons to fall in love with the Nation’s Capital. The print version of Conde Nast Traveler hits newsstands April 14, but the online version, complete with a slide show, can viewed now on Concierge.com.

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • Spring Has Sprung: White House Kitchen Garden Planting

    Spring has sprung in the nation’s capital and for the second year, First Lady Michelle Obama invited elementary school students to help her plant vegetables in the White House Kitchen Garden.

    She explained to the students from Hollings Meadow and Bancroft Elementary Schools that last year’s garden produced 1000 pounds of vegetables.

    “We used it for food in the White House and to feed the homeless.”

    It was a great day to plant a garden. DC’s weather was extremely kind with sunny skies and temps in the upper 60’s. Samuel Kaas, the White House chef and his staff welcomed the group, showed them where to stand when the First Lady was ready to plant and what they would be doing.

    While awaiting her arrival, they sat at picnic tables with checkered tablecloths topped with baskets filled with apples.

    “Did you eat an apple? asked the First Lady. “Noooo,” they said. “Eat an apple,” she instructed.

    This gathering was the latest in Mrs. Obama’s campaign to address childhood obesity. “We want to eliminate this problem of childhood obesity in a generation. We want to get that done,” the First Lady told “Good Morning America’s” Robin Roberts in an exclusive morning television interview. “We want our kids to face a different and more optimistic future in terms of their lifespan.”

    Her signature, nationwide plan, “Lets Move” calls for the following: Getting parents more informed about nutrition and exercise, improving the quality of food in schools, making healthy foods more affordable and accessible for families, and focusing more on physical education.

    Her spring garden is another step in the right direction.

    “Ketchup used to be considered a vegetable,” said Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebilius to puzzled faces. “But it has too much salt and too much sugar. Did you plant ketchup last year?”

    Many of the children present were also at the first planting last year. Mrs. Obama was happy to see familiar faces.

    The garden includes family favorites like spinach, carrots, broccoli, tomatoes, onions, cauliflower and artichokes. It also includes herbs, thyme, spearmint, chervil and chamomile.

    The children seemed to have as much fun as the first lady did in digging, planting and watering.

    “I’m planting,” said one little girl with a big smile on her face.

    Nisa Muhammad, MOW Washington, DC Correspondent

     

     

     

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  • VIDEO: Workplace Flexibility Forum Opening Session

    Today beginning at 1:15 EDT the White House will host a Workplace Flexibility Forum with 5 breakout sessions and a closing session. This forum is an effort to make the workplace an environment that supports parents so that they do not feel they have to choose between career and family. The First Couple will be joined by labor leaders, CEOs, small business owners, policy experts, mother, fathers, and advocates. The live streaming forum will also be accompanied by a discussion on Facebook.

    The breakout sessions topics will include: Exploring the benefits of workplace flexibility for the American workplace and workforce, Best Practices: Making workplace flexibility work day-to-day for employers and employees, Best Practices: Making workplace flexibility work day-to-day for employers and employees, Best Practices: Making workplace flexibility work day-to-day for small businesses, and Exploring Best Practices for the Changing American Workforce.

    To view more of the forums please visit WhiteHouse.gov.

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  • First Lady & weeMichelles on Broadway

    Ahhh it must be spring break. This week First Lady Michelle Obama and the weeMichelles hit Broadway to take in two shows. According to Playbill.com the First Mom and Daughters saw the matinee performance of “Memphis” on Sunday and “The Addams Family” on Monday.

    According to the New York Daily News

    The First Lady and her daughters escaped to New York to catch a Broadway show while her husband stayed in Washington to fight for health care.

    Michelle Obama – with Sasha, 8, and Malia, 11, and about a dozen other people in tow – took in the matinee performance of “Memphis” Sunday.

    Security blocked off 44th Street outside the Shubert Theatre when their motorcade arrived. Obama, the girls and their friends were hustled in through a side door to seats reserved in the first four rows of the theater.

    “They didn’t make an announcement but when they came in, everybody noticed and started taking pictures. Then people started clapping too and there was a standing ovation for them,” said Terri Mertz, one surprised audience member.

    “I knew she was tall but I didn’t realize she was that tall!,” said Mertz, referring to the striking First Lady, who was wearing a black dress.

    Secret Service members, alarmed by the rash of audience members who reached for cellphones and digital cameras to photograph the First Gals, warned at intermission that they would confiscate anyone who tried to take anymore pictures.

    Shortly before the end of the song that signaled the intermission, the Obamas and their entourage were escorted out and returned after the other audience members were seated.

    After the show, the audience remained seated as they again walked up the aisle and the girls smiled and waved to their fellow theater-goers.

    The musical tells the story of a white DJ, Huey Calhoun, in 1950s segregated Tennessee; his love for a black singer, Felicia Powell, and the then underground sound that gave birth to rock and roll.

    Democrats and Republicans were hashing out votes on health care as the First Gals steered clear of that drama and enjoyed the one on stage.

    Last summer the First Kids were with their mom in London where they celebrated Sasha’s birthday with “The Lion King.”

    While the audience greeted the Obama women warmly, The President and Mrs. Obama’s first foray to Broadway last May – to August Wilson’s “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone” – sparked outrage from Republicans.

    GOP critics complained he had no business taking his wife out to dinner and a show, given the economic crisis.

    New Yorkers said that was ridiculous and were thrilled the Obamas were in town – just as they were yesterday to see the First Lady.

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • VIDEO: Michelle Obama at Newseum Q&A

    Yesterday First Lady Michelle Obama took part in a question-and-answer discussion about the Let’s Move! initiative and the fight against childhood obesity at the Newseum in Washington, DC. The Q&A, sponsored by Newsweek Magazine, was proceeded by Mrs. Obama’s speech on Tuesday to the Grocery Manufacturers Association Conference. In her speech she urged the nation’s food makers to produce and market healthier products.

    During the Q&A the First Lady rejected the idea of maligning snack foods and affixing government sanctioned warning labels to certain foods.

    “A Twinkie is not a cigarette, you know,” said Mrs Obama.”… what parents need is just information about what’s in the Twinkie and how much of this we can eat. It’s not that we can’t have a Twinkie. And our kids would be pretty upset. And I am not supporting that.” 

    To read the entire transcript click here.

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • Michelle Obama Watch Is Headed to Mexico City

    Michelle Obama Watch is headed to Mexico City. Well not exactly, First Lady Michelle Obama is traveling to Mexico and we’ll be watching from this side of the border. In April Mrs Obama is headed to Mexico City in her first official trip as a First Lady. According to the White House Press Secretary

    In recognition of the deep ties between the United States and Mexico, First Lady Michelle Obama will visit Mexico City, Mexico, April 13-15, on her first solo official trip as First Lady. Mrs. Obama’s international agenda will amplify the President’s commitment to advancing mutual interests, mutual respect and mutual responsibility between nations and peoples around the world. During this visit, Mrs. Obama will have the opportunity to engage the citizens of Mexico, particularly young people, and build on her recent conversation with Mexican First Lady Margarita Zavala de Calderon on the issues of education and economic advancement in both countries.

    Back in February the two First Ladies met at the White House. They discussed obesity, diabetes, addictions, and the situation of undocumented Mexican minors in the United States. They spoke about the ties between Mexico and the United States in working on these issues.

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • REMARKS: First Lady Michelle Obama at International Women of Courage Awards

     Hillary Clinton And Michelle Obama Host Int'l Women of Courage Awards

    Yesterday First Lady Michelle Obama visited the State Department for a ceremony that honored women of courage around the world. Mrs Obama’s host was Secretary of State Hilary Clinton. In her opening remarks the First Lady created quite a stir when she said, 

    “Let me thank my dear friend, Senator — Secretary Clinton.  I almost said, “President Clinton.”

    One Reuters blogger accused the First Lady of going “overboard in the honorifics for Hillary Clinton” and almost inaugurating her. Give me a break. Did the blogger every stop to think that there was in fact a President Clinton at one point?

    Anywho,  here are the First Lady’s remarks in their entirety courtesy of WhiteHouse.gov

    3:35 P.M. EST MRS. OBAMA: Well, thank you. This is indeed a pleasure and an honor to be here with all of you today. You all look fabulous. (Laughter.) This is a wonderful occasion. Let me thank my dear friend, Senator — Secretary Clinton. (Laughter.) I almost said, “President Clinton.” (Laughter and applause.) But let me thank you for that kind introduction, and most of all thank you for your friendship, thank you for your support, and thank you for your indispensable advice in getting me through this first year and helping me figure out how to get my family settled in our new life in D.C. I think it’s fair to say that this woman here set the standard in her last post in a presidential administration -– and she’s once again setting a terrific standard doing outstanding work as the Secretary of State for the Obama administration. (Applause.) I also want to recognize Ambassador Melanne Verveer for her extraordinary work as our Ambassador at Large for Global Women’s Issues. Melanne. (Applause.) And again I have to thank Andrea Jung and Reese Witherspoon. That’s a tremendous contribution on the part of Avon. Thank you for being with us, thank you for your commitment and your dedication and your words here today. It’s just an exciting opportunity. It’s hard to believe that it’s been 15 years since Secretary Clinton spoke those words that inspired women across the globe to think differently about themselves and about their place in the world, and to demand that others think differently, as well: “Women’s rights are human rights” is what she said; the five simple words that weren’t just a statement of fact, but a call to action. (Applause.) And we’re here today to honor 10 women who have devoted their lives to answering that call in just tremendous ways. You’ve heard about them, but, again, there’s Ann Njogu who left a comfortable job as chief legal officer at an insurance company because she couldn’t bear to stand silent in the face of corruption and violence against women in Kenya. And even after being arrested and assaulted by the police because of her work, she continues to speak out. Then there’s Colonel Shafiqa Quraishi of Afghanistan who began her career with the Afghan National Police. And today, as an official in the Ministry of the Interior, she’s fighting to ensure that women in the police force get the promotions they deserve and that women get the benefits they need to do their jobs. And then there’s Dr. Lee Ae-ran who spent eight years of her childhood in a North Korean prison camp. And after a harrowing escape to South Korea, she became a tireless advocate for North Korean refugees and the first defector to run for Korea’s National Assembly. (Applause.) Upon receiving an award for her work, she replied, very simply, “I was only doing what I was naturally supposed to do.” These are the kind of battles that women we honor here are fighting all over the world. They’re educating girls. They’re getting more women into the workforce. They’re working to end human trafficking, labor abuses, discrimination against minorities. And they’re giving women a voice in the courtrooms and in the parliaments, helping to change laws and transform lives in every corner of the globe. Now, there are certainly easier paths these women could have taken. Much easier. They could have chosen to keep their heads down and their mouths shut. They could have shrunk their aspirations to fit the expectations of others -– and accepted the place reserved for them on the sidelines and in the shadows. But instead, they decided to stand up for what they believed in and for what they hoped. They decided to say the things that no one else would say and take risks few others would endure. As a result, they’ve faced hardships that few could bear. Jestina Mukoko of Zimbabwe was abducted from her home, she was tortured, she was interrogated for hours while forced to kneel on gravel –- all for the simple act of speaking out about the government’s human rights abuses. Yet, she emerged unbroken. And as she put it, “I came out of this experience not a bitter person, but a better person.” That is the thread — (applause) — that’s the thread that runs through all of our honorees’ stories –- that ability to draw strength from suffering, the determination to not just advance their own lives, but the lives of others, as well. That’s what makes these women so extraordinary -– that they not only refuse to be victims of injustice and oppression, they also refuse to be bystanders. And that’s one of the reasons why we’ve invited some young women to join us today — the young women from the White House girls mentoring program, along with young women from the Bell Multicultural School, to join us today. Okay, ladies, raise your hand. Let’s see where you are. (Applause.) You’re here for a reason. We love you dearly, but we also want you to learn from these women, and we want you to be inspired by these women’s lives. So listen carefully. Listen to their stories. We invited them because we wanted to say to these young girls — to you, young women, like so many girls across the country — that if these women can become lawyers and journalists and military leaders, if they can run their own organizations and run for office -– then surely you can find a way to follow your own dreams and be the leaders in your own communities right here in America. That’s what we expect from you. (Applause.) Listen closely, because if these women can endure relentless threats, brutal violence, and separation from their families as they fight for their causes –- then surely, you all can keep going when you face struggles and obstacles in your own lives. If these women can start developing their passion for justice as teenagers, if Sonia Pierre could stand up and protest and demand better conditions for migrant workers at the age of 13 –- an act for which she was arrested — (applause) — then none of you are too young to start making a difference. Right? (Applause.) And if these women can make so many sacrifices to help so many people –- then the least we all can do in this room, in this country is to shine a light on their work and honor their contributions. (Applause.) That is the purpose of these Women of Courage awards. We know the difference this kind of recognition and encouragement can make. It really matters. I’m thinking of a story that I heard, of Ginetta Sagan, a human rights activist who was first imprisoned during World War II for helping Jews in Italy escape from the Nazis. And during her time in jail, she was brutally beaten, raped and tortured with electric shocks. And then one day, one of the guards threw a loaf of bread into her cell. And inside that loaf was a matchbox. And on that matchbox was written the word — one word in Italian — “corragio” -– and it was courage. Ginetta spent the rest of her life working to free prisoners of conscience. And every time she came across prisoners who had started to lose hope because they feared that no one knew of their plight, she thought of that moment in that cell. And so today, we say to you women, our sisters, we say “corragio” — courage. (Applause.) America stands with you. We are so incredibly proud of you and your contributions. And know that we are praying for you and we are thinking about you every day. And we have young women here who are going to follow in your footsteps. Right, ladies? (Applause.) Thank you all so much. (Applause.) END 3:45 P.M. EST

    Posted by Aminah Hanan   

    Hillary Clinton And Michelle Obama Host Int'l Women of Courage Awards

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  • First Lady’s Commencement Address Schedule Includes an HBCU!!!

    The East Wing has announced that First Lady Michelle Obama is scheduled to deliver three commencement addresses this spring. Included in her schedule is the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, one of the nation’s historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU). The University is considered the “flagship of the Delta” offering unique Bachelors and Graduate programs. The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff offers the only Bachelor and Master’s Degree Programs in Aquaculture/Fisheries in the state of Arkansas. The program is internationally recognized for its educational and economic value.

    Back in September, Mrs Obama issued a challenge to the students of George Washington University to complete 100,000 hours of community service and as a reward she would speak at their commencement. The students of GWU are are definitely holding up their end of the bargain. Last time I checked they were a little over 75,000 hours.  

    Here is the First Lady’s commencement address scheduled courtesy of the East Wing …

    Ø On May 8th, the First Lady will address the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. Established more than 130 years ago, the University began as the only state-supported institution of higher education for African Americans in Arkansas. Like many of the nation’s more than one-hundred historically black colleges and universities, the University has played a special role in enabling young people from many walks of life to further their education. While the University offers many different areas of study, it remains dedicated to the mission of providing educational opportunities to underserved communities particularly in the Arkansas Delta region. It is one of a small number of HBCUs that also are land-grant institutions and thus have a long history of preparing students for fields in agriculture, farming, and engineering. The University currently boasts an enrollment of more than 3500 students.

    Ø On May 16th, The George Washington University will host their graduation ceremonies in Washington DC. Mrs. Obama is scheduled to address this group provided the student body, faculty and staff complete the 100,000 hours of community service required during the 2009-2010 academic year. Mrs. Obama issued the challenge for these service hours in exchange for her commencement visit in September of 2009, during the first National Day of Service and Remembrance, which was the culmination of President Barack Obama’s “United We Serve” summer service initiative.

    Ø On June 11th, Mrs. Obama will address the Anacostia Senior High School Commencement, a DC public school that Mrs. Obama visited in the spring of 2009 in conjunction with her Women of Excellence event and her early mentoring activities as First Lady.

    In 2009, Mrs. Obama spoke to the University of California, Merced’s first full senior class. She also addressed the Washington Math and Science Tech Public Charter High School Graduation in Washington DC.

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • PHOTOS & VIDEO: Michelle Obama’s Inaugural Gown Unveiling at the Smithsonian

     

    Today in a stunning ceremony at the Smithsonian Museum of American History, First Lady Michelle Obama donated her fabulous inaugural gown to the institution. The gown was worn to the ten inaugural balls held in Washington, D.C. on that bitterly cold night in January. The formal induction of the gown was an invitation only event that included students from the Huntington High School Fashion Design and Illustration Program in Long Island, New York. In 2009 the school challenged its design and illustration students to create an inaugural gown for Mrs. Obama after students were inspired by her style and spirit. “She’s one of the most fashionable First Ladies,” one young designer said. The students sent a book of illustrations to the First Lady.

    Mrs Obama’s one shouldered, white silk chiffon gown’s designer, Jason Wu, was there and told the audience that he didn’t know his gown, embellished with organza flowers and Swarovski crystal centers, had been selected until Mrs. Obama showed up with it on. He was very proud and honored that his design had been selected. Wu, based in Manhattan, as we all know by now was a relatively unknown designer. Known for his emphasis on the feminine hourglass shape and ladylike style, Mrs. Obama has purchased four of his dresses and worn them to interviews with Barbara Walters and to visit Queen Elizabeth.

    Indeed, inaugurations are celebratory events for presidents but any accomplishment can be worthy of an inauguration. Think about it. How would you celebrate you or your spouse’s highest achievement? What would you wear?

    Nisa Muhammad, Washington DC Correspondent

     

    Huntington High School Fashion Design and Illustration Program

     

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  • Michelle Obama Watch Goes to The White House

    Yesterday First Lady Michelle Obama celebrated International Women’s Day at the White House. Since 1911 International Women’s Day has celebrated the economic, political, and social achievements of women in the past, present, and future. It seemed only fitting that we usher in a new era of Michelle Obama Watch by making blogosphere history and sending our very first Washington, DC Correspondent to the White House. We are the first Black owned and operated (all by women) blog to send a Correspondent to the White House that is strictly dedicated to covering the East Wing. Girls truly do make the world go round.

    “Look At me And Adore me.”

    That’s what the First Lady said to her husband, the President, as they greeted a standing room only crowd at the White House, March 8, for Women’s International Day. When he gave her a look, she said, “Sincerely, look at me adoringly.” He responded with a smile, “I do adore you.” There was a collective sigh in the audience. We all want a man who adores us. We want him to look at us and utter those pleasing words.

    That’s the picture perfect love that the Obamas exude whenever you see them together. At one point during the program the President casually put his arm around his wife while they were sitting and scored another one for how to love a Black woman.

    Today is International Women’s Day and I’m Nisa Muhammad the newly assigned Washington Correspondent for the Michelle Obama Watch Blog. What a great job! I got to go to the White House today.

    I waited in line with the rest of the press corps,

    walked past the west wing, and made my way to the waiting area with the rest of the reports and photographers. I immediately noticed the step stools. What were they for? I didn’t have one. Were they for sitting down? There definitely weren’t any seats where we were waiting. Step stools?

    Then it was time to go in and the mad dash took off. The wire service press corps always go in first. But since I just so happened to be sitting on the very steps they use, there I was, going with crowd, going in with them…in the front! So off we go into the White House but we have to remain behind the golden rope.

    The royal… er… Presidential couple and their guests were like part of a museum exhibit. If I had a step stool like the others, I could have had a better view and taken better camera shots. It didn’t matter though, because I was there and I did see Cynthia Gordon who blogs about the First Family for Essence. Mostly everyone else was a photographer or part of a camera crew.

    The afternoon was a who’s who of Black women. Social Secretary Desiree Rogers, in her last days on the job, was there taking care of business.

    In attendance were Dr. Beverly Tatum, President of Spelman College, Civil Rights icon Dr. Dorothy Height, several members of the Congressional Black Caucus, former Secretary of Labor Alexis Herman, and actress Kerry Washington who was the emcee for the afternoon.

    Mrs. Obama spoke about the progress of women and girls. And guess what, when the President spoke he looked at Mrs. Obama and said, “I’m very sincere when I look at you adoringly.”

    Believe it or not someone asked me if this blog was for stalkers. “Stalkers!?” I said,  “We don’t stalk the First Lady. We just report and keep you informed.”

    If you ever get the chance please go the White House. It’s a great place to see the Obamas up close and in person and they definitely look better in person than in the media.

    Melanie Campbell, Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation, Inc, described the afternoon as “incredible” and “indicative of Michelle Obama’s leadership”.  

    This was my first White House assignment. It was great. Check back later for more to come. This is Nisa Muhammad and I am your eyes and ears in Washington, DC.

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  • Let’s Move! Kicks It to the Soccer Field

    Today First Lady Michelle Obama will take her Let’s Move! initiative to a Washington, DC soccer clinic. According to the First Lady’s Press Office…

    “Mrs Obama join the US Soccer Foundation, Major League Soccer, Women’s Professional Soccer, the National Alliance for Hispanic Health and others at the clinic to highlight the Let’s Move! campaign and the importance of children getting 60 minutes of active play each day. This event will build on Major League Soccer’s support of Let’s Move! by expanding outreach and participation in youth soccer and education efforts on the importance of eating well and staying active. Soccer is the number one sport among America’s youth, with 4 million young boys and girls registered to play across the country. Since its creation in 1994, the US Soccer Foundation, which is the major philanthropic arm of US Soccer, has funded more than 489 youth programs and helped build more than 1,200 soccer fields.”

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • PHOTOS & VIDEO: Michelle Obama Celebrates Seuss with Cat In The Cat

    Yesterday First Lady Michelle Obama celebrated the 106th birthday of famed children’s author Dr Seuss at the National Education Association’s (NEA) 2010 Read Across America Day. Mrs Obama was joined by Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and NEA President Dennis Van Roekel. Read Across America Day’s goal is  to spread the importance of reading and education. In honor of Dr Seuss the First Lady read The Cat In The Hat and then took questions from the children in the audience with the Education Secretary. 

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

     

    Arne Duncan Joins Michelle Obama For NEA's Read Across America Event

    Arne Duncan Joins Michelle Obama For NEA's Read Across America Event
    Arne Duncan Joins Michelle Obama For NEA's Read Across America Event

     

    Arne Duncan Joins Michelle Obama For NEA's Read Across America Event

    Arne Duncan Joins Michelle Obama For NEA's Read Across America Event

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  • REMARKS: First Lady at the School Nutrition Association’s Legislative Action Conference

    Yesterday First Lady Michelle Obama addressed the School Nutrition Association’s Legislative Action Conference at the JW Marriott in Washington, DC. Mrs Obama discussed the importance of school nutrition as part of the recently launched Let’s Move! Campaign.

    According to statistics, many children consume as much as half of their daily calories at school. More than 31 million children participate in the National School Lunch Program and with more than 11 million participating in the National School Breakfast Program, good nutrition at school is more important than ever.

    According to the White House Press office, the School Nutrition Association (SNA), which represents food service workers in more than 75% of the nation’s schools, has joined the Let’s Move! Campaign. Working with other education partners, SNA has committed to increasing education and awareness of the dangers of obesity among their members and the students they serve, and ensuring that the nutrition programs in 10,000 schools meet the Healthier US School Challenge standards over the next five years.

    On Wednesday the First Lady will take the Let’s Move! campaign on the road to Jackson, Mississippi.

    Here are the First Lady’s remarks courtesy of WhiteHouse.gov

    MRS. OBAMA: Thank you. (Applause.) Thanks so much, everyone. Please, sit. (Applause.) Thank you. It is such a pleasure to be here with all of you. Thanks so much for that warm welcome.

    And I also want to thank Dora for that kind introduction and for your outstanding leadership of the School Nutrition Association.

    And I want to thank all of you here today for the terrific work that you’re doing every day all across this country.

    And I know that you always don’t get a lot of credit and recognition for what you do — and you deserve it. You know, there are not a lot of newspaper headlines about how the meals you serve are the only food that many kids may get all day long. People on TV don’t talk much about how kids who participate in the school meal program perform better in class and they miss fewer days of school. And a lot of folks still don’t understand how the cafeteria is actually one of the most important classrooms in the entire school — (applause) — because what you all know is that our kids don’t stop learning at lunchtime.

    Every day, with the food you serve, you’re teaching them these critical lessons about nutrition and healthy eating. You’re shaping their habits and their preferences, and you’re affecting the choices that they’re going to make for the rest of their lives.

    So now just multiply that by the 31 million kids in the school meal program, and it’s clear that all of you don’t just shape the future of individual students; you help to shape the future of this country.

    And that’s been the case since the National School Lunch Program was first started by President Truman after World War II, back when one of the most common disqualifiers for military service was malnourishment, if you can believe that.

    And that’s why President Johnson later in 1966 expanded the program to include school breakfasts and meals at preschools because, as he put it, he said that “good nutrition is essential to good learning.”

    So whether it’s national security, education or child hunger, for decades we’ve looked to you for help in achieving our most urgent national priorities.

     And that’s really why I’m here today -– because once again today we’re going to need your help with a crisis that we face in our own time: and that’s the epidemic of childhood obesity in America today.

    And you all know the statistics –- how nearly one in three kids in this country is overweight or obese. And you all see the impact on the kids that you work with. You see firsthand kids who are struggling to keep up with their classmates, or worse yet they’re stuck on the sidelines because they can’t participate. You see how kids are teased or bullied. You see kids who physically don’t feel good, and they don’t feel good about themselves. You see kids who are at higher risk of conditions like diabetes, and cancer, and heart disease -– conditions that cost billions of dollars a year to treat.

    And by the way, today, one of the most common disqualifiers for military service is actually obesity.

    Now, those of you who’ve been in this business a while, you know that this wasn’t always the case. Things weren’t always this way. I know you may remember a time when kids in your schools led lives that kept most of them at a healthy weight. They walked to and from school, they ran around during recess and gym class, and they played outside for hours after school. Many could — kids ate home-cooked meals, and many had actually seen fruits and vegetables before you served them to them — (laughter) — so they didn’t look at them like foreign objects when they got them at school. (Laughter.) Fast food, soda and candy were special treats; they weren’t part of every meal. And at lunchtime, in many schools, kids just had two choices: either what you served them, or what their mom or dad packed at home, whether they liked it or not.

    But over the past few decades, we’ve seen these healthy habits falling away, replaced by habits of convenience and necessity. You know, parents want to buy healthy food for their kids, but they’re sometimes tight on money and can’t afford it. Or they’re tight on time because they’re juggling extra jobs, extra shifts, and they just can’t swing those home-cooked meals anymore. Those walks to school have been replaced with buses or car rides. And as you know, gym class and school sports have been cut in so many places, replaced by afternoons with the TV, video games, and the Internet.

    And those two reasonably healthy choices at lunchtime, they’ve become dozens of choices –- some healthy and some not. That occurs as schools struggle to get the revenue that they need. From fast food, to vending machines packed with chips and candy, to a la carte lines, we tempt our kids with all kinds of unhealthy choices every day. And it’s no surprise that they don’t always pick the healthy ones.

    And by now, I think it’s clear that between the pressures of today’s economy and the breakneck pace of modern life, the well-being of our kids has too often gotten lost in the shuffle.

    But we have to be honest: Our kids didn’t do this to themselves. You see, our kids don’t decide what to serve — or what is sold at lunch. Our kids don’t decide whether there’s time for recess and gym. They don’t decide whether they’ll learn about healthy eating or nutrition at school. They don’t make these decisions.

    We set those priorities. We make those decisions. And even if it doesn’t always feel like it, we are the ones in charge. But that’s the good news — because if we make the decisions, then we can decide to solve this problem.

    And that’s precisely what many of you are already doing right now in schools all across this country.

    Anji Baumann, the Child Nutrition Director for Gooding, Idaho, she has local farmers grow fresh fruits and vegetables specifically for her school district. And I hear her staff makes many foods from scratch –- including spaghetti and baked goods. In fact, they even came up with a recipe that uses pureed beans as a substitute for some of the oil in chocolate cake –- and it was so tasty that none of the students even noticed.

    In Binghamton, New York, I hear they held a health fair to celebrate when six of the city’s seven elementary schools reached Gold status in the Healthier US School Challenge. Wonderful. (Applause.) And they celebrated with kids proudly displaying the school — their nutrition projects. And the whole community got involved — the local hospital, Boys and Girls Clubs, the USDA office, and others — they all sponsored booths with information on healthy living.

    And in Jackson, Mississippi, thanks to the encouragement of the Executive Director of Food Services, Mary Hill, the superintendent now requires elementary school teachers to eat meals with their students. (Applause.) And as you can imagine, with teachers sitting at the table -– both encouraging kids to eat fruits and vegetables, and eating them themselves –- fruit and vegetable consumption has gone up there.

    And I’m going to be visiting Jackson on Wednesday, and I am looking forward — (applause) — I’m looking forward to seeing Mary and hearing more about what she’s doing. And I’m hoping to come to your areas, too.

    Every day, in communities across this country, you all are proving that if we’re creative and resourceful, if we meet this challenge with determination and commitment, then we can take back control; and we can turn back the tide; and we can give our kids the lives that we know they deserve.

    That’s why earlier this month we launched Let’s Move. It’s a nationwide campaign to help our kids lead active, healthy lives right from the beginning.

    And we’ve issued a call to action. We are telling people, let’s get going, let’s move to help families and communities make healthier decisions — uh oh — (laughter) — not meaning to call you out or anything — (laughter) – but leave it to the press, they’re just — (laughter.) We have to move to help parents make healthier choices for their kids. And we have to move to get the community together — governors, mayors, doctors, nurses, everyone — to tackle this challenge once and for all.

    And we have to move. Let’s move to rally this country around a single, ambitious goal — and that is to solve the problem of childhood obesity in a generation so that kids born today reach adulthood at a healthy weight. (Applause.)

    And we’ve already created the first ever government-wide task force on childhood obesity. It’s composed of Cabinet secretaries and senior administration officials. And over the next 90 days, they’re working fast and furious. They’re going to review every government program relating to child nutrition and fitness. And they’ll develop a national action plan to not just maximize those resources, but make recommendations that the public and private sectors can take to move this ahead. They’ll also lay out concrete benchmarks to measure our success and to hold us all accountable for meeting our goal.

    But we are not going to wait for 90 days to get to work here. We’ve already gotten started on a series of wonderful initiatives to achieve our goal.

    The first: Let’s move to offer parents the tools and information they need to make healthy choices for their kids.

    You know, so many parents, they want to do the right thing, but they’re bombarded with all this conflicting information, and they don’t know who or what to believe or where to start. So we’ve started a Web site –- letsmove.gov -– that’s going to provide helpful tips and step-by-step strategies for parents.

    In addition, we’re working with our doctors, encouraging pediatricians and family doctors to screen kids for obesity and actually work with parents to write out a prescription for the steps they can take to address the problem.

    We’re also working with the FDA and the food industry to make our food labels more customer-friendly so parents won’t have to spend hours squinting at words that they can’t pronounce to figure out whether the foods that they’re buying are healthy or not.

    And that brings me to the second part of this initiative: Let’s move to ensure that all our families actually have access to the foods — the healthy foods that they need in their own communities, because right now, 23.5 million Americans, including 6.5 million children, live in what we call food deserts, and these are areas without access to a supermarket. And as a result, what happens in those communities is that families wind up buying their groceries at a local gas station or a convenience store, places that offer few, if any, healthy options.

    So we’ve set an ambitious goal in this area: to eliminate food deserts in America within seven years. (Applause.) And to achieve this goal, we’ve created a Healthy Food Financing Initiative that’s going to invest $400 million a year –- and leverage hundreds of millions more from the private sector -– to bring grocery stores to underserved areas and to help places like convenience stores carry healthier food options.

    But we know that healthy eating is only half the battle. Experts recommend at least 60 minutes of daily activity. But we all know that many kids don’t even come close to that. So let’s move –- and I say that and mean that literally. We have to move to find new ways for our kids to be physically active. And that’s the third piece of this initiative.

    Our work here includes expanding and modernizing the President’s Physical Fitness Challenge. And we’ve recruited professional athletes from dozens of different sports leagues –- like the NFL, Major League Baseball, the WNBA, and many, many more –- and they’re going to work with us to encourage kids to get and stay active.

    But here’s the thing: We can help kids eat better at home, and we can help them be more active both in and out of school, but the fact remains that kids who participate in school meal programs get roughly half of their calories each day at school. So that means that all of you have as much influence on what our kids eat each day as their parents do.

    And think about that for a minute. This is an extraordinary responsibility. But it’s also an opportunity. And it’s why one of the single most important things we can do to fight childhood obesity is to make those meals at school as healthy and nutritious as possible.

    So let’s move to help all of you get healthier food into our school. That’s the fourth and final part of the initiative.

    And we’re going to start by working to dramatically increase the number of schools that meet the Healthier US School challenge. Those are schools that provide healthy meals, offer physical education and nutrition education, and ensure that children receive the free and reduced price meals that they’re eligible for. These schools that meet the standard, they are the gold standard. They’re the model of what we want for every school in America.

    Now, I know that it’s not going to be easy to meet this challenge, because I know the kind of constraints that all of you are under in this era of budget cuts when you’re constantly pushed to do more with less. And I think that if the average person — if you asked the average person to do what you have to do every day, and that is to prepare a meal for hundreds of hungry kids with just $2.68 a child -– with only $1.00 to $1.25 of that money going to the food itself –- they would look at you like you were crazy. (Laughter and applause.) That’s sad, but that’s less than what many folks spend on a cup of coffee in the morning. So we’re going to have to do everything we can to help you.

    Right now, we’re hard at work updating and strengthening the Child Nutrition Act to give you more of the resources that you need to do your jobs. And Secretary Vilsack, the Secretary of Agriculture, is taking the lead. He’s doing a wonderful job. And we’ve proposed a historic new investment of an additional $10 billion over the next 10 years.

    And I’m pleased that just last week, 66 retired generals, admirals, and other senior military leaders -– including two former Chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff -– sent a letter to Congress in support of these efforts. And that’s amazing. (Applause.)

    Our goals here are very simple: We want to get rid of the unnecessary paperwork that keeps so many eligible kids from participating in the school meal programs –- (applause) — and if we can do that, we can increase enrollment in the school breakfast program so that we can serve an additional 1 million kids in the first five years alone. (Applause.)

    But we also want to improve the quality of food in our schools, increasing reimbursements so that you can add more fruits and vegetables and whole grains, and decrease sugar, fat and salt.

    We also want to get healthier food into those vending machines too –- which, by the way, has actually meant increased revenues for schools in Kentucky and Maine and elsewhere.

    We also want to help you purchase the equipment that you need so that you can start phasing out those fryers and phasing in new ovens and salad bars and serving lines. (Applause.)

    And we want you all to have better training and professional development opportunities so that you know all of the latest research and the best techniques.

    Now, all of this is going to help. But while we can pass better legislation and invest more money, at the end of the day, when it comes to making a school a healthy school, you all know that you’re where the rubber meets the road, because you know better than anyone what our kids will eat and what they’ll throw away. You know what it takes to make them finally –- if even only reluctantly -– try something new. And the training and mentoring that you provide, the contracts you negotiate, the decisions that you make about what to serve –- that’s what really matters here. That’s what really makes the difference.

    So let me tell you I am just thrilled that you all have agreed to work with us to meet the goals of Let’s Move, because we’re going to need everything that you’ve got. We’re going to need your best initiatives. We’re going to need your ideas, both big and small, because in fact, as you know, it’s often the small things that make the difference here.

    For example, switching from 2 percent to 1 percent milk, that could mean 20 fewer calories. Switching from fruit served in heavy syrup to fruit served in light syrup or juice could mean another 13 calories. Substituting low-fat or non-fat salad dressing could be nearly 50 more calories. And little changes that cut 20 calories here, 30 calories there –- all of that can add up to the hundreds of calories a week for kids. And over the course of a year, for some kids, that can mean the difference between being at a healthy weight or not.

    But fighting childhood obesity isn’t just about the food you serve in your lunchrooms. It’s about the leadership you show in your schools and in your communities. It’s about your work as advocates and educators in your own right.

    It could mean reaching out to parents -– posting school menus online, or providing family-sized recipes, so that they can try the foods you serve at home. It could mean working with kids, having them do taste tests, or forming a student nutrition group to advise you on what to do for them. It could mean working with teachers and giving them healthy eating tips that they can share with their students. Or educating administrators about the value of programs like the Healthier US Schools program.

    And it always means, as you know, reaching out to the community at large –- partnering with local farmers and food suppliers to get better food and better deals; speaking to community groups like the PTA or the Chamber of Commerce about the work that you’re doing and what they can do to help you.

    But let’s be clear: This isn’t your responsibility alone. We all have a role to play here, and the only way we’re going to solve this problem is by working together, because you all can give our kids the healthiest school meals imaginable, but if there’s no supermarket in their community and they’re eating unhealthy food at home, then they still won’t have a healthy diet.

    And we can build all the shiny new supermarkets on every block in this country, but if parents don’t have the information they need, they’ll still struggle to make healthy choices for their kids. And then if kids aren’t active, then no matter how well we feed them, they still won’t be leading healthy lives.

    That’s why I’ve met with so many people over the course of the past few weeks — with mayors and governors — asking them to do their part to build healthier cities and states.

    That’s why I’ve met with parents, asking them to do their part to make healthier choices for their families.

    That’s why I’ll be meeting with the food manufacturers in the Grocery Manufacturers Association, calling on them to offer healthier options.

    And that’s why we need more folks from the private sector to step up: from school food suppliers improving the quality of their food, to retailers understanding that what’s good for kids and families can actually be good business, too.

    And that’s why I’m here with all of you, because you all have a vitally important role to play in this effort.

    See, I think President Truman put it best — I’ve said this before — nearly 65 years ago in a statement to the first national conference of state school lunch officials that read, and this is a quote, he said to them, “To you who carry out the program locally falls the crucial job of seeing to it that we build well for the future.” That we build well for the future.

    And in the end, that’s what this is all about –- ensuring that we build well for the future. Ensuring that our kids are ready to learn, that they’re ready to serve their country, that they’re ready to make healthy decisions for the rest of their lives. It’s about ensuring that our kids have the energy and the endurance to succeed in school, to pursue the careers of their dream, and believe it or not, to keep up with their own kids, if they’re blessed, and to live to see their grandkids grow up, and if they’re lucky, maybe even their great grandkids too. That’s why we’re doing this.

    So let’s act. Let’s move. And let’s do everything that we can to give our kids the future that we want for them and we know they deserve. (Applause.) So I thank you all for your work and for your continued success. We are so very proud of you. Thank you all. Thanks so much. (Applause.)

    END

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • Rogers Out Smoot In

    Behold the new White House Social Secretary and Deputy Assistant to the President…

    Today the White House Press Office released this statement…

    The White House today announced Julianna Smoot has been named Deputy Assistant to the President and Social Secretary. She joins the White House staff from the office of U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk, where she serves as Chief of Staff. 

    “Julianna shares our commitment to creating an inclusive, dynamic and culturally vibrant White House, and Michelle and I are pleased to have her join our team,” the President said. 

    “I am humbled and excited to take on the role of White House Social Secretary and support the Obama administration in a different capacity,” said Julianna Smoot. “Over the last year, I have had the honor of building relationships in the international community through my work at USTR, and I am looking forward to implementing this experience at the White House.” 

    “Julianna Smoot brings extraordinary organization and people skills to the role, and sharp attention to detail – all attributes critical to the highly complex responsibilities of the White House Social Secretary. I know that she will continue on the path of creating beautiful events and opening up the White House in new and creative ways that have been established this past year. I’m pleased to welcome her to the East Wing,” said Susan Sher, Chief of Staff to First Lady Michelle Obama. 

    A native of North Carolina, Smoot has worked in and out of Washington. Prior to joining the Administration, Smoot served as finance director for the Obama Campaign. She has also worked for Senators Schumer, Durbin, Reid and Rockefeller.

    Guess I should’ve sent in my resume the day after the White House gate crasher debacle. Like I said before anyone who’s gone to charm school or planned a dinner party can be the White House Social Secretary. Who couldn’t plan an awesome party with a staff the size of a small army?

    I hate to see Desiree Rogers leave her post for several reasons. As a Chicagoan I was kind of digging the whole Chicago on the Potomac feel we were getting from the First Lady and Rogers. I was also looking forward to, after the Obama White House years, Rogers releasing a series of books, like Letitia Baldridge but with a more modern universal flair, about social graces and her years in the White House. I was so ready for Desiree Roger’s Comprehensive Guide to Executive Etiquette. What a wonderful read that would have been, from a woman that is a mother, a once high level corporate executive, and White House Social Secretary. What a fitting legacy that would have been for 2 Black women to leave in the White House. I guess some old girls networks are never meant to be infiltrated and some lines are never to be crossed.

    Now all the anti-Desiree people can rest a little bit easier she’s out and the Social Secretary’s job is in more “capable” hands. There’s just one thing, Michelle Obama is still the First Lady. I know what the anti-Desiree people are saying  – that’s nothing that 2012 can’t fix. Sadly they may be correct because until this administration learns how to build and keep intact its key players, in the face of all opposition, 2012 will mark the end of the road and just like many times before all that will be left are memories and no tangible gains.

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • White House Social Secretary Desiree Rogers Resigns

    This just in – White House Social Secretary Desiree Rogers has resigned. After presiding over 300+ White House events and helping to make it the People’s House, Rogers will call it quits next month. It’s a few months later than what I predicted, but nonetheless it has happened. According to Politico

    White House Social Secretary Desiree Rogers will leave her post next month, according to a White House source, months after she drew criticism for a major security breach at a state dinner in November.

    Rogers, who plans to return to the corporate world, became one of the administration’s most high-profile staffers. A friend of both Obamas dating back to Chicago, she appeared in the pages of Vogue, on the cover of the Wall Street Journal magazine and was in the front row during last year’s New York Fashion Week.

    But it was a blast of unwelcome publicity — the gate-crashers at President Barack Obama’s first state dinner — that put Rogers into the national spotlight. After Tareq and Michaele Salahi got into the dinner and shook hands with the president, all apparently without an invitation, Rogers’ handling of security for the event came under fire.

    Rogers was criticized for failing to post someone from the East Wing at a security checkpoint. The White House defended her, placing full blame on the Secret Service, yet a subsequent investigation led to procedural changes.

    “As we turn the corner on the first year, this is a good time for me to explore opportunities in the corporate world,” Rogers told columnist Chicago Sun-Times columnist Lynn Sweet, adding that it was “an honor and a privilege to serve this president and first lady, in what has certainly been a historic presidency.”

    Friends said that over the last weeks, it became increasingly clear that she would leave the post, because of rising tensions in the East Wing between she and her longtime friend Valerie Jarrett a top adviser to the president. Jarrett, Rogers and Susan Sher, Michelle Obama’s chief of staff, live in the same apartment complex in Washington, yet sources told POLITICO that there was increasing friction about who was in charge in the East Wing.

    Rogers’ ties to the Obamas reach back to Chicago — her ex-husband John Rogers was a major fundraiser and played basketball at Princeton with the first lady’s brother, Craig Robinson.

    Before taking the White House job, Rogers was a high-powered executive and fixture on the Chicago social scene. She was the public face of the Illinois lottery; a high-level executive at People’s Energy, a natural gas company; and, later, the president of social networking at Allstate Financial. Crain’s Chicago Business named her one of the Top 25 women to watch in 2007.

    “She is beloved in Chicago and we think she’s done a good job. She is terrific and I thought she brought a lot of personality and modernism and color,” said Sugar Rautbord, a Chicago friend who is friends with Jarrett and Rogers. “Everybody adores her here.” To read more click here.

    Here’s a statement from the President and First Lady regarding Rogers resignation courtesy of the White House Press Office

    “We are enormously grateful to Desiree Rogers for the terrific job she’s done as the White House Social Secretary. When she took this position, we asked Desiree to help make sure that the White House truly is the People’s House, and she did that by welcoming scores of everyday Americans through its doors, from wounded warriors to local schoolchildren to NASCAR drivers. She organized hundreds of fun and creative events during her time here, and we will miss her. We thank her again for her service and wish her all the best in her future endeavors.”

     I still stand by what I said earlier, Rogers was just a scapegoat in the whole White House gate crasher debacle. The security of the Leader of the Free World and his family should never be the responsibility of a party planner.  MOW will continue to follow this story as it unfolds. I wonder who will be the new Social Secretary. I’m sending in my resume right now.

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • Givhan & Henderson Give 2 Weeks of Good First Lady Articles

    I usually save these for Gina. We all know Robin Givhan and Nia-Malika Henderson are her girls ;-)  but I had to comment on both of their recent articles on First Lady Michelle Obama. The entire time I was reading these articles all I kept thinking was, “Wait for it. Wait for it.” But alas no double speak or snide remarks to be said. Both articles were, in my opinion, good solid pieces of work that spoke about the First Lady’s vision in creating the Let’s Move initiative. Henderson’s article even went on to kind of give Mrs Obama the title of the “Urban” First Lady, taking on issues of race that the President won’t or is unable to do. 

    All I can say is two weeks in a row, well done Ms Givhan and Ms Henderson. What say you Michelle Obama Watchers…

    Michelle Obama shares the emotions behind her movement to boost kids’ health

    By Robin Givhan

    First lady Michelle Obama sits in an upholstered armchair in her East Wing office, a generous bowl of fresh apples on a nearby table. She wears a body-conscious gray sleeveless sheath with an artful corsage of matching fabric decorating the right shoulder. A petite Georgetown student — one of the young ladies from the White House mentoring program Obama established last year — quietly observes as the first lady discusses the role physical fitness played in her Chicago girlhood.

    The tableau contains all the elements that have defined Obama’s time in the White House: youth outreach, distinctive style, healthful food and fitness. Of all these, nutrition and physical activity are key to the legacy Obama would like to leave. They’re essential to her national rallying cry to end the crisis of childhood obesity in a generation.

    Obama launched her sweeping initiative, Let’s Move, in an early February publicity surge that had her discussing “food deserts” and the urgency of clearer labeling. She lobbied the National Governors Association before its members partied at the White House. She visited schools and at a Philadelphia grocery store pulled out a $20 bill to buy a banana-strawberry smoothie. The statistics she has repeated are both jarring and daunting: One in three children is overweight or obese. The dollars she has proposed the federal government dedicate to the dilemma are significant: at least $10 billion over 10 years.

    Most of the attention has focused on the nutrition part of the equation — thanks in large part to her vegetable garden that took on astonishing international significance. Let’s Move aims to make wide-ranging improvements to the eating habits of a food-addled society. Fitness is a less discussed, yet crucial, piece of her initiative. She will unveil the details of a comprehensive fitness agenda in the coming weeks.

    “If kids are naturally active, they shouldn’t have to worry about what they eat. That’s how it was when we were growing up. Nobody talked to you about nutrition. You ate your vegetables. You ate what was on your plate. And you went outside and played. There wasn’t a need for structured activity,” she says in an interview in her office. “The physical education piece is about exploring that. In our nation, what happened? What have been the cultural trends that have led us away from that regular exercise and activity that kids used to get?” To read the entire article click here.

     

    Michelle Obama speaks frankly about race

    NIA-MALIKA HENDERSON

    In tackling the problem of childhood obesity, first lady Michelle Obama is doing something that her husband rarely does — talking about an issue bluntly in terms of race and helping urban America.

    She is, some say, filling a role that Barack Obama seems less inclined to fill, serving as a kind of bridge from the White House to black America in much the same way that she functioned during the campaign, observers said.

    Where President Obama has been reluctant at times to address domestic policy in terms of how it would specifically affect African-Americans or Hispanics, Michelle Obama has approached her signature issue differently, frequently bringing up issues of race, region and inequality.

    The first lady provided a vivid example Friday of her approach to childhood obesity, touring the Fresh Grocer in North Philadelphia, a predominantly black neighborhood that had been without a grocery store for more than a decade. The $15 million store opened in December, created 270 jobs and has a 96 percent minority workforce. The store, located near Temple University, is located in Progress Plaza. Aides to the first lady said the goal is to highlight how neighborhoods have addressed the problem of “food deserts,” neighborhoods that lack a full-service grocery store.

    “It’s a nuanced conversation about race and place and economic inequality, and at the same time, she is staying within the first lady framework,” said Melissa Gilbert, a professor in the urban studies department at Temple University. “It’s a very smart approach because she is bringing up issues that people haven’t thought about in the popular mainstream society.” To read more click here.

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • VIDEO: Let’s Move Hits The Road

    Today First Lady Michelle Obama hits the road and takes her Let’s Move, childhood obesity prevention campaign to Philadelphia. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack will accompany Mrs Obama.  This one day road trip will highlight a pillar of the Let’s Move program: access to healthy, affordable food.  According to the White House Press Office, “They will make local stops to showcase the widespread problem of “food deserts” and the steps Philadelphia has taken to get healthy, affordable food to its communities.” The days activities will include a visit to the Fairhill Elementary School.

    This weekend will be a busy one for the First Lady. On Saturday she will address the National Governors Association. Her address will outline the ways state governments can play a leadership role in achieving the goals of Let’s Move. On Sunday she and President Obama will host the annual Governors Ball at the White House. I wonder what she’ll wear.

    I hope the First Lady focuses more on urban gardening as part of Let’s Move. It would be great to see families in urban and rural areas planting their own gardens in container boxes or in their backyards. Increasing farmers markets is also a focus of Let’s Move. One way to preserve the freshness of spring and summer farmers market finds is home canning. It may seem like a throwback from days gone by, but have you read the sodium content of some canned foods? Having USDA trained volunteers to teach canning and preserving to local residents would be a great way to bring fresher foods to local communities.

     

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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