Here‘s a link to something that will make a nourishing lunch hour for all of us today. It is refreshing in its substance and reflection.
Meanwhile, I have to admit that Juan Williams did a good job boosting “Eyes On The Prize” here.
Here‘s a link to something that will make a nourishing lunch hour for all of us today. It is refreshing in its substance and reflection.
Meanwhile, I have to admit that Juan Williams did a good job boosting “Eyes On The Prize” here.
I would like to humbly suggest to my brother Tavis that since he keeps saying his role model is King, he should read King more—to find more to emulate. It might help.
After watching the dignity and modesty displayed last night by the men and women of “Eyes On The Prize,” we all should, actually.
Okay, I get that The Independent was trying to get attention for its coverage of Africa, but c’mon………….
http://www.nowpublic.com/uks_independent_newspaper_goes_red_with_kate_moss_cover
Couldn’t the editors have found another way to do this? IÂ mean, where was Alek Wek?
TiVo and DVDs ready? Good.
Got this from somebody who got this from Judy Richardson.
Hey, Folks -Â
Yup, the first 6 hours of EYES ON THE PRIZE will, finally, be re-broadcast nationally on PBS’ “The American Experience” on the first three Mondays in October (Oct. 2, 9, 16) at 9:00 pm (check local listings). They’ll air 2 hours each Monday.
Hour 1 – “Awakenings” (1954-1965) — Emmett Till and Montgomery Bus Boycott
Hour 2 – “Fighting Back” (1957-62) — School Desegregation, including Little Rock and ‘Ol Miss.Â
Hour 3 – “Ain’t Scared of Your Jails” (1960-61) — Sit-ins and Freedom Rides
Hour 4 – “No Easy Walk” (1961-63) — Albany, Ga; March on Wash.; Birmingham
Hour 5 – “Mississippi: Is This America? (1962-64) — Medgar Evers and Miss. Freed. Summer
Hour 6 – “Bridge to Freedom” ( 1965) – Selma March
**Important – PBS is waiting to see the audience response to the first series before it commits to air the 2nd EYES series (8 hours). Though the first series is really inspirational, it is the 2nd series that is most relevant to the issues we’re dealing with today: the war; growing gap between rich and poor, etc. (It’s in the 2nd series that you see footage of the Dr. King speech in which he calls for “a radical redistribution of economic power.”) It’s also in the 2nd series that you get the murder of Black Panthers Fred Hampton and Mark Clark in Chicago, the establishment of COINTELPRO, and the Attica Rebellion.
So, it would be great if folks would call their PBS station and let them know you: a) appreciate seeing the first series again and b) hope they’ll also air the second series.
Both the first AND second series will be available on VHS and DVD through PBS Video — but ONLY as institutional sales — no home video.Â
Thanks!
– judy
……..is really bugging me. Yet I do it anyway.
There is NO ONE ON EARTH more media-centric than me 🙂 , but c’mon……..
A whole episode of “Charlie Rose” about ex-President Bill Clinton’s “FOX News Sunday” interview?
Wall-to-wall cable coverage of The Washington Post‘s Bob Woodward coming out with a book explaining the inside story of what we knew all along?
THIS IS NEWS?????
Powerful white men go on white Tee Vee shows and discuss (read: promote) books written by other powerful white men about the actions of a third group of powerful white men (and how Condi and Colin help that third group). Meanwhile, aren’t there people still dying in Darfur right now?
Oh, sorry. Election year. Never mind.
But I’m sure I’m just jealous that we no longer have Black men who directly influence American public policy in ways that help the oppressed and scare the oppressor. I mean, we all know what happened to the last brother who did that successfully, don’t we? 😦
As a Black male would-be nonfiction author who still occasionally pretends to be a Washington, D.C.-area journalist, I also feel left out of this public-policy-book thang. (I was about to ask what happened to writing this kind of stuff for magazines, but I guess authors are tired of just making $15,000 from Esquire and Vanity Fair when they can now grab $150,000 in advance. Maybe it’s always been this way and I’m just now paying attention.) Did ALL of our top political correspondents take buyouts? Where are OUR books on the state of the nation and the world? Have any Black journalists ever met anybody in garages? LOL! 🙂
Heard about the Republican Party’s desperate, half-truth filled ad campaign for Black radio stations?
Listen for yourself.
One thing I can say for the Republicans: They really understand that the American political system is winner-take-all. They don’t want to educate anyone or make any new friends. They neither care about the enemies they make, nor how certain historians will record them. They just want 51 percent. And, as this ad shows, they’re willing to do ANYTHING—no matter how f*(%ed up!—to make that number.
(This is the point where I want to say, “And meanwhile, all Black political leaders do is have meetings on C-SPAN to sell themselves and their books,” but that’d be too self-hating, so I won’t say that. :) So, for the record: I didn’t say that. :) )
Their consistent negative integrity has my negative respect, albeit grudgingly.  🙂 Perhaps it’s wrong to respect your oppressors for the style they show when they put their boot on your back, but when your folks decide it’s okay to just be whipped in a nice home instead of being lynched and raped in a shack…… 🙂
Here’s a blurb from Entertainment Weekly about my filmmaker friends.
And the award for Most Unlikely Announcement the Week goes to Colin Firth (Love, Actually) and Livia Giuggioli-Firth. The married couple are producing In Prison My Whole Life, a feature documentary about a young white British man named William Francome with an unusual connection to controversial death-row inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal. ”He was born on the day that [Philadelphia police] officer Daniel Faulkner was shot,” explains Firth, ”[which is] the crime for which Mumia was condemned [to death]. Francome’s [American] mother, being something of an activist, made him aware of this all his life. Every birthday has marked the incarceration of this man on the other side of the world across this huge cultural distance. It’s connected him with something that would otherwise be very, very far away.”Â
Firth, who only learned of the Abu-Jamal case after his wife introduced him to Francome, is working with director Marc Evans (My Little Eye, Snow Cake) to follow Francome’s exploration of the case and its place in the development of African-American culture and political awareness over the last quarter-century. ”We’re not really taking a position of who is innocent or not of that crime,” says Firth (who is nonetheless firmly against the death penalty), ”but more the fact that Mumia himself has become such a catalyst for political passion on both sides of the argument.” Firth and Giuggioli-Firth plan to have the film completed in time to screen at next year’s Cannes Film Festival.
From Roland S. Martin.
ROLAND S. MARTIN: CBC Foundation Blows Another Great Opportunity
For the last four years I’ve traveled to Washington, D.C. to participate as a panelist or moderator of a workshop during the annual legislative conference put on by the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation.
An annual event for the last 36 years, the four-day confab brings together thousands of people, namely African Americans, to meet with the black members of Congress and discuss a wide variety of issues in the various “brain trusts” and seminars that are offered. Washington, D.C. hotels are packed, entertainers and celebrities blow through for a ton of receptions and parties, and attendees go back full of bubbly, food and lots of conversation.
And nothing ever really gets accomplished.
Oh, don’t get me wrong. I have a great time. Being able to converse on a panel dealing with marriage and money, as well as talking to nearly 200 young leaders, was wonderful. We shared great ideas and got a chance to dialogue, but does the conference ever produce any lasting change for Black America? Nope.
A lot of this isn’t the fault of the attendees. My position is that you always make the best of a situation and keep on moving. The problem? The repeated failure of leadership by the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation to fully understand what to do with the thousands of people who attend.
Between last year’s legislative conference and this year’s event, I didn’t receive one e-mail related to any public policy we discussed last year. The purpose of the caucus foundation is to “focus on education, public health, economic development and African globalism. CBCF is the premier organization that creates, identifies, analyzes and disseminates policy-oriented information critical to advancing African Americans and people of African descent towards equity in economics, health and education.”
So what’s up with the lack of communication? I have no clue who gets their e-mail blasts and public policy positions. You would think those who have attended past events would at least get regular updates on bills that relate to the overall mission of the group.
Then again, why should I expect to get an e-mail blast when the effort isn’t even made to drive the thousands of attendees to the U.S. Capitol to meet with their elected leaders? The way I see it, when you register, they should print on your nametag your U.S. House representative and the two U.S. senators where you hail from (be honest, a lot of us have no clue who represents us in Congress). That way, when you visited the Hill, you would meet with your rep first and then visit with others.
But the foundation must make this possible by setting aside one day to call on members of Congress. My suggestion? Make it Thursday. Members of Congress get out of town on Friday, so send folks to Capitol Hill on Thursday morning to drive home the agenda of Black America.
Other groups do it. The NAACP, Delta Sigma Theta and Alpha Kappa Alpha sororities do variations of this, so you would think that the foundation affiliated with the 43 black members of Congress would have this figured out.
Not.
And what about those great sessions? If you didn’t a chance to travel to D.C., at least make them all available as podcasts. It’s cheap and easy, and folks all over the world could benefit from the great information that is disseminated. Lastly, send the attendees home with a real agenda. This year’s theme was “Changing Course, Confronting Crises, Continuing the Legacy.” Fine. But when I got on the plane Sunday, I didn’t have a list of initiatives and talking points that reflect the agenda leading up to the next gathering. How can you speak of a “Black Agenda” but never present one?
This has often been the failure of many organizations — and not just those led by African Americans. We are the “meetingest” folks in the world, but what is accomplished out of these gatherings? Is there a collective agenda that is advanced, worked on and implemented?
I’ve shared my frustrations with multiple members of Congress, including Reps. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., and Mel Watt, D-N.C. (the outgoing and incoming chairs of the CBC) last year. What happened? Nothing. I’m not holding my breath expecting next year to be any different. And that’s a shame.
But at least the chocolate cake at Morton’s Steakhouse was good. That was about the only thing I savored the whole weekend.
Roland S. Martin is general manager/executive editor of The Chicago Defender, the nation’s largest Black daily newspaper. His columns are syndicated to newspapers nationwide by Creators Syndicate and his commentaries appear on the TV One Cable Network. And he can be heard daily from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. on Chicago’s WVON-AM/1690 or http://www.wvon.com/ . He is the founder of BlackAmericaToday.com. He is also a contributor to The Paradox of Loyalty: An African American Response to the War on Terrorism. He can be reached at rmartin@chicagodefender.com or roland@rolandsmartin.com .

Hmmm……
NOT surprised—neither by the news, nor how he chose to make the break.
I prided myself on reading EVERY McGruder interview that ever came my way. In virtually every one that went beyond than 200 words, I remember him complaining about how grueling it was to do the strip. (Here’s the most in-depth profile of McGruder I’ve yet seen.) To do a comic strip was my original ambition, so I both sympathize with him AND feel he was whining all the way to the bank.
I guess in the 21st century, everything is just a platform to another platform; every spot someone gets is just a temporary space to nap while preparing their next (upward, hopefully) hustle. Ed Gordon and Tavis Smiley use National Public Radio as a forum to keep their very public profiles while setting up their television vehicles. Hiphop Gen stars Queen Latifah and Ananda Lewis were among many that fell into cookie-cutter syndicated daytime Tee Vee talk shows that came and went, but at least their demos haven’t forgotten them, Heaven forbid. 🙂
Ultimately, McGruder—who wrote in the introduction of one of his “Boondocks” anthologies that he wanted to continue the strip because it kept a foot in The Man’s @ss—didn’t want to be Charles M. Schulz or Garry Trudeau. He had always wanted to leverage the characters and the concept into a Tee Vee deal, and he got a very successful one. So why kill yourself? I guess he thought.
And, to be real, for the most part, it’s not like he wasn’t phoning it in for the last couple of years.
If you are going to miss the strip, get this collection and you’ll be straight. It’s the best of the early ones—those made when his full attention was on the task, the ones that came before the Tee Vee show jumped off.
Speaking of the Tee Vee show, here’s the first-season episode that I rank as one of the best Black half-hours of Tee Vee ever.
As these characters become more and more multi-media, we’ll see some of the characters he created that had yet to make the strip. We’ll see, but, sadly, we’ll no longer read.
Ah, so refreshing….. 🙂 Just like that Hilltop editorial.
… When I was first asked to do an interview answering to VIBE‘s concern about reality shows and the mismanagement of female images in media, I straight out flatly refused. I’m neither arrogant, elitist, nor bitter, its just that the problems with the topic are beyond articles, sound bites, and special one off tele, broad, or even webcasts. It’s worthy of dissertation, educational curriculum, and books of new social science containing cultural analysis yet to be published and exposed. Quite frankly, I had my reservations until Danyel Smith took over the magazine (one which to me has had the tendency of coming off like a cultural coloring book). I wish the mag and VIXEN a testosterone-less good look and luck. And it’s the main reason agreeing to the issue here at hand.
With that said, the question of how blacks are treated in the world of reality television is answered simply in that reality TV is not reality at all. It’s shot, canned, edited, and processed Amerikkkan style like Mickey D fries, over 300 million served and told. The public should know that Flavor’s and other reality shows are shot five months beforehand within a ten day span, so how stupid is it when people wait week by week to find out something that at happened a half a year before? Pavlovic, eh? It’s no secret when we don’t control things, they can end up governing our existence. Black ownership in media is nil and none. Maybe there’s some negrownwership in the house, because corporations (usually a squad of white males) need them around to create and endorse ‘niggers’ – this avoids the race tag, I guess. Black media tries to justify parallel programming by saying they need numbers to stay in business. This is a root problem that quantifies black people in a rating system of eyeballs and ears rather than the old school issue of ‘quality’ and ‘feelin’ it.
But the scientific effects go beyond race as most Americans generally have a poor grip on geography and history (i.e. a shameful 18% of US citizens own passports, and many Americans we’re surprised so many black folk lived in New Orleans after watching the news drunken-ality of post Katrina). When one studies mass communication, you find that each situation broke a giant genie out of and busted the bottle with it. Martin Luther (not the king or the singer) with the printing press, Marconi with radio, and various events leading up to post World War Two invention of television. Television is considered the most powerful weapon/tool created to inflict influence. More powerful than a hundred trillion bibles, Korans, or Torahs in the minds of the masses. The power as far as black folk is concerned is like a snapshot of a gathering. If you were in that gathering and the snapshot was passed around, the first person you look for is yourself. This is the basic reason black folks flock and suck to the tube. Take science, drop it in some perceived culture, and you can have some millennium pied piper sht goin on.
Ok, before I lose you to whippings of ass distraction, which is the reality television credo; those powers that be move the M in ‘the masses’, and consider ‘them asses’ – just consumers. In a land where a village idiot reigns at the top, it’s no surprise that many citizens would be reduced to ‘vidiots’. Anti-lectualism and mass dumbassification puts big brother on blast, thus television across five hundred channels comes across as candied stress relief away from the rigors of reality. Thus reality gets created for mass consumption just like the black entertainment and athlete gods are created by the ‘godmakers’ that the public does not or doesn’t care to know.
When one examines the positioning of women and especially black women in the media, again it’s reduced to whatever sells. We’ve heard that sex sells for the longest time, but the past fifteen years corporations looking for numbers have perved their way into selling it to a severely underage demographic. Just check the nearest sixth-grader nearest you. Reality TV, music, hip hop and their adult themes have indirectly invited kids to the orgy.
This disturbance is Xeroxed, reflected, and re-emitted by hip hop in the treatment of women. If mass media has basically been a locker room that women have had to find a safe corner haven, then hip hop is that testosterone heavy, dude crib where the refrigerator’s empty, rugs filthy garbage overflowed, unkept nasty bathroom for all to trip over the debris. Videos have captured the eyeballs for years, and now if they can roll ten to fifteen hot chicks per rapper/singer, marketing teams ( I’m so sick of that wack term marketing 2006 = pimpin) can keep making ugly the new cute…WTF!? This process has been followed by television programming. To hell with an idea and script for the lowest denomination.
But Viacom and reality shows are inseparable, the real world jumped it off in the early 90’s. What’s more disturbed is that Christina Norman of MTV Networks, Debra L. Lee of BET, and Cathy Hughes of Radio One are all black women, and presidents of the most powerful portals of culture, image – portrayals that tens of millions of black folk visit daily, and at the same time black women’s images have never been so low. (a shameless plug here is all-female rap group Crew Grrl Order debut on my SLAMjamz.com label, it’ll be interesting to see the support of these womens’ recordings by these mega conglomerates come this October 2006) Then again when Biggie told the crowd to rub your privates if you love hip hop, and smart cats in fear of being called ‘out’ just did it cause Simon said it, what do you expect ten years later?
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This brings me to Flav’s scenario. Yes, there is a problem, but he’s been generally the same cat I pulled up from his humble beginnings twenty-five years ago. Flav has always existed with a somewhat conscious surrounding, and Public Enemy was a varied, diversified collection of personalities, just as our neighborhood depicted. And we reflected that black men we’re still grouped in one boxed Amerikkan cookie cutter category, whether lawyer, clown, militant, athlete, mechanic, drug dealer, drug addict, soldier, academic cat, thug etc. At the crest of R&B (Reagan and Bush) black life was considered valueless in Amerikka. Flav was Skittles and Starburst to Professor Griff’s okra and beets, and everything else we did was in between. Somehow along the way black life and culture was deemed profitable, and the big great white male took interest and fought over the seven seas of soul. Niggativity, which was a minority element in the hood, had its DNA corporately extracted and created the climate for a ‘Flavor Of Love’ and others. It’s called diminishing returns. I’m glad Flav is busy, really not surprised at all ( been traveling and living with dude all over the earth 20 years people, 56 countries, 54 tours….hello, why would I be surprised?) But it’s a double wince at times when the stats say that it’s a well-watched program by the masses of blackfolk and the topic the next day amongst blackfolk at school and work. Grown people, mind you.
Personally I thought Flavor was the smartest cat in the room on ‘Surreal Life,’ and showed the heart he had in ‘Strange Love’ (although I interjected when I heard a conflict was shot between he and his ex, and I threatened VH-1 and the production company if they aired it, we’d have problems…they were calling the conflict ‘good TV’…… sht) When Flav told me he was doing a Flavor version of ‘ The Bachelor,’ I just laughed and wished him luck. Flavor Flav is addicted to fame; he ain’t never changed. When he has had run ins with the law and some substance cases, it’s been when his fame was on the low. In that position I know this magazine and other cultural mags, shows, blogs, etc., would cover the worst news unfit to print to get black folk’s knee-jerk consumer response at the register. After continued run ins and possible boredom in the Bronx, Hank Shocklee and I suggested he head to California. Hollywood—the place where every time I visit and leave there I have to take IQ rehab. You must understand twenty years ago, myself and Hank formed a noisy rap vehicle in words and sonic assault. PE was to destroy music as we knew it, because it was elitist from a position of black complacency. We knew individuals, in the form of Negroes and niggers marionetted in black guise, for the sake of getting rich for self and never thinking, were running abundant under those blonde suits. At least we knew Flav would be the loudest in whatever room, restaurant he was in. In a twisted way, perhaps he was an asteroid smash landed to possibly change the terrain of imagery, and wake some people up.
The truth is that our image was forsaken in the 90’s when drawing the line was blurred, set back or didn’t matter as much. Black folk started calling athletes and entertainers ‘heroes and legends’ instead of everyday people doing real and important things. Class clowns and thugs were co signed and socially applauded and rewarded by lazier working images and shielded by money. While teachers, and valedictorians were being clowned, thus silencing the smartest kids in the room.
Corporations millennium-marketing big picture says Black people are not asked, we are told, and black women are simply just ordered, whether it’s a demand or as virtual plate-side condiments.
We’ve gone from being laughed with to laughed at. Contrary to popular belief things ain’t gotta be hip hop or have streetcred to cut across to us, but somebody better reverse this momentum that Amerikkan whitefolks believe, or forever culture here will be petri dished in a boardroom.
Ultimately this is a wake up call to prevent the ‘falling off of black America.’ It has little to do with how much money one has, when black folks stop praising and weighing cultural and social success to things and individuals just because money is made, then some of the climate will reverse itself. When culture and news props up those with degrees and key community profile instead of putting celebrity baby-mama issues on the front blast page and reflects cats who work everyday for our people with no gloss, floss and glory then the climate will reverse. Perhaps Flavor is an introduction to black folks killing off the nigger in ourselves.
This just in….the rest of PE continues to do and contribute socially nationally and abroad, we’re balanced as a structure and expect no coverage or publicity campaign costing 6k a month. But I don’t do reality TV and won’t bend for it. Amongst many things I’ve been on the Air America Radio network the past three years with a black woman co-host, Gia’na Garel, boosting social-cultural-political opinions nationally and abroad. We expect a minority of listeners, but also I realize the glaring fact that if I’d merely robbed a gas station I wouldn’t need a publicist, I’d be put on blast on every black media outlet possible and every black person beyond reading this would easily apply my name to the negative, like what Eddie Johnson just went through.
So I would like this to be read, and thoroughly comprehended. If not and it’s fulla sht and too deep, then there you have it. I’m glad you’ve made it this far. Don’t expect some reality show nearest you. I’m not for sale and quick to telling people ‘nunya gd damn bizness…’
Gone….
“I cannot teach you, I can only help you explore yourself.†–Bruce Lee
Chuck D
On The Real radioshow w Giana Garel Airamericaradio.com
sunday nights 11p-1est.
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