African American History Part 7: The Third Era
The Age of Obama (2008- 2017)
One thing about black people is that we are always in
involved in historic events. The historic campaign and election of Barack Obama
as the first African American President of the United States of America
represented a new era of our history. The end of the Bush administration was
marred with economic recession, failures from the Iraq War, NSA warrantless
wiretapping, the Katrina disaster aftermath, and other problems. Barack Obama
spoke to the frustration of black people and others who desired a new way out
of a situation caused by far right wing policies. Barack Obama’s gift was his
usage of extraordinary intellect, oratory, and charisma to advance story,
consensus among different groups, and using structure plus detail to advance
his ideas. He was elected with massive support among black people, other people
of color, white progressives, the youth, women, college educated people, those
who lived in urban areas, first time voters, and other human beings.
Some even promoted the myth that the election of the
center-left politician Barack Obama would mean the establishment of a post
racial era. Now, we see that to be a myth completely. Barack Obama would
represent ironies and paradoxes. Barack Obama, on many occasions, would give
middle of the road speeches on race and education (many of which are those that
I don't agree with), yet reactionaries would still slander him as a racist and
a person who is a socialist. Barack Obama would speak about personal
responsibility and family parenting (which conservatives love to hear)
involving schools, but that wasn’t good enough for those who viewed him as far
left (which he wasn’t). Barack Obama would both execute legitimate policies
(like the Lily-Leadbetter Act, the economic compensation to black farmers, the
Iranian nuclear deal, normalizing relations among Cuba and America, many reforms
in the criminal justice system, etc.) while also executing blatantly bad,
neoliberal plus imperial policies (like the Wall Street bailout, the
continuation of the NDAA, the massive prosecution of whistleblowers, and the
massive drone strikes overseas). He in fact is the representation of the
achievements of Black Americans in many areas and how far we have to go in
achieving justice and human liberation. One cornerstone of the Obama legacy is
his signing the Affordable Care Act, which was a national overhaul of the
health care system (filled with legitimate policies and imperfections).
In a sense, how many conservatives view Reagan, many
liberals view the same for Obama. Barack Obama is the man who is the paradox of
having massive genius intellectually, while we (as black Americans) saw
increases of economic inequality, problems of infant mortality, decreases of
black Americans wealth during the peak of the Great Recession (as a product of
the recession and a fallible capitalist system), and a continued epidemic of
police terrorism against black people (especially against poor and working
class black people). This is caused by a system which has existed long before
Obama was elected, but he is responsible for some of these policies. This
reality has been caused by a neoliberal capitalist system that can never solve
the problems of poverty and economic exploitation period. Part of the Age of
Obama was the inspirational words from First Lady Michelle Obama (she is a
black woman with great intelligence and she has heroically advanced the
importance of health plus exercise). She told the truth that White House was
built by slaves. Michelle Obama is easily the greatest First Lady in history. The two extreme views (which has been
promoted by some) of Obama being nearly perfect (and being immune from any
critique as advanced by black bourgeois political figures especially) or Obama
being evil incarnate (as advanced by white supremacists especially) must be
rejected. We ought to fairly evaluate the Age of Obama as both filled with
crisis and filled with a renewed fight among a new generation of social
activists for social change. By the end of the Age of Obama, the unemployment
rate declined with millions of jobs being created. In terms of LGBT rights, he
is the most pro-LGBT President in American history. The Age of Obama did saw
the birth of the progressive Black Lives Matter Movement (which I will describe
in more detail in the future) and the Occupy Wall Street movement. It saw both
the tragedy in Ferguson including in Charleston and it saw more activism by
heroes in opposing bigotry, police terrorism, and any injustice. Therefore, we
have to look at the Age of Obama in comprehensive terms as a new era of Black
America.
Obama's Election
The campaign of Barack Obama grew after he announced his candidacy
on February of 2007. It was a long campaign with social media being heavily
involved from Myspace, Facebook, and to the rest of the Internet. He fought
against Hillary Clinton and John Edwards during the Democratic primary among
other candidates. By the end of June 2007, Barack Obama out-raised then Senator
Hillary Clinton for funds with a $31 million haul. Barack Obama’s campaign was
based on “hope and change.” He advocated a withdrawal of American troops from
the Iraqi territory (by the end of 2008). He was a previous opponent of the
Iraq War. Chris Dodd, Bill Richardson, and others ran for President too. On September 18, 2007, Barack Obama advocated
an $80 billion in tax cuts for the middle class while eliminating part of the
Bush tax cuts on the super wealthy. Oprah Winfrey publicly supported Barack
Obama on December 8, 2007. Massive crowds would hear him speak and almost
30,000 people came to see Oprah and Obama in Columbia, South Carolina. The
historic Democratic Iowa caucus had its results. Obama won the Iowa caucus on
January 3, 2008. This sent shock waves all over the world. People celebrated.
Hillary Clinton won the New Hampshire primary. Obama won the South Carolina
primary later. The South Carolina primary results caused Bill Clinton to
compare Obama’s victories to Jesse Jackson’s campaigns in 1984 and 1988 (and Bill
Clinton said that Obama would be making him coffee back then according to the
late Edward Kennedy). That comment from Bill Clinton caused rightful anger in
the African American community. Barack Obama surged in popularity. First Lady
Michelle Obama also spoke throughout the campaign. By February 27, 2008,
Georgia Democratic Representative and civil rights hero John Lewis reversed his
endorsement from Clinton to Obama. Small donations caused Obama to receive
massive support. Axelrod was a great apolitical advisor to him too. There were
controversies too. There was the Tony Rezko scandal.
There was the March release of news clips of the sermons of
Rev. Jeremiah Wright (who was Obama’s pastor for 20 years) at Trinity United
Church of Christ in Chicago. Ironically, Wright told the truth on many issues
from exposing imperialism, disagreeing with social injustice, and criticizing
the overt war crimes of dropping bombs in Hirsohima (plus Nagasaki). Past
Jeremiah Wright rightfully abhorred the many evils against black people and
Native Americans like slavery and genocide. Yet, it was taboo for anyone to say
these comments in public, because courageous black preaching against
imperialism has been demonized by the enemies of truth. Jeremiah Wright said
“God d___ America.” Barack Obama gave his Philadelphia speech where he
denounced Wright’s remarks while saying that black people’s legitimate
grievance against racial injustice must be respected. His speech tried to
appealed to people’s better natures and it was very conciliatory and moderate.
His historic speech on race was called, “A More Perfect Union.” Barack Obama
was a genius political figure during the 2008 campaign. Obama talked about some
people clinging to guns, religion, and anti-immigrant sentiment. Hillary
Clinton criticized this comment, but we know now that many people falsely
scapegoat immigrants in explaining why neoliberal policies have caused jobs to
be outsourced unfortunately. Debates about Ayers persisted, but he won the
Democratic nomination for President among the Democratic Party.
By June 3, 2008, Barack Obama became victorious to be a
Democratic Presidential nominee. His Democratic National Convention speech in
2008 was in Denver. It was powerful and historic. He appealed to black people,
working people, and other Americans. He called for energy independence,
economic reforms, health care improvement, and other progressive positions. He
wanted to end the Iraq War. The Republican candidate John McCain was his
political opponent. He debated him in many debates. The Presidential campaign
was fierce. Barack Obama equated McCain to the failed policy of the Bush
administration. Barack Obama won the election in November of 2008. People
cheered. Jesse Jackson cried. Oprah Winfrey celebrated. John McCain gave a very
gracious concession speech. Barack Obama gave his victory speech in Grant Park
of Chicago, Illinois with his wife and children. He was inaugurated on January
20, 2009 to a large crowd of people. Parades existed and hopes were high for
the future of America.
Political News
During his first 100 days in office, President Barack Obama
passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. It promoted
emergency assistance. The stimulus law gave 40 percent of the money to tax cuts
and credits to individuals and businesses. It wasn’t a direct government jobs
program modeled on the 1930’s era Works Progress Administration. The stimulus
package stopped a massive plunge into a worse depression. The unemployment rate
continued to increase for a while. He signed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act
that promoted gender equality involving pay. He promoted an expanded S-CHIP or
the State’s Children’s Health Insurance Program. President Barack Obama
appointed Sonia Sotomayor (who is the first Latina American on the Supreme
Court) and Elan Kagan to the Supreme Court. On October 8, 2009, he signed the
Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act. This is a
measure that expanded the 1969 United States federal hate-crime law to include
crimes motivated by a victim's actual or perceived gender, sexual orientation,
gender identity, or disability. On October 30, 2009, Obama lifted the ban on
travel to the United States by those infected with HIV, which was celebrated by
Immigration Equality. He repealed Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell in December 22, 2010.
On March 11, 2009, Obama created the White House Council on Women and Girls,
which forms part of the Office of Intergovernmental Affairs, having been
established by Executive Order 13506 with a broad mandate to advise him on
issues relating to the welfare of American women and girls. He continued to
expanded military involvement in the Afghanistan war while withdrawing military
forces from Iraq involving combat missions. President Barack Obama had
discussions about Israel, Russia, and the Muslim world. He gave his historic
speech promoting tolerance to the Muslim world in Cairo during his first term,
but he executed drones strikes and other militarist policies in the Muslim
world. So, political news was definitely part of his administration.
The Great Recession
The Great Recession harmed the Black American community in
such bad ways, that we have not fully recovered from it to this very day. In
essence, the Great Recession was caused by many factors not just one. It
involved a massive economic decline in many world markets from the late 2000's
to the early 2010's. It was the worse global recession since the Great Depression
according to the IMF. The causes of the Great Recession related directly to the
financial crisis of 2007, and the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis of 2007-2009
too. Under the economy definition of recession (which is about 2 or more
consecutive quarters of GDP decline), it lasted from December of 2007 to June
or July of 2009. Yet, the African American community suffered economic hurt to this
very day. Subprime loan losses in 2007 expanded the economic crisis. Loses
continued and Lehman Brothers fell on September 15, 2008. Neoliberal
politicians passed bailouts in their minds to save the largest banks from total
financial collapse. During the Great Recession, international trade, and
commodity prices declined. Unemployment grew and many human beings foreclosed
on their housing since they couldn’t afford to pay their mortgage payments.
Household debt increased also. The housing bubble nearly tripled the prices of
homes and other real-estate from 1999 to 2007. This huge increase was due in
part to the uncontrolled credit given by the American banks that engaged in
such practices, and which further increased demand in the housing sector. On December
30, 2008, the Case-Shiller home price index reported the largest price drop in
its history. Increased foreclosure rates in 2006–2007 among U.S. homeowners led
to a crisis in August 2008 for the subprime, collateralized debt obligation,
mortgage, credit, hedge fund, and foreign bank markets.
As early as October 2007, the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
had called the bursting housing bubble "the most significant risk to our
only economy.” Economic inequality further grew. The distribution of household
incomes in the United States has become more unequal during the post-2008
economic recovery, a first for the U.S but in line with the trend over the last
ten economic recoveries since 1949. Income inequality in the United States has
grown from 2005 to 2012 in more than 2 out of 3 metropolitan areas. Median
household wealth fell 35% in the US, from $106,591 to $68,839 between 2005 and
2011. The U.S. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission found that some of the
causes were the failures of financial regulation (like the Federal Reserve’s
failure to stop the spread of toxic mortgages. Back then, many aspects of the
derivatives trading lacked transparency and basic regulatory controls) and the
financial firms acting too reckless and taking too much risk. Other factors
that caused the Great Recession included the following: excessive borrowing and
risk by households and Wall Street that permitted this risky reality, and many
policy makers failing to prepare for the crisis. Many conservatives blamed the
crisis on the actions of Fannie & Freddie since they were involved in
government policy in dealing with much of American housing. Liberals, of
course, disagree with that assumption. The capitalist system was filled with
risky practices, excessive leverage, and instability that contributed to the
recession. African American suffered greatly during this era.
The Economic Policy Institute mentioned that in 2010, black
unemployment reached above 10 percent. There was the 2001 recession too (as a
result of the dot com bubble). Many black workers suffered discrimination, loss
of wealth, and massive economic troubles. Bailouts existed for big Wall Street
corporations (when no major Wall Street banker have been convicted of financial
malfeasance) while the leadership of both parties refused to bailout state and
local governments during the Great Recession (and afterwards because many of
them believe in the neoliberal, faulty philosophies of austerity and free market
fundamentalism). During the Great Recession, Black household wealth fell to
one-twentieth that of median white households. After debts were subtracted from
assets, the median white household was worth a little over $113,000, while
Black households could lay claim to only $5,600 in assets. Half of Black
households were worse off than that, and about half of those had virtually no
family worth at all. Studies have documented racial discrimination against
black Americans involving many financial situations. Wall Street oligarchs and
their allies received the majority of the economic benefits post-Great
Recession. That’s the sad part.
There has been economic growth since 2009, but that growth
has been uneven. The US gained 1.058 million jobs in 2010, 2.083 million in
2011, 2.236 million in 2012, 2.331 million in 2013, and 3.116 in 2014. GDP grew
roughly 2.5% in 2010, 1.6% in 2011, 2.3% in 2012, 2.2% in 2013, and 2.4% in
2014. May of 2014 also marked the recovery of all jobs lost during the
recession. Over 12.1 million jobs have been created since job losses stopped in
February 2010 as of June 2015. However, these new jobs are not equal in pay to
those medium-paying jobs lost: roughly 40% are high-paying jobs and 60% are
low-paying jobs, further widening the income gap between poor and affluent
Americans. Government attempts to reduce deficits via the sequester budget cuts
will remain a drag on the economy for as long as the Budget Control Act of 2011
remains in place. I don’t agree with sequester, because of obvious reasons.
Economics are complex, so every aspect of an economy can’t be blamed on any
President completely. Goods and services spread in the economy while Wall
Street banking interests have used hedge funds including derivatives to
establish record profits. Only a revolutionary policy can be a real solution.
In essence, Americans (and other people worldwide) were victims of an imperfect
economic system while the financial oligarchs were heavily involved in
exacerbating the Great Recession in the first place. One aspect of the Great
Recession was that it has inspired many progressive activists (from Occupy Wall
Street to Black Lives Matter) to advance the goal of economic justice.
Shirley Sherrod
Shirley Sherrod is one of the most heroic black women of our
generation. She fought against racial injustice and economic exploitation for
decades. On the date of July 19, 2010, Shirley Sherrod was pressured to resign
from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (as Georgia State Director). The reason
was that she was falsely accused of being racist towards white Americans (in a
March 2010 event of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People). The speech was about overcoming personal prejudices. She helped out a
white farmer in 1986 named Roger Spooner. She, at first, thought that he had a
superior attitude towards her (and she recalled the murder of her father in the
South back in 1965 in Georgia). Later, they became friends. She said that
poverty affected all races of people. Sherrod explained that her father’s
murder led her to a decision: “I couldn't just let his death go without doing
something in answer to what happened. I made the commitment on the night of my
father's death, at the age of 17, that I would not leave the South, that I
would stay in the South and devote my life to working for change. And I've been
true to that commitment all of these 45 years.” The right wing blogger Andrew
Breitbart (who died years ago) took her words out of context and edited them in
order for him to lie about Sherrod. In regard to the NAACP, Sherrod told CNN,
“The NAACP has not tried to contact me one time … I would have appreciated—when
you look at my history of civil rights, I would have appreciated having the
NAACP at least contact me …contact me to try to get the truth about what
happened…That hurts, because if you look at my history, that's what I'm saying.
I've done more to advance the causes of civil rights in this area than some of
them who are sitting in those positions now with the NAACP. They need to learn
something about me. They need to know about my work. They need to know what
I've contributed through the years.” Shirley Sherrod was so disrespected that
the Obama administration (which included United States Secretary of Agriculture
Tom Vilsack, other White House officials, and NAACP officials) apologized to
her. Back in 2010, there has been massive coverage of the incident. The
situation further caused more debates about racism in American society. I’m
glad that Sherrod filed a defamation lawsuit against Breitbart and co-defendant
Larry O’Connor. By 2015, the suit was settled in undisclosed terms. Shirley
Sherrod is a heroic black woman and a great human being.
The 2010 Fair Sentencing Act
Involving black American history, the War on Drugs has
harmed so many communities that the 2010 Fair Sentencing Act was passed. For a
long time, sentencing disparities have existed among those who use crack
cocaine and those who have use powdered cocaine. Also, there are sentences
being different among people of different races even if everyone was convicted
of the same offense. By the 2010’s, many people from across the political
spectrum have called for reforms involving drug policy. People reject the act
of massive incarceration as that alone is no solution as families have been
ruined as a product of the War on Drugs. The disparities of drug convictions
are racist. Even the U.S. Sentencing Commission (USSC) found out in a report in
1995 that showed that almost 90 percent of defendants sentenced under crack
cocaine rule were black people. The
USSC, hardly a bastion of antiracism, advocated for the elimination of the
100-to-1 rule, issuing four reports over 20 years that concluded there was indisputable
racial bias in the disparity between the mandatory minimum sentencing. Their
recommendations were ignored by both Republican and Democratic administrations
(who wanted to promote the “tough on crime” rhetoric). The Fair Sentencing Act
of 2010 dropped the disparity to 18 to 1. This new law didn’t apply retroactively.
Many federal inmates (who are serving time for past crack cocaine convictions)
could apply for reduced prison terms. Yet, inmates with criminal histories or
those who possessed or use a gun will not be eligible for sentence reductions.
So Telisha Watkins, sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2007, won't be eligible
for a reduction because of a prior criminal conviction for drug possession. Her
likely release date is 2024. Nor will Derrick Cain, sentenced to 10 years for
selling cocaine and possession of a firearm. Derrick's gun was legally
registered and wasn't used in connection with cocaine sales, but he'll be in
prison until 2017.
The War on Drugs continues even though we know that
prohibition doesn’t work and discrimination exists in the criminal justice
system among all levels. The Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 also eliminated the
five-year mandatory minimum sentence for simple possession of crack cocaine,
among other provisions. Some progressives wanted the entire act to be
retroactive. According to Gil Kerlikowske, Director of the Office of National
Drug Control Policy, "there is no scientific basis for the disparity and
by promoting laws and policies that treat all Americans equally, and by working
to amend or end those that do not, we can only increase public confidence in
the criminal justice system and help create a safer and healthier nation for us
all." The sentencing disparity should be eliminated completely. The 2010
Fair Sentencing Act does not reduce sentences for those prosecuted under state
law, and state prosecutions account for a vast majority of incarcerations for
drug-related offenses. The law represents the further need to end the War on
Drugs once and for all (and implement creative alternatives to help society).
The Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial
One of the greatest events of African American history
during the 21st century was the opening of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Memorial on Washington, D.C. on the date of August 22, 2011. It is found near
the National Mall. It is found in 4 acres of land. Lei Yixin was the sculptor
who created the Stone of Hope for the granite statue of the Civil Rights leader
Dr. King. It existed after long decades of planning, fundraising, and
construction. The location is found at the northwest corner of the Tidal Basin
near the Franklin Delano Memorial on a sightline linking the Lincoln Memorial
to the northwest and the Jefferson Memorial to the southeast. The official
address of the monument is 1964 Independence Avenue, S.W. which honors the year
when the Civil Rights Act of 1964 became law. This memorial is the first
memorial near or on the National Mall that memorializes an African American.
The memorial, which is first to honor an African American in Washington, D.C.,
is the Mary McLeod Bethune bronze statue. It is administered by the National
Park Service. The Vision statement of the King Memorial is very clear on how
Dr. King wanted freedom and democracy for all. Harry E. Johnson is the
President and Chief Executive Officer of the memorial foundation. The Dr. King
Memorial has quotes from King’s speeches and sermons. They are found on the
Inscription Wall. SCLC staff photographer Bob Fitch and others were involved in
the design and construction of the memorial. The official dedication ceremony
took place on October 16, 2011 after much delay because of Hurricane Irene.
President Barack Obama gave his speech about how the work for justice is not
done, but we are still going forward. He linked the civil rights movement from
the past to the 21st century events of the Great Recession. Barack Obama talked
about Dr. King’s legacy and the need for economic justice. Jesse Jackson,
Andrew Young, Al Sharpton, Martin Luther King III spoke at the ceremony. Many
singers performed like Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder, Sheryl Crow, James
Taylor, Jennifer Holiday, and Sweet Honey in the Rock.
Over 10,000 people attended. First Lady Michelle Obama, Vice
President Joe Biden, Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi, Congressman John Lewis,
Congressman Elijah Cummings and former Congressman Walter E. Fauntroy were
there too. Now, it is also important to
make other points as well. We have to reject the notion that Dr. King wasn’t a
great radical, because many people want to sanitize his message and legacy. The
truth is that Dr. King was a revolutionary who wanted a redistribution of
wealth. He praised democratic socialism and he admitted that many of the civil
rights reforms were limited mainly to the black middle class. So, he wanted to
use the Poor Peoples Campaign in order to fight against economic injustice.
While both major parties (the Democratic and Republican Parties) are in league
with the interests of the military industrial complex, Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. publicly denounced the Vietnam War and exposed the U.S. for its war crimes
in Vietnam.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Muhammad Ali were great friends. Each opposed the Vietnam War and wanted freedom, justice, and equality for black people. Also, Coretta Scott King loved Dr. King a great deal. Coretta Scott King also was a social activist who promoted peace, social justice, and equality. She was a singer too.
He also branded the United States government “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today” during his Riverside Baptist Church speech in 1967. Dr. King was a pacifist preacher. The former President Barack Obama have been very aggressive in punishing whistleblowers, giving record bailouts to large banks (while not giving equivalent resources to homeowners, workers, and the poor), and maintaining the growth of the military industrial complex. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said the following: “…I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today – my own government.” So, Dr. King wanted peace in the world. He spoke out against racism, materialism, and militarism. Therefore, we are in favor of justice, which is about promoting housing, living wages, jobs, and human justice. We certainly need a revolution of values in our public life as Dr. King has eloquently stated. This is why it is always important to endorse black liberation, social justice, environmental justice, and gender justice 100 percent. Our eyes are on the prize.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Muhammad Ali were great friends. Each opposed the Vietnam War and wanted freedom, justice, and equality for black people. Also, Coretta Scott King loved Dr. King a great deal. Coretta Scott King also was a social activist who promoted peace, social justice, and equality. She was a singer too.
He also branded the United States government “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today” during his Riverside Baptist Church speech in 1967. Dr. King was a pacifist preacher. The former President Barack Obama have been very aggressive in punishing whistleblowers, giving record bailouts to large banks (while not giving equivalent resources to homeowners, workers, and the poor), and maintaining the growth of the military industrial complex. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said the following: “…I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today – my own government.” So, Dr. King wanted peace in the world. He spoke out against racism, materialism, and militarism. Therefore, we are in favor of justice, which is about promoting housing, living wages, jobs, and human justice. We certainly need a revolution of values in our public life as Dr. King has eloquently stated. This is why it is always important to endorse black liberation, social justice, environmental justice, and gender justice 100 percent. Our eyes are on the prize.
Trayvon Martin
Trayvon Martin’s death was one of the biggest tragedies in
American history. He was a young teenager whose life was cut short by a coward
named George Zimmerman. Trayvon Martin was killed in Sanford, Florida. Trayvon
Martin was trying to return home. Zimmerman stalked him and the police told him
not to follow Martin. Yet, he proceeded to do so. He met up with Martin and
struggle occurred. Then, Zimmerman used his gun to kill Trayvon Martin.
Pressure came in order for authorities to investigate the case. Zimmerman was
arrested and a trial commenced. By July 2013, a mostly white jury acquitted
Zimmerman. This caused protests nationwide and it inspired the creation of the
Black Lives Matter Movement. The Trayvon Martin tragedy makes known of how
racism, savage vigilantism, and police brutality continues to exist in our
generation. We have to be made aware of the uncomfortable truth that the system
of racism/white supremacist was created to harm us and the system must be
replaced with a real system of justice. Trayvon Martin’s black life was
valuable as any other human life.
2012 re-election of Obama (and the 2013 inauguration)
The 2012 election or the 57th quadrennial United
States Presidential election was the most difficult election of Barack Obama.
He worked hard and many of his supporters continued to ally with him. His
opposition included Republicans and the new Tea Party movement. The Tea Party
movement were made up heavily of right wing conservatives and deficit hawks who
believed in the false notion that trickled down economics was a panacea to the
end economic problems in America. The 2012 election was about health care, the
economy, foreign policy matters, and what would be best for the future. On
January 21, 2010, the Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision on Citizens United made
the bad decision of allowing corporate funding of independent political
broadcasts in candidate election to be unlimited. By November 2010, the
Republicans gained control of the House. Many Republican candidates existed
like Jon Huntsman Jr., Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain, Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul,
Rick Santorum, Tim Pawlenty, Thaddeus McCotter, and others. They debated each
other on many social and foreign policy issues. Barack Obama was the Democratic
candidate and Mitt Romney won the Republican nomination. Paul Ryan was the
Republican vice Presidential candidate. The 2012 Republican National Convention
was held in Tampa, Florida in August of 2012 while the Democratic National
Convention was held in Charlotte, North Carolina in September 2012. Barack
Obama and Mitt Romney debated each other 3 times. The first Presidential debate
was at University of Denver in Denver, Colorado. The second one was in Hofstra
University in Hempstead, New York and the third one was at Lynn University in
Boca Raton, Florida. Barack Obama struggled in the first debate and did a much
greater job in the last 2 debates.
By late October 29, 2012, Hurricane Sandy pummels the East
Coast. President Barack Obama’s response to the East Coast was praised by
Democrats and Republicans. Barack Obama won the election and he was re-elected
as President with 51% of the vote. Most African Americans voted for his
re-election too. The second inauguration of Barack Obama happened in January of
2013. This was the time of the 150th Year Anniversary of the Lincoln
Emancipation Proclamation and the completion of the Capitol dome in 1863. During
the public inauguration on January 21, 2013, the invocation was expressed by
Myrlie Evers-Williams, who is the widow of the civil rights leader Medgar
Evers. Barack Obama spoke about human rights, climate change, immigration
reform, and gun control. About 1 million people came into the inauguration.
Later, there was a performance of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic"
by the Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir. Vice President elect Biden took his oath from
Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor. After completing his oath of office as the
Vice President, Biden received in his honor the first playing of four ruffles
and flourishes and the march "Hail, Columbia" by members of the armed
forces. This was followed by a performance of "America the Beautiful"
by James Taylor.
After the performance of "America the Beautiful",
Chief Justice John Roberts administered the oath of office to President elect
Obama. The Obama family marched in a parade and was part of a National prayer
service. The Obama couple danced in many inauguration balls too. President
Barack Obama’s 2nd inauguration address was historic since it was an embrace of
many causes, especially on social issues. It was his expression of what he
wanted to do and why he wanted to do it. He eloquently showed the linkages of
many social movements and why it is important to promote equal rights for all.
After the inauguration, President Barack Obama will make more decisions that
affected Black Americans forever.
The Supreme Court's gutting of the Voting Rights Act on June
25, 2013
That date of June 25, 2013 was a date of infamy. It’s a date
that I will remember for the rest of my life. This is a milestone of the attack
on the courage and sacrifice of activists who caused the Voting Rights Act of
1965 to exist in the first place. The people who protested in Selma for voting
rights were of many races. Many were poor, many were working class, some were
clergymen, some were clergywomen, and they continued to fight. This act of a
wrong judicial decision is an attack of democratic rights. The margin of
victory was 5-4. Yes, Clarence Thomas was in favor of the gutting of part of
the Voting Rights Act too. Chief Justice John Roberts defended the decision.
Even Anthony Kennedy supported the evil decision. The law gutted Section 4,
which tried to prevent voting discrimination in various states of the Union.
Even today in the 21st century, there are countless pieces of evidence of
racially motivated discrimination involving voting from the efforts to purge of
the rolls of black voters, the redrawing of electoral boundaries, and the Voter
ID laws which limit the times and types of ID used to vote. Shelby County v.
Holder has gone down in history as one of the most disgraceful decisions of the
Supreme Court.
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act required Alaska and eight southern states, plus parts of seven other states, to pre-clear (or get federal government approval from the Department of Justice and show that they don’t have a discriminatory purpose or effect) any changes in voting procedures with the federal government. To their credits, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the ACLU have expressed dissent with the decision. Voting rights continue to be under attack. Many Voter ID laws restrict when people can vote, what types of ID people can use, and the locations in which people can vote. Social activists in North Carolina especially have opposed the Voting ID law in that state. According to the Sentencing Project, "1 of every 13 African Americans of voting age is disenfranchised, a rate more than four times greater than non-African Americans. Nearly 7.7 percent of the adult African American population is disenfranchised compared to 1.8 percent of the non-African American population." Nineteen states passed more than 24 measures in 2011 and 2012 that make it harder to vote--"the biggest rollback in voting rights since the Jim Crow era," according to the Brennan Center's Myrna Pérez and Lucy Zhou, writing in the Christian Science Monitor. The 19 states are all over the country, including New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. This is a national problem not just a Southern problem. Black Americans continue to fight for voting rights to this very day.
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act required Alaska and eight southern states, plus parts of seven other states, to pre-clear (or get federal government approval from the Department of Justice and show that they don’t have a discriminatory purpose or effect) any changes in voting procedures with the federal government. To their credits, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the ACLU have expressed dissent with the decision. Voting rights continue to be under attack. Many Voter ID laws restrict when people can vote, what types of ID people can use, and the locations in which people can vote. Social activists in North Carolina especially have opposed the Voting ID law in that state. According to the Sentencing Project, "1 of every 13 African Americans of voting age is disenfranchised, a rate more than four times greater than non-African Americans. Nearly 7.7 percent of the adult African American population is disenfranchised compared to 1.8 percent of the non-African American population." Nineteen states passed more than 24 measures in 2011 and 2012 that make it harder to vote--"the biggest rollback in voting rights since the Jim Crow era," according to the Brennan Center's Myrna Pérez and Lucy Zhou, writing in the Christian Science Monitor. The 19 states are all over the country, including New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. This is a national problem not just a Southern problem. Black Americans continue to fight for voting rights to this very day.
Black Cabinet members (during the Obama years)
There were many African Americans in the Cabinet of the
Obama administration from 2009 to 2017. Eric Holder was the first black
Attorney General in American history. The first black woman Attorney General
was Loretta Lynch. Both human beings were superbly qualified and dealt with a
diversity of issues from legal cases to issues of police brutality (including
the criminal justice system). Jeff Johnson was the first black Secretary of
Homeland Security in history. John King Jr. was the Secretary of Education.
Anthony Foxx was the Secretary of Transportation. Valerie Jarrett was a key
advisor in the Obama administration. She has been a long supporter of the Obama
family and a businesswoman. She was Assistant to the President for Public
Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs. Susan Rice was Obama’s National
Security Advisor. Her expertise dealt with the complexities of foreign policy
affairs. Deesha Dyer was the Special Assistant to the President and Social
Secretary. Ashley Allison was the Deputy
Director of the Office of Public Engagement. Ashley Etienne was the Special
Assistant to President and Cabinet Communications Director.
African American music and culture of the 2010's
African American music and culture during the 2010’s
represented new music, diverse cultures, and creative expressions of the
diversity of the black experience. During this decade of the 2010’s, indie pop
grew. Also, instruments like banjos, ukulele, and other instruments were
common. Experimental music had a comeback and hip hop music further evolved
with experimentation and the new genre of mumble rap. Electronica were used
heavily during the early 2010’s. Gospel music continued to be popular and youth
gospel musicians have shown their gifts to the world. By January of 2010, Teddy
Pendergrass (who was a R&B soul legend) passed away at the age of 59. For decades, he has performed the world to express his music about love, introspection, and joy in life. Many
artists (on January 22, 2010) from Wyclef Jean to Mary J. Blige are involved in
the Hope for Haiti Now telethon, which dealt with helping people who suffered
from the Haitian earthquake. Haitians fought Western imperialism to create Haiti as the first black Republic of the Americas by 1804. So, we have a great love for Haiti forever. Hope for
Haiti Now becomes the first digital-only album to top Billboard 200 albums
chart and the largest pre-order album on iTunes until broken in 2012 by
Madonna's album MDNA. The January 31, 2010 52nd Annual Grammy Awards took place
at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.
Beyoncé broke a record winning 6 Grammys in one night including Song of The Year for "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It).” It was announced that within 6 months after the death of Michael Jackson sales increased 75% sold in just 6 months 57.5 million records. Beyoncé played at a sold out crowd of 60,000 people in São Paulo, Brazil at Morumbi Stadium. A lot of Beyonce's songs were soundtracks of women empowerment. By February 12, 2010, there was the remake of the 1985 song "We Are the World" for victims of the earthquake debuts during the opening ceremonies of the 2010 Winter Olympics. On March 18, 2010, Rihanna’s “Rude Boy" reaches No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming her sixth no. 1. This tied her fifth among females to reach no. 1 in the US. Also, it made her the female with the most no. 1 singles since 2000. On May 2010, Bone Thugs-n-Harmony released their reunion album with all original five members entitled Uni5: The World's Enemy.
Beyoncé broke a record winning 6 Grammys in one night including Song of The Year for "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It).” It was announced that within 6 months after the death of Michael Jackson sales increased 75% sold in just 6 months 57.5 million records. Beyoncé played at a sold out crowd of 60,000 people in São Paulo, Brazil at Morumbi Stadium. A lot of Beyonce's songs were soundtracks of women empowerment. By February 12, 2010, there was the remake of the 1985 song "We Are the World" for victims of the earthquake debuts during the opening ceremonies of the 2010 Winter Olympics. On March 18, 2010, Rihanna’s “Rude Boy" reaches No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming her sixth no. 1. This tied her fifth among females to reach no. 1 in the US. Also, it made her the female with the most no. 1 singles since 2000. On May 2010, Bone Thugs-n-Harmony released their reunion album with all original five members entitled Uni5: The World's Enemy.
Macy Gray (on June 2010) released The Sellout to critical
acclaim. It is her first studio album in over three years. Drake continued to
perform music. On November 22, 2010, Kanye West releases his fifth studio
album, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, which becomes the best-reviewed album
of the year, according to Metacritic. Kanye West is known as a very talented producer and a hip hop artist who expands boundaries about his expression. The 53rd Grammy Awards happen on December
1, 2010. Many artists were nominated and won. 2011 comes about and new music
exists. By March of 2011, Chris Brown topped the charts for the first time ever
after the release of his fourth studio album F.A.M.E. I don’t agree with Chris
Brown on many issues, so I want to make that clear. On August 8, 2011, Jay Z
and Kanye West released their anticipated collaborated album called, “Watch the
Throne.” On January 20, 2012, Etta James died of leukemia at the age of 73. Etta James was one of the greatest singers of the 20th century and she was a woman who inspired so many artists in our time too. During the Super Bowl XLVI, Nicki Minaj, Cee Lo Green, and other artists
performed at its halftime show. The twelve-minute performance becomes the most
watched television event of all time, gathering a record 118 million viewers,
six more than the game itself.
Whitney Houston in 2011. Rest in Power Sister Whitney Houston.
On February 11, 2012, the iconic singer Whitney Houston
passed away at the age of 48 in her Los Angeles hotel room. This was hours
before a pre-Grammy party hosted by Clive Davis. She suffered heart diseases
and a drowning. Whitney Houston was a legend and I felt shocked when she
passed. Sales of her albums spike, and
"I Will Always Love You" re-enters the top ten of the Billboard Hot
100. Whitney Houston was more than a singer. She was a woman who loved her spirituality and she greatly loved her family plus fans. She was born and raised in Newark, New Jersey. Whitney Houston was heavily awarded and she was the greatest vocalist singer of our generation period.
On the February 12 Grammys, Kanye West won 4 Grammy awards. Donna Summer passed away in May 17, 2012 at the age of 63. On June 29, 2012, Chris Brown goes to number 1 on the charts a second time after the release of his fifth studio album Fortune. This was the year when Snoop Dogg changed his name to Snoop Lion. On November 19, 2012, Rihanna released her new album Unapologetic scoring her first #1 album on the US charts. In January 2013, Jay Z tours. Alicia Keys sang the National Anthem and Beyoncé performed during the Super bowl XLVII halftime show on February 3, 2013. On June of 2013, Kanye West released his sixth studio album (filled with controversy and unique sounds) called Yeezus. Yeezus was unlike any hip hop album in history.
On September 2013, Sister Janelle Monae related her critically acclaimed album, "The Electric Lady." It was very popularity and it showed the myriad of musical skills from Janelle Monae. It outlined important messages about creativity, tolerance, acceptance, and a love of music. As music can unite people, Janelle Monae wants her music to unite people, especially among those who feel left out or oppressed. She is a great dancer too. She was born in Kansas City, Kansas in the Midwest. Electric Lady has influences from hip hop soul, funk, gospel, jazz and rock. Songs like Electric Lady, Q.U.E.E.N., Victory, etc. outline her intentions and her gifts of expression. She continues to advocate for Black Lives Matter, STEM fields for human beings, and artistic growth among humanity in general.
On the February 12 Grammys, Kanye West won 4 Grammy awards. Donna Summer passed away in May 17, 2012 at the age of 63. On June 29, 2012, Chris Brown goes to number 1 on the charts a second time after the release of his fifth studio album Fortune. This was the year when Snoop Dogg changed his name to Snoop Lion. On November 19, 2012, Rihanna released her new album Unapologetic scoring her first #1 album on the US charts. In January 2013, Jay Z tours. Alicia Keys sang the National Anthem and Beyoncé performed during the Super bowl XLVII halftime show on February 3, 2013. On June of 2013, Kanye West released his sixth studio album (filled with controversy and unique sounds) called Yeezus. Yeezus was unlike any hip hop album in history.
On September 2013, Sister Janelle Monae related her critically acclaimed album, "The Electric Lady." It was very popularity and it showed the myriad of musical skills from Janelle Monae. It outlined important messages about creativity, tolerance, acceptance, and a love of music. As music can unite people, Janelle Monae wants her music to unite people, especially among those who feel left out or oppressed. She is a great dancer too. She was born in Kansas City, Kansas in the Midwest. Electric Lady has influences from hip hop soul, funk, gospel, jazz and rock. Songs like Electric Lady, Q.U.E.E.N., Victory, etc. outline her intentions and her gifts of expression. She continues to advocate for Black Lives Matter, STEM fields for human beings, and artistic growth among humanity in general.
By December of 2013, one of Beyoncé’s most acclaimed albums
and her surprise fifth studio album was called Beyoncé. It is a visual album
and it has 14 songs and an accompanying music video for each song. The album
debuts at #1 based on 3 days of digital sales, maybe Beyoncé the first female
artist, and second artist overall to debut at the top spot with her first five
studio efforts. The album of Beyoncé shows anthems of women empowerment,
sexuality, and many diverse issues. It includes contemporary R&B with
electronic and soul music. One of her greatest songs on her album was "Pretty Hurts" which promotes human self esteem. On January 26, 2014, the 56th Annual Grammy Awards
existed. It was located in Staples Center in Los Angeles. By May 13, 2014,
Michael Jackson released his second posthumous album of previously unreleased
songs. The album is called Xscape. On August 24, 2014, there was the 31st
Annual MTV Video Music Awards take place in Inglewood, California. Beyoncé won
4 awards that night and also received the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award,
presented to her by her husband Jay Z and her daughter Blue Ivy following her
16-minute performance to close the show. TLC released their first single in
nine years called "Gift Wrapped Kiss" (on December 15, 2014).
On October 2, 2015, Janet Jackson releases Unbreakable her first album since 2008's Discipline to widespread critical acclaim. The album goes on to top the Billboard 200 chart. In 2015, Kendrick Lamar grows in popularity with his lyricism and diverse messages in his songs. On January 11, 2016, Ciara performed the National Anthem at the second College Football Playoff Championship. On January 28, 2016, Rihanna released her eighth studio album Anti. Two days following its release, the album was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) after receiving 1 million free downloads in 15 hours due to a deal with Samsung. This was the fastest certified platinum album in history. Beyoncé performs in the halftime show of the Super Bowl 50 in Santa Clara, California on February of 2016. Beyoncé pays homage to the Black Panthers, BLM, and pro-black movements in general with her performance. We know that is truly sacrosanct to praise Blackness and to acknowledge great social activism from the past and during the present too. Kanye West released his seventh studio album, The Life of Pablo, as a Tidal exclusive. After a couple of months being exclusive to the streaming service it was made available for purchase in an updated format (on February 14, 2016).
On October 2, 2015, Janet Jackson releases Unbreakable her first album since 2008's Discipline to widespread critical acclaim. The album goes on to top the Billboard 200 chart. In 2015, Kendrick Lamar grows in popularity with his lyricism and diverse messages in his songs. On January 11, 2016, Ciara performed the National Anthem at the second College Football Playoff Championship. On January 28, 2016, Rihanna released her eighth studio album Anti. Two days following its release, the album was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) after receiving 1 million free downloads in 15 hours due to a deal with Samsung. This was the fastest certified platinum album in history. Beyoncé performs in the halftime show of the Super Bowl 50 in Santa Clara, California on February of 2016. Beyoncé pays homage to the Black Panthers, BLM, and pro-black movements in general with her performance. We know that is truly sacrosanct to praise Blackness and to acknowledge great social activism from the past and during the present too. Kanye West released his seventh studio album, The Life of Pablo, as a Tidal exclusive. After a couple of months being exclusive to the streaming service it was made available for purchase in an updated format (on February 14, 2016).
The 58th Annual Grammy Awards took place at the Staples
Center in Los Angeles on February 15, 2016. Lamar won the most awards of the
night with five. On March 5, 2016, Rihanna's single "Work" became the
first dancehall song to top the Billboard Hot 100 since Sean Paul's
"Temperature" in 2006. La’Porsha Renae continues to do music from
2016 to the present. Prince passed away on April 21, 2016. It was a shock. He
won the Grammy Awards seven times. He could sing, play instruments, and dance. Prince broke down taboos and still was himself while he was doing it. He passed away in his recording studio in Minnesota.
Kendrick Lamar and SZA are certainly black artists of the present and the future.
On April 23, 2016, Beyoncé premiered her sixth studio album
Lemonade on HBO with an hour-long film. The album was released on Tidal, where
it remained exclusively available to stream for 24 hours, until it was uploaded
to all formats, including iTunes. Upon the album debuting at number-one on the
Billboard 200 chart, Beyoncé became the first act in Billboard history to have
their first six albums debut at number one. I saw the whole Lemonade film on
HBO for free. It was very creative, innovative, and showed the diverse
experiences of black women in general. Lemonade is her signature album and it
will be analyzed for generations. On September 30, 2016, Solange released her
critical acclaim album “A Seat at the Table. “ It was unapologetic in promoting
Blackness, women empowerment, mental health awareness, and self-determination.
It showed her showing emotion, joy, love, and anger at injustice. “Cranes in
the Sky” is one song that was honest in showing feeling. Other songs like 'F.U.B.U.,'
'Mad,' 'Don't Touch My Hair' outline the truth that a black woman’s autonomy,
wisdom, and passion for change must always be honored and respected.
On November 11, 2016, A Tribe Called Quest released We Got It from Here... Thank You 4 Your Service, their first studio album since 1998 and also their final studio album. The album was tribute to Phife, who was the heart and soul voice of the group A Trible Called Quest. He recently passed away on March 22, 2016. He was 45 years old and he was born in St. Albans, Queens, NYC.
Rest in Power Brother Phife.
In 2017, artists continued to perform and innovative involving music. On January of 2017, Bell Biv DeVoe released their first album in sixteen years, Three Stripes. On February 12, 2017, the 59th Annual Grammy Awards took place at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Chance the Rapper became the first ever unsigned artist to win a Grammy. The awards he won are Best New Artist, Best Rap Performance, and Best Rap Album. On March 5, 2017, the iHeartRadio Music Awards took place at the Forum in Inglewood, California. Chrisette Michelle, Jill Scott, Tamia, Deborah Cox, Coco, Ledisi, and other artists are amazing singers of the 21st century as well.
On November 11, 2016, A Tribe Called Quest released We Got It from Here... Thank You 4 Your Service, their first studio album since 1998 and also their final studio album. The album was tribute to Phife, who was the heart and soul voice of the group A Trible Called Quest. He recently passed away on March 22, 2016. He was 45 years old and he was born in St. Albans, Queens, NYC.
Rest in Power Brother Phife.
In 2017, artists continued to perform and innovative involving music. On January of 2017, Bell Biv DeVoe released their first album in sixteen years, Three Stripes. On February 12, 2017, the 59th Annual Grammy Awards took place at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Chance the Rapper became the first ever unsigned artist to win a Grammy. The awards he won are Best New Artist, Best Rap Performance, and Best Rap Album. On March 5, 2017, the iHeartRadio Music Awards took place at the Forum in Inglewood, California. Chrisette Michelle, Jill Scott, Tamia, Deborah Cox, Coco, Ledisi, and other artists are amazing singers of the 21st century as well.
Also, African American culture became more diverse and
interesting during the decade of the 2010’s. This is the age of massive social media from Snapchat, Facebook, and to Instagram. That is why many of my relatives have Facebook accounts. In 2010, For Colored Girls was
released about the pain, adversity, and triumphs of black American women. It is a very emotional film. The
movie Night Catches Us is about a drama dealing with 1970’s Philadelphia
(involving the Black Panthers, love, and decisions to make). The film was directed and written by Tanya
Hamilton and stars Kerry Washington, Anthony Mackie, Jamie Hector, Wendell
Pierce and Novella Nelson. The Walking Dead premiered in 2010 on AMC. The Walking Dead is an unique show since fans of the show exist among every color, every socioeconomic background, and every background in general. In 2011,
movies like Pariah, The Help, etc. came out. These films deal with romance,
sexuality, the civil rights movement, and courage. Also, the Black Power
Mixtape 1967-1975 came out in 2011 too. I have watched the film and the
documentary gives an eye opening look at the Black Power movement. It gives an up-close insights into the era of the Black Panthers, Kwame Ture, Dr. King, and other activists for change. Commentaries include words from poets and hip hop artists like Erykah Badu and Talib Kweli. Gina Torres is a well-known actress of Suits
which started in 2011. In 2012, Red Tails, and Men in Black 3 came out. Middle
of Nowhere is a 2012 independent feature film written and directed by Ava
DuVernay (who is a great director and a conscious black woman) and starring
Emayatzy Corinealdi, David Oyelowo, Omari Hardwick and Lorraine Toussaint. The
film was the winner of the Directing Award for U.S. Dramatic Film at the 2012
Sundance Film Festival. The movie is about a Registered Nurse must come to
terms with her husband receiving an eight-year prison sentence. Ava Duvernary
wanted to show the turmoil many women go through when their lovers are
incarcerated. She also wanted to show love among black people, which is very
important. Scandal came about in 2012 and its stars Kerry Washington.
2013 was a monumental years of black movies without
question. This year had 12 Years a Slave, Fruitvale Station, the Butler, 42 (or
the story of Jackie Robinson, which I have seen before), The New Black
documentary, Black Nativity (which has an ensemble cast of black people telling
the story about a family trying to survive in a cruel world and it shows the
real value of family and togetherness), etc. Orange is the New Black has
African American people in it from Uzo Aduba, Lorraine Toussaint, Samira Wiley,
Vicky Jeudy, Laverne Cox, Danielle Brooks, etc. It is a series on Netflix about
the experiences of women in prison. In 2014, Dear White People, Selma, Annie,
Black Coffee, and other films came out. In 2014, How to Get Away with Murder
and Gotham premiered. By September 24, 2014, the critically acclaimed show
Black-ish was released. It has an ensemble cast of black people like Anthony
Anderson, Tracee Ellis Ross, Yara Shahidi, Marcus Scribner, Miles Brown,
Jenifer Lewis, Laurence Fishburne, and other people.
The comedy is about an upper middle class African American family who navigates the complex world of American society. The show tackles issues of race, culture, school, class, sex, police brutality, etc. One episode talked about the Black Lives Matter movement in emotional, important terms too. The show has received a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress for Tracee Ellis Ross, Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for Outstanding Comedy Series, and a TCA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Comedy. Black came out in 2015 including the Black Panther documentary from Stanley Nelson. Rosewood came out in 2015. It is about doctors in Miami, Florida. Empire on FOX was released in 2015. In 2016, Fences, Moonlight, and Fifty Shades of Black (which is a comedy) were released in 2016.
The comedy is about an upper middle class African American family who navigates the complex world of American society. The show tackles issues of race, culture, school, class, sex, police brutality, etc. One episode talked about the Black Lives Matter movement in emotional, important terms too. The show has received a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress for Tracee Ellis Ross, Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for Outstanding Comedy Series, and a TCA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Comedy. Black came out in 2015 including the Black Panther documentary from Stanley Nelson. Rosewood came out in 2015. It is about doctors in Miami, Florida. Empire on FOX was released in 2015. In 2016, Fences, Moonlight, and Fifty Shades of Black (which is a comedy) were released in 2016.
These human beings are in an Afropunk festival.
On September 26, 2016, the HBO TV series Insecure was
released. It stars actress Issa Rae. It is about the experiences of a black
woman in post-modern American society. It was created by Issa Rae and Larry
Wilmore. Raphael Saadiq created original music for the first season. Solange
Knowles served as music consultant; she was introduced to Rae by Matsoukas, who
directed the music video for Knowles's song "Losing You.” Other actors and
actresses on the series include Jay Ellis, Yvonne Orji, Lisa Joyce, Natasha
Rothwell, Amanda Seales, Y’lan Noel, and other people. On September 2016, the Netflix action series
Luke Cage (relating to Marvel) was released. It stars Mike Colter as Luke Cage,
who fights crime in Harlem, NYC with his superpowers. Other people in Luke Cage
include Alfre Woodard, Rosario Dawson, Mahershala Ali, Simone Missck, Mustafa
Shakir, Gabrielle Dennis, etc. Atlanta, the TV series was released in 2016. The
2010’s saw the continuation of reality TV shows. Many of them show some of the
most anti-black stereotypes around.
In 2017, BET released new shows like Rebel (which is about a
black woman private investigator, once Oakland police officer, fighting police
brutality while trying to find the killer of her brother) and the Quad (about
HBCUs in the modern generation of the 2010's). BET also shown the movie Madiba,
which was a film about the life story of the heroic legend Nelson Mandela.
Nelson Mandela was played by Laurence Fishburne. Actress Danielle Moné Truitt
was cast as lead character of the show Rebel, while Giancarlo Esposito, Mykelti Williamson,
Method Man, and Brandon Quinn also were cast as series regulars in Rebel. In
July of 2017, Snowfall premiered in FX. It is a show about the crack epidemic,
drug dealers, the CIA, and Southern California. In 2017, the documentary about
the role of HBCUs involved in the Civil Rights and racial equality movements
was finished. It is called, “Tell Them We are Rising: The Story of Black
Colleges and Universities.” Many of my relatives graduated from HBCUs, so this
documentary is very personal with me. The filmmakers include an all-star cast
of directors and producers like: Stanley Nelson (producer and director), Maroc
Williams (co-producer and co-director), Stacey L. Holman (producer), and Cyndee
Readdean (a producer). Time goes onward and culture is an exciting aspect of our humanity.
By Timothy
No comments:
Post a Comment