• she doesn't just focus on black bloggers • she doesn't make the story about bloggers of color struggling for a seat at the table of "white bloggers" as so many other stories do • i think she captured a good part of the nature of blogging as a conversation and follows that conversation into posts, comments and the airwaves of mainstream media, showing blogger influence well beyond the blog itself
While I think all of us bloggers can, at times, get an inflated sense of importance thinking we are the revolution, there is no doubt that we're an important part of it. Keep on keepin on.Viewing entries in
Pop Culture
The Souls of Black Girls is a provocative news documentary that takes a critical look at media images--how they are instituted, established and controlled. The documentary also examines the relationship between the historical and existing media images of women of color and raises the question of whether they may be suffering from a self-image disorder as a result of trying to attain the standards of beauty that are celebrated in media images.
The documentary features candid interviews with young women discussing their self-image and social commentary from Actresses Regina King and Jada Pinkett Smith, PBS Washington Week Moderator Gwen Ifill, Rapper/Political Activist Chuck D, and Cultural Critic Michaela Angela Davis, among others. The Souls of Black Girls is a piece that attempts to provoke honest dialogue and critical thinking among women of color about media images and our present condition—internally and externally.
Saturday
New York - October, 20 2007 - 3:45P
Harlem International Film Festival (Schomburg Center)
515 Malcolm X Blvd (Corner of 135th Street)
Harlem , New York|33 10037
Los Angeles - October, 20 2007 - 6:00P
African American Film Marketplace and the S.E. Manly Short Film Showcase
5300 Melrose Ave
Hollywood , CA
Cost: 10.00
Sunday
October, 21 2007 - 3:30P
African American Film Marketplace and the S.E. Manly Short Film Showcase
5300 Melrose Ave
Hollywood , CA
A new front on the content wars may be opening when Congress holds its first hearing specifically into media "stereotypes and degradation" of women -- particularly African- American women -- later this month.
Hearing, not yet officially announced and tentatively skedded for Sept. 25, will focus primarily on hip-hop lyrics and videos, which critics have frequently derided for explicit misogyny aimed largely at black women.
But other media will likely come under scrutiny, too.
"I want to engage not just the music industry but the entertainment industry at large to be part of a solution," said Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Ill.), chairman of the House Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection, which will hold the hearing.
Just as his colleagues on other committees have summoned TV execs to be grilled on sexual or violent content, Rush wants to hear from the leaders of companies purveying rap music. The intent is to examine commercial practices behind the music's most controversial content.
According to the subcommittee website, the hearings will consist of three panels with a variety of witnesses. Panel 1 (the c-walkers) Phillipe P. Dauman, President & CEO, Viacom Edgar Bronfman, Jr., Chairman & CEO, Warner Music Group Doug Morris, Chairman & CEO, Universal Music Group Alfred C. Liggins III, President & CEO, Radio One Strauss Zelnick, Chairman of the Board, Take-Two Interactive Software (creators of the Grand Theft Auto game franchise) Panel 2 (the artists) Percy Miller, aka Master P Levell Crump, aka David Banner Panel 3 (the akademiks) I provide links to their bios or books, etc. Tracy Sharpley-Whiting, PhD @ Vanderbilt Andrew Rojecki, Phd @ Univ of Illinois Chicago Faye WIlliams, PhD & Chair Nat'l Congress of Black Women Lisa Fager Bediako, President of Industry Ears Karen Dill, PhD @ Lenoi-Rhyne College This should be very interesting. I won't be able to tune in, but I hope someone can report back on some highlights. Congress has a habit of dragging content executives to the Hill when there is a public outcry of inappropriate images, especially where children are the intended audience. Criticisms of the media as a "vast wasteland" date back nearly to the medium's beginning in former FCC Chairman Newton Minow's famous 1961 speech. As an artist and "content creator" myself, I don't relish the idea of legislation dictating what I can and cannot say, but I'm interested in what this hearing will bring out. The title suggests they will do more than drag a few artists and execs up in order to rub their noses in filthy content. Being about the business of stereotypes, we could see some interesting data on the affects of images and sound on the audience and the profits behind such. I was in high school when I first saw C. Delores Tucker protesting "gangster rap," and she honestly irked me to no end. When I saw her, she was rude, mean and didn't seem to want to listen. I can't say that's how she is, but that was my impression and I wanted none of it. Let folks play what they will, I thought. But the marketplace of images isn't so fairly balanced as to let just the "market" decide, and saying that violent images don't affect people is plain wrong. As a friend of mine put it so well once, "there's a multibillion dollar industry predicated on the idea that images and sound make people do sh*t. It's called advertising."- the unavoidably racist appearance of a bunch of black people on a website, essentially branded with the techie version of the phrase "owned"
- the perverse Robin Hood-ish justice that a poor African nation is redistributing a tiny piece of global wealth with scams like these
- my admiration for the scam-baiters who tie the hands of scammers and keep them from hurting generous, if naive, people
- and more ish
It is just too ironic that BET is being taken to task by the likes of CNN over THIS video.
And the host, Tony Harris, needs to check himself. Brotha's been watching Bill O'Reilly too much. In the real world, the right people are probably getting the message of "Read a Book," but I can't help but be frustrated at the massive distraction that shows like this CNN farce are to the real work that needs to be done which is to reclaim the images and messages of our people from those who have sold us self-destruction in the name of profits.
Part 1 of 2
Part 2 of 2
Technorati Tags: BET, hip hop, CNN, rap, read a book, satire
Read a book! Read a book! Read a muh'fuckin book! Not a sports page (what) not a magazine (who) But a book nigga, a fuckin book nigga (YEAHHH~!) Raise yo' kids, raise yo' kids, raise yo' God damn kids Your body needs water - so DRINK THAT SHIT Buy some land, buy some land (what) FUCK SPINNIN RIMS Brush yo' teeth, brush yo' teeth, brush yo' God damn teeth Wear deodorant nigga, wear deodorant nigga It's called Speed Stick (bitch) it's not expensive (bitch) Read a book! Read a book! Read a muh'fuckin book!Yes there is explicit language and lotsa booty shakin in the video, but satirists must use the tools and techniques employed by the subject of their satire. Sure we could listen to another angry lecture from Bill Cosby, or we could hear, in these 10 short lines to a catchy beat, Bomani challenge rap artists and the consuming public to use our resources in a more reasonable fashion. Seriously? "Buy some land?" When is the last time you heard a black leader talk about the importance of real wealth accumulation? How many preachers are advising their flock to do more than contribute to his Cadillac fund? (I know I'm generalizing but I'm just sayin). I get the message in the video, and I know my friends do as well, but poor Reverend Jackson and the folks over at Rainbow PUSH are unsurprisingly out of touch. Rather than praising the video for its effort to challenge the pop cultural images that are literally killing black America by supporting unhealthy eating, unsustainable consumption and a threatening image that tightens the trigger finger on an already gun-happy, black-bashing law enforcement community, Jackson & Co went out of their way to condemn the video. You've got to read it to believe it.
CHICAGO and ATLANTA (August 23, 2007) The following is a statement released on behalf of Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr., founder and president of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, from Attorney Janice Mathis, Vice President and Executive Director of Peachtree Street Project, Rainbow PUSH Coalition. Mathis's commentary comes after the release of a rap video, "Read a Book" on YouTube and BET. If Benjamin E. Mayes challenged us to reach for the stars, the not-a-rapper video "Read a Book" on YouTube takes us into the abyss. Billed as a satirical look at popular culture, a viewer is left with the distinct impression that nothing matters, that life is futile, knowledge fruitless, manners meaningless.Wrong!
A common definition of satire is witty language used to convey insults or scorn. The video is plenteously scornful and insulting, but not of crassness. The video insults reading, personal hygiene, family values and frugality. "Read a Book" heaps scorn on positive values and (un)intentionally celebrates ignorance. The narrator is obviously illiterate, unkempt and disrespectful. So who takes his advice seriously?Apparently, Rainbow PUSH does. How do you go about giving a definition of satire and then interpret art literally, all in the same paragraph? That takes a special kind of incompetence for which the word "incompetence" does not suffice.
The best Hip-hop is clever, with allusions to politics, history, great music and literature. Part of the fun is finding the hidden meaning....which you clearly did not do!
I was prepared to forgive the crude language and lack of creativity if there was as message encouraging viewers to read and otherwise conduct themselves responsibly. I was disappointed. The simplistic repetitive rhyme and tune made it clear that the creator had not taken his own advice, i.e. to Read a Book.Uh, the title of the song is READ. A. BOOK. That was the point. Do we really need to spell it out? Maybe Bomani can drop a track called R - E - A - D A B - O - O - K and deliver it personally to Jackson.
The Rainbow PUSH Coalition is a progressive organization protecting, defending and expanding civil rights to improve economic and educational opportunity. The organization is headquartered at 930 E. 50th St. in Chicago. For more information about the RainbowPUSH Coalition, please visit the organization's website, www.rainbowpush.org or telephone (773) 373-3366. To get additional information, please call the number listed above.That's it. No more press releases from Rainbow PUSH. We have songs out there like "A Bay Bay" and you're gonna focus on the one hip hop song that actually says something??You have just disqualified yourself from speaking on behalf of anyone. I cannot believe that the people who were there during the Civil Rights Movement, when poets and actors and musicians played such a vital role in opening the public's eyes and challenging the system are so blind to the same role being played by today's artist/activists. It's possible, of course, that Rainbow PUSH's press release was itself a work of satire, making fun of an increasingly out of touch and irrelevant generation of has-been Civil Rights leaders.
Technorati Tags: hip hop, jesse jackson, satire, rap, read a book