The latest in a decades-old movement among those in the Black community to embrace natural hair reached the halls of state government last month when the House of Representatives passed its version of ...
Most people choose hair products based on marketing claims or what works for their friends, but your hair’s specific type and texture determine which products and techniques will actually deliver the ...
KVUE: KVUE Profiles: Getting to the root of hair's significance in Black culture
AUSTIN, Texas — As part of KVUE's continuing celebration of Black History Month, we met up with several Austin stylists to explore the significance of hair in Black culture. “If you have to ask why ...
KVUE Profiles: Getting to the root of hair's significance in Black culture
Business Insider: Natural-hair care is getting a boost from AI as Black-owned beauty-tech companies harness personalized data to better serve customers
Natural-hair care is getting a boost from AI as Black-owned beauty-tech companies harness personalized data to better serve customers
It is very commonly seen that people use "guy" or "guys" in workplace. It is totally appropriate to use this word when it is a casual occasion. If the occasion is more formal, for example you are referring a very senior member, an old and respectful man or a professional such as police officer, the appropriate alternatives could be "gentleman", "sir", "officer" or just "man" or "woman/lady ...
An Atlantic article, "The Problem with 'Hey Guys'", describes people consciously choosing to replace guys with the gender-neutral folks (it also mentions y'all), and says that folks is preferable to people because people is "too often pushy and impersonal." However, this is just in the context of using it as a second-person plural pronoun.