…….and I can’t really think of him as gone. Just transformed.
Category Archives: music
Asante Sana, Lena Horne
I hope you find peace in the Realm of the Ancestors. You sure worked hard enough for it.
I’m glad that your commitment to what Negro newspapers used to call “the race” has not been forgotten. I’ll never forget how shocked I was to see your Op-Eds in The People’s Voice on the same page as Paul Robeson and W.E.B. Du Bois!
Asante Sana, Dorothy Height and Guru
Happy 75th, Amiri Baraka!
Chris Brown Targeted!
And I couldn’t be happier! Wow, he did all three (!) male characters! He’s SO getting a deal! LOL! 🙂
The Young Lords Turns 40
Had To Be There
And we all were. What a tribute by the Queen La, and a fantastic poem by Maya Angelou.
(The Return Of) Blue-Collar Journalists

I’m not ashamed to admit that, as a kid in the mid-80s, I wanted to be Rick Redfern when I grew up. I still do. But in 2008, of course, he got laid off and had to re-invent himself as a blogger.
Meanwhile, Barbara Ehrenreich told the truth to today’s J-grads. The profession was always considered a trade, anyway. It was elevated into a profession sans license thanks to Woodward, Bernstein and the springing up of local and national television and radio newscasts. Now the vocation has become a real public utility (as in, members of the public, at best, being useful to each other), separated from “job” and “career,” and the old world ain’t coming back.
Black press veterans worked like this from the beginning. I was whining a few years back once to my friend and mentor Judy Dothard Simmons (now an ancestor) about how limited the (paid) Black (national newspaper and magazine) journalistic opportunities were (for me), and, as usual, she corrected me to the quick: “When you came along [late 1980s-early 1990s], working for a national Black(ish) magazine became a full-time job,” explaining to me how new that was. (1990-ish Newsstand Freelancer Roll Call: Black Enterprise, Vibe, The Source, Honey, Shade, Blaze, Black Elegance, The Crisis, Rappages, Emerge, Class, YSB [Young Sisters and Brothers], Heart and Soul, Code, Black Issues Book Review, Upscale, and on and on.) And now, as I see, like Simmons (and, eventually, all of us) how very temporary all of it is.
A Dignified Goodbye
Very dignified. Almost too reserved, frankly. (My mom disagreed; she thought it was an example of perfect pitch.) The comments from Berry Gordy and the Rev. Al Sharpton set the proper context. And Brooke Shields and Usher…..wow, I hope they’re being comforted. Missed Mariah Carey and Trey Lorenz’s opener, but I’m sure she nailed it. As Marlon, one of his brothers, said, “Maybe now, Michael, they will leave you alone.”
The wait by the mailbox for Rolling Stone now begins……..Vibe could have redeemed itself here, had it not died with him….. *SIGH* 😦
[JULY 10th UPDATE: And I found these two radio programs essential.]
And Now We Are Three
And to think, next year, for this blog’s next birthday, I can use “The Four-Legged Zoo!” LOL! Well, one at a time….. 🙂
And thanks, as always, to Saswat.






