I Miss Being That Optimistic……

……..but the more and more I read our history in 2006, the more and more I understand that the present in which we are living is extraordinarily different, on many levels, from our collective past, if you start that particular clock with Reconstruction and break it in the aftershock of the tragedy at the Lorraine Hotel. The many changes of our current world make the possibility a Movement—as we have known the term—well, highly improbable.

I know—I’m Master Of The Obvious. 🙂 Anyway, check this out.

By the way, I attended the first one, and wrote a little sump’in that I thought needed to be said at the time.

The *NEW* Syndicated BET: The "E" Stands For "Enterprise"

So Black Enterprise finally has made the leap into Tee Vee. (I’m sure someone at Essence with a long memory is going, “So what? We had a nationally syndicated show years ago.”) ‘Member it? Nope? Okay, moving on, then…….. 🙂

Buying “America’s Black Forum” and re-shaping it can only been seen as a good thing. The program’s only claim to fame in its years on broadcast life-support was that it was a national mainstream platform for Armstrong Williams and Niger Innis to parry their conservative views with crusading—and graying—Black liberals Julian Bond and Deborah Mathis. *YAWN*. It’ll be interesting to see if Ed Gordon and Co. will create something that will have a purpose beyond being an early-morning FCC requirement.

Peter's Farewell Deals With Blacks And AIDS

Damn, I miss Peter Jennings. He helmed what was then the only (relatively-free) bullshit-free newscast. I still watch what’s now called “World News With Charles Gibson” still out of loyalty. We’ll see how long this loyalty lasts when I get the option of checking out kick-ass Katie (sans those extraordinary legs :)) on CBS at the same Bat-time.

Peter’s last project, which ABC finished up for him, is a prime-time “special” (the dreaded “D” word was banished from network news divisions a LONG TIME AGO) on African-Americans and AIDS. It’s scheduled to air on Thursday at 10 p.m. Those of us who constantly complain about how the white boys of the internationally-known alphabet either don’t cover our issues, or mis-cover them when they do, should be by their Tee Vees or Tee-Vos.

NPR's "News And Notes" And The White Ghost

When “Eyes On The Prize” returns this fall to public television, check for the episode of “Eyes II” that starts with Amiri Baraka rapping about how Black people try to be Black, but they are prevented from doing so because there’s a white ghost on their shoulder or right behind them, warning that Black person of the consequences of the freedom to be oneself.

The current problems with National Public Radio’s “News And Notes” remind me of Baraka’s statement. The show is slowly fading, and host Ed Gordon may bolt.

I LOVE NPR’s “News and Notes with Ed Gordon” because it’s the only national Black news show that exists right now. On paper, it was a perfect match—NPR’s Mickey D-deep resources used to create a national Black perspective on the news. But here’s the problem: It’s a Black show produced by Black people on a white network funded personally and institutionally by liberal-to-moderate white people. So how do you pull off a Black “All Things Considered” for an audience who may not want it? (Whether Black America wants news or not is another story.) How to do a weekday Black newsmagazine on white terms for white people and a few HBCU stations? It may not be possible, but as a devotee of both Black radio AND NPR, I will continue to wish for it anyway. We’ll see what my Pen Pal, Michel Martin, comes up with when her NPR show premieres later this year or early next year.

My unsolicited suggestion to the white folks at NPR: If you keep “News And Notes,” loosen it up. Let the producers color outside the hegemonic lines; surprise me with something I haven’t heard before–or put a NEW spin on something I have heard before. Keep the roundtable, but wrap around it more poetry, music, commentaries and documentaries. (Everyone chant with me, now: “More ‘Soundprint,’ Less ‘ Morning Edition!'”) And for gosh sakes, let the staff produce content that OFFENDS SOMEBODY, whydon’tcha? 🙂 The very vanilla “On The Media,” another of my favorite NPR shows, seems to do whatever it wants to do every weekend. Its hosts are not afraid to challenge either its interviewees or its own assumptions. It gives itself the freedom—there’s that idea again!—to be silly. So please give me a reason to listen to “News And Notes” other than to prove my racial loyalty. Exorcise the white ghost.