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tv   Black in America  CNN  December 18, 2011 5:00pm-6:00pm PST

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glen emory is leaving us. after 19 years here at cnn and he's been on the weekend team since i started weekends and he is a great writer, a great producer and most of all a fantastic person. i don't want to cry but i'm going to miss you, glenn. good luck. i'm don lemon. thanks for watching. see you at 10:00. you know, this is a white and asian world here. it just is. >> people are minting money in silicon valley right now. i want a piece of it. >> hi! >> it's a capitalist endeavor. you know, we're all serious adults, entrepreneurs. >> i'm determined. >> i'm tired of playing games. >> i believe in my product. i believe in my ideas. >> we're building great companies, every single one of us. >> i'm chasing success. >> and so we want to stand out because we're just so damn good that they have to notice us. >> each founder is going to have two minutes to pitch their idea.
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>> i'm nervous. i haven't been nervous all night and i'm nervous. >> the way we're going to make money -- um. >> um. >> um. >> you didn't tell me a thing about what your business plan is or what you intend to do for revenue. >> okay. >> when i did raise venture capital, my buddies here advised me was, get a white guy to be your front man. i hired a 6-foot-tall polished white guy and let him do all the talking. >> it's very sad. in 2011, we got a black president. and he's not putting no money in my rocket right now directly, so what do we got to do? play the game until we are successful. >> if ten years down the road there are no more black entrepreneurs than there are today, what's at risk? >> a -- a permanent underclass. in this unassuming three-bedroom home in mountain view, california, angela benton and wayne sutton
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hope to make history. >> here? see what this thing look like. >> one of them is supposed to be a sofa bed. >> the friends connected online, two black internet entrepreneurs trying to succeed in an overwhelmingly white industry. >> for whatever reason, african-americans tend to be consumers of technology and not really creators of technology. >> name me one black web tech founder or start-up ceo. where's the example of a black mark zuckerberg? >> last year only 1% of internet start-ups that received funding were founded by african-americans. so angela and wayne created the new media accelerator, newme for short, a groundbreaking program
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designed to speak up the development and success of minority led start-ups in silicon valley. >> if you're going to be an actor, you go to l.a. if you're going to be in fashion, you go to new york. and if you're going to be in technology, then you come to silicon valley. >> modeled after similar programs, newme offers its dotcom founders immediate access to deep-pocketed investors, well-connected mentors and opens doors to some of the most successful internet companies in the world. >> welcome to facebook. >> the downside? >> everyone will be living together. >> eight people. nine weeks. one house. one goal. changing the face of silicon valley. >> for it to be successful to me, founders have to get investment. >> thanks for your enthusiasm for coming to google. >> the high-stakes program, backed by sponsors, culminates in demo day when each entrepreneur will have just six minutes to pitch their company to a room full of investors. 75 people applied.
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six were chosen by angela and wayne based on their start-up ideas. >> people are leaving their loved ones for the summer. >> ready, kenny? >> they're leaving their spouses. they're leaving their kids. some of them are quitting their jobs. so people are making major life changes to take a risk and be involved in this program, and that's a little bit of pressure. >> hi. nice to meet you. >> they include a former mit student body president. >> pius is really smart. pius is really strong. >> a master programmer. >> tiffani is super sweet. she's a girl and she's also a programmer. so that's an oddity. >> a former hedge fund project manager. >> crisson is really focused. >> a video game blogger, here. >> anthony, i like to call him cool. he's just laid back. he's not trying to be something he's not. >> an engineer from detroit. >> hajj has swagger. he's a sales guy.
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>> a former dotcom millionaire. >> hank, he's experienced. he's raised money before. >> newme co-founder and self-described country boy, wayne sutton. >> it takes courage and guts to come out here and leave my son, my wife a while and come out here and pursue your dreams. >> this isn't a charity. it's not a summer camp. we're capitalists. we're all trying to build great businesses. and we're trying to secure the funding needed to build those businesses. >> why is this so important? >> how can you have a huge and growing part of the economy with no participation from a significant demographic? >> the odds of success are slim. 80% of all start-ups founded by first-time entrepreneurs fail. but angela is confident her accelerator will help the housemates beat the odds. something she says she's done her entire life. >> i was 15, and i was in ninth grade and i was pregnant.
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but it was a hard time. i mean, when you're around people in society and you're also around your own family and people think they know how your life is going to end up. >> driven to prove people wrong, angela earned a masters degree in graphic design and founded a trailblazing website for african-americans interested in technology. today, angela is 30, a single mother of three. in addition to running the newme accelerator with wayne, angela's working on her own start-up. get cued. a mobile app that makes shopping and restaurant recommendations based on past experiences. >> people often have a lot of excuses. i hate that because i could have had every reason to have a lot of excuses, and i didn't. i mean, just how bad do you want something? >> six people got to share one bathroom? >> the eight entrepreneurs arrive in mountain view with billion-dollar dreams.
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but for the next nine weeks, they'll sleep on $80 air mattresses. >> it's not what i would call five-star accommodations. i'd call it scrappy. >> but their first event is first class. a welcome reception sponsored by google. >> how are you doing? >> good. how are you doing? >> the first inkling that something may be a little different than we'd expected was when there was an announcement about a dragon's den and that the judges for the dragon's den should please come up to the stage, please. >> dragons don't sound good. >> i'm at google and i'm pitching. cued is basically -- and i don't even know what i'm supposed to say next. [ terri ] my husband, hank, was always fun.
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never took life too seriously. 'til our son was born... that day, he bought life insurance. now, there's no way i could send our boy to college without it. if there was one thing i could say to hank, it'd be "thank you." you're welcome. hey, hank. [ male announcer ] life insurance you can use while you're still living. you are one lucky lady. mm-hmm. [ male announcer ] learn more from your state farm agent today. [ cheers and applause ] [ playing out of tune ] [ playing in tune ] [ male announcer ] at mcdonald's®, we support the community by giving to programs that bring out the best in our youth... ...because we believe when you feed the competitive spirit... ...it enriches the entire neighborhood. the simple joy of being deeply rooted. ♪ the simple joy of being deeply rooted.
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by the end of the first day, the newme entrepreneurs find themselves inside the headquarters of google, an internet start-up founded in 1998 today worth close to $200 billion. >> how are you doing? >> people respond positively and
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negatively. >> thanks. >> this place is amazing. >> hello. welcome to google. >> but quickly their excitement is replaced by concern. >> if anyone who's involved in judging the dragon's den, please come up to the front. >> we're kind of all wondering what is the dragon's den? it's essentially slang for a panel of judges where they, you know, throw you and your company in and, you know, they essentially rip you to shreds after you pitch. and it's really the antithesis of an unstressful environment. >> the founders felt kind of ambushed in a way. >> the first founder to come up is tiffani bell for the company pencil you in. >> so, yes. i'm tiffani. >> tiffani graduated from howard university with a degree in computer science. she quit her job as a web developer in fayetteville, north carolina, to join the accelerator. how many black female
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programmers do you know? >> so before i went to howard, i would say none. historically, black people -- whether we're talking about, like buffalo soldiers or the tuskegee airmen have not traditionally been thought of as being capable of things. and so i think that's kind of how it is for me as a black woman in technology. pencil you in is my start-up. and right now i'm allowing beauticians to accept appointments online. at this point i have a functional product. >> by the time she was done and the judges started critiquing her, i mean, they were critiquing her on everything they told us we didn't have to worry about. >> you need to do your darnedest to differentiate what you're doing. >> it was serious. >> okay, our next entrepreneur is anthony frazier. his start up is playd. >> we want to give gamers a chance to recommend games and also have the app recommend games to them based off what they've played. >> you didn't tell me a thing about what your business plan was and what you intend to do for revenue.
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>> it was definitely a dragon's lair. >> what are your launch plans? >> some people got chewed up more than others. >> a material entrepreneur. our first product is called kloud.co organizer. we let you organize information. >> i don't know who your customer is. >> don't ever give vague numbers. give specific numbers. >> my way of impressing my girlfriend is building a web app. so that's what i do. >> there are things you said that kind of backed me off. you're a chief salesperson. you have to figure out how to relate to your audience. >> i don't know what you built, what you're aspiring to build. snoof >> so last but certainly not least we have angela benton. >> cued is basically a mobile application. when i was giving my pitch, i literally just -- my mind kind of blanked. i'm nervous. i haven't been nervous all night, and i'm nervous. and i was just like, wait, i'm at google and i'm pitching and i don't even know what i'm supposed to say next. that's it. >> your nervousness i think cut you a little bit short. >> the google event is over. and the impression left is not good.
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>> i kind of felt bad for them because any time you give a good pitch, it's a missed opportunity. >> yet the housemates feel it went okay. >> the presentations across the board were really strong. >> i would probably give myself a seven. >> i thought people did really well, though, considering that there was no preparation. >> housemate hank williams has pitched to silicon valley investors before. are you the oldest person in the house? >> by far. >> really? >> i think, yes. >> hank grew up in harlem, the son of a judge. he left the university of pennsylvania after his junior year and in 2000 founded an internet radio start-up that raised $40 million. two years later, it folded. >> emotionally, it was very difficult. i really for a couple of years didn't want anything to do with technology at all. >> hank has spent the last four years full time developing kloudco, a web platform to help
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people organize their e-mail and personal documents online. what are you looking for moneywise? >> over the course of the next several years of the company, $5 million to $10 million. >> are you competing with the people in the house? >> no, not at all. we're eight companies out of thousands seeking funding. >> silicon valley is a long way from newark, new jersey, where newme entrepreneur anthony frazier grew up. >> i didn't grow up with a lot of money. when i was living in newark, the only time i would see a person of a different color, you know, a white person would be like the missionaries walking around trying to convert people. >> after dropping out of community college, he worked the overnight shift at kmart. >> the people i worked with, that was their life. but i've realized that a lot of those people didn't really have many options. i don't want to work like that. i kind of want to make my own way. >> a video game fanatic, anthony created a video game website which led to his start-up idea.
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so tell me about playd. >> playd is a social network for gamers. i got passion. i got determination. i got heart. i may not have the paper to say i know what i know, but i know what i know. >> for newme entrepreneur pius, the summer in silicon valley is about going all in on his dotcom idea. an mit grad and former student body president, pius quit his consulting business last year to work with his co-founder and girlfriend becky developing becouply. a social network for couples. >> for us, this isn't a summer project. this isn't -- it's not a hobby. >> living off their savings, the couple bought one-way tickets to the west coast. becky will live close to the newme house during the nine-week program. >> definitely for us the stakes are very high. >> the housemates know the road to demo day won't be easy. >> you're going to take
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something personal, if someone says i didn't think that was very good at all and is blunt and straightforward and that hurts your feelings, go home now. go home now. >> there are lots of people who, you know, they hear about a program like this and they assume that it's more or less a handout. you know? and that we aren't serious entrepreneurs. and all they're doing is charity for minorities. it's a capitalist endeavor. you know, we're all serious adults, entrepreneurs, who, you know, we're building great companies, every single one of us. so we want to stand out because we're so damn good, they have to notice us. >> why do you think there are so few african-american tech entrepreneurs? >> i think that they probably think that it is an uphill battle. >> is it? >> it is an uphill battle for -- >> for everyone or for african-americans specifically? >> oh, for everyone. >> perhaps the most influential investor in silicon valley is ron conway, an early investor in
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google, paypal and twitter, conway invests about $10 million a year in start-ups. >> but we only invest in 1 out of 30 companies that we see. so it's a very -- it's a winnowing down process that's pretty brutal. i have to admit that a lot of it is who you know. if they're well known to us, we will tend to see that entrepreneur before an entrepreneur who's just coming in blind. >> is that particularly hard if you're african-american? >> i would say yes. it's disappointing, but, you know, we don't know how to go recruit those people. >> so right now all you should be thinking about is how do i execute on my idea. >> one week after the google event, the entrepreneurs have dinner with one of their mentors, navarro wright, the chief technology officer for the internet company interactive one. navarro was also one of the four
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dragons during the google event. what was your take? describe for me that moment. >> i said to myself they weren't ready. everybody is looking at this environment of this incubator and saying, i don't want to be the first person to tell this black person that, hey, they're not doing a good job so i guess to a certain degree that role's kind of fallen on me. >> on the black guy. >> on the black guy. yes. show of hands. who thinks they did well? so nobody thinks they did well? >> i did okay. >> i think you guys need to be a little bit harder on yourselves. and let's be clear. my goal to say that is to not to belittle anybody in this room. my goal to say that is that i need you guys and want you guys to understand the vastness of this opportunity, right? you guys walked through palo alto to get here. this is probably the most black people who are in the town right now. let's be honest, right? so you need to understand the reality that you're in. >> no one that walked into that room knew they were about to pitch. >> let's say you walked in there and mark zuckerberg was in there and said, hey, i want to hear your idea.
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so you're going to tell me that it's okay to say, oh, well, i didn't know i was going to pitch to him and i shouldn't be ready? you can make those excuses and at the end of the nine weeks not be where you need to be. but you got to recognize that the only person that was in control of that was yourself. it wasn't the valley. it wasn't the investors. it was you, because you guys made the decision to come out here, and it's bigger than you. if an investor is only seeing one african-american a year to give a pitch, right, and you don't do well, you've not only affected you, you affected other people. it's that important. i joke with angela. there's a tag line. no whack demos on demo day. >> there are still eight weeks till demo day, and every day the challenge seems greater. >> this is a white and asian world here. it just is. >> when i did raise venture capital, my buddy here's advice to me was, get a white guy to be your front man. it's easy to see what subaru owners care about.
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the newme entrepreneurs start their journey humbled. they have eight weeks left to develop their dotcom companies and refine their pitches before demo day. >> this is anything but "the real world." this is anything but "jersey shore." you know, we're all here to work. i don't know if there's even any
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alcohol in this house. there are a lot of computers. a lot of people coding late at night. >> i wake up at 6:00. there's already one or two people that have taken a shower. so i think everyone is pretty focused and pretty intense. and, you know, there's not a lot of play time. >> start-ups are hard. you have to go through suffering most of the time in unexpected ways that will really test and challenge. >> are you also trying to do an actual raise of capital? >> noted tech entrepreneur mitch kapor is a sponsor and mentor of the newme program. >> they're going to want to know what your plan is. >> in 1982 kapor founded the lotus development corporation which developed the popular lotus 123 spreadsheet. the company was later sold for $3.5 billion. today kapor invests in start-ups.
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>> i'm incredibly excited about newme. >> why do you care about a bunch of black entrepreneurs who've come to silicon valley to try to be successful? >> we have serious problems being economically competitive in the world. and we have to have everybody, absolutely everybody, who can contribute making their maximum contribution. >> you can't tell the whole story. >> okay. >> is it really true that every entrepreneur with an idea gets an equal shot? that's absolutely not true. >> there are so few women and minorities asking for money from vcs, i'm not sure if there's enough data to know if there's some sort of built-in bias. >> michael arrington is the founder of the influential website techcrunch. arrington is outspoken in his belief that success in the valley is more merit-based than any other place in the world. why do you think there are so few african-american tech entrepreneurs here? >> i don't know. and it's something that should be fixed but i think a lot of it
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goes back to school. a lot of the successful people here are engineers. because if they aren't engineers, they have to find an engineer to help them build software or hardware or both. >> so the pipeline issue. >> yeah, i think that's a big problem. >> who would you say is the number one black technology entrepreneur? >> you know, that's a weird question. who would you say is the number one black -- >> i don't cover technology. >> i'm trying to think of any black ceos in silicon valley and i'm not even coming up with any. >> so the entrepreneurs, the people making companies. >> i don't know a single black entrepreneur. >> you cover the industry. what does that say? >> it means there just aren't any. it's not a perfect meritocracy. but generally speaking it doesn't matter what your education is. it doesn't matter who your parents are here. you can become very successful based purely on your brain size and how you use it. >> i have not been in the room recently when somebody said, oh, that's an african-american led company. i'm not going to invest there.
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but i guarantee you from personal experience, that's what people are thinking. so i would go toe to toe with michael arrington and wind up saying the part that is meritocratic is great, and there's a big part of it that isn't. >> arrington says the rarity of black entrepreneurs might give them an edge. >> this is a white and asian world here. it just is. it's not a good thing. we have a conference three times a year where companies actually launch on stage. we're looking for women and minorities all the time. there's a guy -- actually he was my first client when i was a lawyer. his last company just launched at our event. and he's african-american. it's a cool start-up. his start-up is really cool. but he could have launched a clown show on stage and i would have put him up there. absolutely. i think it's the first time we've had an african-american be the sole founder. >> me and becky sometimes watch that show "down home cooking with the neelys." >> the burgers look almost done.
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>> among the 25 speakers and mentors who meet with the newme entrepreneurs, it's vivek wadhwa's visit that leaves them speechless. >> you know, i think what you're doing is fantastic. >> he's a professor at duke. wadhwa came to the united states from india in 1980 and founded two internet companies that raised $50 million. >> can i be critical about the community? >> yeah. >> you folks don't help each other. >> okay. >> in some parts of america you have this entitlement attitude that we've been discriminated against. we've been slaves and that's what's held the community back. my community did the exact opposite. we didn't -- we basically said, all right, there's a problem here. we'll fix it ourselves. >> professor wadhwa says investors in the valley practice what's known as pattern matching. they see entrepreneurs who are successful, mainly young, white males, and invest in those who fit that pattern. >> when i did raise venture capital, my buddy's here advice to me was, he said get a white guy to be your front man.
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and i did that. i hired a very impressive i hired a very impressive 6-foot-tall polished white guy and let him do all the talking. that's the way it is here. i'm telling you. i've done it, okay? this is how i surmounted the problems. that's the way the system works here. you might as well understand it and then use it to your advantage. >> i'm still kind of, like, speechless. >> you know, there's something raw and very direct about it that's -- you know, that's a little -- it's jarring. >> it's very sad. in 2011, it's very sad. we got a black president. and he's not putting no money in my pocket right now directly. so what do we got to do? play the game until we successful. >> there's so many kids in berkeley or stanford you can hire. >> professor wadhwa leaves and hank gathers the housemates to talk. >> we are alone, you know. we're just us. this is it. there's not that many of us. and so it's kind of weird. we've been here a week, and no
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one's done a demo or showed a screen shot or anything between us. i mean, it's crazy. and i guess we're all just trying to, you know, everyone's so focused on themselves and i don't mean to offend anybody. i'm not saying that people are selfish. but i'm saying that we're, you know, who else is going to help you? who else? we ought to figure out how to band together and, like, make something bigger and better and more powerful because there's almost none of us. maybe this is a catalyst. i don't know. >> we have a bigger success working together than we do alone. >> we need to have something that comes out of this after nine weeks. >> let's get cracking. >> i'm changing my clothes. i'm putting on my sweats. >> they realize to have any chance of success on demo day, they'll have to work together. >> i'm not crazy about it, but it's something. >> the simplest feature that will differentiate you and develop that and try to make
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i'm don lemon live in cnn. here are your headlines. you might not want small children in the room for this story. an alleged 2,000 debt is believed to be the motive behind the brutal killing of an elderly woman in new york city. a 47-year-old suspect is in custody in the fatal attack. surveillance video appears to
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show a man dressed as an exterminator spraying his victim with flammable liquid as she stood inside an elevator. he then set her on fire. residents quickly called 911 but not in time to save her life. during a military hearing in maryland. prosecutors called bradley manning a traitor known for his computer expertise and emotional outbursts. a defense expert said his computer in iraq had an unusual amount of problems. he is the army private who allegedly provided secret documents to wikileaks. now back to cnn's "black in america special: silicon valley, the new promised land." see you at 10:00. i'm trying to get one thing clear, which is that i can't be the front man. i can't even talk about this. you've got to do it. that's all i'm saying.
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>> we're about a month out from demo day, and the pressure's on. ♪ >> the stakes are really high. i think if the stakes aren't high enough, maybe you aren't taking that much of a risk. i definitely took a huge risk coming out here, you know. excuse me. i'm trying to get some information on where exactly this is going to take place. my state of mind is just focused on the product. get as many big people and big places excited about what i'm doing. you know, they thought we were volunteers. i guess that comes with it. i started a brand-new start-up called playd. it's called playd. it's going to be a gaming -- thank you. you got a card? >> i do, yeah. >> yeah. that's when i realized this whole thing is about relationships. playd is a good idea, you know. i'm thinking this one is going to be the big one.
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it'll be interesting to see how it all folds out. >> you seem very stressed to me. are you? >> yeah, i mean, i am. it's a lot going on. it's a lot happening. >> you need to know what you're going to pitch. >> she's away from her three daughters running the accelerator developing her own dotcom company and it's become clear, the best way to make the accelerator a long-term success is to move to silicon valley with her kids. >> if i do it i want to do it right so that they can start the new school season out here and i mean that's -- >> that's in three weeks. >> yeah, that's crazy, so we'll see. >> for weeks the entrepreneurs have worked day and night developing business plans, building their websites, refining their pitches.
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but for wayne sutton the hardest part is missing his 7-month-old son. >> i'm happy. it's emotion too because you want to play with him and hold him and stuff and you're across the country and just, you know, dealing with stuff and like i could be playing with him. i know i'm not doing this making this sacrifice so i can get rich. i want my little boy to be successful. i want him to learn so i can teach him to be successful. >> most nights wayne works until 11:00 p.m. at a neighborhood yogurt shop. he walks home to clear his head. on a monday night he is walking home when he is stopped by police. >> i saw two cops, hands on their hips ready to pull out a gun, a baton or something to take me down if necessary. >> 404, clearance on one, north carolina number available. >> the officers run a background check. wayne doesn't have a criminal
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record. he's told he can go. >> 11:00, 2:00, 1:00 in the afternoon or 11:00 at night if i'm walking on the street, just trying to get home, i shouldn't get stopped by the police. >> mountain view police tell us they stopped wayne because he was an unfamiliar face in the neighborhood. >> it don't look good for me to be stopped by police. i'm not trying to sell a rap album. i need credibility. that's what i need. >> apparently he was walking while black. >> you would think in silicon valley where you're supposedly judged based on talent alone and great ideas that you would be treated the same way whether walking down the street or pitching an idea. it just truly reinforces that's not the reality that we that are african-americans live in. >> i want to get back to -- >> with just 24 hours left until
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dem dough day the house mates hold one final practice session. >> show how your product -- >> okay. writing software a long time and thinking about data. standing in front of a podium is always a little bit nerve-racking. >> how is everyone doing. >> i realize there is a difference between practice and game day. you know, i mean it's totally different when the lights are on. >> my heart is still beating weird. >> i'm tiffani ashley bell, ceo and founder of pencil you in. when it comes to salons -- hold on. hold on. stop. >> tiffani, the programmer, is nervous. >> it's probably the most high-profile thing that i've done in my life as far as a speaking event. and mostly just because i feel like it could be one thing that determines the course of the rest of my life. >> it's something you can't remember word for word. i don't know. but just tell the story. >> if you stop and pause, they'll know you're making a mistake. >> there's no more time to practice. tomorrow is demo day.
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♪ keep a cool head. focus.
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>> it's like opening night on broadway. and now it's show time. >> going to make it happen today. >> i'm a little nervous. >> of course, you're going to be scared. it's only human. >> let's do it again. >> less than an hour to go, and the entrepreneurs run through their demo day pitches one last time. >> now let's take a quick look at some of the features that separate -- >> the counsel that i try to give is, be real, be substantive, but just say enough to get a serious investor interested and hungry for more. >> thank you. all the way to the back. >> when we walk in, we see it's standing room only. ♪ >> investors. venture capitalists. angels. >> hi. good morning. >> members of the press were there. it was a big deal. really high stakes. >> for anthony frazier, demo day is much more than an opportunity to pitch. >> for a large part of the first half of my life, you know, me and my mother and my brother had to go to different houses and
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stay with different family members. we never had a place to call our own. and one day my mother told me, like, you're going to get me a house. i just think about her wanting a house. i'm going to get her a house. >> father god, thank you for allowing us to take this journey together. let us recognize that our talents have brought us here. think these entrepreneurs, bring our ideas to fruition, to ignore the fact that we haven't been done before, we've done great things, we thank you in jesus' name. amen. >> demo day begins. each entrepreneur gets six minutes to pitch. >> i'm going to ask everyone to take their seats, please. one last call to take your seats. ♪ >> good morning, everyone. less than 1% of technology start-ups are founded by african-americans. and in a place where opportunities and challenges are
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overcome every day, that's a significant one. so without further ado -- >> pius and becky cruz. >> we kind of just launched into it. >> my name is pius. i'm the product designer and hacker behind becouply. we focus on three things. discovering new date ideas and date spots. everything starts to fade away. the crowd disappears. and there's nothing but the material. we're not just building an app here, but we're really on a mission. and that mission is to help every pcouple in the world have an epic social life. thanks. >> if you guys work with them, you might want to put them not breaking up in your liquidation preferences. >> i personally feel a responsibility to make sure that i leave everything on the court. that i leave everything out there. in life, you always want to be able to say, you know what? i have no regrets. >> barbershops and salons just in the united states alone made $37 billion in revenue.
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>> standing off to the side and watching everyone present was -- i was just on cloud nine. it was like going to your kid's graduation. >> there's no way i could have expected things to turn out as well as they did. >> today what we're going to focus on is specific features that we have that relate to collaborations. >> i was a little nervous, of course. but, you know, got to shake it off when it's time to go. >> the cool thing about it is, people see this -- >> what was going through your head? >> i just thought about what i don't want to be doing next year. >> what do you mean? >> i don't want to work at kmart, so, you know, it's either this or nothing, so. >> so you had to hit it? >> yeah. we will be giving gamers digital rewards when you go out and buy it the first day. [ applause ] >> what it does is actually
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brings the suggestions and recommendations in to you. cued really connects what you like online with what you like in real life. that's what cued is. thanks. >> can i ask all the founders to come up, please. so i think you guys can agree we saw some great ideas praud and some great products. can you join me in welcoming the first class of the newme accelerator program. [ applause ] >> i think the group did amazing. every single person i thought represented the accelerator, represented the race. >> if you think about where we came from at the first google event and what you saw today, what was encouraging, a lot of people in the audience said they were good pitches. i mean, there was a writer from techcrunch who sent out a tweet saying this is one of the best start-up events she's been to. >> hands down, nothing to apologize for. no adjustment in stand dares. and i go on record about that. >> but a strong pitch is just a first step. >> it's not demo day and somebody -- you just get a check one day. ends up in the mail. ends up in your bank account.
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it doesn't really happen like that. there is follow-up that has to be done. there are a series of meetings that have to be done. >> know what game it is. what platform it is. it's not like we can go home and sleep. no. you know, then again, i'm going to go home and work harder, you know? it gets harder from here. it doesn't get easier. >> so if we look three months from now and nobody has received funding, did you fail? >> that's not going to happen. >> if getting funded is a measure of success, who's succeeded? the answer might surprise you. [ indistinct talking on radio ] [ tires screech ] [ crying ] [ applause ] [ laughs ] [ tires screech ]
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after delivering their pitches on demo day, it's time for the newme entrepreneurs to chat with potential investors. >> i want to show you how -- >> we got to kind of take the temperature of the crowd, see which investors were really interested. >> is success getting funded? >> i think a few companies getting funded should be part of the score of whether it was
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successful or not. >> will some of the companies that were presenting get funded? >> i think so. >> nine weeks after arriving in silicon valley, the first newme accelerator ends. >> so what's next? >> everything's next, you know. if i didn't come out here and do the accelerator, i probably wouldn't have had the opportunity to meet a lot of key people and bond with other entrepreneurs that look just like me. >> why is that important? >> there's probably somebody just like me, you know, want to do something with computers. if i had that example early on, maybe i would have done it. if i had myself now go to my younger self and say, look, you need to do this, this, this, this and you can be, like, right here, oh, man, i'd be different. yeah. i would love that. >> if no one were funded, i would be extremely surprised.
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>> it has been very real. >> yes, it has. >> having been out here, it's clear that people -- a lot of them have great intentions. but i think a lot of the people we met throughout the program and on demo day were, you know, utterly surprised just how good everyone was. now, why is that a surprise? >> do you think you've changed the world? do you think you've changed silicon valley? >> no. >> what did you do then? >> what we have done is that other entrepreneurs who look like us and were like, if you guys can do it, we can do it. >> within the black community, we're starting to understand how important technology is and we're starting to want to participate. on the other side, we have to demonstrate success. we have to get some points on the board and in a visible way. that's why this is really significant.
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>> when the accelerator ended in august, tiffani returned home to fayetteville, north carolina. she hasn't received any funding yet, but tiffani says her start-up is adding customers. and early next year, she plans to move back to silicon valley. crisson, hajj and wayne also returned home. they haven't received funding either but say they remain committed to building their start-ups into successful companies. >> i want success so bad that it hurts. >> in october, hank received an undisclosed investment in kloudco. he continues to talk to investors from his home base in harlem, new york. anthony returned to new jersey. he hasn't received any funding yet but in december playd was added to the apple app store. after the accelerator ended, pius and becky moved to san
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francisco. this fall, two funders invested an undisclosed amount in their start-up becouply. one of those investors, mitch kapor. and in september, angela benton moved to silicon valley with her three daughters. she put her start-up on hold and is planning the second edition of the newme accelerator program set to start in early 2012. this time, she says, she wants to include more women and other underrepresented minorities. a lot of people have complained about the issues of a lack of diversity in silicon valley. but nobody else created an accelerator to fix it. >> when i think about my life, being pregnant at 15, all of the circumstances that i've had in my life are really just similar to what i did with the accelerator. like, literally, it's just problem and solution. and the solution is thinking of things creatively. not the same way that, you know, anyone else would think about it.

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