Monday, July 31, 2006
it only happens every hundred years
this past week was alpha phi alpha fraternity's 100th anniversary celebration. i'm willing to argue that this is probably a very momentous occasion in black history, and it happened in my city. 7 young men with a vision at a predominately white school. that's incredible. and it's probably one of the reasons why i maintain that i may not have joined a bglo at a black school. i feel like the struggle is much different at a white school. different issues.
with that being said: here are some highlights-
*my blue ice mixer. peep the above pic. that's only a glimmer of how frickin fun that shit was. lots of drinks, happy people, spades, and cute ass alphas.
*my boy jason's (HAY BOO) presidential suite. good God that place was bigger than my entire office.
*H2O with one of the coolest sorors i know, malica ahmad. damn, there were some real cuties in there. and darn good drinks.
*beautiful opera solo at their public program. that was really breathtaking
*the following comment: "you're a Zeta? ooooooh....ahhhhhh...i love Zetas" on repeat all week.
*partyin and chillin with my rhode island boys again
*actually finding a cute stuffed gorilla
* seven words: 6 to 1 guy to girl ratio.
and there you have it folks.
and you shoulda gone to H2O.
Wednesday, July 26, 2006
this was so on point, that i had to share it with you.
I had a talk with my friend yesterday (see below--he's in RI), and we were saying how for some reason I can't find someone who is interested enough to actually date me; not just kinda chill up in my crib and maybe hook up.
Then today, I looked at my horoscope, and here's what it said:
AQUARIUS: Romance can blossom, but make yourself available to someone who is eager to pursue a more active involvement with you.
now isn't that amazing? we were JUST talking about this hours before I picked up my copy of The Express.
Then today, I looked at my horoscope, and here's what it said:
AQUARIUS: Romance can blossom, but make yourself available to someone who is eager to pursue a more active involvement with you.
now isn't that amazing? we were JUST talking about this hours before I picked up my copy of The Express.
Friday, July 21, 2006
Now that's what i'm talking about.
PHARRELL WILLIAMS REACHES BACK: Artist is has plans for community center.
*The artist/writer/super producer Pharell Williams is going back to the community and bringing gifts.
The Star Trak executive is in talks to build a computer resource center in his hometown, Virginia Beach, VA. The economic development director for Virginia Beach, Don Maxwell, told The Virginian Pilot that the demographics, cost, and size of the project are still being figured out. But, Virginia Beach’s City Council may get to review the deal as early as next month.
In addition, Williams is also negotiating with Apple and Microsoft to support the center and will utilize a local architect to design the building.
"One of these kids could be the next chemist for Pfizer," Williams said referring to the health care giant Pfizer Inc. HP has started a campaign entitled the “Computer is Personal Again” and Williams has agreed to appear in the new spot.
The campaign debuted with rapper/mogul/Def Jam president Jay-Z and has featured Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, U.S. Olympic, snowboarding gold medalist Shaun White and television executive Mark Burnett (The Apprentice, The Apprentice: Martha Stewart, On the Lot).
All three spots will be available online prior to hitting major television networks.
We can also prepare for Williams highly anticipated solo release “In My Mind” to drop July 25.
*The artist/writer/super producer Pharell Williams is going back to the community and bringing gifts.
The Star Trak executive is in talks to build a computer resource center in his hometown, Virginia Beach, VA. The economic development director for Virginia Beach, Don Maxwell, told The Virginian Pilot that the demographics, cost, and size of the project are still being figured out. But, Virginia Beach’s City Council may get to review the deal as early as next month.
In addition, Williams is also negotiating with Apple and Microsoft to support the center and will utilize a local architect to design the building.
"One of these kids could be the next chemist for Pfizer," Williams said referring to the health care giant Pfizer Inc. HP has started a campaign entitled the “Computer is Personal Again” and Williams has agreed to appear in the new spot.
The campaign debuted with rapper/mogul/Def Jam president Jay-Z and has featured Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, U.S. Olympic, snowboarding gold medalist Shaun White and television executive Mark Burnett (The Apprentice, The Apprentice: Martha Stewart, On the Lot).
All three spots will be available online prior to hitting major television networks.
We can also prepare for Williams highly anticipated solo release “In My Mind” to drop July 25.
Sunday, July 16, 2006
hood? providence? are you kidding?
oh i kid you not.
for a place that seems very "suburban" i was shocked to find how hood some spots were.
we went to a club on friday night called Jovan's. I guess i should have known from the name, but i thought "well it's providence, the block can't be THAT hot"
oh but it was....when we were leaving, we walked as quickly as possible to the car. with all them black folks out there in front of the club, a "nigga moment" was bound to pop off (thanks, aaron macgruder).
providence is also home to probably one of the most awesome malls i've ever been to. providence place NOT ONLY has an H &M, and two (2) aldo stores, but it also happens to have...a Delia's store! Delias? i thought. I grew up on the Delia's catalog. Seeing the store was total trip to me. i couldn't believe my eyes.
another cool place i went to while i was there: this spot called...the Black Repertory Center (Black Rep for short). very chill, fairly inexpensive drinks, live soul music, and dj that played mostly dancehall. oh, and lively, inebriated alphas. what more can a girl ask for? wonderful vibe, nice ambiance.
i used to crack jokes about my boy livin in rhode island...one liners about cow tipping come to mind. but now i'm rethinking it. maybe i'll go even go back for a return visit. whoda thunkit?
for a place that seems very "suburban" i was shocked to find how hood some spots were.
we went to a club on friday night called Jovan's. I guess i should have known from the name, but i thought "well it's providence, the block can't be THAT hot"
oh but it was....when we were leaving, we walked as quickly as possible to the car. with all them black folks out there in front of the club, a "nigga moment" was bound to pop off (thanks, aaron macgruder).
providence is also home to probably one of the most awesome malls i've ever been to. providence place NOT ONLY has an H &M, and two (2) aldo stores, but it also happens to have...a Delia's store! Delias? i thought. I grew up on the Delia's catalog. Seeing the store was total trip to me. i couldn't believe my eyes.
another cool place i went to while i was there: this spot called...the Black Repertory Center (Black Rep for short). very chill, fairly inexpensive drinks, live soul music, and dj that played mostly dancehall. oh, and lively, inebriated alphas. what more can a girl ask for? wonderful vibe, nice ambiance.
i used to crack jokes about my boy livin in rhode island...one liners about cow tipping come to mind. but now i'm rethinking it. maybe i'll go even go back for a return visit. whoda thunkit?
providence--america's hidden secret.
Thursday, July 13, 2006
new bey-z
http://www.mtv.com/overdrive/player...._beyonce.jhtml
some day i'll learn how to embed a youtube, but for now here's a link to the new video for deja-vu.
i'm loving the song, the video is whatever.
unlike some women i simply don't hate on her. i think beyonce's doin her thing and i can't really hate on her. i like her music and she is arguably the greatest entertainers out right now.
some day i'll learn how to embed a youtube, but for now here's a link to the new video for deja-vu.
i'm loving the song, the video is whatever.
unlike some women i simply don't hate on her. i think beyonce's doin her thing and i can't really hate on her. i like her music and she is arguably the greatest entertainers out right now.
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
update on the psp ad:
Sony pulls controversial Dutch PSP adWed Jul 12, 2006 08:09 AM ET By Lisa Baertlein LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Sony Corp. said on Tuesday it had pulled a Dutch billboard advertising campaign for the new white version of its PlayStation Portable video game player and apologized to anyone offended by the ad, which critics dubbed racist.
A billboard ad in the campaign -- which Sony said was launched in the first week of June and created locally and exclusively for the Dutch market -- portrayed a white woman aggressively grabbing the face of a black woman and read "PlayStation Portable White is Coming."
Sony said that the Netherlands campaign intended to highlight the color contrast between the existing black PSP and the new ceramic white PSP.
Instead, the ad campaign riled California Assemblyman Leland Yee, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and a youth civil rights education project called Sojourn to the Past.
Those critics condemned Sony's use of the racially charged photo to sell a product and said it recalled an age and time when black people were portrayed in minstrel shows.
"We recognize that the subject matter of one specific image may have caused concern in some countries not directly affected by the advertising. As a result, we have now withdrawn the campaign," said Sony, which has also removed the image from its Dutch PSP site and apologized to those put off by the ad.
"I am pleased to see Sony taking responsibility for their racially charged ad and appropriately pulling it from the marketplace," said Yee, who has spearheaded state legislation aimed at keeping excessively violent and sexually explicit games out of the hands of minors.
Late last year, Sony sparked controversy in the United States with spray-painted PSP ads that looked like urban graffiti. The stealth campaign featured dazed-looking kids doing a variety of things with their PSPs, from riding them like skateboards to licking them like lollipops.
Each of Sony's controversial PSP campaigns has created massive buzz in the Internet blogosphere -- which can work to the company's advantage.
The PSP's closest competitor is Nintendo Co Ltd.'s DS, a dual-screened mobile game device.
A billboard ad in the campaign -- which Sony said was launched in the first week of June and created locally and exclusively for the Dutch market -- portrayed a white woman aggressively grabbing the face of a black woman and read "PlayStation Portable White is Coming."
Sony said that the Netherlands campaign intended to highlight the color contrast between the existing black PSP and the new ceramic white PSP.
Instead, the ad campaign riled California Assemblyman Leland Yee, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and a youth civil rights education project called Sojourn to the Past.
Those critics condemned Sony's use of the racially charged photo to sell a product and said it recalled an age and time when black people were portrayed in minstrel shows.
"We recognize that the subject matter of one specific image may have caused concern in some countries not directly affected by the advertising. As a result, we have now withdrawn the campaign," said Sony, which has also removed the image from its Dutch PSP site and apologized to those put off by the ad.
"I am pleased to see Sony taking responsibility for their racially charged ad and appropriately pulling it from the marketplace," said Yee, who has spearheaded state legislation aimed at keeping excessively violent and sexually explicit games out of the hands of minors.
Late last year, Sony sparked controversy in the United States with spray-painted PSP ads that looked like urban graffiti. The stealth campaign featured dazed-looking kids doing a variety of things with their PSPs, from riding them like skateboards to licking them like lollipops.
Each of Sony's controversial PSP campaigns has created massive buzz in the Internet blogosphere -- which can work to the company's advantage.
The PSP's closest competitor is Nintendo Co Ltd.'s DS, a dual-screened mobile game device.
Tuesday, July 11, 2006
man, don't eff with Zidane
you asked for it:
I called one of my best guy friends this morning. He had a date last night and wanted to tell me how it went since I didn't get to talk to him the night before. Before he went out he wanted me to tell him what makes a date good or memorable?
I hadn't expected that question and I had never really thought about it. I mean the last date I went on was maybe two or three weeks ago. And while I think we both had fun it wasn't necessarily memorable. I can think of five dates I went on that were more memorable than that one. And he was very cute. But it was just good, not "memorable."
So per my friend's request, I will be listing, in no particular order, the things that make a date good and/or memorable
Originality
This one is pretty ignored because everybody and they're momma wants to go to dinner and a movie. And it's always a real generic ass restaurant and a bad movie. I remember one time this guy switched it up and we went to a chinese tea house and then to a moroccan restaurant; there was a belly dancer and everything. That was probably the #1 greatest date i've ever been on.
Sense of Humor
I went out with this dude once and while the date was kept real simple (i think we went to see a movie), this cat had me in-the-floor laughin.
Confident Swagger
not to be mistaken for arrogance, but i love a man who has that confident swagger about him. it makes even average looking cats look like a 10. Men like this I find are great converstationalist, and they also have the above sense of humor.
they are also more likely to make the first move, which takes some of the pressure and anxiety off, cuz it's one less thing i gotta think about.
Good, Intellectual conversation
I once went out with someone who told me that he didn't like to read and that if it wasn't for skoo' he wasn't with it. The date ended immediately.
Chivalry and politeness
This is probably one thing I am old fashioned about. I still like doors being opened for me, a guy walking on the side closest to the street, you know stuff like that. In fact it bothers me when a guy neglects to do stuff like that. would you know that i went out with someone who let me take the metro to meet him when he had a car, and THEN didn't even pay for dinner?
he also was not even trying to hold a decent conversation. I should have went straight home when i saw him pull up in the car, but c'est la vie i suppose.
That's about all I can think of right now but I think I may come up with more.
I hadn't expected that question and I had never really thought about it. I mean the last date I went on was maybe two or three weeks ago. And while I think we both had fun it wasn't necessarily memorable. I can think of five dates I went on that were more memorable than that one. And he was very cute. But it was just good, not "memorable."
So per my friend's request, I will be listing, in no particular order, the things that make a date good and/or memorable
Originality
This one is pretty ignored because everybody and they're momma wants to go to dinner and a movie. And it's always a real generic ass restaurant and a bad movie. I remember one time this guy switched it up and we went to a chinese tea house and then to a moroccan restaurant; there was a belly dancer and everything. That was probably the #1 greatest date i've ever been on.
Sense of Humor
I went out with this dude once and while the date was kept real simple (i think we went to see a movie), this cat had me in-the-floor laughin.
Confident Swagger
not to be mistaken for arrogance, but i love a man who has that confident swagger about him. it makes even average looking cats look like a 10. Men like this I find are great converstationalist, and they also have the above sense of humor.
they are also more likely to make the first move, which takes some of the pressure and anxiety off, cuz it's one less thing i gotta think about.
Good, Intellectual conversation
I once went out with someone who told me that he didn't like to read and that if it wasn't for skoo' he wasn't with it. The date ended immediately.
Chivalry and politeness
This is probably one thing I am old fashioned about. I still like doors being opened for me, a guy walking on the side closest to the street, you know stuff like that. In fact it bothers me when a guy neglects to do stuff like that. would you know that i went out with someone who let me take the metro to meet him when he had a car, and THEN didn't even pay for dinner?
he also was not even trying to hold a decent conversation. I should have went straight home when i saw him pull up in the car, but c'est la vie i suppose.
That's about all I can think of right now but I think I may come up with more.
Monday, July 10, 2006
Dave Chapelle, bitches
I saw the first installment of the Dave Chapelle Lost Episodes last night and I have to say that I'm a little disappointed. I mean some parts were rather funny (the first skit, the tupac jumpoff, were both standouts), but i thought it was going to be way better than that.
I also felt a little torn about watching it. I mean, these were the episodes dave didn't want aired and what ultimately led him to walk away from a 50 million dollar contract and flee to Africa. There are only three episodes, and I simply don't really like the idea of watching an unfinished product. I mean think about it. Would you want to look at an unfinished DaVinci painting? If Ralph Ellison was alive, do you REALLY think he would have published an unfinished Juneteenth? I highly doubt it. That would be doin a half assed job, and, as my dad would put it, "actin like a cat crappin in the corner."
I also think they should have had just Charlie Murphy as the host of the show if dave wasn't going to be on there. But oh well. Ashy Larry was aight I guess.
What I'm really looking forward to is Dave Chappelle being interviewed on Anderson Cooper tonight. That should be pretty interesting as Anderson likes to play hardball. He's pretty gangsta considering that his mom designed pantyhose for a living.
I also felt a little torn about watching it. I mean, these were the episodes dave didn't want aired and what ultimately led him to walk away from a 50 million dollar contract and flee to Africa. There are only three episodes, and I simply don't really like the idea of watching an unfinished product. I mean think about it. Would you want to look at an unfinished DaVinci painting? If Ralph Ellison was alive, do you REALLY think he would have published an unfinished Juneteenth? I highly doubt it. That would be doin a half assed job, and, as my dad would put it, "actin like a cat crappin in the corner."
I also think they should have had just Charlie Murphy as the host of the show if dave wasn't going to be on there. But oh well. Ashy Larry was aight I guess.
What I'm really looking forward to is Dave Chappelle being interviewed on Anderson Cooper tonight. That should be pretty interesting as Anderson likes to play hardball. He's pretty gangsta considering that his mom designed pantyhose for a living.
Thursday, July 06, 2006
India DOT Arie.
I tried to like her. I really did.
But I just couldn't. I have her first album, and I like it okay, but there's so many things missing.
I don't knock her for being on the positive tip. I'm glad that somebody is teaching girls about something else other than gettin' some head from a dude or how to whine about the fact you should have cheated on his ass when you didn't.
But there are just these...things about her that i dont' like.
Let's start with the DOT in her name. India.Arie.
Why the dot?
why the damn dot, girl?
It just screams pretentious. I hear it's cuz of the way she wanted people to think about her. Like you know...that pause is like the drama or something like that. India...Arie. I don't...think so. I can't get with that kind of stuff. I like Jill Scott cuz she can be creative without being pretentious about it.
Then there's the music. Again, I love positive soul music and stuff. I dig it. It's what I normally listen to if i'm not listening to underground stuff like MF DOOM or Cannibal Ox or something like that. Progressive hip hop, you know. But she has made the same song at least four times in her career. In fact, you can blend the joints into one song and called it "My hair is not your average little thing."
In addition, the production is so basic, so booooooring i just want to cut myself.
well not that bad,
but it's like she doesn't even try to be musically innovative. For someone whose biggest inspiration is Stevie Wonder, I sure as hell don't see it in her music. I do rather enjoy the remix of "I am not my hair" with Akon. even though i also don't like Akon (something about his voice). I'm simply not impressed with the bulk of it.
I do like her voice. she can sing. But she holds back I think. Who else saw her singing Chaka Khan at the BET awards? Why doesn't she sing like that more, with more power? I always get the feeling she isn't putting her back into it. Man, if she did, I'd definitely dig her. I dig singers who put their foot into any song they sing. and she may not have a range like jill scott, but she could work her voice so much better than she does.
This isn't a hate post, I respect her. I guess as the book says, I'm just not that into her.
Wednesday, July 05, 2006
loryn's favorite things
okay so that last post was kinda heavy. so i decided to post some things that i think are just great. (thanks, oprah.)
when i saw this on line, i thought YES. this is the top for me. being a Zeta, i have plenty of royal blue tops. i know this isn't royal blue, it's navy blue, but 1.navy blue was our original color and 2.-this joint is so cold, so classy, i really wish a soror would come up to me and say "THAT'S not royal blue." i even have a satin purse to match.
i'm wearin this joint to the Alpha Centennial. um. that is. if i get the cajones to buy it. it's definitely a cool 60 bucks. now i know i'm gainfully employed and all, but even that is asking for a lot.
when i saw this on line, i thought YES. this is the top for me. being a Zeta, i have plenty of royal blue tops. i know this isn't royal blue, it's navy blue, but 1.navy blue was our original color and 2.-this joint is so cold, so classy, i really wish a soror would come up to me and say "THAT'S not royal blue." i even have a satin purse to match.
i'm wearin this joint to the Alpha Centennial. um. that is. if i get the cajones to buy it. it's definitely a cool 60 bucks. now i know i'm gainfully employed and all, but even that is asking for a lot.
now i don't wear lil short things like this. people say i should, cuz i have pretty legs, but i really don't do it very often. this dress just seems like so much fun though.
do i really need to say anything? this shit is cold!
this phone really deserves its own post. i wish they made ipods this color and trim and everything. maybe they'll start doing that.
ad [sic] insult to injury.
Right above is the newest ad for the PSP white.
I really don't know what to say about it. other than the fact that I think it's racist and in very poor taste. peep how the black model is dressed like a british servant. i can't get with that. there are other ads in the series but this one is getting the most press.
i don't know what i hate more about it, the fact that these are women depicted (the ad seems also sexist to me) or the fact that they have a black person under submission (again).
this, i am sure, brings a whole new meaning to "ignorant art". i just think wow. so that's what they think of us.
just an atrocious ad. and to make it even worse, those bastards at sony are talking about how it wasn't racist and that there was "no other meaning" to the ads:
http://www.gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?aid=18101
how could they even say that? I'm in PR, which is close to advertising, but not really. but in either field, you have to be smart enough to know when messages have these types of social implications to them.
sigh.
-loryn-
Tuesday, July 04, 2006
the 4th of July Dilemma
I know today is the Fourth of July and everything, but I can't help than feel a little less than patriotic on a day where my people didn't have independence.
I'm not a party pooper or anything, I mean I'll go to a cookout...but I simply don't feel as thought 4th of July means anything to me as a Black woman. if that makes me "unAmerican" then so be it, but I'm more in favor of Black people take Juneteenth off and celebrating it as our indpendence day than to just accept 4th of July just because it's a federal holiday.
I didn't get to do it this year....but next year, I'm taking Juneteenth off.
Sunday, July 02, 2006
December can't get here soon enough
Dreamgirls Trailer right here...if you were watching the BET awards you may have seen it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIe5V7t_NCE
I'm really very excited about it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIe5V7t_NCE
I'm really very excited about it.
Saturday, July 01, 2006
Men Suviving Blackness
Black Men Quietly Combating Stereotypes By ERIN TEXEIRA Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK — Keith Borders tries hard not to scare people.He's 6-foot-7, a garrulous lawyer who talks with his hands.
And he's black.
Many people find him threatening. He works hard to prove otherwise.
"I have a very keen sense of my size and how I communicate," says Borders of Mason, Ohio. "I end up putting my hands in my pockets or behind me. I stand with my feet closer together. With my feet spread out, it looks like I'm taking a stance. And I use a softer voice."
Every day, African-American men consciously work to offset stereotypes about them — that they are dangerous, aggressive, angry. Some smile a lot, dress conservatively and speak with deference: "Yes, sir," or "No, ma'am." They are mindful of their bodies, careful not to dart into closing elevators or stand too close in grocery stores.
It's all about surviving, and trying to thrive, in a nation where biased views of black men stubbornly hang on decades after segregation and where statistics show a yawning gap between the lives of white men and black men. Black men's median wages are barely three-fourths those of whites; nearly 1 in 3 black men will spend time behind bars during his life; and, on average, black men die six years earlier than whites.
Sure, everyone has ways of coping with other people's perceptions: Who acts the same at work as they do with their kids, or their high school friends?
But for black men, there's more at stake. If they don't carefully calculate how to handle everyday situations — in ways that usually go unnoticed — they can end up out of a job, in jail or dead.
"It's a stressful process," Borders says.
Melissa Harris Lacewell, a political scientist at the University of Chicago, says learning to adapt is at the heart of being an American black male.
"Black mothers and fathers socialize their sons to not make waves, to not come up against the authorities, to speak even more politely not only when there are whites present but particularly if there are whites who have power," she said.
"Most black men are able to shift from a sort of relaxed, authentically black pose into a respectable black man pose. Either they develop the dexterity to move back and forth or ultimately they flounder."
It's a lot like a game of chess, says 43-year-old Chester Williams, who owns Chester Electric in New Orleans. He has taught his three sons, ages 16, 14 and 11, to play.
"The rules of the game are universal: White moves first, then black moves," he said. "Black has to respond to the moves that the whites make. You take the advantage when it's available."
Twenty-year-old Chauncy Medder of Brooklyn says his baggy jeans and oversized T-shirts make him seem like "another one of those thuggish black kids." He offsets that with "Southern charm" he learned attending high school in Virginia — "a lot of 'Yes, ma'ams,' and as little slang as possible. When I speak to them (whites), they're like, 'Hey, you're different.'
"Such skillful little changes in style aren't talked about much, especially not outside of black households — there's no reason to tip your hand. As Walter White, a black sales executive from Cincinnati, puts it: "Not talking is a way to get what you want."
He recalled that, "as a child, we all sat down with my mother and father and watched the movie 'Roots,'" the groundbreaking 1970s television miniseries tracing a black family from Africa through slavery and into modern times.
The slaves were quietly obedient around whites. "But as soon as the master was gone," he said, "they did what they really wanted to do. That's what we were taught."Historians agree that black stereotypes and coping strategies are rooted in America's history of slavery and segregation.
Jay Carrington Chunn's mother taught him "how to read 'Whites Only' and 'Negro Only' before she taught me anything else," said the 63-year-old, who grew up in Atlanta. "Black parents taught you how to react when police stopped you, how to respond to certain problems, how to act in school to get the best grade."
School is still a challenge, even from an early age.
Last year, Yale University research on public school pre-kindergarten programs in 40 states found that blacks were expelled twice as often as whites — and nine out of 10 blacks expelled were boys. The report did not analyze the patterns, but some trace it to negative views about black boys.
Black male children are often "labeled in public schools as being out of control," said Lacewell, who studies black political culture and wrote "Barbershops, Bibles, and BET: Everyday Talk and Black Political Thought."
"If you're a black boy who is smart and energetic and always has the answer and throws his hand up in the air," she said, "you might as a parent say, 'Even if you know the answer you might not want to make a spectacle of yourself. You don't want to call attention to yourself.'"
Bill Fletcher still has nightmares about his third-grade teacher, a white woman who "treated me and other black students as if we were idiots," he said. "She destroyed my confidence."
But his parents were strong advocates, and taught him to cope by having little contact with teachers who didn't take an interest in him, said Fletcher, former president of TransAfrica Forum, a group that builds ties between African-Americans and Africa.
As black boys become adolescents, the dangers escalate. Like most teenagers, they battle raging hormones and identity crises. Many rebel, trying to fit in by mimicking — and sometimes becoming — criminals."They are basically seen as public menaces," Lacewell said.
Rasheed Smith, 22, a soft-spoken, aspiring hip-hop lyricist from the Bedford Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, recently tapped his long fingers, morosely counting his friends killed in neighborhood violence in the last five years — 11 in all. Few spent much time beyond their blocks, let alone their neighborhood. Some sold drugs or got in other trouble and had near-constant contact with police.
Smith has survived by staying close to his family. He advised: "With police, you talk to them the way they talk to you. You get treated how you act."
Twenty years ago, Carol Taylor's teenage son — now a lawyer — was mugged twice near their Brooklyn home, but police officers "treated him like he had done the mugging," she said. She wrote and self-published "The Little Black Book: Survival Commandments for Black Men" filled with tips on how to deal with police: keep your hands visible, carry a camera, don't say much but be polite."Don't take this as a time to prove your manhood," wrote Taylor, a retired nurse and community activist who said she's sold thousands of the pocket-sized, $2 books.
And more general advice: "Learn to read, write and type, and to speak English correctly. This is survival, not wishful thinking. If you are going to survive in America, go to college!"One selective business program at historically black Hampton University in Virginia directs black men to wear dark, conservative suits to class. Earrings and dreadlocked hairstyles are forbidden. Their appearance is "communicating a signal that says you can go into more places," said business school dean Sid Credle. "There's more universal acceptance if you're conservative in your image and dress style."
One graphic artist says he wears a suit when traveling, "even if it's on a weekend. I think it helps. It requests respect."
But in the corporate world, clothing can only help so much, said Janet B. Reid of Global Lead Management Consulting, who advises companies on managing ethnic diversity.
Black men, especially those who look physically imposing, often have a tough time."Someone who is tall and muscular will learn to come into a meeting and sit down quickly," she said. "They're trying to lower the big barrier of resistance, one that's fear-based and born of stereotypes."
Having darker brown skin can erect another barrier. Mark Ferguson has worked on Wall Street for 20 years. He has an easy smile and firm, confident handshake.
"I think I clean up pretty well — I dress well, I speak well — but all that goes out the window when I show up at a meeting full of white men," says Ferguson of New Jersey, who is 6-foot-4 and dark-skinned. "It's because they're afraid of me."
"Race always matters," said Ferguson, whose Day in the Life Foundation connects minority teenagers with professionals. "It's always in play."Fletcher knows his light brown skin gives him an advantage — except that he's "unsmiling.""If you're a black man who doesn't smile a lot, they (whites) get really nervous," he said. "There are black people I run across all the time and they're always smiling particularly when they're around white people. A lot of white people find that very comforting."All this takes a toll.
rest of the article here:
http://www.ajc.com/news/content/shared-gen/ap/National/Men_Surviving_Blackness.html
sidenote: is it just me, or are more journalists prying intot he lives of Black men? The Washington Post did a whole series on something very similar to this. Very important topic, i'm glad people are finally exploring this.
NEW YORK — Keith Borders tries hard not to scare people.He's 6-foot-7, a garrulous lawyer who talks with his hands.
And he's black.
Many people find him threatening. He works hard to prove otherwise.
"I have a very keen sense of my size and how I communicate," says Borders of Mason, Ohio. "I end up putting my hands in my pockets or behind me. I stand with my feet closer together. With my feet spread out, it looks like I'm taking a stance. And I use a softer voice."
Every day, African-American men consciously work to offset stereotypes about them — that they are dangerous, aggressive, angry. Some smile a lot, dress conservatively and speak with deference: "Yes, sir," or "No, ma'am." They are mindful of their bodies, careful not to dart into closing elevators or stand too close in grocery stores.
It's all about surviving, and trying to thrive, in a nation where biased views of black men stubbornly hang on decades after segregation and where statistics show a yawning gap between the lives of white men and black men. Black men's median wages are barely three-fourths those of whites; nearly 1 in 3 black men will spend time behind bars during his life; and, on average, black men die six years earlier than whites.
Sure, everyone has ways of coping with other people's perceptions: Who acts the same at work as they do with their kids, or their high school friends?
But for black men, there's more at stake. If they don't carefully calculate how to handle everyday situations — in ways that usually go unnoticed — they can end up out of a job, in jail or dead.
"It's a stressful process," Borders says.
Melissa Harris Lacewell, a political scientist at the University of Chicago, says learning to adapt is at the heart of being an American black male.
"Black mothers and fathers socialize their sons to not make waves, to not come up against the authorities, to speak even more politely not only when there are whites present but particularly if there are whites who have power," she said.
"Most black men are able to shift from a sort of relaxed, authentically black pose into a respectable black man pose. Either they develop the dexterity to move back and forth or ultimately they flounder."
It's a lot like a game of chess, says 43-year-old Chester Williams, who owns Chester Electric in New Orleans. He has taught his three sons, ages 16, 14 and 11, to play.
"The rules of the game are universal: White moves first, then black moves," he said. "Black has to respond to the moves that the whites make. You take the advantage when it's available."
Twenty-year-old Chauncy Medder of Brooklyn says his baggy jeans and oversized T-shirts make him seem like "another one of those thuggish black kids." He offsets that with "Southern charm" he learned attending high school in Virginia — "a lot of 'Yes, ma'ams,' and as little slang as possible. When I speak to them (whites), they're like, 'Hey, you're different.'
"Such skillful little changes in style aren't talked about much, especially not outside of black households — there's no reason to tip your hand. As Walter White, a black sales executive from Cincinnati, puts it: "Not talking is a way to get what you want."
He recalled that, "as a child, we all sat down with my mother and father and watched the movie 'Roots,'" the groundbreaking 1970s television miniseries tracing a black family from Africa through slavery and into modern times.
The slaves were quietly obedient around whites. "But as soon as the master was gone," he said, "they did what they really wanted to do. That's what we were taught."Historians agree that black stereotypes and coping strategies are rooted in America's history of slavery and segregation.
Jay Carrington Chunn's mother taught him "how to read 'Whites Only' and 'Negro Only' before she taught me anything else," said the 63-year-old, who grew up in Atlanta. "Black parents taught you how to react when police stopped you, how to respond to certain problems, how to act in school to get the best grade."
School is still a challenge, even from an early age.
Last year, Yale University research on public school pre-kindergarten programs in 40 states found that blacks were expelled twice as often as whites — and nine out of 10 blacks expelled were boys. The report did not analyze the patterns, but some trace it to negative views about black boys.
Black male children are often "labeled in public schools as being out of control," said Lacewell, who studies black political culture and wrote "Barbershops, Bibles, and BET: Everyday Talk and Black Political Thought."
"If you're a black boy who is smart and energetic and always has the answer and throws his hand up in the air," she said, "you might as a parent say, 'Even if you know the answer you might not want to make a spectacle of yourself. You don't want to call attention to yourself.'"
Bill Fletcher still has nightmares about his third-grade teacher, a white woman who "treated me and other black students as if we were idiots," he said. "She destroyed my confidence."
But his parents were strong advocates, and taught him to cope by having little contact with teachers who didn't take an interest in him, said Fletcher, former president of TransAfrica Forum, a group that builds ties between African-Americans and Africa.
As black boys become adolescents, the dangers escalate. Like most teenagers, they battle raging hormones and identity crises. Many rebel, trying to fit in by mimicking — and sometimes becoming — criminals."They are basically seen as public menaces," Lacewell said.
Rasheed Smith, 22, a soft-spoken, aspiring hip-hop lyricist from the Bedford Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, recently tapped his long fingers, morosely counting his friends killed in neighborhood violence in the last five years — 11 in all. Few spent much time beyond their blocks, let alone their neighborhood. Some sold drugs or got in other trouble and had near-constant contact with police.
Smith has survived by staying close to his family. He advised: "With police, you talk to them the way they talk to you. You get treated how you act."
Twenty years ago, Carol Taylor's teenage son — now a lawyer — was mugged twice near their Brooklyn home, but police officers "treated him like he had done the mugging," she said. She wrote and self-published "The Little Black Book: Survival Commandments for Black Men" filled with tips on how to deal with police: keep your hands visible, carry a camera, don't say much but be polite."Don't take this as a time to prove your manhood," wrote Taylor, a retired nurse and community activist who said she's sold thousands of the pocket-sized, $2 books.
And more general advice: "Learn to read, write and type, and to speak English correctly. This is survival, not wishful thinking. If you are going to survive in America, go to college!"One selective business program at historically black Hampton University in Virginia directs black men to wear dark, conservative suits to class. Earrings and dreadlocked hairstyles are forbidden. Their appearance is "communicating a signal that says you can go into more places," said business school dean Sid Credle. "There's more universal acceptance if you're conservative in your image and dress style."
One graphic artist says he wears a suit when traveling, "even if it's on a weekend. I think it helps. It requests respect."
But in the corporate world, clothing can only help so much, said Janet B. Reid of Global Lead Management Consulting, who advises companies on managing ethnic diversity.
Black men, especially those who look physically imposing, often have a tough time."Someone who is tall and muscular will learn to come into a meeting and sit down quickly," she said. "They're trying to lower the big barrier of resistance, one that's fear-based and born of stereotypes."
Having darker brown skin can erect another barrier. Mark Ferguson has worked on Wall Street for 20 years. He has an easy smile and firm, confident handshake.
"I think I clean up pretty well — I dress well, I speak well — but all that goes out the window when I show up at a meeting full of white men," says Ferguson of New Jersey, who is 6-foot-4 and dark-skinned. "It's because they're afraid of me."
"Race always matters," said Ferguson, whose Day in the Life Foundation connects minority teenagers with professionals. "It's always in play."Fletcher knows his light brown skin gives him an advantage — except that he's "unsmiling.""If you're a black man who doesn't smile a lot, they (whites) get really nervous," he said. "There are black people I run across all the time and they're always smiling particularly when they're around white people. A lot of white people find that very comforting."All this takes a toll.
rest of the article here:
http://www.ajc.com/news/content/shared-gen/ap/National/Men_Surviving_Blackness.html
sidenote: is it just me, or are more journalists prying intot he lives of Black men? The Washington Post did a whole series on something very similar to this. Very important topic, i'm glad people are finally exploring this.
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