One Year, $241 Million: What Three African American Athlete Families Could Do for Black Nonprofit Infrastructure

We put too much burden on a few to carry the many, but it does not remove the responsibility of the few to provide the accelerant that the many often cannot. – William A. Foster, IV

There is an old story, told in many forms across many communities, about a village built beside a river. The river flooded every generation, and every generation the village rebuilt — hauling timber, patching roofs, burying the dead, and beginning again. The village produced, across its history, a number of its sons and daughters who left, distinguished themselves in distant cities, and returned at flood time with wagons of supplies and tears in their eyes. The village received them gratefully. It rebuilt again. What the village never did and what no returning son or daughter, however generous, ever proposed was to move the village to higher ground, dig the drainage channels, or build the levee that would make the next flood a manageable inconvenience rather than a recurring devastation. The supplies were real. The grief was genuine. But the wagon that arrives after the flood is not the same thing as the engineering that prevents it. One is charity. The other is infrastructure. African American institutional life has lived, for too long, beside the river.

The question is not hypothetical in the way that thought experiments usually are. The money exists. The institutions that need it exist. The gap between them is not a mystery — it is documented in publicly filed IRS Form 990s, in university endowment reports, in the annual financial statements of African American nonprofits that are, in many cases, running on budgets that would embarrass a mid-sized dental practice. What has not existed, at least not yet, is the architecture of intention that would connect the two. It is worth stating plainly that this architecture is not novel, not radical, and not exclusionary — it is what every other community with durable institutional power has built and continues to build without apology, and it is built most reliably through the household. When a Jewish couple endows a chair at Brandeis, establishes a donor-advised fund through the Jewish Communal Fund, or makes a lead gift to their local Jewish federation, no one questions the cultural logic of the decision. It is understood as the natural expression of a family whose identity, community, and institutional loyalty are aligned. When an Indian American couple directs philanthropic capital toward an IIT alumni endowment, an Indian American arts institution, or a diaspora investment vehicle, it is celebrated as community cohesion in action. When an Irish American family in Boston gives generously to Boston College or the local Catholic Charities chapter, the giving is read as heritage and pride. These couples and families are not accused of exclusion. They are not asked to justify why their philanthropy reflects their identity. They are not told that their giving should serve a broader, more universal constituency before it serves their own. The African American community is held to a different standard, one that is not articulated as a standard so much as assumed as a condition. African Americans are expected to fight for the big tent, to frame every institutional investment in the language of universal benefit, to justify community-directed giving in terms that no other community is required to provide. Jewish families give to Jewish institutions. Indian couples give to Indian institutions. Cuban American networks build Cuban American power. And the African American family that proposes to do the same is asked, implicitly or explicitly, to explain itself. That asymmetry does not originate in principled universalism. It originates in a philanthropic power structure in which African American institutions have historically depended on external goodwill for their survival, and in which the communities whose goodwill has been most consequential (typically well-meaning white liberals) have developed, consciously or not, a proprietary relationship to the terms on which Black institutional investment is deemed acceptable. Communities that hold the center of gravity in their own institutional infrastructure do not need outside permission to give to themselves. They simply give. The African American community has not yet fully reclaimed that center of gravity and it is precisely that gap, between institutional need and internally generated capital, that creates the opening for a different standard to be applied, and accepted. The question being asked here about African American athlete families and the African American nonprofit ecosystem is not a different kind of question. It is the same question every community of consequence has already answered for itself, on its own terms, without waiting for permission. This analysis proceeds from that premise, asking a precise and answerable question: if the highest-paid African American athlete families those with African American partners or spouses, reflecting a household whose cultural loyalty and community identity are aligned in the way that Jewish couples, Indian American couples, and Irish American families align theirs without apology dedicated one year of their combined earnings to establishing endowments for African American nonprofits, what would that look like? What would change? And what would it mean for the institutions that have been waiting, in some cases for generations, for that question to be asked seriously?

The three families at the center of this analysis were identified based on the 2024 earnings data compiled for the highest-paid African American athletes and the requirement that their household include an African American partner or spouse — a condition that matters because endowment-building at this scale is, or should be, a household decision, not a unilateral one, and because the framework here is explicitly about families whose full economic identity is embedded in the African American community. LeBron and Savannah James reported combined household earnings anchored by LeBron’s $128.2 million in 2024, which includes his NBA salary, his Nike lifetime deal, and the returns from business ventures including SpringHill Co. and his stake in Fenway Sports Group. Stephen and Ayesha Curry contributed $102 million, with Stephen’s Curry Brand partnership with Under Armour structured, as his peers at Under Armour have noted publicly, analogously to Michael Jordan’s Nike arrangement, including equity participation. Simone and Jonathan Owens, with Simone’s $11.2 million derived almost entirely from sponsorships with Athleta, Visa, Core Power, and Uber Eats following her historic Paris Games performance and Jonathan’s NFL career with the Chicago Bears, round out the group. Three families. Combined annual earnings of approximately $241.4 million.

To understand what $241.4 million could accomplish for African American nonprofit infrastructure, it is necessary to first understand what that infrastructure currently looks like and how comprehensively undercapitalized it is across nearly every domain of African American civic life. The problem is not concentrated in a handful of high-profile institutions. It is structural and pervasive. A prior analysis in this publication documented the investment income crisis at the core of Black philanthropy with precision: the gap between annual contributions-dependent revenue and the asset-generated investment income that allows institutions to operate with independence and permanence is, for the vast majority of African American nonprofits, not a gap at all. It is an absence. Institutions that have received contributions for decades that have built recognizable names and genuine community trust often hold investment income figures of zero or near-zero. That means every year of operation restarts from scratch. Every program depends on the next grant cycle. Every staffing decision is made against the backdrop of funding that may or may not be renewed. This is not a description of institutional weakness. It is a description of what happens when an entire sector is financed as though permanence were a luxury rather than a prerequisite for effectiveness.

Consider the Black and Missing Foundation, founded in 2008 and dedicated to raising awareness about missing African Americans, a population that receives demonstrably less media coverage, law enforcement attention, and public concern than missing white individuals. The Foundation has built genuine public visibility, including a documentary series that brought its work to a national audience. Its two co-founders, Derrica and Natalie Wilson, have spent years making the case that the crisis of missing Black Americans is not only a law enforcement failure but a media failure, a resource failure, and an institutional failure. According to its publicly filed Form 990, the Foundation reported $602,887 in total revenue in its fiscal year ending December 2024 with 100 percent of that revenue derived from contributions, zero investment income, and a net deficit of $87,568 on the year. Its total net assets stood at $852,506. This is the complete financial picture of an organization that addresses one of the most acute and chronically underreported crises in African American life. When a Black child goes missing and the Foundation cannot respond with the speed and resources the situation demands when staff capacity is constrained, when outreach budgets are thin, when the organization cannot sustain the surge capacity that a crisis by definition requires the cost is not measured in program metrics. It is measured in outcomes. Time lost in the first hours of a missing person’s case is not recovered. An institution too financially fragile to deploy resources at the moment of maximum urgency is, in the most direct sense, an institution that cannot fully do its job. The Black and Missing Foundation is not exceptional in its financial precarity. It is representative of it.

The data that contextualizes this precarity at scale comes from a joint April 2026 research publication by Candid and ABFE (Association of Black Foundation Executives) titled From Transaction to Transformation: Three Ways Foundations Can Invest in Black-Led Nonprofits for Lasting Change. The findings are worth sitting with. Between 2016 and 2023, only 50 percent of Black-led nonprofits received foundation funding in a given year, compared with 70 percent of other nonprofits. For small Black-led nonprofits, those operating below the threshold of visibility that attracts institutional grantmakers, the figure fell to 30 percent. These organizations were not absent from the funding marketplace by choice: the research found they had the lowest grant success rates of any category studied, meaning they were applying and being rejected at rates their counterparts did not face. The racial justice uprisings of 2020 produced what many organizations hoped was a structural shift; foundation giving to Black-led nonprofits increased, and for a brief window it appeared that the sector’s chronic underfunding was finally being addressed. The data tells a different story. Small Black-led nonprofits saw no significant change in the amount of funding they received during the 2020 surge, the increased dollars flowed predominantly to large organizations already established in foundation portfolios. And by 2023, even those larger organizations were seeing funding retreat, with one nonprofit leader describing the reversal plainly: that window closed in 2023, and resources were already drying up. The funding that arrived as a moral response to a moment of crisis did not become structural. It came and went. The organizations that most needed it barely felt it. And the organizations now relying on new funders — 64 percent of small Black nonprofits’ total grant funding comes from first-time funders rather than sustained relationships — face the perpetual overhead of cultivating those relationships from scratch, year after year, at the cost of the mission time and organizational capacity they cannot afford to spend.

This is the terrain into which $241.4 million, strategically deployed, could introduce genuine structural change not by replicating what major foundations already do, but by doing what major foundations have demonstrably failed to do. The first and most immediately actionable use of athlete family capital at this scale would be the establishment of matching endowment programs targeted specifically at small and mid-sized Black-led nonprofits. A $50 million matching fund seeded by these families and structured to match community donations to qualifying organizations dollar for dollar up to a defined threshold would accomplish two things simultaneously: it would inject direct capital into organizations that the existing grant marketplace consistently bypasses, and it would create a mechanism for broader community participation in institutional capitalization that does not currently exist at scale. The matching structure matters because it changes the dynamic of community giving from charity to investment: when a donor knows that their contribution will be doubled before it reaches the institution, the incentive calculus shifts. Matching programs have been used for decades in university fundraising precisely because they work. There is no structural reason they cannot be deployed for African American nonprofit infrastructure, and there is no reason that athlete family capital cannot be the seed that makes them possible. A second use of this capital would be the creation of multi-year, unrestricted operating grants for African American nonprofits that meet basic governance and transparency thresholds — grants that do not require program-specific reporting, that do not expire at the end of a fiscal year, and that allow organizations to build the staffing, reserve funds, and institutional capacity that project grants never cover. The Candid/ABFE research is explicit on this point: grant dollars alone are insufficient for transformative change, and the organizations that need sustained support the most are the ones least likely to receive it from existing funders. Unrestricted, multi-year capital is what converts an organization that restarts every year into one that accumulates. A third function of this capital would be institutional stability grants, one-time capitalization awards to organizations like the Black and Missing Foundation, which have demonstrated mission effectiveness and community trust but carry balance sheets too thin to absorb any operational disruption. A stability grant of $2 to $5 million to an organization with under $1 million in net assets does not make that organization wealthy. It gives it a runway. It buys the time and the breathing room that allow leadership to focus on mission rather than survival. And at a 4.5 percent annual return on even a $2 million endowment base, it generates $90,000 per year in perpetual investment income which is not a transformative sum, but the difference between zero and something, between an organization that exists year to year and one that has a permanent financial floor.

There is a dimension of this argument that goes beyond the mechanics of endowment returns, and it requires a frank accounting of where African American nonprofits currently find themselves in the philanthropic ecosystem. A prior HBCU Money analysis documented what that publication called the double-edged sword of external philanthropy: the reality that large gifts from non-African American donors, however genuinely valuable in addressing immediate capital needs, carry structural leverage that internally generated endowments do not. Over 95 percent of HBCUs have endowments below $100 million. The pattern holds across the nonprofit sector more broadly. MacKenzie Scott, the ex-wife of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, with a net worth estimated at $38.3 billion has now directed more than $1 billion to HBCUs since 2020, part of a $26 billion philanthropic commitment that spans thousands of organizations. Her 2025 gifts alone included $80 million to Howard University, $63 million each to Morgan State and Prairie View A&M, $50 million each to Bowie State, Norfolk State, Virginia State, and Winston-Salem State, and $70 million each to the Thurgood Marshall College Fund and the United Negro College Fund. Michael Bloomberg separately directed $100 million to the nation’s four HBCU medical schools. The scale is staggering and the structural question it raises is equally so. A single donor’s philanthropic decisions now shape the financial trajectory of dozens of African American institutions simultaneously, representing a concentration of external philanthropic influence over what is supposed to be the independent infrastructure of African American intellectual and civic life. The harder question the one that institution after institution has been reluctant to ask publicly is what recognition of that kind costs in terms of institutional autonomy. The institution that cannot survive without the gift is not in a position to refuse the influence that follows it. Money that keeps the doors open commands a different kind of deference than money that provides additional capacity. The capital that athlete families could direct toward Black nonprofit infrastructure would not carry that cost. It would be capitalized by people who came from the communities the institutions serve, whose identities are inseparable from the African American community. That is a different kind of money. It is money that strengthens the institution’s voice rather than qualifying it.

The household dimension of this framework is not incidental. It is, in fact, the mechanism through which this kind of capital commitment becomes plausible. LeBron James’s individual philanthropy is well-documented; his I PROMISE School has become a national model for community-anchored public education. But the I PROMISE School is a program investment, not an endowment. It is an annual commitment that requires continued capital to sustain. The distinction matters because a program can be discontinued when priorities shift or resources contract. An endowment cannot be discontinued, its principal persists and generates income regardless of whether the founding family remains engaged. Savannah James has become a sophisticated philanthropic voice on questions of Black women’s health and family economic stability. A household endowment initiative would represent the institutionalization of both of those philanthropic identities into something permanent. The same logic applies to Ayesha Curry, whose Eat. Learn. Play. Foundation has deployed significant resources in Oakland and beyond but operates as a program-driven organization requiring annual capital commitments rather than as a perpetual institution with asset-driven income. And it applies to Simone Biles’s philanthropic work on behalf of abuse survivors and mental health infrastructure, causes that require the kind of sustained, multi-year institutional commitment that annual giving cannot reliably provide.

This analysis acknowledges the objection that will immediately arise: $241.4 million is the combined annual earnings of three families, and asking families to commit one year of income to endowment capitalization is not a trivial request. It is, however, not an unprecedented one. John D. Rockefeller gave away approximately $350 million during his lifetime, roughly $6 billion in today’s dollars, and the institutions that received those gifts are still operating, still growing, still deploying capital into the world, more than a century after he died. Andrew Carnegie gave away approximately the same amount. Both men demonstrated that the conversion of personal wealth into institutional endowments produces returns measured not in investment income but in institutional permanence and civilizational influence that no other deployment of capital can match. The Rockefeller Foundation today holds $6.23 billion in total assets and disbursed $440 million in charitable grants in 2023 while leaving the principal largely intact. These are the compounding returns on gifts made by men who died in the early 20th century. The three families in this analysis have the opportunity to create the same kind of compounding institutional legacy and unlike Rockefeller and Carnegie, they would be directing that capital toward institutions that serve the communities from which they came.

The structural argument for endowment over annual giving is ultimately an argument about time horizons. Annual giving asks: what is the most effective thing I can do with this capital right now? Endowment building asks: what is the most effective thing I can do with this capital across the next hundred years? The two questions produce different answers. Annual giving at scale sustains real programming and real operations. But it does not accumulate. It does not compound. It does not transform an institution’s relationship to financial risk. An endowment does all three. It changes the Black and Missing Foundation or any of the hundreds of small African American nonprofits running below the foundation funding threshold from an organization that must survive year to year into one that has a permanent financial floor from which it can actually build.

Before concluding, it is necessary to name plainly what this analysis does not argue, because the misreading would be consequential. It is not the job of three African American athlete families to underwrite the entire architecture of Black nonprofit infrastructure. The impulse to look at high-earning African American athletes and assign them collective responsibility for community institutional development is a reflex that deserves scrutiny rather than endorsement. It conflates income with wealth, celebrity with capital, and individual obligation with structural solution. The problems facing African American nonprofits are measured not in hundreds of millions but in the tens and potentially hundreds of billions, a gap that no collection of athlete earnings was ever going to close. The thought experiment offered here is illustrative, not prescriptive. The further assumption that even the highest-paid African American athletes represent a deep and stable philanthropic reservoir collapses under basic scrutiny. Athletic careers are short. The median NFL career lasts approximately three years. The wealth that survives even significant earnings depends entirely on financial decisions made during a compressed window of peak income, and a substantial number of professional athletes face serious financial stress within years of retirement. LeBron James and Stephen Curry are extraordinary outliers, not a generalizable class. It is also worth noting that professional athletes despite their prominence in popular culture and their genuine compensation occupy a position at the bottom of the organizational chart of the industries that employ them. They are well-paid labor. The team owner, the league investor, the media conglomerate executive who controls broadcast rights: those are the economic principals. A 23-year-old making seven figures is still, in the structural sense, the cashier. Understanding the economics of the institution you work for is not a skill that compensation alone confers. The deeper structural point is this: the class that actually generates transformative philanthropic capacity is not the labor class at any pay grade it is the ownership class. The Rockefeller and Carnegie legacies that shadow this entire analysis were not built on salaries. They were built on equity stakes in oil and steel on the compounding returns of assets that appreciated and generated income regardless of whether their owners continued working. The families whose philanthropy has reshaped American institutional life across generations — the Waltons, the Johnsons, the Pritzkers — built their capacity through business ownership, real estate, investment portfolios, and family asset structures that accumulate across decades and pass wealth forward rather than dissipating it at career’s end. That is the class whose analog is largely missing from African American institutional life. It is not missing because African Americans cannot build businesses or accumulate assets. It is missing because systematic exclusion from capital markets, property ownership, business credit, and institutional investment has compressed the timeline and scale at which African American family wealth has been permitted to compound. The consequence for Black nonprofits and HBCUs is direct: the families who write the transformative endowment checks at Harvard and Yale and the University of Chicago are families whose wealth has been compounding, in many cases, since the industrial era. African American families have been building from a much more recent and more disrupted starting point. Athletes earn. Owners accumulate. Until the African American community develops the ownership infrastructure — the family-held businesses, the real estate portfolios, the investment compounders across generations — that generates the asset-based wealth on which transformative institutional philanthropy depends, the question of who funds Black nonprofit endowments will continue to be answered, as it has been answered historically, by people outside the community whose generosity arrives with strings attached. The thought experiment posed here is worth conducting. But the honest conclusion of this analysis is not that three athlete families should give more. It is that the community needs to build the ownership infrastructure that makes the question of athlete philanthropy feel like what it should always have been: a supplement to community wealth, not a substitute for it.

None of this, however, exempts the broader community from its own share of the responsibility. The argument that athlete families cannot and should not bear the full weight of Black nonprofit capitalization is correct. The argument that the ownership class whose asset-based wealth could transform these institutions is largely absent from African American life is also correct. But neither observation releases the 40 million members of the African American community from what they can do right now, at whatever income level they occupy. The data from prior HBCU Money analysis is instructive: nearly a third of Black-led nonprofits operate on annual budgets of just $30,000. Forty-three and a half percent have no full-time paid employees. These are not institutions that require a philanthropist or an endowment to become functional they require the community whose interests they serve to treat consistent, recurring giving as a non-negotiable line item rather than an occasional gesture. Ten dollars per paycheck. Twenty dollars per paycheck. Directed not as a one-time response to a crisis or a viral campaign but as a standing commitment to an organization the giver has vetted and chosen to sustain. Across a community of 40 million people, the aggregate of those modest recurring commitments is not modest at all. The philanthropy club model where small groups of family members, friends, or HBCU alumni pooling monthly contributions, rotating responsibility for identifying and presenting organizations, building institutional knowledge alongside financial commitment is precisely the infrastructure through which that aggregate gets organized. It converts individual giving from an isolated act into a collective practice, and it creates the kind of sustained, recurring revenue that the Candid and ABFE research identifies as the resource most critically absent from small Black nonprofits: not grant windfalls, but continuing funder relationships. An organization that knows it will receive $500 per month from a philanthropy club of fifteen members for the next three years can plan around that. It can hire. It can retain staff. It can make the multi-year programmatic commitments that one-time donations cannot support. The athlete family endowment and the $20 paycheck deduction are not competing strategies. They are the same strategy operating at different scales, and the community needs both.

The $241.4 million scenario described here is a thought experiment. No announcement has been made, no commitment recorded. But the arithmetic is real and the institutional need is real; documented not in the finances of a handful of celebrated civil rights organizations but in the 990s of hundreds of African American nonprofits that address genuine crises with revenues measured in the hundreds of thousands, investment income of zero, and staffing levels that cannot absorb a bad quarter let alone a structural funding retreat. The capital to begin closing that gap exists. What has not yet materialized is the architecture of intention that would direct it. The institutions that three athlete families could help build through matching programs, stability grants, and unrestricted multi-year capital would still be filing 990s long after all of us have gone. But the full distance will only be closed when the African American community stops looking to its athletes to do what only owners can do and what the community as a whole must become responsible in building.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

City & Police Budgets: Are They Prepared For The Era Of The Driverless Car?

“The only way you survive is you continuously transform into something else. It’s this idea of continuous transformation that makes you an innovation company.” – Ginni Rometty

By William A. Foster, IV

Anyone who knows me intimately knows I have been pulled over a lot in my lifetime. In my first month after transferring into Virginia State University, I was pulled over five times by the local police. I have probably paid enough in fines and court costs to fund a full-ride scholarship at many HBCUs.

Instead, I—like many African Americans (disproportionately speaking) and Americans in general—was paying into what amounts to a shadow tax system. This system is fueled not by income or property, but by police-issued traffic tickets. It’s a pay-as-you-go model for civic participation, enforced with red-and-blue lights. And while traffic violations serve a nominal safety purpose, they also feed the operational budgets of thousands of city governments and police departments across the United States.

This framework—an unspoken pact between public safety enforcement and municipal finance—is now facing an existential threat. The advent of autonomous vehicles, or AVs, promises to upend not just transportation norms, but the budgetary bedrock of American cities. And yet, amid the techno-optimism of AVs, one question remains startlingly unexamined: if machines no longer speed, run red lights, or roll through stop signs, who—or what—will fund the municipal revenue streams that traffic enforcement has long propped up?

The Traffic Ticket Economy

To understand the fiscal cliff approaching, it’s necessary to acknowledge just how embedded traffic tickets are in city and police budgets. A 2019 report by Governing Magazine found that nearly 600 jurisdictions across the United States relied on fines and fees for at least 10% of their general fund revenues. In 80 of those towns, fines and fees made up more than 50% of revenue. These places, like Calverton Park, Missouri, and Henderson, Louisiana, have built entire municipal ecosystems around traffic enforcement.

For many cities, especially those with shrinking tax bases or limited industry, traffic fines are a predictable stream of cash. The relationship between enforcement and revenue becomes so intertwined that police departments may face pressure explicit or implied to issue a certain number of citations. While quotas are technically illegal in many states, anecdotal and whistleblower reports have revealed otherwise.

For marginalized communities, the burden is not merely financial but psychological and systemic. A 2015 Department of Justice investigation into Ferguson, Missouri, revealed how ticketing became a weaponized form of racial control, with Black residents disproportionately stopped, cited, and incarcerated for minor traffic infractions. Thus, traffic enforcement has become more than a tool for safety it’s become a fiscal engine, a behavioral control mechanism, and a lightning rod for racial and economic justice debates.

Enter the Driverless Car

Autonomous vehicles promise to revolutionize mobility. Tech firms like Waymo, Tesla, Cruise, and Apple are jockeying to commercialize a future where cars operate without human drivers. Proponents point to fewer accidents, faster commutes, and more accessible transportation options for people with disabilities or the elderly. But AVs also promise near-perfect compliance with traffic laws. They don’t speed. They don’t drive drunk. They don’t fail to signal or get distracted by cell phones. That’s great for public safety and a death knell for traffic citation revenue.

A 2018 analysis by the Eno Center for Transportation found that AVs could eventually eliminate up to 90% of traffic-related tickets. Another study by the University of Texas estimated that driverless vehicles could reduce annual ticketing revenue by $4 billion nationally. These projections don’t even include the indirect financial losses from towing, impound fees, court costs, and driver education programs—services that exist largely to correct human error.

The Quiet Fiscal Crisis Ahead

For cities, this shift is not theoretical it’s fiscal. In a 2020 audit of San Francisco’s finances, officials warned that AV adoption could cut traffic fine revenues by 50% by 2040. In Los Angeles, ticketing generates over $150 million annually. If AVs wipe out even half of that, the city will need to either cut services or find new revenue sources. The pressure is particularly acute for small towns and municipalities that have used traffic enforcement as an economic development tool, often targeting out-of-town drivers on underposted speed traps. The loss of such income may mean layoffs for police departments, library closures, deferred maintenance, or higher property taxes. The irony is striking: a technology designed to increase safety could force cities into fiscal austerity or into finding new ways to extract revenue from increasingly law-abiding machine operators.

Policing Without Pullovers

There’s another dimension to consider: the very nature of policing may change. Much of modern American policing revolves around vehicle stops, which serve not just to enforce traffic laws, but to search for drugs, guns, warrants, and more. According to the Stanford Open Policing Project, police make over 50,000 traffic stops per day in the U.S. AVs could eliminate this cornerstone of law enforcement’s engagement with the public.

In some quarters, this is welcome news. Advocates for criminal justice reform argue that fewer stops could mean fewer racially charged confrontations, fewer unnecessary arrests, and fewer deaths. But for departments whose mission and staffing are oriented around vehicle enforcement, this creates an identity crisis.

Moreover, will police departments respond to the fiscal void by doubling down on other kinds of fines and citations—jaywalking, bicycle violations, loitering—or increasing their reliance on civil asset forfeiture, a deeply controversial practice?

The Race and Class Implications

It is critical to understand that traffic enforcement in America does not occur in a vacuum—it is deeply racialized and class-based. Poorer residents and communities of color are more likely to be pulled over, more likely to be unable to pay, and more likely to face compounded legal trouble from unpaid fines.

With AVs, which will initially be expensive and likely concentrated in wealthier areas, there’s a real risk of a dual system emerging. Rich neighborhoods may become AV utopias with safe, citation-free transport, while poorer areas continue to face heavy-handed traffic enforcement until legacy vehicles are phased out. The timeline for AV adoption may therefore exacerbate existing inequalities rather than resolve them.

Moreover, if cities try to recoup lost revenue through flat fees or usage taxes, they must be mindful of regressivity. A flat AV tax would hit lower-income users harder, even as they adopt older or shared AV technology.

The Urban Planning Ripple Effects

The decline of ticketing is only one part of the municipal financial picture AVs threaten to redraw. Consider the broader impact on urban planning and budgets: fewer accidents mean less need for emergency services, fewer parking tickets reduce municipal court dockets, fewer DUIs lessen jail populations.

This could be a moment for reallocation, not just resignation. Cities might seize the transition to AVs as an opportunity to rethink public space, reinvest savings from emergency responses into social programs, or pivot their budgetary dependencies away from punitive revenue altogether.

But it requires planning. Today, very few city budget blueprints forecast for an AV future. The conversation is dominated by curb space management, rideshare integration, and data privacy—but not budget reform. That’s a mistake.

Solutions & Proactive Policy

So, what can cities do to prepare?

  1. Revenue Diversification
    Cities must transition away from fine-heavy fiscal models. This may mean more progressive taxation, congestion pricing, or taxing the AV platforms themselves. For instance, Chicago already taxes ride-hailing services and allocates a portion toward public transit.
  2. Equity in AV Deployment
    Cities must ensure that AV benefits don’t accrue only to the wealthy. Requiring AV companies to operate in low-income neighborhoods, share data with city planners, and contribute to mobility justice funds could ensure more inclusive outcomes.
  3. Policing Reform
    As traffic stops decline, cities can reassign officers to community service roles, behavioral crisis teams, or investigative units. AVs could accelerate the conversation on demilitarizing the police and moving toward public safety models that are less reliant on confrontation.
  4. Participatory Budgeting
    Cities should engage residents directly in conversations about how budgets are shaped, especially when long-standing revenue streams (like traffic fines) begin to disappear. Participatory budgeting can align spending with community values rather than institutional inertia.
  5. AV Fee Structures
    Some cities may introduce per-mile AV taxes or vehicle occupancy incentives. If structured well, these can offset lost ticket revenue while promoting sustainable transport behavior.
  6. State-Level Oversight
    In many states, traffic fine revenue is capped or partially redirected. Legislatures could intervene to mandate revenue neutrality, preventing cities from replacing one predatory revenue model with another.

The Way Forward

As with many shifts in technology, the arrival of AVs has triggered excitement about safety, efficiency, and innovation. But few are sounding the alarm about what is lost—especially for cities and police departments whose fiscal models were quietly built on human error and punishment.

That’s not to say traffic enforcement should be mourned. For many, it has been more punitive than protective, a reminder of how racial and economic disparities are built into the bones of urban governance. AVs could offer a reprieve.

But only if cities prepare. Only if we confront the uncomfortable reality that public budgets were sustained by bad behavior—and begin the work of replacing that scaffolding with something more just, more sustainable, and more transparent.

The driverless car is coming. Whether cities crash into that future or coast into it smoothly depends on what they do now—not when the last human foot presses a gas pedal, but long before.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ChatGPT

LESS: Can Minimalism Spur African American Wealth Building?

“Too many people spend money they haven’t earned, to buy things they don’t want, to impress people they don’t like.” — Will Rogers

In a consumer culture that equates success with spending, African America remains uniquely vulnerable. The historical denial of access to capital and economic agency has not merely constrained African Americans’ ability to accumulate wealth it has warped the cultural psychology of money itself, bending consumption from a utilitarian act into something closer to an identity claim. Now, a small but growing movement within the community is embracing a deliberate counteroffensive: minimalism. The philosophy is straightforward of less spending, less clutter, fewer financial obligations, and more intentional deployment of resources. But the more consequential question is whether this aesthetic and lifestyle ethos can be converted into a durable institutional strategy for wealth building, and whether the infrastructure exists to capture and redirect the capital it might free.

The structural context for this argument is more specific — and more damning — than the familiar headline figures suggest. African American household assets reached $7.1 trillion in 2024, a half-trillion-dollar increase that might appear encouraging at first glance. But the composition of that wealth exposes the mechanism of the problem: corporate equities and mutual fund shares, the asset class that generated the year’s fastest growth at 22.2%, represent less than 5% of African American holdings and a mere 0.7% of total U.S. household equity assets. The community is, in other words, almost entirely absent from the compounding wealth engine that most reliably converts income into intergenerational capital. On the liability side, consumer credit has surged to $740 billion, now representing nearly half of all African American household debt and approaching parity with home mortgage obligations of $780 billion, a near 1:1 ratio that represents a fundamental inversion of healthy household finance. For white households, the ratio stands at approximately 3:1 in favor of mortgage debt over consumer credit. The African American community stands alone in this precarious position. The debt itself flows almost entirely outward: with African American-owned banks holding just $6.4 billion in combined assets, the vast majority of $1.55 trillion in African American household liabilities flows to institutions outside the community, meaning that interest payments, fees, and the wealth-building potential of lending relationships are systematically siphoned away from Black-owned financial institutions. The historical dimension compounds the structural one. Black farmers owned more than 16 million acres of land in 1910; by 1997 they had lost more than 90% of it through state-sanctioned violence and discriminatory structures, a compounded loss estimated at $326 billion. From 1992 to 2002 alone, 94% of Black farmers lost part or all of their farmland, three times the rate at which white farmers lost land. What minimalism confronts, then, is not merely a spending habit. It is a balance sheet in structural retreat where African American households are asset-poor, debt-heavy, and systematically drained by the institutions that hold the debt.

Minimalism is not simply about having fewer possessions or a tidier apartment. It is a structural challenge to compulsive consumption. But for African Americans, consumption frequently functions as both a status signal and a psychological buffer. The legacy of economic exclusion has produced what some economists describe as compensatory consumption purchasing to claim affirmation in a society that has historically devalued Black presence. Designer goods become cultural armor. The latest consumer technology becomes a credential of arrival. Automobiles are more than vehicles; they are visible declarations of survival and dignity. This dynamic has its own historical coherence. In the early twentieth century, Harlem’s “Sunday Best” was less an act of religious observance than a form of public defiance, a counter-narrative to pervasive images of African American poverty and invisibility. The twenty-first-century iteration of that impulse has been systematically captured by brands whose ownership and supply chains are entirely removed from the community’s economic interests. To embrace minimalism, then, is to confront not only consumer capitalism but also the psychological architecture that colonialism and exclusion built. It demands a community-wide renegotiation of what economic success actually looks like and for whom it is being performed.

The utility of minimalism as a wealth-building mechanism is not merely philosophical it is arithmetically demonstrable. A household reducing monthly discretionary spending by five hundred dollars, through fewer restaurant meals, less fast fashion, and deferred consumer electronics, could redirect six thousand dollars annually into productive instruments: a college savings plan, a real estate investment trust with Black ownership, Treasury bonds for capital preservation, equity crowdfunding platforms supporting Black-led ventures, or a direct contribution to an HBCU endowment fund. Over a decade, with even modest returns, that redirected capital compounds into a six-figure investment position. Scaled across one million African American households practicing this discipline, the aggregate represents a wealth transfer of historic proportions initiated not by policy intervention or philanthropic rescue, but by the community’s own redirected consumption decisions. The distinction between compulsive and intentional spending is not a luxury concern. It is the difference between subsidizing someone else’s institutional power and building your own.

The most direct application of minimalism is also the most legible: the household balance sheet. A family that eliminates one financed vehicle and opts for a used purchase outright removes both a monthly payment and an interest obligation, freeing several hundred dollars a month that compound differently when redirected. Choosing a duplex over a single-family home and renting the second unit transforms the primary residence from a consumption asset into an income-producing one — the kind of structural move that converts homeownership from a wealth symbol into a wealth mechanism. Retirement contributions left at the employer match rather than maximized represent another form of consumption by inertia; households that treat the gap between the match ceiling and the IRS contribution limit as a monthly target are effectively building a tax-advantaged investment position that most never access. The same logic applies to life insurance: the difference between a term policy and a whole-life policy, redirected into an index fund over twenty years, is not a marginal decision. These are not sacrifices. They are reallocations — the substitution of visible, depreciating expenditure for invisible, compounding position-building. At scale, if HBCU alumni associations or community organizations created coordinated vehicles to receive and deploy this redirected capital — endowment contributions, community development financial institutions, Black-owned bank deposits — the household discipline becomes institutional fuel. But the household is where the discipline begins and where it is most immediately actionable.

Historically, African America has deployed its dollars as a political instrument. The Montgomery Bus Boycott extracted direct economic cost from a segregated transit system. The 2020 Blackout Day redirected consumer attention toward Black-owned businesses and away from corporations that profited from Black spending without reciprocal investment in Black communities. Minimalism extends this tradition into daily economic practice. It is a sustained withdrawal from the consumption patterns that extractive industries have engineered to capture Black income. Consumer surveillance capitalism studies African American spending behavior in granular detail, refining the advertising systems designed to push more debt, more aspirational luxury, and more financial dependency. Opting out methodically is not merely frugality — it is a form of information asymmetry disruption, denying data that feeds systems designed to work against Black institutional interests.

The objection that minimalism is a privilege of the already comfortable misreads the proposition. For lower-income households, intentional resource management is not a new concept — it is frequently a survival discipline already in practice. What is missing is not the behavior but the infrastructure to leverage it: institutions capable of receiving redirected capital, community platforms that make collective commitment visible and accountable, and frameworks that connect household choices to institutional outcomes. Minimalism as a communal strategy must also extend its frame of reference. Digital minimalism can reduce the tech dependency being engineered into younger generations at enormous cost to family finances. Food minimalism can recalibrate spending patterns distorted by food desert geography. Spatial minimalism can encourage shared community investment over the overcapitalized private home as the primary wealth vehicle. None of these requires material sacrifice — all of them require institutional infrastructure to translate reduced consumption into coordinated capital formation.

Minimalism will not, by itself, undo redlining, reverse discriminatory lending, or equalize inherited wealth. It is a tool, not a solution — one component of a coordinated institutional strategy that also requires political leverage, legal infrastructure, and sustained endowment growth. But it is a tool African America has yet to fully institutionalize. The community already possesses the spending mass. What it requires is the institutional architecture to redirect that mass with precision. The question is not whether African America can afford to consume less. The question is whether it can afford not to.

The Prospect Heights Empire, Part II: From Newsprint to Natural Resources — How Flavor Group Holdings Built a Vertical Integration Strategy for the Ages

We ain’t gotta dream no more, man. We got real shit. Real estate we can touch. – Stringer Bell

There is a concept in corporate strategy called vertical integration which is the deliberate extension of a company’s ownership up or down its supply chain in order to capture margin that would otherwise accrue to a third party, reduce dependency on suppliers with competing interests, and build structural moats that competitors cannot easily replicate. Standard Oil practiced it. Carnegie Steel perfected it. The major timber and paper conglomerates of the twentieth century built generational fortunes on it. Khadijah James understood something about the magazine business that most publishers learn too late: the product you sell is content, but the input you cannot live without is paper. And paper, in the mid-1990s, was not simply a commodity. It was a strategic vulnerability. Flavor Group Holdings, had it been built with the institutional discipline the prior analysis outlined, would have recognized this vulnerability by no later than 1997. What follows is the story of how it would have addressed it and how that address would have positioned the company for a generational transformation that most legacy media firms failed to execute.

In 1997, the average ton of coated magazine paper cost between $850 and $1,100, depending on grade, supplier relationship, and contract structure. For an independent publisher without the purchasing leverage of Condé Nast or Hearst, paper costs could represent 25 to 35 percent of total production expense. Flavor magazine, growing its print run and expanding its distribution footprint, would have been acutely sensitive to this dynamic. Kyle Barker, reviewing the company’s cost structure with the same analytical discipline he applied to equity portfolios, would have identified paper as the single largest controllable variable in the production budget. He could not control advertiser sentiment. He could not control newsstand foot traffic. He could not control the postal rates that governed subscription economics. But he could, in theory, control the cost of the raw input upon which everything else depended.

The strategic logic of timber acquisition was straightforward. Timberland in the Northeast — the forests of Maine, Vermont, and upstate New York — and the Southeast — the pine flatwoods of Georgia, Alabama, and North Carolina — had been the backbone of American papermaking since the late nineteenth century. By the mid-1990s, consolidation in the timber industry had created an unusual market dynamic: large tracts of productive timberland were available at prices that undervalued their long-term yield, precisely because institutional investors had not yet developed the appetite for timberland as an asset class that they would later demonstrate through the proliferation of Timber Investment Management Organizations. Overton Wakefield Jones, whose expertise in physical infrastructure extended naturally to land assessment and property management, would have led the due diligence on initial timber acquisitions. Kyle would have structured the financing, likely through a combination of SBA rural development lending and community development financial institution capital. Maxine would have drafted the easement agreements, the timber rights contracts, and the supply agreements that would formalize the relationship between the timber subsidiary and the magazine operation.

The initial acquisition target was 15,000 to 20,000 acres of mixed hardwood and softwood timberland in Maine and Georgia, purchased between 1997 and 2001 at an average price of $400 to $700 per acre consistent with market rates for productive timberland in those regions during that period. Total acquisition cost at the midpoint: approximately $9 million, financed with 60 percent debt against the land’s appraised productive value. What Flavor Group Properties now held was not simply commercial real estate in Brooklyn. It held a natural resource asset with a biological growth cycle, a recurring harvest yield, and a supply relationship with its sister company that guaranteed a baseline demand for its output. The New York Times connection deserves its own examination. By the late 1990s, the Times consumed approximately 200,000 metric tons of newsprint annually, sourcing from multiple suppliers across North America and Scandinavia. An independent, Black-owned timber operation with certified sustainable forestry practices and competitive delivered costs to the Times’ printing facilities in New York and New Jersey would have represented precisely the kind of supplier diversity that large institutional customers were beginning to prioritize under pressure from shareholders and advocacy organizations. Flavor Group Timber, positioned as a minority-owned sustainable forestry operation with direct supply relationships to the Northeast’s largest paper consumers, would have been a compelling commercial proposition, one that combined genuine cost competitiveness with the reputational differentiation that procurement officers could document. The Times as a primary customer would not have been charity. It would have been commerce.

The structural shift in paper demand did not arrive without warning. The signals were present and legible well before their full consequences materialized. U.S. newsprint consumption peaked in 1998 and began a decline that would prove both sustained and accelerating. Printing and writing paper demand followed a similar trajectory after 2000, ultimately falling more than 30 percent from its peak by 2010. The causes were not mysterious: digital news consumption, desktop publishing, email, and eventually the smartphone demolished the economic foundation of the industries that had historically consumed the most paper. Kyle Barker, reading the data with the same discipline he applied to equity valuations, would have begun signaling concern about the long-term demand trajectory of printing and writing paper no later than 2002. The question before the Flavor Group Holdings board was not whether the shift was real — the data made that question moot. The question was what to do with timberland optimized for a demand profile that was structurally contracting.

The answer came in two phases, both of which required the kind of strategic patience that only a company with a diversified revenue base and a disciplined governance structure could sustain. The first phase was a deliberate pivot within the timber portfolio toward the segments of the paper market that were growing rather than contracting. Packaging paper — corrugated boxes, containerboard, kraft paper — was experiencing demand growth driven by a structural shift that would later be named e-commerce but was already visible in the late 1990s as catalog retail and early internet commerce began to reshape consumer purchasing behavior. The same digital transformation that was destroying demand for newsprint was simultaneously creating demand for the boxes that delivered the products ordered online. By 2005, packaging paper represented over 40 percent of total U.S. paper production. By 2020, it accounted for more than 50 percent. Flavor Group Timber’s response was to work with its mill partners and supply chain relationships to shift harvest and processing toward fiber grades appropriate for packaging applications, a conversion that required capital investment but was achievable within the existing land base and timber management infrastructure. The Southeast pine holdings were particularly well-suited for this transition, given the fiber characteristics of Southern yellow pine and the geographic concentration of containerboard manufacturing capacity in Georgia, Alabama, and the Carolinas. The second category that continued to perform was sanitary paper products such as tissue, paper towels, and related consumer hygiene products that demand for which proved remarkably durable across economic cycles. This segment is dominated by large integrated manufacturers with proprietary consumer brands, making direct market entry difficult for a company of Flavor Group’s scale. The strategic play here was not manufacturing but supply: positioning the timber holdings as a certified sustainable fiber source for contract manufacturers and consumer products companies seeking to strengthen their environmental sourcing credentials.

The second phase of the timber strategy represented a more ambitious conceptual leap, and it required the company to think about its land holdings not as a paper input operation but as a biological platform capable of supporting multiple overlapping output streams. By 2008, it was apparent to anyone watching the materials science and energy sectors that biomass — organic material derived from forest and agricultural waste, including wood chips, sawdust, bark, and non-merchantable timber — was becoming a meaningful feedstock for both energy generation and next-generation materials production. The forest residuals that had historically been burned as waste or left to decompose were being revalued as inputs for cellulosic ethanol production, biogas generation, and, most significantly for Flavor Group’s strategic trajectory, the emerging field of bioplastics. Bioplastics, materials derived from biological sources rather than petrochemical inputs, were receiving significant research investment and early commercial development from companies seeking alternatives to conventional plastics in packaging applications. The confluence of e-commerce-driven packaging demand, regulatory pressure on single-use plastics in European markets, and consumer preference shifts created a market pull for bio-based packaging materials that was structurally aligned with precisely what Flavor Group Timber’s land base could provide.

The strategic investment here was not vertical integration into bioplastics manufacturing which is a capital-intensive, technically complex undertaking beyond the company’s core competency at that stage of development. It was equity participation in early-stage bioplastics and biomass ventures through Flavor Group Ventures, the holding company’s investment vehicle that Kyle had been building since the early 2000s as a repository for the company’s excess cash flow. The investment thesis was straightforward: companies developing bio-based packaging materials needed not only capital but also feedstock security that had reliable, sustainable, cost-competitive access to the biological raw materials their processes required. Flavor Group Timber, with its certified sustainable land base and established supply chain infrastructure, could provide both financial capital and strategic value to early-stage bioplastics ventures in a way that purely financial investors could not. It was, in the language of modern venture capital, a strategic investor with genuine operational relevance to the companies it was backing. By 2015, Flavor Group Ventures held equity positions in four bioplastics and biomass processing companies — two of which had reached commercial scale in packaging applications for e-commerce clients, creating a financial return that compounded the underlying land value of the timber holdings.

Step back and consider what Flavor Group Holdings had assembled by 2015, beginning from a magazine operation and a Brooklyn brownstone in 1995. The media and content division, anchored by Flavor magazine’s digital transition and Synclaire’s talent network, had evolved into a multi-platform content business with subscription revenue, branded partnerships, and a podcast and video operation serving the same audience the original magazine had cultivated for two decades. The legal and advisory division, under Maxine Shaw’s continued leadership, had become one of the most respected Black-owned commercial law practices in the Northeast, with a client roster that included entertainment companies, real estate developers, and the timber industry supply chain relationships that Flavor Group’s own business development had generated. The real estate and land management division held commercial and residential properties in Prospect Heights, Crown Heights, and Bedford-Stuyvesant alongside approximately 22,000 acres of productive timberland in Maine and Georgia. The timber and natural resources division supplied packaging paper clients across the Northeast, held supply agreements with consumer products manufacturers seeking certified sustainable fiber, and managed a portfolio of forest residuals contracts with biomass energy facilities in the Southeast. The ventures division held minority equity positions in bioplastics, biomass processing, and sustainable materials companies, an early-stage portfolio assembled at valuations that by 2020 had generated returns consistent with the upper quartile of venture capital performance in the materials science sector. A conservative enterprise value estimate for this portfolio in 2020: between $400 million and $600 million, depending on the bioplastics portfolio’s mark-to-market performance and the real estate cap rate applied to the Brooklyn holdings.

There is a temptation to read this analysis as speculation, an exercise in imagining what fictional characters might have accomplished had their writers been economists rather than television producers. That temptation should be resisted, because the companies described here are not fictional. Every business model, every asset class, every strategic pivot outlined in this analysis has real-world precedents built by real people with the same inputs available to Khadijah, Kyle, Maxine, Régine, Synclaire, and Overton. Boise Cascade began as a lumber company and became a diversified paper and packaging enterprise. Potlatch Corporation managed timberland as a REIT and generated durable returns across multiple paper market cycles. Sappi, the South African pulp and paper company, executed a packaging pivot in its North American operations that preserved institutional value through the printing paper decline. The difference between those companies and the one that was never built on that Brooklyn brownstone is not talent, geography, or access to capital in any absolute sense. It is the deliberate decision to build an institution rather than simply pursue a career.

Khadijah James understood that Flavor was more than a magazine. The question she never got to answer on television and that every ambitious professional working from a brownstone office or a shared apartment in a gentrifying neighborhood ought to be asking right now is how deep the roots of that institution could have grown. Timber is patient capital. So is institution building. Both require the wisdom to plant trees whose shade you may not sit under for decades. Both reward the discipline to tend what you have planted rather than sell it before the harvest. The forest, it turns out, was always the point.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

The Prospect Heights Empire, Part I: What Khadijah James, Kyle Barker, and the Living Single Six Could Have Built Together

The function of freedom is to free somebody else. — Toni Morrison

There is a brownstone on a tree-lined block in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn that television once made sacred. Between 1993 and 1998, Living Single gave Black America something it had rarely seen in prime time: six young professionals, rooted in community, living with intention and ambition in one of the most historically Black neighborhoods in the United States. Khadijah James was building a media company. Kyle Barker was moving markets. Maxine Shaw was winning courtrooms. Régine Hunter was shaping aesthetics. Synclaire James was cultivating audiences. Overton Wakefield Jones was holding the physical infrastructure together.

Television, however, being what it is, treated these characters as a collection of charming personalities rather than what they actually were: a fully staffed, vertically integrated holding company waiting to happen. This is the story of what they should have built.

To understand the magnitude of the missed opportunity, one must first inventory the human capital assembled inside that Brooklyn brownstone. Khadijah James ran Flavor magazine as editor, publisher, and chief revenue officer — all without the title or the equity structure to match. She possessed the rarest combination in media: editorial vision and the operational will to execute it. Her Howard University classmate and best friend, Maxine Shaw, was a Howard Law-trained attorney with a litigation record and a strategic mind sharp enough to cut through any corporate structure. Kyle Barker held a Series 7 license and worked on Wall Street at a time when fewer than 3% of stockbrokers in the United States were Black. Régine Hunter was a boutique buyer with a finely calibrated eye for brand, trend, and consumer psychology — skills that today command mid-six-figure salaries in brand strategy and fashion consulting. Synclaire James, often underestimated, possessed the one asset that no business school can manufacture: an authentic connection to an audience. And Overton Jones, the building’s maintenance man, was a master of the physical built environment — a man who could fix, build, assess, and manage real property with technical expertise and institutional loyalty. Six people. Six distinct competencies. One address. The question is not whether they had what it took. The question is why no one ever suggested they combine it.

Flavor Group Holdings would have been organized as a Delaware C-Corporation with six co-founders holding equal equity tranches of 16.67% each at founding, subject to standard four-year vesting schedules with a one-year cliff. The governance structure would have assigned each founder a role corresponding to their demonstrated competency. Khadijah James would serve as Chief Executive Officer and Publisher — the company’s public face, editorial driver, and primary relationship manager with advertisers and distribution partners. Flavor magazine, already generating revenue, becomes the flagship asset and the brand that anchors everything else. Maxine Shaw would hold the role of General Counsel and Chief Legal Officer. Every media company transaction, every real estate deal, every employment contract, every licensing agreement passes through Maxine’s desk. She is not simply the lawyer on retainer — she is the institutional immune system, the person whose job is to ensure the company never gives away more than it receives. Kyle Barker would serve as Chief Financial Officer and Head of Capital Markets — not simply managing the company’s books, but building the capital architecture, structuring debt instruments, managing the investment portfolio, identifying accretive acquisitions, and positioning the company for institutional funding. His Wall Street credentials are the bridge between Khadijah’s vision and the capital required to scale it.

Régine Hunter would become Chief Brand Officer and Head of Consumer Products. She is not a boutique buyer anymore — she is the architect of Flavor Group’s brand extension strategy, governing licensing, merchandising, fashion partnerships, and eventually a Flavor-branded lifestyle vertical that monetizes the audience Khadijah has spent years cultivating. Her later work as a wedding planner reveals a service orientation and event production skill that would translate directly into the company’s live event and experiential revenue line. Synclaire James would serve as Chief Creative Officer and Head of Talent Relations. Her acting background and relational warmth make her uniquely suited to manage the talent ecosystem that a media company depends upon: writers, photographers, contributors, brand ambassadors, and eventually the television personalities that Flavor would feature as its audience expanded. Synclaire is also the company’s institutional memory — the one who ensures that the culture of the organization never loses the warmth that built the audience in the first place. Overton Wakefield Jones would hold the role of Chief Operating Officer and Head of Real Property. This is perhaps the most analytically underappreciated appointment. His role is not merely to fix things — it is to acquire, maintain, and develop the physical infrastructure that gives Flavor Group Holdings its most durable long-term asset base. In 1995, Prospect Heights brownstones were selling for between $150,000 and $250,000, a fraction of the $2 million to $4 million valuations they command today. A systematic acquisition strategy of three to five properties in the immediate vicinity of their original building, executed between 1995 and 2002, would alone represent an unrealized asset base worth between $8 million and $18 million at current market.

Flavor Group Holdings would have operated across three mutually reinforcing business pillars. The first is media and content. Flavor magazine remains the core asset, but the strategy evolves. The magazine is not simply a publication — it is an audience aggregation platform. By 1998, with digital distribution beginning to reshape print media economics, Khadijah and Kyle would have recognized that the magazine’s value lay not in its paper but in its subscriber list, its advertiser relationships, and its brand authority in Black urban culture. A digital transition, executed early, would have positioned Flavor Group as one of the first Black-owned digital media properties at scale — preceding by nearly a decade the consolidation that would eventually hollow out Black print media. Synclaire’s talent relationships would have fueled a podcast network and video content vertical by 2005, and Régine’s consumer product instincts would have monetized the audience through branded partnerships that competitors lacked the cultural credibility to execute.

The second pillar is legal and advisory services. Maxine Shaw’s legal practice does not remain a solo operation — it becomes the institutional anchor of a Flavor Group legal advisory subsidiary focused on serving Black-owned businesses, entertainment clients, and creative professionals. The model here is not unlike what entertainment law firms built around the music and television industries of the 1990s and 2000s. Maxine’s Howard Law network provides the talent pipeline. The brand provides the client pipeline. The business generates revenue independent of the media operation while deepening the company’s institutional relationships across industries. The third pillar is real estate and facilities management. Under Overton’s direction, Flavor Group Properties becomes a systematic accumulator of commercial and residential real estate in gentrifying Brooklyn neighborhoods — Prospect Heights, Crown Heights, Bedford-Stuyvesant. The strategy is not speculative flipping. It is long-hold, income-producing property management that generates the stable cash flow required to fund the more volatile media operation during lean advertising cycles. The 1995-to-2010 window of Brooklyn real estate acquisition represents one of the most dramatic wealth-creation opportunities in modern American urban history. An institution that held even ten properties through that period with leverage appropriate to the cash flows would have emerged with a portfolio worth north of $30 million.

Kyle Barker’s Wall Street experience would have been decisive in assembling the capital stack, and not simply for its technical value. His credibility in institutional financial circles — rare for a Black professional in the mid-1990s — would have opened access to Small Business Administration lending, community development financial institution financing, and eventually the early-stage venture capital that began flowing into minority-owned media businesses following the success of companies like Black Entertainment Television and Essence Communications. A conservative five-year financial projection for Flavor Group Holdings, incorporating magazine advertising revenue of $2.5 million annually, property management income of $400,000 annually from a six-property portfolio, and legal advisory fees of $800,000 annually, would have produced aggregate revenue of approximately $18.5 million between 1995 and 2000. With disciplined reinvestment — consistent with the capital retention philosophy that separates institutional builders from lifestyle operators — that revenue base would have funded a real estate portfolio, a media technology transition, and a legal services expansion that by 2010 would have generated a company valued conservatively at $75 million to $120 million. For context, Essence Communications, a comparable Black women’s magazine brand, was acquired by Time Inc. in 2000 for a reported $170 million. Flavor Group Holdings, with its diversified revenue model and real estate holdings, would have been a more complex and arguably more defensible asset.

Much of the analysis of Black wealth destruction focuses on what was taken. Less attention is paid to what was structurally never built — and therefore never available to be taken or transmitted. A C-Corporation structure with six co-founders and a disciplined shareholder agreement would have accomplished several things that individual success cannot. It would have created a legal entity with perpetual existence, meaning the company survives the death, departure, or London relocation of any single founder. It would have created a mechanism for profit distribution and reinvestment insulated from any individual’s spending behavior. It would have established a board governance structure capable of recruiting outside expertise as the business scaled. And it would have created a transferable asset — something that could be sold, taken public, or bequeathed to the next generation.

Kyle’s decision to accept a job in London and Régine’s eventual departure to marry Dexter Knight are, in the television version of their lives, personal choices with only romantic consequences. In the Flavor Group Holdings scenario, they are governance events — managed by the shareholder agreement, addressed by the board, with equity buyout provisions and employment transition protocols already in place. The institution does not collapse when an individual leaves. That is the entire point of building one.

The argument for taking these characters seriously as institutional builders rather than television archetypes is not merely imaginative — it is instructive. The Living Single cast represented, with remarkable precision, the full professional profile required to build a durable Black enterprise: media, law, finance, brand, talent, and real property. These competencies are not accidental. They are the precise functions that every successful institutional structure requires. The lesson is not that Khadijah James should have been more ambitious. She was, by any measure, already ambitious. The lesson is that ambition without institutional structure dissipates with time, while institutional structure — even modest institutional structure — compounds. The S&P 500 teaches this principle in the financial markets. The same principle governs human capital and organizational design. There is a Flavor Group Holdings waiting to be built in every city where six talented Black professionals happen to share proximity, trust, and complementary skills. The brownstone is not metaphorical. The talent is not hypothetical. The only thing missing is the deliberate choice to convert a social network into an institutional one. Flavor magazine told its readers what was happening in the culture. Flavor Group Holdings would have told the culture what was possible. That is a different kind of editorial mission. And it is long overdue.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.