Because the only numbers that really matter are the ones in your economy.
Illustrator Heidi Moreno’s cat Peanut is really more of a co-worker.
Teacher Nia Grigsby started The School Box Toolbox when her own daughters were running low on supplies early in the pandemic.
With live performances canceled, artists are finding creative solutions.
“I guess, thanks in large part to COVID, we had a lot of people looking for outdoor picking and being outside at farms,” says Red Apple Farm owner Al Rose.
Keba Konte, CEO of Red Bay Coffee based in Oakland, California, recounts the challenges his business has faced due to the pandemic.
Celene Navarrete had to close her shop doors in March and is now growing her online store and attending virtual book fairs.
Atlanta-based Black tattoo artist Debbi Snax is breaking stereotypes.
More than six months have passed since Veronica Coon started an online barter group to help people in need.
When the pandemic upended minor league baseball, Jen Pawol focused on growing her off-season business.
Nearly four months after a list of Black-owned businesses in Utah was published, Rita Magalde’s bakery is booming with new customers.