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"What Happened To Black Media Coverage Of The AA GLBT Community?"

3 Comments -

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Blogger Go Go Jo Jo said...

This is an issue very dear to me. I went into af-am studies and minored in the studies of women and gender because i wanted to do Black LGBT history.

it is painful the amount of information that exists that is not readily available to the broader community. i am particularly upset with mainstream Black media because i believe that their homophobic practices promote a very heterosexist ideal in the community.

what i can't understand is how, knowing that there *have* to be queer people in the media world (come on now, we're everywhere) this has been allowed to persist for so long.

i am times torn between my desire to work in journalism and try to change this situation and follow my personal nerdy passion into academia.

9:06 AM

Blogger Monica Roberts said...

Jo Jo,
Do what your heart tells you.

Yes, it is mind boggling how much history we have lost, especially due to the early stages of the AIDS epidemic.

I think a lot of the reason for the media blackout is this 'dirty laundry' attitude that started during the Civil Rights movement and has been invoked to stifle discussion on any sensitive topic within our community for fear of making the community 'look bad'

BET took care of that, so if you can show booty shaking videos of scantily clad sistahs on a ostensibly Black owned network and not care about what message that sends, why should frank discussion on Black GLBT history and Black GLBT issues bother anybody?

9:55 AM

Blogger gogojojo said...

I agree. Black media's hysteria about portraying "the best" of us means that many of the non-normative aspects of our culture go unexplored. For example I was watching TV1 a couple days before inauguration and they were playing one of the three million unofficial biographical documentaries created about President Obama this year. They made a *HUGE* deal about him identifying as Christian. No his mama wasn't and yeah he supposedly didn't always believe. But rest assured he loves Jesus now. Which is great I love Jesus too. But it makes it seem as if there are none of us darker brothers and sisters (seriously that is my new favorite way of describing Black people) who do not identify with that and/or do not care.

I just get so frustrated because so many people I knew in college would not get involved in community organizing (such as it was) because they were worried about what parts of themselves they would have to leave behind to become part of the monolithic blackness portrayed in the magazines and tv shows. Its a travesty in my opinion. I mean you could go back and read old issues of Ebony/Essence and never dream that the magazines would become what they are today.

7:29 PM

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