• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

23 Times America Failed Black People in 2014

Status
Not open for further replies.

Malyse

Member
http://mic.com/articles/105704/23-times-america-failed-black-people-this-year

Without question, black people dominated news coverage this year, but often not for reasons many would celebrate.

As America witnessed the killings of unarmed black people by police, the reality of a broken justice system, the perpetuation of various anti-black stereotypes and racism rearing its head within many major institutions, the country had no choice but to face its racial demons head-on.

And although these issues don't surprise many African-Americans, they still prompted widespread outrage at every level. Thousands more took to social media, even to streets in cities across the country, sending a clear message: Black lives matter.

Here are but a few of the many moments when the country failed its black citizens in 2014.

1. The officer who killed Eric Garner is free — despite video evidence.

MDIwNzZmYzJjYSMvWWxjVW1rRUpDcmtSS1Rpc24yV2JKcFBoMEpjPS82M3gxMzI6NTEyMXgzMzI0Lzg0MHg1MzAvZmlsdGVyczpxdWFsaXR5KDcwKS9odHRwOi8vczMuYW1hem9uYXdzLmNvbS9wb2xpY3ltaWMtaW1hZ2VzL3g0bGxpN2JvMXdxemU1djFuaHVkYWMwbWF3bW91eGRqdnNwMWNwaGV4dzR4ZWZ4aWNpcm5ldXhteGFjbXR0bDMuanBn.jpg


In July, a New York police officer used an illegal choke hold to apprehend Eric Garner, a married father of six who was accused of illegally selling loose cigarettes. It was recorded on video for America to see as Garner gasped for air, his final words repeated more than a dozen times: "I can't breathe." But on Dec. 3, a Staten Island grand jury voted against an indictment for the officer who killed Garner.

And with that decision, yet another wave of national protests erupted in defiance of law enforcement's treatment of unarmed black people.


2. A white politician "threw gang signs" while posing with black people.

OTMxYTAwOTI3OCMvbVhSeVV3d2tpQzBrRDJuNVNGUnVHeUE3TkpZPS8zMHg4Ojg3MHg1MzgvODQweDUzMC9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvbXRsaDZtdnZzbWw1Mmt4ZXQwbHZtcXhuaXJneW1rcW4xb3d5NnFpd2J2dnM5N2V1YmN4aTlmNm92M3pjMHN6MC5qcGc=.jpg


"This is a photo of Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges, arm in arm with a man flashing what law enforcement agencies tell us is a known gang sign for a North Side gang," said an anchor for Minneapolis station KSTP. In the incident that would become known to everyone as #Pointergate, reporters and police alike accused Hodges of showing solidarity with a convicted criminal, fearing it would put the public at risk.

All of this because she posed with a constituent while pointing, something people commonly do in photos, especially with celebrities and public figures. The difference here? There's a black guy on one side — and he happened to be a campaign volunteer.


3. NBA team executives profited from black players but hated black fans.

YTE3YjI2YmI4NiMvYnZ1RWJrMjRxN0lDSm02ZXZHWV9zWXdJS0VjPS8xOTR4MDoyMTAzeDEyMDUvODQweDUzMC9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvY3VsZXQ3MW50Zm90bTlhZzVuYXZuM2d6NzdjMXM1OHVnNGx6NXp0d3ZibXQzenZ4dm4wZXF3YmFvcGkxa3JkZS5qcGc=.jpg


Two NBA team owners were disgraced and forced to leave their organizations after private remarks about black fans became public, demonstrating the contempt and racist attitudes they harbor toward black people. L.A. Clippers owner Donald Sterling told his girlfriend V. Stiviano in a recorded tape that he didn't want her bringing black people to games, noting that it upset him to see them present. On the other coast, Atlanta Hawks owner Bruce Levenson sent emails to staff complaining that they were having trouble attracting season ticket holders because the environment at the games was too black.

Apparently, it's only OK to be black in a basketball stadium if you're there to be the entertainment.


4. Black culture and music kept getting appropriated by white artists.

NTU4ZDBhZWQ3YyMvVmJOajM0WnR0bUQ5eE5HVWE3b2RJTmN1NHdZPS82MngxNzg6MjkzOHgxOTk1Lzg0MHg1MzAvZmlsdGVyczpxdWFsaXR5KDcwKS9odHRwOi8vczMuYW1hem9uYXdzLmNvbS9wb2xpY3ltaWMtaW1hZ2VzL2ZmcWhnZ3d1dGFwYTJsYnBycHRyYTFxbnVmZnpxcnp1dnhhd2xhdndnZDJicGtoczJ4dHc5dHg0Yjh2cjByMmEuanBn.jpg


Rap music found its original roots in the lived experiences and oppression of black people, but the art form has since become universal — so much so that many more white artists have picked up the mic. But there's a fine line between appreciating and appropriating a culture different than one's own, let alone taking leadership within that space. But during a year that continued a trend of white people appropriating black music, dance moves and other black cultural staples, it incensed many to read headlines claiming Iggy Azalea "runs hip-hop" and witness Macklemore virtually sweep the rap categories at the 2014 Grammy Awards.


5. No one cared about Ebola until it started affecting white people.

Y2VmOTRhNjg5NiMvMHpxQWtLdkd2RlJlRnMxVHZFU0FPT3dwM0NRPS8weDA6ODQweDUxMS84NDB4NTExL2ZpbHRlcnM6cXVhbGl0eSg3MCkvaHR0cDovL3MzLmFtYXpvbmF3cy5jb20vcG9saWN5bWljLWltYWdlcy85dHNia2dvcGVhZmM1OXNjMDQ2NGprNG14bGR2dXJwejh0d2t3cmR1OWFmdTc1N3ZwNmFtOXhkaHRkMnR6dGduLmpwZw==.jpg


Before this past summer, many Americans considered Ebola a disease that's only a concern for people living on the African continent. But once the United States had its first Ebola case, news outlets, TV stations and everyday people could not stop obsessing over a disease that, while devastating, only spreads through direct contact with bodily fluids. Some concern is understandable, but it's telling that the nonstop news coverage and panic only picked up when Ebola came in close proximity to a predominately white, Western country, as Mic's Sophie Kleeman noted in response to a poignant illustration.

Worse, some mocked people from Africa, even opting to stay away from them, because they feared those individuals could have the virus.


6. 12 Years a Slave won Best Picture and this is how front pages looked:

NDgwMDBlYjZkYyMvT28yMjlJbV9VQi1nYzg3b1FXTDVBbzFPQjhBPS8zMHgxODo4NzB4NzU5Lzg0MHg3NDEvZmlsdGVyczpxdWFsaXR5KDcwKS9odHRwOi8vczMuYW1hem9uYXdzLmNvbS9wb2xpY3ltaWMtaW1hZ2VzL3lkcnFtM2VldHR0cXp3M2Z1cnhscXR3anZoZnZxanpvMXhvaGV4Y3I1NHVta3NqZWhrdjZubW1pYXMzeHZ2OWUuanBn.jpg


The film 12 Years a Slave captured the brutality and dehumanization endured by blacks during American slavery, resonating with audiences so much that it won the Academy Award for Best Picture. It was a cinematic feat that made acclaimed director Steve McQueen more of a household name, and called everyone's attention towards diversity in Hollywood, especially as Lupita Nyong'o catapulted into the spotlight. But after the film won top honors, some newspapers created the most offensive headlines about slavery, making a mockery out of an issue that still affects America today.


Bh0TH44CYAAjLdI.jpg


7. Richard Sherman was called a "thug" for celebrating a Super Bowl win.

ZGY5ZmM1ZGE3OCMvZXozVW8xNVNYYWZQT1hfQjhEcjVzc3ZESmtRPS8weDA6ODQweDUyOS84NDB4NTI5L2ZpbHRlcnM6cXVhbGl0eSg3MCkvaHR0cDovL3MzLmFtYXpvbmF3cy5jb20vcG9saWN5bWljLWltYWdlcy9qZmxpZDlxa2tobTY0azFnaTlldnJpejhjaWNzdGE4bXQyYTFwOHNmZndmd25jc2x3cmRqZHIwM3A2cjJ2OW90LmpwZw==.jpg


Shortly after the Seattle Seahawks won the 2014 Super Bowl, cornerback Richard Sherman gave an explosive interview with NFL sideline reporter Erin Andrews. The outspoken Sherman was on an emotional high, celebrating the victory while pointedly putting his critics in line. That one interview earned Sherman the distinction of being called a "thug" all over social media in the moments and days that followed, illustrating a clear double standard — even an educated, professional black athlete can't express himself publicly without it being attached to racial stigma.

As both Sherman and the Daily Beast's Jamelle Bouie highlighted, "thug" has become a new way for many to say "N-word."


(I'm doing to add this as well: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRjBhbH3y38)

8. Marissa Alexander got three years in prison for firing a warning shot.

M2I5MzFjOGE0MCMvYWhaV3RSaHBoMGNyZ1hzTE4xVW5CM2J0eVo0PS81eDA6MjEyMXgxMzM0Lzg0MHg1MzAvZmlsdGVyczpxdWFsaXR5KDcwKS9odHRwOi8vczMuYW1hem9uYXdzLmNvbS9wb2xpY3ltaWMtaW1hZ2VzL3A0dWx4cWs3YnNtNWVkazdtbmZvbjhjZ3R6NzA3dnhrZmlvZTVramQwemNpc3o2emN3d2JjaWlyeDl4d2xxYnAuanBn.jpg


Near the time of Trayvon Martin's death and national outcry over whether George Zimmerman would be taken to trial, another story emerged from Florida over the storied "Stand Your Ground" laws. In May 2012, Marissa Alexander was prosecuted and sentenced to a mandatory minimum of 20 years in prison for firing a warning shot in the presence of her husband — a man with a history of domestic abuse who threatened to kill her. Although it resulted in a retrial, she could have faced 60 years if a Florida jury found her guilty. Instead, she accepted a plea deal in November to serve only three years instead.

Whereas Zimmerman got off scot-free for harassing and killing an unarmed black teenager, a woman who fired a warning shot in self defense gets her freedom taken away and hit with a felony.


9. Gap thought an "MLK Day Sale" would be cool to launch.

YjhmOTUwNmFhMSMvQTBqdFBlakZld3hmOFNVTzVZRUpPaFJYTnlNPS84eDA6ODkyeDU1OC84NDB4NTMwL2ZpbHRlcnM6cXVhbGl0eSg3MCkvaHR0cDovL3MzLmFtYXpvbmF3cy5jb20vcG9saWN5bWljLWltYWdlcy9zZm5reWRhanh4YnY0ZGtwb2tqam1ncjJ2dmxjbjZkcXMybmlvd29zdnVzbHRidGJiem52NHgweGkycGw5dmRkLmpwZw==.jpg


Quite a few people don't go to work on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a national holiday that calls Americans to reflect on racism's legacy and the work of the civil rights movement. But for Gap, it's apparently just another day for people to shop in their stores. The retailer appealed to the masses with an "MLK Day Sale" that totally defeats the purpose of what the observance stands for.

As Colorlines' Aura Bogado wrote, "The company's website and emails to its potential customers do not include one mention of the civil rights movement, racial justice or King himself — but do feature several white women, who are promoting 50% off 500 styles from the Gap."


10. People dressed as Ray and Janay Rice for Halloween — in blackface.

OTI1OGJjMGVjZSMvdE4xYTk4STI0RFR4QmZERE1yQnBjZmZlNXM0PS8zMHgxMjo4NzB4NTQyLzg0MHg1MzAvZmlsdGVyczpxdWFsaXR5KDcwKS9odHRwOi8vczMuYW1hem9uYXdzLmNvbS9wb2xpY3ltaWMtaW1hZ2VzL3hqbG9mMGZpdGN0ZHlsaDkxc3dpMW9jZ2p0cHBnaGV5cnFodDJkMXcwZmFnMHloaDJvaW50MnZtd2h6Y2lmdHMuanBn.jpg


It was the story that sent shockwaves in the sports world, calling attention to a long history of professional athletes committing domestic abuse. The tragic episode played out for the entire nation to see, as TMZ released camera footage of Ray Rice brutally attacking his wife, Janay, in an elevator and dragging her unconscious body out with him. But during Halloween celebrations, numerous people turned it into a punchline, going even one large step further by dressing as the couple in blackface, a form of entertainment that has historically denigrated black people.

http://mic.com/articles/98326/19-why-istayed-tweets-that-everyone-needs-to-see
http://mic.com/articles/98212/leaked-footage-shows-ray-rice-knocking-out-his-fiance
http://gawker.com/ray-rice-halloween-costumes-combine-blackface-domestic-1650963461
http://thegrio.com/2013/10/30/a-brief-history-of-blackface-just-in-time-for-halloween/

11. A school served stereotypes in a "Black History Month" meal.

NGM3MWU2NTgwMiMvVW5uTmZUTjJveFFOOE5NUFVTc3ZTdmsyQ1RJPS8yN3gxMzk4OjMyMTN4MzYwMy84NDB4NTgxL2ZpbHRlcnM6cXVhbGl0eSg3MCkvaHR0cDovL3MzLmFtYXpvbmF3cy5jb20vcG9saWN5bWljLWltYWdlcy90YnVmaGlsZ3dna3F6eGN4d3Jzc3Zvamg3Y2poanpta3NtNXlnbjdsZGtqcXV6ZnE0c3g0OWZheGRyanI5bTZtLmpwZw==.jpg


It's a common racial stereotype: Black people love fried chicken and watermelon. In February, a California high school played right into the stereotype, announcing a Black History Month-themed menu that included both items, along with a hearty side of cornbread. Administrators for the school eventually apologized, but the damage was already done. In fact, according to government data, black people actually don't care that much for watermelon.

Fried chicken and watermelon aren't racist foods in themselves. But as Arit John wrote for the Atlantic, "The problem stems from the way fried chicken is associated with black people, and the historical baggage that comes with it. The same way blackface recalls minstrel shows, the 'black people love fried chicken' image recalls negative portrayals of black people."


12. Vogue credited JLo and Iggy Azalea for pioneering the "booty trend."

MTJmNzI3ODY5ZSMvWVdsU3Jad1l0MU5xc3NLRlBJZkEwWVFIYV9zPS80M3gxMTo4ODN4NTQxLzg0MHg1MzAvZmlsdGVyczpxdWFsaXR5KDcwKS9odHRwOi8vczMuYW1hem9uYXdzLmNvbS9wb2xpY3ltaWMtaW1hZ2VzL205ZGVocGZ2c2hmZ2R1c3FjZHJoYndhcm91YmE4d21lbjRjMXZtNnhhcmVnaGR3a2F6bmFzc2t6c2tzeHQ4dzkuanBn.jpg


Black women's bodies have long been objectified by mainstream audiences, going as far back as the Hottentot Venus during the late 18th century. That doesn't stop many from celebrating their curves in their own way, as numerous black female artists have done over the years, even before Destiny's Child's 2001 hit "Bootylicious" and Nicki Minaj's 2014 summer smash with "Anaconda."

But in an article for Vogue, the magazine highlighted two non-black women as purveyors of the current "booty trend" in Hollywood: Iggy Azalea and Jennifer Lopez. Although Lopez is a woman of color, many took umbrage with how the feature diminished the cultural contributions of black women, panning the magazine with the hashtag #VogueArticles.


BxLqSCKIEAA55hf.jpg:large

Viktor T Kerney @wondermann5
Bo Derek, the Golden Girl of Street Style #VogueArticles

(continued)
 

Malyse

Member
13. A New York Times critic calls Shonda Rhimes an angry black woman.

Njc4MzgyNDUyYiMvUVdrMVlaQjRDRU9venpxWi0yVHpfVnhvQl9nPS84OHgxMzc6NDQyNHgyODcxLzg0MHg1MzAvZmlsdGVyczpxdWFsaXR5KDcwKS9odHRwOi8vczMuYW1hem9uYXdzLmNvbS9wb2xpY3ltaWMtaW1hZ2VzL2lnZm94YWhoZDJrdnJvMnN1NnI5cGVxdThyc3ZvYjd0NGh5aXJwazJld25wNmV2cGdybGJpYzFmdW9hdGZld3kuanBn.jpg


In a scathing critique of the ABC showrunner's body of work, New York Times critic Alessandra Stanley wrote, "When Shonda Rhimes writes her autobiography, it should be called How to Get Away With Being an Angry Black Woman." She then took it a step further, sizing up How to Get Away With Murder star Viola Davis as a "less classically beautiful" woman, a take that unfortunately has racial implications given Hollywood's glaring lack of diversity — something Davis has pointedly critiqued.

But the paper's public editor rebuked Stanley's column, calling it "astonishingly tone-deaf and out of touch."


14. Time magazine wrote an entire expose on the word "bae."

NzkzN2I4NmNjZSMvUkQ1TkloSnhLRFdzSlVvTzRKNThLWHROVnhvPS83N3gwOjkxN3g1ODEvODQweDU4MS9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvaXB2c3AxbnRneHVka2hmeGlxemlxc3Qzdm9ueHNyZmF3endja2xydGJtdnM3OGVobmdvOHJ4c3V0YmdlZTFkaS5qcGc=.jpg


In July, Time magazine wrote a lengthy expose on the etymology of the word "bae," a word that's recently taken off in pop culture, as popularized by African-American vernacular English. But for many, it was yet another moment when a mainstream media outlet took a voyeuristic approach to black people and black culture, offering yet another thing for clueless white people to use and discard in a cultural dustbin. In reality, black people have used the word for years.

And just a few months later, the magazine asked readers in a poll if "bae" should be banned from America's collective vocabulary in 2015, confirming what many black people knew would eventually happen.

http://time.com/3026192/this-is-what-bae-means/
http://www.theroot.com/blogs/the_gr..._bae_and_twitter_went_in_with_timetitles.html
http://time.com/3576870/worst-words-poll-2014/

15. Black people kept getting racially profiled by the police.

M2I5YWI3ZmUzNCMvYVZ1d3NuZUM3UEptS0xGeFlOX3Nobmk2T1lzPS84eDQ2Ojg5Mng2MDQvODQweDUzMC9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvaTJxd2x5bWFocHRrc3Q0dDV3NjFiMm1raHJrZHNnb2E0Z2tiem12YTdxb2U1dmZmY3BkZDVjdG9kemVtbm5jNi5qcGc=.jpg


While traveling for a dinner in the Los Angeles area, actor Charles Belk was held by police for six hours because he "fit the description" of a suspect. For a lengthy amount of time, he even sat handcuffed on a sidewalk, humiliated as passersby witnessed another unsuspecting black person being criminalized by law enforcement. It was just one of many incidents where racial profiling took center stage in 2014.


16. Nicki Minaj and Rihanna endured racist slut-shaming for baring all.

NzE1NDA5MmMyOCMvU0RmUkthdUQ2Tmwyd3RMSzBTMThJUzRRQWFFPS80MHg0Ojg4MHg1MzQvODQweDUzMC9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvc3JkYXAxNGZwczlzaG1iaTdyY3R3ZHZ1a2xocnQydHY4dHg3ZXg5N2NhY25idXBhanptYTlpdWdmcjJ4bXY0dy5qcGc=.jpg

YzNjYTgwMTY0ZSMvbXdYOGh1SWFtMkZ5UnBhUnlzZXdReXZnWk1ZPS80NHgwOjg4NHg1MzAvODQweDUzMC9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvaGJxODdudnExZnBmNTBib3BkaXQwb3IwcGNibnZnYndxMzd4Ynp5cmdtcTdncmVoNGhua3hucGxmaHVlYjdvZC5qcGc=.jpg


After Nicki Minaj released the cover art for her summer single "Anaconda," the singer endured many racist insults and fat-shaming targeted at her display of a curvaceous backside. But Minaj was quick to call out the double standard, using her Instagram account to post other examples where thinner, white women modeled or appeared in magazine spreads with their backsides exposed, but not attracting nearly the same level of uproar or criticism.


17. Variety credited Elvis Presley for inventing rock 'n' roll.

MDdhNTYwMDY0MSMvNGpaUVF0ZWo0NE5ncGd4OXpaSXNiUEEzMzRRPS81M3gyNDQ6MjY0N3gxODgzLzg0MHg1MzAvZmlsdGVyczpxdWFsaXR5KDcwKS9odHRwOi8vczMuYW1hem9uYXdzLmNvbS9wb2xpY3ltaWMtaW1hZ2VzL3dtemFtYnhicGk1MXZoMW1rd2czYXZ1ZHdsdHpjbnd0MmtlYzVnY252ZzJneXR4eGZsd2lyeGR0dXdqY2Q0cmEuanBn.jpg


In a feature that praised the man known by many fans as "the King," Variety claimed that Elvis Presley invented rock 'n' roll music 60 years ago. But in doing so, they erased the many contributions that black artists like Chuck Berry, Little Richard and other influential black producers and record companies had in creating the sound many Americans love today. People on Twitter were quick to issue a course correction, using the hashtag #VarietyHeadlines:


Brvwdh7CQAIovrH.jpg

Terrell J. Starr @Russian_Starr
EXCLUSIVE: Justin Timberlake Tells Variety How He Taught Michael Jackson How To Moonwalk! #VarietyHeadlines

18. Lifetime and VH1 gave white women "sassy, black" life coaches.

YmZlMjk1ODVkYSMvM0lhV1J6QzA3REt3Y21oekUwdE9kbzRIa2Q0PS8weDE0Ojg0MHg1NTgvODQweDU0NC9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvaWxkcXdjeThxb2V2MGdhNXZnc3g1c2l3cTdkN3FvYXRrZWI2M2tmaWlvaWVtMXQycWhnZGJ2OWwzb3pnbWQ1ZS5qcGc=.jpg


As Erika Turner wrote at Mic, "The media often plays up the resilience of black women to the point where it becomes a caricature. The latest tragedy is Lifetime's new show Girlfriend Intervention, a makeover show promoting the unfortunate idea that, as they say, 'Trapped inside of every white girl is a strong black woman ready to bust out.'"

The idea for this show and VH1's new creation Bye Felicia! is premised on stereotypes of white women as docile and passive, while black women are supposed to be loud and opinionated, a reinforcement of the Sapphire trope.


19. Black writer wins National Book Award, was rewarded with racist jokes on stage.

Y2Y3YmI0MzRiZSMvTVNFUEpmUzNYamlvM0I4aFUxZVNKS2UwekRRPS82eDMzNzoyNjAyeDE5NzQvODQweDUzMC9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvc2Q4a21lMmExNmtwb2JjZG5nbG50d2hmMXF3Y2FsNHN3c3Rtdm1zN2JvdmFnMGJpdzE3OXhmcGU1dTU2NGhuay5qcGc=.jpg


After winning the National Book Award for Brown Girl Dreaming, Jacqueline Woodson accepted the prize on stage, only to be greeted with an off-key racial joke about black people and watermelon from a presenter. Writer Daniel Handler quipped, "I told Jackie she was going to win. And I said that if she won, I would tell all of you something I learned about her this summer — which is that Jackie Woodson is allergic to watermelon. Just let that sink in your mind."


20. Everyone learned Thug Kitchen isn't actually run by black people.

YTZkMDU0ZWRiYiMvRHdxMS1ZUVlsc2xlMEZhWVJPa0FWTW1JWURvPS8xOHgxNjo5OTh4NjM0Lzg0MHg1MzAvZmlsdGVyczpxdWFsaXR5KDcwKS9odHRwOi8vczMuYW1hem9uYXdzLmNvbS9wb2xpY3ltaWMtaW1hZ2VzLzgzcXRsMGthbGd3dHFmd2h0b2JvdWh6ZXR2Y2hmaWpmZzMxZ2x4ZWhncHVoaTc1dW9ocWw3Z2xsNGc3cTB5YjAuanBn.jpg


The popular, profanity-laden online cookbook and advice site Thug Kitchen went to the masses with a new book this fall, even setting up a tour to promote it. But backlash erupted when the public found out it was actually not run by savvy, black urban food connoisseurs, but instead a white duo from Los Angeles. Immediately, they canceled appearances, as many organized protests to challenge Thug Kitchen's cultural appropriation and promotion of racial stereotypes.


21. The SketchFactor app helped people avoid black neighborhoods.

Nzc5NDEwY2M1NiMvN20wSUlfX0JlUU9uVFlDcVdtd3drZ0hXcUlnPS8weDIwOjg0MHg1NzAvODQweDU1MC9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvZHJmbGZsYmhtcmRtb3Z4ajR6dDRsbmVlMWIwaHNxMXEzeHZ1a2FheHdybTFxZnhtbjV1MXh0bmt0aXhqZDhndy5qcGc=.jpg


Launched earlier this year, the SketchFactor app was created by an all-white team of entrepreneurs to help users avoid "sketchy" or "bad" neighborhoods. But in reality, it's a tool to enable racial profiling and persecute minorities whose living situations are marked by race and class divides. As Tom McKay wrote for Mic, "'SketchFactor' might be subtler than an 'avoid ghetto' button, but it has the same effect."


22. Police gunned down a 12-year-old boy for holding a toy gun.

Nzg4MzJiMDJlZCMvSlh5akJCSjBhQlVQNDZLaXhYMmUxeDZWYzk4PS80Mng1MzozNzYyeDI2MDkvODQweDU3Ny9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvMHRkbmVramh3a3Bwb3RnOXFzajNpcjduM2t0dGowZmFxZ3NkeWxsMW1mdHJrcXJ4eXZuMXRtbmFnYWVmMzRtNy5qcGc=.jpg


After receiving a call where Cleveland resident saw a young kid holding what appeared to be a gun, local police showed up on the scene, gunning down 12-year-old Tamir Rice within mere moments. But he was actually holding a toy gun, one that wasn't pointing at the police and didn't pose a threat. His name became yet another addition to a long roster of unarmed black people killed mercilessly by police officers.


23. Ferguson.

ZGY0N2Y3MDIyYiMvMEVEcnNFVWpoNGZfeko4MlFsTWd4TGpSdE1ZPS8yOHg1MjoyMzcyeDE1MzEvODQweDUzMC9maWx0ZXJzOnF1YWxpdHkoNzApL2h0dHA6Ly9zMy5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3BvbGljeW1pYy1pbWFnZXMvYW5janpld3o4NWhwamVoYnNua3JuOXJqN2xlcmp4enlmbW55dXZ0Z2h2OGZ1Y202a24wMnJsbm1pMnh6MXJycy5qcGc=.jpg


Michael Brown lay dead on a street for more than four hours in Ferugson, Missouri, last August — shot repeatedly by police Officer Darren Wilson during an alleged altercation between the two. And like many others black victims of police shootings, Brown was unarmed. But just before Thanksgiving, a St. Louis county grand jury voted against indicting Wilson, in a process that's roundly faced criticism from the beginning.

For more than 100 days, organizers held demonstrations, die-ins and community meetings in Ferguson, as part of a local and national call to action against racialized police brutality. But even they faced stigma in media reports, as many otherwise peaceful protestors were labeled as violent and disorderly while facing a militarized police force.

Despite the still-pending federal investigation, the collective grief and outrage prompted by this tragedy, it does not appear that Brown will have died in vain. It's one of many disappointments for black people that could very well help transform the racial landscape in America.

----

It's utter depressing to realize that there's a number of things I could append to this list.
 

whytemyke

Honorary Canadian.
Even the garbage clickbait you posted is inaccurate. Sherman went off in the conference championship game, not the Superbowl.

Look, there are serious problems going on that need to be addressed. But lumping in an idiot mayor with Ferguson, or trying to make us feel bad because players were getting millions while playing for a racist owner (whom was known to be racist LONG before those guys ever signed their contracts) is absolute liberal bitching at its very worst.

Seriously. Comparing that mayor to the Garner case is essentially spitting in the face of everyone who cares.
 
lol @ Rap getting recognition because of white rappers. First of all why is Rap only allowed by Black artists and also Kanye West and Jay Z are billboard top 1 diamond sellers and they have been around for 15 years
 

Piecake

Member
Don't agree with all of them, 4 and 5 specifically. I don't think I really need to go into 4, but n one in America cared about Ebola until it hit America because it wasn't in America until that point. I think that is an indication of Americans not giving a shit what happens in the rest of the world and not an indication of America being racist against Africans.
 

Malyse

Member
Even the garbage clickbait you posted is inaccurate. Sherman went off in the conference championship game, not the Superbowl.

Look, there are serious problems going on that need to be addressed. But lumping in an idiot mayor with Ferguson, or trying to make us feel bad because players were getting millions while playing for a racist owner (whom was known to be racist LONG before those guys ever signed their contracts) is absolute liberal bitching at its very worst.

Seriously. Comparing that mayor to the Garner case is essentially spitting in the face of everyone who cares.

/sarcasm?

I mean, you can't be serious.

lol @ Rap getting recognition because of white rappers. First of all why is Rap only allowed by Black artists and also Kanye West and Jay Z are billboard top 1 diamond sellers and they have been around for 15 years

If you aren't gonna read it, why out yourself like that?
 
If you aren't gonna read it, why out yourself like that?

But during a year that continued a trend of white people appropriating black music, dance moves and other black cultural staples, it incensed many to read headlines claiming Iggy Azalea "runs hip-hop" and witness Macklemore virtually sweep the rap categories at the 2014 Grammy Awards
.

I read it, well the above snippit that was posted, not sure what you mean. It is saying Macklemore and Iggy Azalea are popular and are white which is true. I don't know if they are popular because they are white, that may be a stretch.
 
If I remember correctly, the lady from number 8 (?) Left the house, then went back. And her kids were in the house. 3 years was a fair ending to that fiasco, unless that was a different case.

Also, what's wrong with white people winning awards for rap music? Never understood that.

Also, number 22 is more a complete tragedy than a failure. Just an all around ugly situation.

Can't argue with the rest though.
 

Malyse

Member
.

I read it, well the above snippit that was posted, not sure what you mean. It is saying Macklemore and Iggy Azalea are popular and are white which is true. I don't know if they are popular because they are white, that may be a stretch.

So, it's not that you didn't read it, but that you don't understand what cultural appropriation is and why that's bad, correct?
 

highrider

Banned
White people have always been involved with hip hop/rap. Rick Rubin produced some of the best music of the art form.
 
Seriously. Comparing that mayor to the Garner case is essentially spitting in the face of everyone who cares.

I'm fairly sure you completely misunderstood the entire list. You're looking at these things too literally and ignoring that each of them represents a larger underlying problem. The Mayor thing has nothing to do in particular with the mayor and more to do with the underlying assumptions of black males being thugs/gangbangers for doing things a white person who do without anyone batting an eye.

Fuck, look at the Macklemore picture right below! He's flashing what could be construed as gang signs and clearly no one gave a shit!
 

kendrid

Banned
Don't agree with all of them, 4 and 5 specifically. I don't think I really need to go into 4, but n one in America cared about Ebola until it hit America because it wasn't in America until that point. I think that is an indication of Americans not giving a shit what happens in the rest of the world and not an indication of America being racist against Africans.

I was just going to post the exact same thing. America didn't care about Ebola until it was here.

Question for our European members - did your press care about Ebola before it started to spread?
 
Glad I'm not the only one who sees #4 as a terrible choice.

#5 is pretty dumb as well. "No one cared about Ebola until it started affecting white people. " ... should be Americans didn't care until it started infecting Americans here (...and news media overhyped the fuck out of it). Never mind the biggest face around the few cases we had here was clearly not white (Nina Pham).
 
So, it's not that you didn't read it, but that you don't understand what cultural appropriation is and why that's bad, correct?

I am not meaning to argue I am just stating that White people and Rap/ Hip-hop have been around for decades. Also I don't know anything about Iggy but Macklemore's rap style and lyrics are not very "black" so according to the definition of cultural appropration he doesn't really fit the bill, unless it is stating that Rap is strictly for African Americans.

Cultural Appropriation: Taking intellectual property, traditional knowledge, cultural expressions, or artifacts from someone else's culture without permission. This can include unauthorized use of another culture's dance, dress, music, language, folklore, cuisine, traditional medicine, religious symbols, etc
 

maxcriden

Member
That is terrible. Thank you for posting this list. I think I was aware of most of the most important ones listed here. I don't know if I fully understand the black culture appropriation issue with Macklemore, though (I'm not a fan of his, though). I dunno. It seems like if the list is being ranked in order from most to least important (maybe I misunderstood that), Macklemore's cultural appropriation being rewarded seems less pertinent to me, but even if it's not being ranked that way (and with Ferguson so low on the list it's probably not meant to read that way), it just feels like the Macklemore issue is a subset of the Elvis/rock'n'roll and related cultural issues. Not that it's not its own thing; maybe it's just because I'm not as interested in that genre of music that I don't understand the nuances of that particular issue as well. Maybe someone can articulate its importance a bit more for a layperson? (I mean, I understand why it matters, I think--it just seems odd on a list with ebola and shootings.)
 

CrankyJay

Banned
#5 is sort of sketchy to me. People didn't care about Ebola until it came to America.

They're overly simplifying it by basically saying America is white and Africa is black. Of the six people I can recall having Ebola in America, 2 were black, 2 were white, 1 was Asian, and the guy named "Ashoka" (the cameraman from NBC), I don't even know what race he was.

#5 is pretty dumb as well. "No one cared about Ebola until it started affecting white people. " ... should be Americans didn't care until it started infecting Americans here (...and news media overhyped the fuck out of it). Never mind the biggest face around the few cases we had here was clearly not white (Nina Pham).

This guy gets it.
 

Nvzman

Member
Even the garbage clickbait you posted is inaccurate. Sherman went off in the conference championship game, not the Superbowl.

Look, there are serious problems going on that need to be addressed. But lumping in an idiot mayor with Ferguson, or trying to make us feel bad because players were getting millions while playing for a racist owner (whom was known to be racist LONG before those guys ever signed their contracts) is absolute liberal bitching at its very worst.

Seriously. Comparing that mayor to the Garner case is essentially spitting in the face of everyone who cares.
I fully agree with this. Only 5 points seemed valid, the rest were straight up false or grasping for straws.
 

Nesotenso

Member
So, it's not that you didn't read it, but that you don't understand what cultural appropriation is and why that's bad, correct?

so its off limits to become successful in anything which doesn't have roots in your own culture because it would be cultural appropriation?
 

Malyse

Member
so its off limits to become successful in anything which doesn't have roots in your own culture because it would be cultural appropriation?
You can be part of rap music without appropriating black culture. Also, you missed the whole damn point.
 

Nesotenso

Member
You can be part of rap music without appropriating black culture. Also, you missed the whole damn point.

People can make the argument that Iggy tries to act black. But unless I am missing something, I don't think the same could be said for Macklemore. A lot of the ire seems to be directed towards the artists themselves when publications, other people and the media engage in hyperbole.


If they ever made a fucking list about how not to reply on forums, gifs would be number one.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom