Posted on 11/15/2014 7:35:36 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
The Philadelphia Association of Black Journalists (PABJ) hosted a discussion on The Black Male Image through the Media at its general body Chapter Meeting on Tuesday.
The discussion was moderated by PABJ President Johann Calhoun and featured four culture, social, media and education leaders who offered their perspectives and suggested solutions.
Black men are special. We are the only group of individuals in America that, when we leave our house in the morning, we have no idea whats going to happen, said Fathers Day Rally Committee (FDRC) President Bilal Qayyum, one of the discussions panelists.
We dont know whether we are going to be killed by the police officer, [if] we are going to run into another angry Black man we dont know when we get to work, if were going to have a job, he said. No other group Black women, white women, white men, Asian, Latino men and women have to live by that daily pressure. I always say to folks the image is already painted in America, in the sense that our ancestors came here under gun point.
Upon setting this frame of reference, the discussion then centered on specific cases of Black male images in mainstream media, ranging from coverage of the Michael Brown case in Ferguson, Mo., to President Barack Obama.
Opinions on each issue varied. Some panelists were satisfied with coverage of Ferguson, because it helped to expose the organizing of Black youth for a cause, inclusive of Black males. And, some pointed out depending on the station, you may or may not see fair coverage of Americas president.
But the panelists, agreed, in general, the media does skew negative, toward violent and thuggish images, when it comes to the Black male.
Eric Grimes, 900AM WURD host of the Shomari Show and one of the panelists, used demeaning coverage of Obama, the most powerful man in the world, as a primary example. In a 2009 New York Post cover story on the presidents stimulus package, the Post published a cartoon image of Obama as a chimpanzee, held at gun point by police. Such images, Grimes said, send a key message.
When you live in a culture that can equate your president to a chimpanzee thats worthy of a police shooting, then thats going to trickle down, he said. If I can kill your president, then Mike Brown and Trayvon Martin dont have a snowballs chance in hell. If this is what they can do to the most powerful man in the world without ramification, then all bets are off regarding the way the average, basic brother is going to be treated.
The question was then raised if Black males contribute to this negative coverage with self-perpetuating stereotypes, such as the wearing of sagging pants.
Several of the panelists dismissed the notion, making the point such a look is not unique to Black males. White male youth adopt the sagging pants as well, but it is usually called by a different name, they said.
Sagging pants, slang talk and less than flattering lyrics is negative on a Black body, but on a white body its skater culture or maybe its death metal, said panelist Christopher Norris, CEO of Techbook Online. If you go into King of Prussia or if you go into South Philly by the stadium where they are skating, youll see the white boys dressed like that with their pants down and they are dropping f-bombs they are doing all this stuff that Black males do, but they are not demonized for it.
To correct or change this phenomenon, the panelists said there needed to be a push for balanced coverage, and advocated for more Black media ownership.
Advocacy for Black males and equity in the media process is important, said panelist Thomas Butler, director of Advancement and Operations for the Philadelphia College Prep Roundtable. Wherever we can try to balance the information [on] how Black men are portrayed, that for me is the best way ... equity doesnt necessarily mean equality. Because there is so much negative [information] about Black men, we have to do double time to [publish] the positive.
For Grimes, Black journalists taking over their media and communications spaces is the most effective answer, even more so than protest[ing] for fair coverage.
We are the only people who are crying about this issue, he said. Overnight you can create a whole communications system thats at scale, thats where the work is. And then, all of a sudden, these images will change real quick. You dont have to worry about your protests because youll have your protest by building your own institution.
“we dont know when we get to work, if were going to have a job, he said. No other group Black women, white women, white men, Asian, Latino men and women have to live by that daily pressure.”
Yes, no other group must deal with job insecurity.
What a bunch of anecdotal BS!
They are where I live.
Everywhere there are clusters of Blacks, it's just destruction, period.
The rest of us can tell the future.
This is ten pounds in a five pound bag!
Of course they were under gun point. After their fellow blacks captured them, held them under spear point and sold them to the European slavers, what do they expect? They should thank their fellow blacks back in Africa for their captivity.
This guy sounds like a two year old.
You know that dressing up like an idiot is dumb, so say so. Why should you care that someone else doesn't say anything about it?
Maybe they should brother Obama, or better yet- Moopchelle, to read and explain the lyrics to the hit song their friend Jay Z performed at the White House, so Americans could understand their culture.
I had no idea Stringbean was so popular in the ghetto.
“We are the only group of individuals in America that, when we leave our house in the morning, we have no idea whats going to happen”
Yeah, like strong arm robbery of convenience store workers or,
or attacking police officers IN their patrol car or,
shaking down a fellow bro for his dope stash and not knowin he be packing heat or ....
Now there’s the way to get rid of that attire. Claim a white cracker invented it.
“Yes, no other group must deal with job insecurity.”
Irish were despised. Chinese were ignored. Vietnamese were told to screw off. Koreans called slant eyed and told no jobs for you. Etc. etc. etc.
But blacks, after getting jobs and having intact families seized the welfare life that Lyndon Baines Johnson bequeathed them. Since then, they’ve been little more than printed advertisements for the “Before” picture in life.
“...when we leave our house in the morning, we have no idea whats going to happen...”
Um, sorry, but that’s true for everyone. Of course most days what you expect to happen, happens.
But then there’s a 9/11 a Sandy a car crash.
This guy’s an idiot, we are all in that boat.
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