
Probably the only time I ever agreed with Stanley Crouch. 🙂  His view is now more mainstream among Black thinkers.

Probably the only time I ever agreed with Stanley Crouch. 🙂  His view is now more mainstream among Black thinkers.
The key moment here is at the very end, when Mike is on the run from folks trying to capture him—detain him, constrain him, define him. The smile on his face as he infuriates King Eddie is more than just Bugs Bunnyish cleverness; it’s bliss. (He’s completely in his element here, a combo of Eshu, the Yoruba Trickster God and the mysterious magician from/for the [African] world.) He tries to run away. Seemingly trapped, he then turns into sand, confounding his opponents. The moment works because since it’s Michael Jackson, you think he actually did that. Fifty years of morphing into any shape, every shape. A half-century of re-defining American and world entertainment. Michael showed us that magic wasn’t just possible in fantasy, but actually present, in the world, in us. He continued to produce it, on his own terms, and allowed us to bear witness so we could tell the tale of a man who spent an entire life transforming pain into pleasure.
What a GREAT way to show the problems in Darfur!
Wow! Glad for him that worked. 🙂
This post shouldn’t make me feel good about being a nerd/dork, but it does anyway! LOL! 🙂

…..The Legion of Superheroes to show up on “Smallville” early next year… Exactly one month from today, in fact.  🙂

DECEMBER 22ND UPDATE: Loved this new trailer! 🙂

Although I will never be a fan of Reginald Hudlin’s first arc (see my comments at the bottom of this link), I admit this trailer (check the interview below it)—a word-for-word, scene-for-scene adaptation of that story’s first few pages—had me quite excited.
He’s greatly improved (I really liked BP 38), but to be honest, I’ve always thought that Hudlin’s Panther work would make better movies and television than comics. But I think it’s more about me being too old to read modern Marvel Comics. Judging by the first issue, the writer who replaced Hudlin for the current arc made the BET exec seem literary in comparison. 🙂

Masterpiece.
P.S. I’m off to see it tomorrow for the THIRD time, but I’ll see it again with anyone who wants to see it.
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…..so I’ll leave it to the audience as to whether this episode of “Click & Clack’s As The Wrench Turns,” the new “Car Talk” animated series I saw over the weekend, is borderline racist. I know that if I was from India I’d be getting tired of this kind of thing. And what’s up with every person of color in the garage sounding like they escaped from 1970s network sitcoms?