What I Said In Full To The Grio

The Grio interviewed me about this petition. So I squeezed my entire doctoral dissertation into six paragraphs. 🙂

Here’s what I sent it:

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I am deeply disturbed by this turn of events in New York City. Black radio—particularly when 1190 WLIB-AM had a Black news/talk format in the 1980s, and you could listen to “Nighttalk with Bob Law,” the show created by National Black Network and originating on 1600 WWRL-AM—was a powerful force in the lives of many New Yorkers. Both played an extraordinary role in my political and cultural socialization.

I am a native of Newark, N.J., so most of us grew up on New York City media. When I listened, WLIB was exactly what some Black journalists called it: “The Afrocentric University of the Airwaves.” I was introduced to the concept of Afrocentricity because of WLIB and “Nighttalk.” WLIB taught me about some older men named “Dr. Clarke” and “Dr. Ben,”  and I listened intently to what they had to say about world history. New York’s Black radio identified for me who was out in the street fighting for Black people, and why they were doing it. And who their enemies were. And why, by extension, I now had to consider their enemies my enemies. A Communication major at Seton Hall University, I started cutting class and staying home in the mid- to late-1980s to listen to what the activists, historians and others had to explain about the condition of Black people, and the responsibility of all Black people—particularly those in media—to struggle for Black self-determination and self-definition.

WLIB and “Nighttalk” were living, crackling, commercial-filled, radical street-level HBCUs. They took the historic legacy of Black radio and furthered it. Even KISS, owned by white corporate types, had a brother named Bob Slade who understood this tradition and represented community concerns. I understand he’s now on WBLS, but what will happen if there’s no more WBLS?

Today, KISS is gone, Gil Noble and “Like It Is” are starting to become fading memories, and WLIB is gospel. “Nighttalk” is gone and Bob Law is a restaurateur. Gary Byrd is holding on to his career for dear life.

So losing WLIB and WBLS? New York’s historic Black Liberation Stations? If that happens, it will be a major setback for Black political socialization and community development. New York has always been a leader in Black activism because its radical and progressive traditions—Garvey, Adam, Malcolm, streetcorner speakers, rallies/protests etc.—transferred successfully to radio and television, giving a political and cultural education to multiple generations at the same time. I’m 44, and I remember when New York local television had FIVE local and national Black public affairs shows on weekends. (“Like It Is” (WABC) “The McCreary Report” (WNEW/WNYW) “Tony Brown’s Journal” (WNET/PBS) “Essence: The Television Program” (SYNDICATED, BUT AIRED ON, MADE AT AND BY WNBC) and “Positively Black” (WNBC). Black people in New York were organized in the  late 1960s and early 1970s because they had forums they trusted that told them what was going on. They continued to count on Black radio in the 1980s, 1990s and even the 2000s to educate them politically and culturally, and to organize them.

Regardless of media consolidation, whites have the entire political and social spectrum on their radio dial—from Pacifica to Rush, with NPR and all-news radio in the middle. Historically, a Black radio station had to fulfill all of the functions Black people needed—educator, motivator, activist, spiritual uplifter. What we have now—a (mostly white) corporate abandonment of those ideas—is bad enough. But not to have it at all in the nation’s biggest, most powerful, and politically and culturally Blackest market will show how Black communities once again have been given symbolism instead of substance in the Obama era.

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Congrats To……….

………Hazel Trice Edney, who has been elected president of the Capital Press Club. It has a great history.

Her old newspaper, The Richmond Free Press, wrote thusly in its June 7-June 9 edition:

Hazel Trice Edney, a former Richmond Free Press reporter, has donned a fresh journalism hat.

Ms. Edney, who now owns and operates a Washington-based wire service and teaches journalism classes at Howard University, is the new president of the Capital Press Club, the nation’s oldest Black journalism association.

The Louisa County native and Harvard University graduate was elected May 1 to lead the 300-member group for four years.

The club was founded in 1944 when Black and female reporters were barred from the National Press CLub and other white-controlled journalism organizations.

She is currently president and CEO of Trice Edney Communications and editor-in-chief of the Trice Edney News Wire, which she launched in November 2010.

Also a graduate of Virginia Commonwealth University, Ms. Edney began her reporting career with the now-defunct Richmond Afro-American. She was the first member of The Free Press news staff and mainly covered City Hall and the State Capitol after the paper began publication in 1992.

She left Richmond in 1998 aftger receiving a fellowship to Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, where she earned a master’s degree.

Her career sicne has included stints as a legislative aide to now-deceased U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and as editor-in-chief of the news service of the National Newspaper Publishers Association.

Among her journalism honors, she was inducted into the Virginia Communications Hall of Fame in 2009 and last year received the New America Media Career Achievement Award.

Yep, Used-To-Be-Luke-Skywalker, :) I Agree……….

….the next “Avengers” movie better have the Black Panther in it! I mean, he is all over the cartoon, as seen below. Note the obvious differences between these two Marvel productions. 🙂 Glad to find out BET finally aired this six-part miniseries last November. It had been slow-rolling on this for quite a while.  The below airs around the world and in America on Disney XD.

Asante Sana, Hal Jackson…..

…..for being there from the beginning. And leaving a huge legacy. 

Another Black broadcasting legend in the Realm of the Ancestors. Sad, but understandable, since it’s hard to be considered an American mass media pioneer without starting your career sometime between 1930 and 1970. And as we keep seeing in the celebrity obits, the 1970s are now 40 years ago.

A sad irony: the young sister interviewed here, Michelle Thomas—known in “the industry” as Urkel’s girlfriend on “Family Matters” and Malcolm Jamal-Warner’s one-time girlfriend—is also an Ancestor. More irony: the oldest of the three lived the longest.

"Harvest of Empire," The Documentary

Just got back from the screening of this film (from this book) at Brookings less than two hours ago. It was great to see Joe Torres and the AP’s Suzanne Gamboa (the post-film panel moderator) again, and equally great to see the legendary Juan Gonzalez in the flesh. (Of course, I’ve raved about Gonzalez’ and Torres’ epic here and here.)

It was a solid film.  It told the story of the immigration of Latinos from the historical perspective of (the abuses of) American foreign policy. The same racial-conflict-covered-in-red-white-and-blue tone reminded me of the first set of “Eyes On The Prize.”

Because I hadn’t been paying attention, I didn’t know that if the Supreme Court decides to uphold the worst parts of Arizona’s iillegal mmigration crackdown, 14 states may follow up with their own laws. Juan Crow, as somebody said tonight.