RSS    RSS  /  Atom
Wikio - Top of the Blogs - Film
Blogroll

33 1/3 series

Ananzie: Afro Life Style

Anarchist Graffiti

Change.gov

Donnell Alexander

Harry Allen

My American Meltingpot

Naked With Socks On

Nelson George

NewBlackMan

Post No Ills

?uestlove

Riffs & Revolutions

Ta-Nehisi Coates

The Daily Beast

The Paris Blog

The Root

Zentronix: Dubwise
& Hiphopcentric

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Black Is Black...?

filed under: ,

My oldest’s third birthday is in a few weeks and (don’t tell him) I just ordered a Green Lantern action figure for him. GL isn’t his favorite; he only knows about seven superheroes anyway. But Mattel sells the John Stewart Green Lantern, the black one in other words, which is why I just bought it off Amazon.fr. At the start, most of Lucas’s toys were animals. But now there’s Superman and Batman laying around, and a Mr. Incredible to slip on late at night. Nobody’s black. That’s my responsibility, right? This is the topic of the next real post. For now, a little primer on where I (used to?) stand from my first book, Scars of the Soul Are Why Kids Wear Bandages When They Don’t Have Bruises:

I chose to apply to the historically black Morehouse College in 1988, the same year their alum Spike Lee released School Daze (based at the fictional, historically black Mission College) and NBC began airing A Different World (a spinoff of The Cosby Show based at the fictional, historically black Hillman College). A Different World was cancelled during its sixth season in 1993, the year I graduated. Serendipity is an amazing thing. Comedienne T’keyah “Crystal” Keymáh of Fox Television’s In Living Color variety show invented a character named Crissy for a recurring skit about Black World, a place where everything was “good and black” with no sign of the dominant white culture anywhere around. Given the political sensibility I shared with hiphop peers, adopting the Black World aesthetic as a lifestyle seemed a viable, attractive option. After graduating from an African-American institution, the most significant jobs of my professional career included positions at the fanzine Black Beat, XXL, the urban-culture magazine Vibe, and the website of BET during the dotcom boom. Ironically, all those media outlets were white-owned: by Sterling/MacFadden Partnership, Harris Publications, Miller Publishing Group and Viacom, respectively.

Comments

MoreLikeACoachOrAnOwner at 3:01 AM on 09/05/08:

wish we had you here to blog on this election f+@kery…

MML at 3:23 PM on 09/05/08:

it’s definitely a real interesting year, i’ve been following everything daily from paris. ta-nehisi coates has some great thoughts on what’s going on… see my blogroll!

Post a comment

Textile Help

Home