Posted on 12/28/2005 12:15:26 PM PST by Nasty McPhilthy
National Public Radio is sometimes unintentionally funny. Propped up with tax dollars from average Americans who have more sense than to waste their time listening to liberal twaddle, NPR delights in its reputation for appealing to a highly educated audience.
I thought of that audience this morning when looking at NPRs Web site. One page described "Dreaming of a Black Christmas," a commentary heard last week on the News & Notes with Ed Gordon program. There NPRs highly educated fans learn:
"This time of year its hard to avoid the figure of old Saint Nick. With very few exceptions these Santas are white. Commentator Carole Boston Weatherford says shed like to see a little more color in the complexions of the Kris Cringle candidates."
Kris Cringle? Isnt his last name Kringle with a K? And then we have "these Santas are white." Just between you and I, although tossing in an apostrophe every so often may make you look highly educated and even grammatically correct, it isnt always required.
Commentator Weatherford (or Commentator Boston Weatherford, if you prefer) thinks that some black parents dont take their children to see Santa Claus in stores and malls because hes almost always white.
"Could it be that we cant bear spending our hard earned money so that some white man in a red velvet suit can take credit for putting toys under the Christmas tree?," she asks. She suggests a black Santa might make the process more palatable and laments a lack of them, even in predominantly black urban areas.
I understand the ladys view. Santa Claus is a secular symbol and what he looks like isnt a matter of dogma. Seeing the jolly elf should be a time of unbridled joy, and if kids are comfortable hopping on the knee of someone who resembles them more, so be it. Santa Claus should be highly customizable.
She may also be right about there being a dearth of black Santas, but that doesnt appear to be the case everywhere. In suburban Chicago, the very successful Evergreen Plaza Shopping Center has a black Santa. I saw him on TV the other day and my only beef is he seems a tad scrawny for the role.
Dreaming of a black Christmas isnt a new concept. Especially not in the Chicago area. In the late 60s Jesse Jackson took the idea out for a ride.
A 1969 Chicago Tribune article related that Jackson had announced his second "Black Christmas" boycott of white merchants. Claiming that a similar boycott had cost white stores up to $40 million in 1968, the Reverend Mr. Jackson said the move was "the affirmation of black people that we intend to control the theological, the psychological, and the material aspects of Christmas."
He cautioned blacks from "running downtown and over extending themselves by falling for cheap gimmicks." Not that hes an authority on cheap gimmicks or anything.
He also proclaimed that his "Black Christmas" initiative would, according to the Tribune, "include a parade and the appearance in Negro areas, hospitals, and jails of Soul Saint, a black Santa Claus."
In their 1985 book "Jesse Jackson and the Politics of Race," authors Thomas Landess and Richard Quinn write of the Soul Saint "who, according to Jackson, came from the South Pole rather than the North Pole and lingered along the equator sufficiently to take up wearing a dashiki of black, with yellow, red and green trimmings the colors of the flag of Ghana. Henceforth, the Soul Saint would preside over the season of Christmas, a black figure whose gifts were not toys or sugar plums but love, justice, peace, and power."
Can you see a child of any color at Christmas time asking not for toys, but for a generous serving of love, a dollop of justice, a piece of peace and some power on the side? No wonder Jesses idea went over like a case of New Coke.
It wasnt his finest moment, but he picked himself up and moved on to bigger and better things. Playing into white guilt and fear, he now pulls down megabuck "donations" from corporations like IBM, General Motors, AT&T and, naturally enough, Coca-Cola.
So we havent heard much dreaming of a black Christmas from the Rev for a while. But if his Wall Street angels ever stop subsidizing him, dont be surprised if he trots out a black dashiki with yellow, red and green trimmings.
Being the Soul Saint would be a step down for the man who said, "Great things happen in small places. Jesus was born in Bethlehem. Jesse Jackson was born in Greenville." But we know hell do practically anything to keep hope alive.
CHICAGOLAND PING
Leave it to the lily white lefties at NPR to be clueless about yet another aspect of the real America.
Reminds of when Freddy "Boom Boom" Washington sang, "I don't care what de white man say, Santa Claus is a black man" on Welcome Back Kotter.
>>Kris Cringle? Isnt his last name Kringle with a K? And then we have "these Santas are white." Just between you and I, although tossing in an apostrophe every so often may make you look highly educated and even grammatically correct, it isnt always required.<<
Perhaps in radio, where the Internet transcript is an afterthought, we can forgive the fact that the written version wasn't proofread. But am I walking into some kind of unsuspecting trap by noting that "Just between you and I" is a rather egregious error to making in the very sentence in which one attacks someone else's grammar?
damnifino
Unless they can prove that St. Nicholas was black, they need to shut up.
I'm offended that Martin Luther King Jr. was black.
Ho Ho Ho.
Merry Christmas, everyone!
If the audience is 'hightly educated' per NPR's on publicity, then they are also probably relatively affluent. (I'd be curious to know the median income of typical NPR listeners.) This in turn would mean they don't really need publicly funded news outlet because they can probably afford to pay for some more specialized news source themselves. So, this is just an entitlement to the rich, or at least the reasonably well-off.
PBS viewers tend to be more affluent, educated and influential than the average U.S. Adult.
Compare PBS viewers to the average U.S. adult:
42% more likely to have an investment portfolio over $75K
28% more likely to own a vacation home
67% more likely to have met with an elected official
12% more likely to have a postgraduate degree
Source: MRI Doublebase 2002
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