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Archive for the ‘The Media’ Category

Precious is Not “Our Story”

Friday, February 12th, 2010

A Response to Fade to White by Ishmael Reed

In a New York Times Op-Ed, Ishmael Reed discusses the movie Precious, and how it was offensive to the African-American audiences to whom he spoke, while being more widely accepted by white audiences.

He writes:

Among black men and women, there is widespread revulsion and anger over the Oscar-nominated film about an illiterate, obese black teenager who has two children by her father. The author Jill Nelson wrote: “I don’t eat at the table of self-hatred, inferiority or victimization. I haven’t bought into notions of rampant black pathology or embraced the overwrought, dishonest and black-people-hating pseudo-analysis too often passing as post-racial cold hard truths.” One black radio broadcaster said that he felt under psychological assault for two hours. So did I.1

It seems to be Reed’s contention that the heart-wrenching portrayal of an African-American woman living in a terrible situation is palatable to white Americans because they already think very little of how African-Americans live.  On the other hand, African-Americans whose lives do not in any way resemble that of Precious should be offended for how that story misrepresents them.

And here is where Mr. Reed and – everyone else who feels this way – makes a critical mistake.  Like so many others, he treats the example of one individual who happens to be African-American necessarily as a representation of all African-Americans.  This kind of presumption is one that bubbles up from the cracks of institutionalized racism.  It is an irony and a travesty where African-Americans themselves – like Mr. Reed – are instilled with racist presumptions by way of this institution.

An Interesting Experiment

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Someone – not naming any names – created a Facebook account for conservative political pundit Michelle Malkin. Within no time at all, the account amassed hundreds of friends, countless comments, and “Michelle’s” inbox was flooded with messages from people who actually thought “she” might actually care about what they had to say.

The purpose was not to antagonize or slander Malkin herself – although she is deserving of every attack leveled at her – but to gain some insight into how run-of-the-mill conservatives think, and the kinds of conversations they have amongst themselves.

In a rather hilarious twist, “Michelle” posted a status message about how quickly people will jump on one bandwagon or another, if only someone uses the right buzz words. In no time at all, the facebook followers rallied behind “her”, blissfully unaware that “she” was talking about them.

Time will tell how many of the followers will recognize that they’ve been deceived.  For now, the experiment continues…

District 9 is Better Than Its Critics

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

To save you the time of reading this long review, I’ll state in a paragraph my overall opinion of District 9:

If you haven’t heard of District 9 or weren’t interested, find out or get interested. If you were debating about whether or not to see it, then see it. If you were planning to see it, then see it NOW. Great movie.

And I can state this as fact rather than opinion – why?  Because where a certain friend and I – who almost always disagree on movies – both love a movie, it must be great!

That said, I’m going to start my review of District 9 with a criticism of another review, one written by Armond White of the New York Press.  Mr. White, throughout his review, describes the film as “a ludicrous allegory for segregation”, “high-concept inanity”, and some of the “sloppiest and dopiest pop cinema” – all points which I will debate. He also criticizes D-9 for not being “ominously beautiful like the civilization-in-peril tableau that caps Roy Andersson’s You, the Living (critic John Demetry described that climax as a “revelation out of [Morrissey’s] ‘Everyday Is Like Sunday’”).”

What?  Does anyone other than John Demetry, Mr. White himself, or other film students even understand that reference?  Which brings me to a second point – that film critics are a ludicrous sort, people whose entire body of work relies upon the perceived success or failure of others’ work – that is, having no independent merit at all.

Dennis Kucinich and Fox News

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

Dennis Kucinich, since he appeared on the scene during the 2008 Democratic primaries (I simply never knew about him before that), has become of my favorite politicians.  That is really to say that he is in the extreme minority of politicians who I actually think has any merit, at least and especially in terms of basic integrity.  His treatment of the issues – which includes both his perspective and his willingness to discuss them comprehensively – has resonated with me in the vast majority of cases.  I am dangerously close, even, to saying that I trust him, which is something I offer public figures and power brokers very rarely, and that I am eager to revoke at the first sign of duplicity.

That all said, there is one thing about Kucinich that has confused me.  And it is probably less about Kucinich and more about Fox News.  The thing is that Fox News, which is so unapologetically right-aligned that it covered former President Bush’s return to Texas while every other network was covering Barack Obama’s inauguration, has had no reservations about hosting interviews with Mr. Kucinich, who is about as far-left a politician as exists anywhere in the U.S. government.  When I say “no reservations”, I mean that Kucinich regularly appears on Fox News – at least several times every month.

The Bell Curve Fallacy

Wednesday, June 29th, 2005

“The Bell Curve”, a book written in 1994 by Richard Herrnstein – a professor of psychology, and Charles Murray – a writer of political science, purports to explain the social strata of humanity, mostly in terms of cognitive differences between races. Although the book has been dismissed by many as pseudoscience, it remains a sacred writ of racism and social Darwinism. The best argument against the ideas expressed in the book came from people like acclaimed evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould and geneticist Richard Lewontin; and all backgrounds considered, Gould and Lewontin are probably in a better place to understand the subject than either Herrnstein or Murray. Actually, Herrnstein’s and Murray’s thesis is so weak and underdeveloped that someone like myself, with considerably less education, can shoot it to pieces. That is exactly what I plan to do.

As noted, neither Murray nor Herrnstein are geneticists, yet they herald biological differences, i.e. “ethnic” or “racial”, as a primary cause of intellectual differences. One has to wonder then, how do they define these racial differences?

“How are we to classify a person whose parents hail from Panama but whose ancestry is predominantly African? Is he a Latino? A black? The rule we follow here is to classify people according to the way they classify themselves.” (p. 271)

What? How is that scientifically viable? There is relatively large genetic/biological diversity amongst the population of people who identify themselves as “black”. I say “relatively” because ALL genetic differences amongst all human beings account for less than one percent of the common genome. The socially recognized relationship between genetics and racial self-identification is a manifestation of culture, and is entirely subjective. Race itself is a social construct, not necessarily a reflection of genetic makeup. To remind you, Herrnstein and Murray are NOT geneticists, do not anywhere in The Bell Curve cite genetics literature, and yet use genetics as the foundation of their argument!