On
October 15th, Comedy Central is slated to premier a “satirical
fake news show” called, Chocolate News. David Alan Grier,
most famous for his many characters in the ‘90s hit sketch comedy
series In Living Color, will be the host. The show is reported
to be a cultural spin-off of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
and The Colbert Report, but judging from the released trailers,
Comedy Central is aiming for a much different objective.
The scene is an all too familiar one. The trailers feature Grier,
like past Black comics before him, dressed up in feminine outfits,
yelling at the top of his voice, acting erratically, and operating
in an incoherent shuffle. It is as though this long national nightmare,
of which President Ford spoke, is far from over.
In
early 2005, Chappelle’s Show, Comedy Central’s most popular
series at the time, received a set-back from production because
Dave Chappelle, star of the show, had come to a sobering conclusion
that he did not wish for his soul to be purchased at the price of
corporate America’s offer. As the legend tells itself, Dave
Chappelle turned down $50 million – the allotted price for the third
season – and escaped to South Africa for a “spiritual retreat.” Comedy
Central, uneasy about the kind of message being sent to Black boys
and girls across the globe, initially spun Chappelle’s departure
into a battle with the flu, but subsequently reoriented it to suggest
a meltdown of insanity and eccentricity.
Dave
Chappelle, upon a return to The States, informed TV icon Oprah Winfrey,
that he was motivated to halt production of his ultra successful
show because it had grown increasingly “socially irresponsible.”
In response to the growing concern from within the Black Community,
vis-à-vis his many overtly stereotypical sketches, Chappelle remarked
that he didn’t want “black people to be disappointed in me for putting
that [message] out there. … It's a complete moral dilemma.” What
an unusual and unprecedented act of solidarity and candor.
What
Dave Chappelle understood, quite explicitly, is the depth to which
images matter. Dave Chappelle, unlike his counterparts, has a concerted
knowledge of history and is aware of the degree to which Minstrel
shows, in the past, have damaged the quality of life for Black folks
worldwide. For Chappelle, stoking the flame of suffering would be
unforgivable and unacceptable. If contemporary Black comedians,
artists and entertainers in general, possess a similar amount of
self-worth, the world would undoubtedly be a much better place for
Black people. Veteran Black Panther activist and presently incarcerated
political prisoner, Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin a/k/a “H. Rap Brown,”
once noted that in the stadium on entertainment, Blacks “dominate
the field,” but stop short of actually “controlling” it. In essence,
commercial Hip-Hop artists foolishly parade around with diamond-encrusted
slave chains on their necks, but ultimately realize who the “master”
is.
Hip-Hop,
a musical genre constructed from the agonizing and cruel conditions
of inner-city life, has now morphed into a safe-haven for over-sexed
men, over-sexed women, cutthroats, pimps, promiscuous females, testosterone-filled
adolescents, capitalists, criminal international bankers, government
agents, drug-dealers etc. What once represented, as Public Enemy
founder Chuck D put it, the “CNN for black people,” is now a disseminator
of filth, uncleanliness and impurity. Corporate Black male rappers
– powered by big name industries – operate like cranked-up robots
whose sole purpose is the further degradation of Black women. With
the much publicized studies
claiming 72% of Hip-Hop’s consumers to be White kids, with 80% of
that being suburban White females, one wonders for whom the proverbial
“studio gangsters” flex their steroid-laden
muscles.
The
triple evils of BET, VH1 and MTV have wreaked more havoc – in the
21st century – upon the Black psyche than at any other period in
entertainment history. Under the umbrella of Viacom, owned by the
85-year-old White Sumner Redstone, BET, VH1 and MTV have risen to
great heights as the primary source of amusement for the 18-35 demographic.
Even more foul is the reality that BET – also know also known as
“Black Evil Television” or “Black Embarrassment Television” – has
extended that margin to accommodate, through marketing schemes,
kids as young as 9 years. old.
Like
every rotten apple, BET was once a ripe beacon of illumination and
intellectual stimulation. At a certain period in its formation,
the now withering BET entertained a diversity of programs and a
line-up embroiled in novelty. As the late Notorious B.I.G. once
quipped, “Damn, sh-- done changed.” With long-axed variety shows
including, “Our Voices with Bev Smith,” “BET Tonight with Tavis
Smiley,” “BET Tonight with Ed Gordon,” “BET Nightly News,” “Teen
Summit” and “Lead Story,” it seemed odd that Black Entertainment
Television would, in a pathetic move, attempt to substantiate the
magnitude of such loss with the addition of a weekly half-hour political
talk show, hosted by noted activist, Jeff Johnson. In
2007, many activists in the Black Community grew weary of BET’s
stubborn reluctance to feed its viewers healthy material, and therefore
employed numerous avenues to send a strong message of resistance
to the corporate monsters – mostly white – whose programming decisions
are wiping out the consciousness of an entire generation.
One
of such activists, Opio Osokoni, created an international “Turn
off Channel Zero” (TOCZ) movement in mid 2007. Through a self-produced
documentary, Osokoni searched for answers to the over-saturation
of Black male buffoonery on Viacom and the mainstream media at large.
The documentary featured a panel of acclaimed activists such as
Public Enemy member Professor Griff, Hip Hop journalist Davey
D, Last Poet's Abiodun Oyewole and Morgan State University Professor
Ray Winbush. In less than 80 minutes, Turn off Channel Zero was
able to accomplish what most mega-budget Hollywood
scripts constantly fail in fulfilling. It exposed the corporate
characters that pull the strings behind big media companies.
One
intriguing development was the fact that most of those forces, who
now sit atop the Hip-Hop and “urban” industry, are Caucasian or
non-black. These corporate criminals are, without a doubt, the chief
culprits in the continual cheapening of the Black Community’s integrity.
With the stroke of a pen, they have outlawed positive/uplifting
imagery, and promoted – with full force – the incessant caricature
of Black life that has grown into a normative state on most entertainment
and News channels. Rosa Clemente, V.P. nominee of the Green Party,
spoke
out eloquently against this reality in a 2005 protest of the
Hip-Hop station, Hot 97. “Believe me, when you look at Emmis.com,
and you see the 7 top executives of Emmis Communication, they are
all white men over the age of 50, programming poison to our children,”
Clemente said. “As a new mother, with a two-month old, I refuse
to let these companies, these corporations, call my daughter a bitch,
a hoe, a nigger. It’s over. It’s not about ‘free speech.’ It’s about
your peddling drugs into the mind of our community. What you do
is addicting our children to violence.” Another sobering finding,
that TOCZ uncovered, is the reality that White corporate executives
have always found – and would always find – Black males who would
readily submit themselves for the usage of the devil.
Many
older Blacks are familiar with Stepin' Fetchit and the horror
of minstrel shows. White directors, in the 1800s, formulated a plan
to keep their pale-faced audiences everlastingly entertained. The
way they figured it, if Black men soon resolved their internal battle
with self-hatred/self esteem and decided to abruptly refuse the
role of “lawn jockey” for White-owned media production companies,
white actors could simply darken their faces with cosmetic products
and perform in a way they believed was natural to Black people –
that of drunkenness, laziness, ignorance and incompetence. Luckily
for the swine, locating Black men who perceived their prime objective
in life to be that of lackeys and coons for White satisfaction has
proved to be no daunting task.
In
the ‘70s, CBS found it amusing to promote a sitcom called “Good
Times.” The premise of the show was apparently to propagate the
concept that a family with unpaid bills, horrible living conditions,
insufficient food, and domestic commotion was somehow dwelling in
“Good Times.” As expected, the cast of gifted characters was incomplete
without a silly-acting son whose self-obsession, poor taste and
preoccupation with promiscuity was accommodated, and sometimes encouraged,
by the loving, yet misaligned set of parents. It was also in the
‘70s that NBC ‘made a killing’ with the variety show, The Flip
Wilson Show. A show which, amongst other factors, was most popular
for the Geraldine Jones skit, featuring the host, Clerow
Wilson Jr. reduced to the role of a sharp-tongued black woman who
was devoid of any sense of personal responsibility and always retorted
– when caught – “The devil made me do it!”
This
phenomenon of Black men unashamedly embracing offers that require
appearances in dresses and drags have blossomed into a cash-magnet
enterprise. Tyler Perry (Madea) and Martin Lawrence (Big Momma’s
House), two very famous comedians, are perhaps the most treasonous
in reprising self-imposed roles, where the mocking and open denigration
of Black women (whether consciously or subconsciously) is entertained
as “humor.” It is somewhat ironic that these two acts are most beloved
by Black women, whose mass consumption of “mammy-like” stereotypes
helped make Perry and Lawrence
instant multi-millionaires.
It
is no surprise that the same media which revels in the destruction
of Black male identity seeks to fulfill the same with today’s most
important Black male: Sen. Barack Obama. More
disturbing is the reality that Sen. Obama, like prominent Black
public figures before him, is too uninformed to acknowledge the
degree to which such acquiescence would redound toward the disadvantage
of generations to come after him. One thing is for certain however:
Black folks of consciousness have work cut out for them. For Change
is not a cheap political exercise, but rather a unified hegemonic
force against a system of convention.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Tolu Olorunda, is an
18-year-old local
activist/writer and a Nigerian immigrant. Click here
to reach Mr. Olorunda. |