Tag Archives: African-American

The Thing About Fitzgerald Grant and Black Women

After resisting insurmountable peer pressure, I gave in.

I just ordered Season One of the wildly popular television series, Scandal.

My friend Jenn, arguably one of the show’s most enthusiastic fans, tipped me over the edge by not only sharing the Diahann Carroll (I adore Diahann Carroll)/Kerry Washington connection, (click here), but also by providing insight as to why a great number of my Facebook sisters are posting and watching Thursday evenings – 10p est (click here.)

I can’t say much more about Scandal…yet, but Diahann Carroll’s career represents another little know Black history fact.
A legend.
Tony and Golden Globe Winner.
Emmy, Oscar and Grammy Awards Nominee.
In 1968, she became the first Black actress to star in her own television series, Julia.

 

The most despicable black motherf#%ker in the history of the world

I took my dad to see Django Unchained.

As is the case with the majority of Tarantino’s work, I expected to be inundated with foul language and depictions of graphic violence.

However, I was in no way prepared to be blown away…by a single performance.

Samuel L. Jackson’s performance, as head house slave, “Stephen” (not Jamie Foxx, not Leonardo DiCaprio) is worth the price of admission.

Before “Stephen” opens his mouth, Jackson’s facial expressions and body language express an unctuousness that left an emotional wound on everyone in the audience.

This is the stuff that should garner nominations and awards.

My dad and I represent two generations of Black men.
We agreed that the character was offensive, but we also question why Jackson received so little recognition for such an outstanding performance.

Perhaps Frank Rich is correct in his assessment that Jackson’s performance was “so repellent and so politically incorrect” that it frightened people.

“Tarantino has cited a pulpy Hollywood movie of 1975, Mandingo, as a favorite. That film, which improbably cast an aged James Mason as a sadistic plantation owner, was widely dismissed as a racist exploitation movie at the time of its release. Looking at it now, you can see what captivated Tarantino: For all its camp dialogue, racial stereotypes (white and black), and soft-core miscegenation porn, it actually showed the rape and genocide that were usually bowdlerized or kept offscreen by mainstream American movies depicting slavery up until then. (The phenomenally popular ABC mini-series Roots, which in watered-down network fashion tried to remedy that failing, didn’t appear until 1977.) In Django Unchained, some of the most savage incidents in Mandingo are ratcheted up to an excruciating pitch, which may be what it takes to discomfort a contemporary film audience inured to violence. The scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. believes that one scene, which literally puts the blood back into bloodhounds, is among the most “devastatingly effective” to be found “in any representation of the horrors of slavery.” That scene is unwatchable, which is the point.
And the bad guys of Django aren’t only whites. Candie’s head house slave, a demonic Uncle Tom, has been accurately described by Samuel L. Jackson, the actor who plays him, as “the most despicable black motherfucker in the history of the world.” He is so politically incorrect and so repellent that Jackson seems to have frightened away ­Oscar and Golden Globe voters alike from giving his profusely shaded characterization of abject villainy, an Iago refracted through centuries of African-American history, the recognition it deserves. There’s nothing like it in American movies.
To what point does Tarantino rub our noses in this hideous ancient history, you might ask? Slavery is long gone in America, and so are Stepin Fetchit, Jim Crow, and the heyday of the Ku Klux Klan (which makes a cameo prewar appearance in Django even though it didn’t emerge until Reconstruction). We have elected a black president, after all. African-American history is now a staple in every (well, almost every) school. Tarantino gave his own answer recently. “Doing history with a capital H keeps the movie at an arm’s distance, puts it under glass a little,” he said. “The whole idea of doing a movie like this was to take a rock and throw it through the glass.” By using every imaginative strategy he can, he aspires to jolt us into looking with fresh eyes at a past we assume we know. He departs wildly from the facts to make an audience face the harshest truths. It’s gutsy, and arguably arrogant, for a white man to attempt this, and I feel strongly that Tarantino pulled it off. As Lincoln portrays the politics we wish we had, so Django forces you to think about the unfinished business that keeps us from getting there just yet.”

To read Rich’s full article, click here
His analysis is a powerful Black History statement.

The industry knows quite precisely what they are doing

Caloric content and childhood obesity are only a part of the problem facing the African-American community.

A new study from the Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health points to a threat that is greater than fast-food.

Are You Registered??

I was having dinner not too long ago with a co-worker.

After a few glasses of wine, he said that, despite the fact that he had been eligible to vote for twenty four years, he has never registered or participated in the process.

Without my saying anything, it was clear that this revelation was, for my co-worker, a point of frustration and consternation.

This is a man who is viewed as a leader…a leader in his profession, in his community and to his family.

As we talked further, it became clear that he was ashamed.

My best counsel was to tell him that what happened in the past is history.

He could change the course of the future with one simple action.

Register to vote.

Attorney General Eric Holder recently addressed a group of African-American clergy.

His message was concise and simple, ’60s voting-rights gains are at risk.


The attached article includes the primary points that he made, but the point that hit me the hardest was that an estimated 25% of African-Americans do not possess the proper documentation to meet ID requirements in some states.

That statistic is alarming. But the right to vote is more than a racial issue.

The vulnerable and ‘at risk’ include the elderly and those who live in urban environments and don’t have a driver’s license.

An article from the May, 2012 AARP Bulletin illustrates the gravity of the situation:

We are holding an election in spite of ourselves.
The League of Women Voters has shut down its voter registration efforts in Florida, and Souls to the Polls, a fleet of buses that has transported Floridians from churches to polling places since 2004, is grounded.
That is because 12 years after its hanging-chad fiasco, Florida has decided to tighten voter access and threaten, with stiff fines and possible jail, groups that help register voters.

This is how we preserve and promote the world’s greatest democracy??

If, like my co-worker, you are not registered to vote, do something about it.

Today.

Exercise Your Right to Vote.

If you aren’t clear how to, click this link.

It is that simple and that important.

Bringing Up The Rear

I heard the muted giggles and snickering before the object of the public ridicule caught my attention.

Call me ‘old fashioned,’ “not hip” and, perhaps, “out of touch,” but there is something very wrong and not cute about inappropriate clothing behavior…especially among Black people.

Some might raise the bar and suggest that it is unacceptable, (or acceptable?) regardless of race.

That is neither my argument or the point I am making.

As Black people, we have a shared responsibility to lift one another up and encourage each other to always put the best foot forward or at least make the effort.

What one wears in the comfort of their home is an entirely separate matter.

Once outside, parts of the anatomy that are typically covered need to stay that way.

If you have a 36″ waist, those 32″ jeans are no longer appropriate because, simply put, they don’t fit.

While low hanging jeans project a fashion forward image when worn by an artist or a pro-“baller,” if you are neither, pull your pants up and put a belt on it.

First impressions count.

They matter.

This I know is to be true…especially as we all struggle for equality and the right to be treated with respect and dignity.

The next time you see someone that you love, care about and/or have a vested interest in – all young people – pay it forward.

Tell them the difference between self-expression and self-respect.

Tell them to put a belt on it, to cover up and tell them that you are doing it because you love them.