News & Views
 

February 25, 2009

What Did You Think Of The President's Address?

President Barack Obama

President Barack Obama addresses a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber of the Capitol in Washington. Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool / AP Photo

 

Share your thoughts below.

comments () | | e-mail

 
February 24, 2009

Obama To Address Congress, Nation On Economy

President Obama will address a joint session of Congress tonight, focusing mainly on his plans to fix the flagging economy. Here's more of what you can expect, via the Detroit Free Press:

-- First, as he did with the middle-class tax cut in the stimulus bill, he'll talk up intentions for another campaign promise: health care reform, with guarantees of better access for more people.


-- Second, Obama will work on bolstering the public's trust by recognizing the cost of the stimulus and promising to cut the federal deficit in half by 2013, the end of his term, by trimming some spending (especially by scaling back in Iraq) and raising taxes on the wealthy, as advertised by his campaign.

-- Third, he'll talk about resolve, about commitment to change and about how all these efforts will take time. Don't be surprised if he cautioned against attaching too much importance to a day's or week's swing in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

What do you want to hear from President Obama tonight?

comments () | | e-mail

 
February 18, 2009

Sharpton, 'New York Post' At Odds Over Political Cartoon

Al Sharpton says a political cartoon in today's New York Post (above) "is troubling at best," when viewed in a racial context. The cartoon appears to spoof yesterday's police shooting of a raging chimpanzee in Connecticut and President Obama signing his billion-dollar stimulus bill into law.

Sharpton issued this written statement:

"The cartoon in today's New York Post is troubling at best given the historic racist attacks of African-Americans as being synonymous with monkeys. One has to question whether the cartoonist is making a less than casual reference to this when in the cartoon they have police saying after shooting a chimpanzee that "Now they will have to find someone else to write the stimulus bill."


"Being that the stimulus bill has been the first legislative victory of President Barack Obama (the first African American president) and has become synonymous with him it is not a reach to wonder are they inferring that a monkey wrote the last bill?"

The Post followed with this:

"The cartoon is a clear parody of a current news event, to wit the shooting of a violent chimpanzee in Connecticut. It broadly mocks Washington's efforts to revive the economy. Again, Al Sharpton reveals himself as nothing more than a publicity opportunist."

What do you think?

comments () | | e-mail

 
February 17, 2009

Read & Respond: 'Confessions Of A Reluctant Flag-Waver'

American Flag

iStockphoto.com

Though he hasn't yet been in office for a full month, President Barack Obama's presence in the White House has sparked a wholesale reevaluation of long-held beliefs and assumptions about race in America.

It extends beyond, for instance, rehashed debates about the continuing relevance of Black History Month to something deeper, which frequent News & Notes guest and Spelman College associate professor William Jelani Cobb considers in a post titled, "Confessions of a Reluctant Flag-Waver."

He writes: "These are strange days. Last August, I was caught on camera waving an American flag at the Democratic National Convention. This from the man who, as a student activist at Howard University, was caught on camera lowering the flag and raising a red, black and green one in its place." The following is an excerpt:

(L)ike all else concerning black people in this country, the interconnectedness of black history and American history has become more complex with age. Since Nov. 4, 2008, it has seemed little more than an indecipherable riddle of identity. There are those who saw the election returns and divined from them a declarative statement, a reply to Frederick Douglass' enduring question, "What to the slave is the 4th of July?" Or maybe a libation poured for those souls who died clearing the route to this moment.


These are strange days. Last August, I was caught on camera waving an American flag at the Democratic National Convention. This from the man who, as a student activist at Howard University, was caught on camera lowering the flag and raising a red, black and green one in its place. The same man who scowled when a military chaplain handed my mother an American flag at my father's funeral. During the uproar over the Confederate flags flying in Georgia, I frequently pointed out that black people suffered for far longer under the stars and stripes than we ever did under the stars and bars. And there are still no simple answers.

There are still voices that see Obama's election as the ultimate gesture of cynicism, the moment at which a black face was put to the service of this nation's global schemes and third-world adventurism. As the 44th president, Obama has necessarily fallen in with a checkered crowd: Washington, who laid out precise numbers of slaves to keep a perfect gender ratio of the Negroes he owned; Jefferson, who crossed out the lines in the Declaration of Independence that condemned the slave trade, copy editing black freedom out of existence. Jackson, who strangled abolitionist efforts and bought a black girl at an auction for his own entertainment; Lyndon B. Johnson, who signed civil rights laws but never relinquished his profane noun of choice for black people. Even Barack's boy, Abraham Lincoln, was arm-twisted into glory and penned the Emancipation Proclamation as he struggled to exile freed blacks outside America's borders. It's this kind of thing that will make your head grow weary of pondering.

On the day after the election, one of my students announced to me that the question was no longer "What to the slave is the 4th of July" but "What to the African American is the 4th of November." I didn't have an answer for her then -- and I still don't. But when I figure that one out, I can holler back about the meaning of Presidents Day.

Read the full post via TheRoot.com, and share your thoughts.

comments () | | e-mail

 
February 2, 2009

Did Hudson's 'Anthem' Surpass Houston's?

Jennifer Hudson (2009):

Whitney Houston (1991):

Which is better?

comments () | | e-mail

 
January 20, 2009

Open Thread: Hail To A New Chief

The Bushes and Obamas

President Bush, (center right), and first lady Laura Bush, (center left), welcome President-elect Barack Obama, (far left), and his wife Michelle Obama, (right), on the North Portico of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2009. Credit: Pablo Martinez Monsivais, AP Photo

Share your thoughts about today's presidential inauguration of Barack Obama.

If you aren't near a radio or TV, you can listen to NPR's coverage online or watch the live Webcast of the swearing in.

comments () | | e-mail

 
January 14, 2009

Open Thread: Inauguration Inundation

Obama Shirts

Stacks of Barack Obama T-shirts sit on a shelf at the Official Inaugural Collectibles store in Washington.

Jose Luis Magana, AP Photo

It's your turn.

If you are planning to attend next week's inauguration of President-elect Obama ... or watch the festivities while ensconced on your couch, we want to hear from you.

Share your thoughts, expectations, and concerns about Obama's inauguration and subsequent first term in the White House.

comments () | | e-mail

 
January 13, 2009

Have A Question About Book Publishing?

On today's show, Farai Chideya guided a conversation about African-American authors and the future of book publishing.

Our guests -- Haki Madhubuti, Quincy Troupe, and Nakea Murray -- covered the finer points of editing and quality control, self-publishing, and literary marketing. The three agreed to continue the conversation online.

So, if you have a question or comment about book publishing, leave it below, and we'll have our guests respond.

comments () | | e-mail

 
January 6, 2009

Should Burris' Senate Appointment Be Honored?

Roland Burris

Illinois U.S. Senate appointee Roland Burris leaves the U.S. Capitol, seen right, in Washington after he was turned away when he appeared to take his seat.

Charles Dharapak, AP Photo

Amid a chaotic scene on Capitol Hill today, the Secretary of the Senate denied former Illinois attorney general Roland Burris from taking the Senate seat vacated by President-elect Barack Obama.

Burris, 71, said he was told "my credentials are not in order and will not be accepted." Speaking to reporters, Burris added he was "not seeking to have any type of confrontation."

Here's more from the Associated Press:

It was a spectacular demonstration of political gridlock at a time when the Democratic-controlled Congress has been eagerly awaiting Obama's inauguration while nervously anticipating tense work on a much-discussed stimulus program to steady the faltering economy.


An attorney for Burris, Timothy W. Wright III, said that "our credentials were rejected by the secretary of the Senate. We were not allowed to be placed in the record books. We were not allowed to proceed to the floor for purposes of taking oath. All of which we think was improperly done and is against the law of this land. We will consider our options and we will certainly let you know what our decisions will be soon thereafter."

Asked what his options were, Wright said there possibly could be a court challenge and he said that Burris also would continue to talk to the Senate leadership.

Should the Senate honor Burris' appointment by embroiled Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich? What do you think of Burris' Senate pursuit?

On today's show, Farai Chideya gets an update from NPR's Cheryl Corley and professor Sherrilyn Ifill.

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 30, 2008

Share Your Memories Of 2008

Nobody can say that 2008 was uneventful. As the year draws to a close, it's a good time to look back on what was ...

Happy New Year

We were inspired by an historic election, swashbuckled by Somali pirates, and scared by the threat of a new Great Depression.

We reached out to each other with "terrorist fist jabs," fell for a Bigfoot hoax, and rooted for Michael Phelps.

Happy New Year

We learned way too much about Eliot "Client #9" Spitzer, not enough about where our tax dollars are going, and just enough about Governor Sarah Palin.

Yes, we've been through a lot over the past 12 months.

Please share your memories of 2008 with us below. To help out, feel free to look back at what News & Views was blogging about throughout the year:

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 22, 2008

Bloggers Respond To Obama's Invocation Choice Of Rick Warren

Barack Obama and Rick Warren

Then presidential candidate Barack Obama shakes hands with Pastor Rick Warren during the Saddleback Forum in Lake Forrest, Calif.

Alex Brandon, AP Photo

It's what some see as the first major rift between President-elect Obama and his progressive supporters: his choice of evangelical pastor Rick Warren to deliver the inauguration invocation.

Warren supported a California initiative aimed at banning gay marriage and says he disapproves of homosexuality.

For his part, Obama said of his controversial decision: "That dialogue, I think, is part of what my campaign's been all about: That we're not going to agree on every single issue. But what we have to do is to be able to create an atmosphere when we -- where we can disagree without being disagreeable and then focus on those things that we hold in common as Americans."

Below is a sampling of what some of our regular bloggers' roundtable guests think. (Click the links to read the full posts.)

Corey Richardson of Vexed In The City in a post titled, "Gay People, Please Calm Down":

Rick Warren isn't your enemy because Rick Warren can't do anything to you or for you. He's just another guy who has an opinion that you don't share. Get over it, move on.


Your real enemies are the people who you don't know. Your real enemies are the ones who silently went into the voting booth and voted YES on Prop 8, then returned to work, had a cup of coffee with you and asked you if the jeans they were wearing made their butt look big. Your real enemy isn't the person who would speak his mind against you, your real enemy is the person who would conspire their thoughts to harm you and say nothing of it.

... So instead of throwing your well manicured and gay hands in the air in protest, be cool. You know who Rick Warren is and what he's about and there's nothing you can do to change him or that fact.

And for those who want to get mad at Barack Obama for asking him to deliver the invocation, I got some bad news for you too. A lot of people voted for Obama and a lot of the folks who voted for him aren't down with gay marriage either. That's why Prop 8 passed. It's called democracy. The people vote and sometimes they make choices you don't like (see President George W. Bush 2000/2004). That's what being a minority is about sometimes, not getting your way ... Black folks know the deal, we dealt with that slavery sh*t for a minute.

Jill Tubman of Jack & Jill Politics:

Boo ... hiss ... claws scratching at the air -- this was a major misstep IMHO. I salute the instinct to unify the nation symbolically. But this guy is on the wrong side of some basic human rights issues. ... [The Reverend Dr. Joseph E. Lowery] is the man who should be giving the invocation, not Warren. It is his courage, values and example that should precede Obama's swearing in, not Warren's. He's most recently known for bravely castigating Bush's policies at Coretta Scott King's funeral two years ago in front of 4 U.S. presidents, including Bush himself. Here's a quote: "We know now there were no weapons of mass destruction over there. But Coretta knew and we know that there are weapons of misdirection right down here. Millions without health insurance. Poverty abounds. For war billions more but no more for the poor!"

Jasmyne Cannick in a post directed at "white gays."

The man isn't even in office yet and you are all up in arms over the inaugural invitation of evangelical pastor Rick Warren by President-elect Barack Obama just because Warren opposes gay marriage.

Look -- America already knows that you are unhappy with the outcome of Prop. 8, but ... you have no one to blame for that but yourself.

Instead of denouncing Obama's choice to invite Warren, you should be hailing it, as it shows a continued effort on Obama's behalf to reach across the aisle in an effort to bring everyone to the table. You know, that thing that you haven't quite learned how to do yet.

If no one ever told you -- the world doesn't revolve around gay marriage. If it did, let's face it, Obama wouldn't be the President-elect, now would he?

And Pam Spaulding of Pam's House Blend:

How's the whole fundie outreach thing going, Team Obama? Look at who's giving you praise for giving Rick Warren the mic at the inaugural -- Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council, the man who paid former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard David Duke $82,500 for his mailing list. Are you scratching from the fleas yet?

What do you think? Share your thoughts below.

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 17, 2008

Brazile: Jackson Jr. Claim Doesn't Meet The 'Smell Test'

Jackson Close-Up

Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr., D-Ill., pauses during last Wednesday's news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais, AP Photo

On today's show, Democratic strategist and News & Notes regular contributor Donna Brazile said Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.'s claim that he is not an informant in a federal investigation of Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich
"didn't meet the smell test."

Farai Chideya: ... What's the status in your mind of Congressman Jackson's ability to frame the debate around his role, or lack thereof in this?


Donna Brazile: You know, when you start issuing press releases every other day, things become a little bit murky. After his first press conference, I called him to say I thought he did a great job in laying out the facts, and essentially acknowledging that he was "Candidate 5."

Now with this new revelation that he may or may not have served as a government informant, and then another press release indicating that he did nothing wrong -- all he was doing as a public servant was informing federal officials something that was going on -- that didn't meet the smell test.

I have to tell you, I too, am one of those Americans that's waiting for Mr. Fitzgerald to lay out all of the information to give us a complete account on what happened and to see the evidence. Right now, it's a lot of innuendo, a lot of hearsay, a lot of talk. But this seems to be a web that is going to ensnare a lot more than the governor, and it worries me deeply.

Listen to the entire segment here.

CNN quotes Jackson spokesman Kenneth Edmonds on the matter: "As a responsible citizen and elected official, Congressman Jackson has in the past provided information to federal authorities regarding his personal knowledge of perceived corruption and governmental misconduct. ... This was completely unrelated to the current investigation regarding the U.S. Senate appointment. And it is absolutely inaccurate to describe the congressman as an informant."

Do you agree with Brazile's assessment?

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 16, 2008

Fashion Designers Suggest Obama Inaugural Duds

Obama Inauguration Tuxedo

Sean John suggests this look for the President-elect.

Women's Wear Daily

After suggesting inauguration dress ideas for Michelle Obama, top fashion designers now have President-elect Barack Obama in their sights.

The fashion magazine Women's Wear Daily is back with a photo gallery of suggested looks for a range of inaugural events ... with the man of the house in mind.

Take a look, pick your favorite(s), and fill us in below.

Flashback: Fashion Desginers Try To Size Up Michelle Obama

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 15, 2008

NY Gov. Paterson Calls 'SNL' Spoof A 'Third-Grade' Attempt

New York Governor David Paterson says a Saturday Night Live sketch, aimed at spoofing his blindness, was nothing more than a "third-grade depiction of people and the way they look." It also sparked the ire of some activists in the blind community.

Continuing a trend of what some deem "more acceptable" blackface, cast member Fred Armisen portrayed the governor during SNL's "Weekend Update" segment.

Here's more via the New York Post.

... Paterson and advocates for the visually impaired didn't appreciate stock blind jokes that had Armisen pretending to be disoriented and wandering aimlessly.


"I can take a joke," Paterson told reporters.

But he called the SNL spoof a "third-grade depiction of people and the way they look" that could lead others to believe that "disability goes hand-in-hand with an inability to run a government or business."

"I run the place I work in, so I don't have to be worried about being discriminated against," noted Paterson.

Although Paterson is legally blind and has aides help him with some tasks, the governor is rarely out of step with his surroundings and seems comfortable in virtually all settings.

Watch the sketch, and tell us what you think:




comments () | | e-mail

 
December 12, 2008

More Answers About The Future Of 'News & Notes'

(UPDATED 12/17/08)

From covering the news to being the news ...

As word of our cancellation spread, so too did the headlines. Here's a sampling of reaction from frequent guests, our regular team of bloggers, and friends of the show. (Feel free to post additional links below.)

Vexed In The City: I'm Now A Victim Of The Recession ...
Average Bro: My Five-Year Plan For Media Domination Hits A Snag
Melissa Harris Lacewell: Post-Racial Media? White Noise replaces News and Notes
Jasmyne Cannick: For NPR, Blacks Are Still Last to Be Hired and First to be Fired
Jack & Jill Politics: NPR Cancels Only Black-Issues Program, News & Notes
Washington Post: NPR to Cut 64 Jobs and Two Shows
Culture Kitchen: NPR cancels "New and Notes" and enters a world of suckitude
Jasmyne Cannick: Unemployment Line: NPR Cancels Only African-American Focused Show 'News & Notes'
The Daily Voice: NPR cancels 'News and Notes' black radio program
Pam's House Blend: NPR cancels News & Notes, Day to Day, and lays off dozens
LA Eastside: NPR is cancelling News and Notes with Farai Chideya
Obenson Report: Damn! NPR Cancels Only African American-Themed Program
African American Political Pundit: Economy Hits NPR, Farai Chideya, News and Notes and Black Bloggers
Black Informant: NPR's "News & Notes" Gets Canned
Black Politics On The Web: NPR to cut 7 percent of workers, cancels African-American focused 'News & Notes'
Baratunde: NPR Cancels Only Black-Issues Program, News & Notes
Mother Jones: NPR Lays Off Staff, Cuts Shows

One listener even started a special Facebook group, with the goal of saving the show.


Now to some of your more recent questions:

Matthew Scallon wrote: Like The BPP, maybe your last week could have a week-long bloggers' roundtable, with each day going through the Five Stages of Grief ....
Thanks for the suggestion, Matthew. Beyond that, thanks for being such a loyal reader of our blog over the last few months. We've valued your comments and insight.

To all of you, please keep the suggestions coming. Tell us what you want to hear in these final three months -- including segments you want to hear again, as part of our planned "Best Of" compilations.


Lynsey Saunders wrote: I've been listening to News & Notes since middle school when Tavis Smiley was around. To Farai, you've made the show your own, and I loved listening to the podcasts. ***sniffle*** Where will I get my black journalistic inspiration from now?
If only we knew ... if only we knew ...


ernise s wrote: I've truly enjoyed listening over the years. I'm curious to know if you all will be absorbed into other NPR shows?
There isn't a definitive answer to your question yet, Ernise, but NPR has said it will try to accommodate as many of us as possible.


monica mclendon wrote: Can you guys move to a less costly area? The South has all kinds of options. Please reconsider.
That's not really a viable option for us at the moment, Monica. But we did have a fantastic time during our week-long visit to Atlanta.


N Wood wrote: What can we do? Tell us.
You can continue to listen each weekday through March 20; come back to our blog and Facebook page; sign up for our newsletter; or check out our YouTube video archive. Your concern and words of support are more than enough right now.

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 11, 2008

So ... Now What?

News & Notes Staff
Top (L-R): producer Roy Hurst, senior supervising producer Christabel Nsiah-Buadi, alternate host Tony Cox, producer Devin Robins, editor Sasa Woodruff, executive producer Nicole Childers, Web producer Geoffrey Bennett / Middle (L-R): Web producer Geoffrey Gardner, producer Zach Slobig, host Farai Chideya / Seated: former producer Christopher Johnson
Not Pictured: director Sonata Lee Narcisse and engineer Sherene Strausberg
Credit: Erin Mikosz, NPR

To News & Notes' fans and friends:

A sincere thanks for your words of support posted here and elsewhere.

If only the circumstances were different ...

For those of you who posed questions about the immediate future of our show, here's what we know:

How long can I continue listening to News & Notes?
We'll continue to bring you new programming until we take our final collective breath on March 20. On some days, you might hear "best-of" compilations or extended roundtable conversations.
As you can imagine, it will be increasingly more difficult to produce our hour-long show, if our already small staff begins to dwindle ... but we are committed to bringing you the same great show to which you've grown accustomed.

What about News & Views?
Our blog -- and daily newsletter -- will sunset along with the show on March 20. But our Facebook fan page will remain active. After News & Notes goes off the air, you'll still have access to the show's archives via NPR.org -- much like the now shuttered Bryant Park Project.

What can I do to keep News & Notes on the air?
The decision, as it stands, is final ... but that hasn't stopped some people.

Have a question or comment? Post it, and we'll respond. We are reading all of your comments.

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 10, 2008

ABC News: Jesse Jackson Jr. Tapped In Blagojevich Case

Jesse Jackson Jr.

Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, left, is congratulated by The Rev. Jesse Jackson, right, and Jackson's son, Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. D-Ill., second from right, after Blagojevich delivered his State of the State address to a joint session of the Illinois General Assembly in the House of Representatives at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield, Ill., Thursday, Feb. 3, 2005.

Seth Perlman, AP Photo

ABC News' Brian Ross is reporting the following: "Chicago Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. (D-IL) is the anonymous 'Senate Candidate #5' whose emissaries Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich reportedly claimed offered up to a million dollars to name him to the U.S. Senate, federal law enforcement sources tell ABC News."

Here's more:

According to the FBI affidavit in the case, Blagojevich "stated he might be able to cut a deal with Senate Candidate 5 that provided ROD BLAGOJEVICH" with something "tangible up front."


Jackson Jr. said this morning he was contacted yesterday by federal prosecutors in Chicago who he said "asked me to come in and share with them my insights and thoughts about the selection process."

Jackson Jr. said "I don't know" when asked if he was Candidate #5, but said he was told "I am not a target of this investigation."

Jackson Jr. said he agreed to talk with federal investigators "as quickly as possible" after he consults with a lawyer.

Read the rest, and share your reaction below.

Flashback: Jesse Jackson, Jr. Helps Obama Win Black Vote

UPDATE: Jackson: "I Am Not A Target Of This Investigation"

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 4, 2008

Fashion Desginers Try To Size Up Michelle Obama

Michelle Obama Composite
Credit: Composite Image

Julia Turner of Slate's XX Factor blog took a look at Woman Wear Daily's slideshow of commissioned Michelle Obama inauguration gowns and asked: "Is it so hard to draw a woman with black skin?"

The fashion world is notoriously inhospitable to black women -- if Michelle Obama lands the cover of Vogue, as has been rumored, she'll be one of the few black non-models ever to grace it -- but these sketches suggest a discomfort with blackness that's truly startling.

Take a look, and tell us what you think.

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 1, 2008

Obama Names Clinton In National Security Team Rollout

Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama

President-elect Barack Obama, left, stands with his choice to be secretary of state, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, right, at a news conference in Chicago today.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais, AP Photo

Following weeks of speculation, President-elect Barack Obama nominated one-time Democratic rival Hillary Clinton as his Secretary of State.

Here's more from NPR's Linton Weeks:

President-elect Barack Obama introduced Sen. Hillary Clinton, his archrival in the 2008 Democratic presidential race, as his secretary of state on Monday.


"I have known Hillary Clinton as a friend, a colleague, a source of counsel, and as a campaign opponent. She possesses an extraordinary intelligence and toughness, and a remarkable work ethic," said Obama, speaking at a news conference in Chicago where he has been managing his transition. "Hillary's appointment is a sign to friend and foe of the seriousness of my commitment to renew American diplomacy and restore our alliances."

In introducing his national security team, Obama said he will keep Robert Gates as secretary of defense. "I will be giving Secretary Gates and our military a new mission as soon as I take office: responsibly ending the war in Iraq through a successful transition to Iraqi control," Obama said.

... The president-elect also formally nominated Eric Holder as attorney general, Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security and Susan Rice as ambassador to the United Nations. Obama named retired Gen. Jim Jones as his national security adviser.

By choosing Clinton as his secretary of state, Obama may be solving several problems. Because of her long, variegated political experience, Clinton is one of the most qualified people for the prestigious position.

Rice and Holder would be the first African Americans to hold those respective positions.

What do you think of Obama's chosen war Cabinet? What does this selection of prominent names say about the President-elect and how he will govern?

comments () | | e-mail

 
November 20, 2008

Are 'Housewives' Bad For The Race?

The end of yesterday's bloggers' roundtable focused on whether Bravo's The Real Housewives of Atlanta -- and shows of that ilk (Flavor of Love, anyone?) -- are "bad for the race," meaning they perpetuate negative stereotypes of black people. In this case, it's black women with money.

Lawrence Otis Graham -- author of the controversial book Our Kind of People: Inside America's Black Upper Class -- labeled "The Real Housewives" as the "P. Diddy crowd," who are "here-today-and-gone-tomorrow money. ... These are not people who value education and true philanthropy," he told The Houston Chronicle.

Like Graham, some see a class conflict between black "old money" and the black nouveau riche; others take issue with the housewives' consistent use of crass language; and some say it's much ado about nothing.

Take a look at a clip from this season's reunion show, and tell us what you think.

comments () | | e-mail

 
November 17, 2008

Are You Suffering From Obama Overload?

Woman sitting at computer, stressed out

iStockphoto.com

From T-shirts and bumper stickers to cable TV and even video games -- Obama mania has reached a fever pitch, and perhaps a plateau ... and the man hasn't even been sworn in yet.

We've been guilty of OD'ing on Obama at times, given the historic nature of the campaign and his victory. But it's also true that moderation is often underrated.

Have you had your fill of Obama coverage for now? If so, tell us about it. And what other stories have had your attention in the interim?

But if you need to fill your daily Obama fix ... check out today's bloggers' roundtable.

comments () | | e-mail

 
November 11, 2008

Read & Respond: "Public School For the Obama Girls, Please?"

Blood Pressure

President-elect Barack Obama gets a kiss from daughter Malia (left) as he leaves her and daughter Sasha (right) at the University of Chicago Lab School.

Stan Honda, AFP/Getty Images

On Thursday's show, we are planning to speak with Stephanie Mencimer of Mother Jones magazine about her essay (below) titled "Public School For the Obama Girls, Please?"

Finding the right school is sure to be one of the most important decisions for the Obama family upon relocating to Pennsylvania Avenue.

During Farai's conversation with Stephanie, we'd like to share with her some of your reaction. So here's your homework: Read the following essay and tell us what you think.

Dear President-elect Obama,


I'm writing to you as a resident of the District of Columbia, where you'll soon be moving with your two lovely children. I would like to respectfully request that you seriously consider sending your kids to DC public schools -- and not a charter school, either, but a full-on traditional neighborhood public school. I realize that you've already taken some flack for ensconcing your daughters in a private institution in Chicago. I don't intend to pile on. I understand that choosing a school is fraught with anxiety and it's the most private of decisions. But you are a public figure, so I think it's fair to ask that you give the public schools a boost of confidence by electing to send your kids to one.

Full disclosure: I send one of my children to public school, and the White House is within the same school boundary as my own home. After 5th grade, my kids would attend the same school as yours. So I have a vested interest in where your kids end up, as any school that lands the president's kids is likely to see a host of improvements. But my self-interest aside, whatever happens with your administration, you could at least leave a lasting impact on hundreds of poor, mostly minority kids languishing in schools that routinely fail to teach them to read simply by sending your kids to public schools.

Bill Clinton greatly disappointed city residents when he and Hillary Clinton opted to send Chelsea to the tony Sidwell Friends School. His argument at the time was that he and Hillary wanted to protect their daughter's privacy, an argument some found disingenuous, given that private schools are crawling with the children of the media elite who rarely, if ever, set foot in DC's crappy public facilities. City residents were immensely disappointed that the leader of the free world did not seize the opportunity to help improve one of the nation's worst school systems, without having to spend a dime.

One of the major problems with the city's schools is that they've been all but abandoned by middle-class parents who can use their political clout to hold schools to higher standards and to demand sufficient resources for them. Right now, DC schools are at a critical turning point. Some middle class families, particularly with very young kids, are starting to come back into the system, which holds great promise for the future of education in the city. But keeping those families -- and convincing more to do so -- is a major challenge. The arrival of the Obama girls in a DC public school would send a powerful message to other nervous yuppie parents: your kids will be OK here -- come join us! Those parents can be a major force for good that, unlike tax cuts, does have a trickle down effect on lots of kids whose parents don't know how to write grant proposals or lobby Congress. And imagine the turnout for PTA meetings should Michelle join!

While the prospect of throwing your kids into the maw of public school is something that can definitely keep you up at night (believe me, I've been there), you should take heart in the fact that you wouldn't be the first president to do it. Jimmy Carter sent Amy to Stevens Elementary School downtown, and she seemed to emerge unscathed. Stevens was closed this summer and consolidated with Francis Junior High to create the Francis-Stevens Educational Campus, the pre-K through 8th grade facility near Dupont Circle where, technically, your kids would go. There are no school performance test scores available yet for the reconstituted school, but the building was recently rehabbed and now sports a lovely new playground. True, it's a far cry from Sidwell, but it's closer to the White House and, like Sidwell, it has a tennis court. Compared with Sidwell's $28,000 annual tuition (plus $5,000 for aftercare), it's a real bargain, too.

Still, I'd be a hypocrite if I said you should send your kids to Francis when I myself have serious reservations about eventually sending my own kids there. Its junior high predecessor was pretty dreadful; many of its 9th graders looked old enough to vote. So I can see where you might balk at the idea. But Francis isn't your only option. DC actually has a number of very good schools. Thompson Elementary, also not far from the White House, is an up-and-coming school housed in a brand new building and features a Chinese immersion program. The city might even cut you some slack and give you a coveted spot at Oyster Elementary, the award-winning Spanish bilingual school in Woodley Park where schools chancellor Michelle Rhee sends her kids. (Si se puede!)

Rhee, in fact, has said she hopes to persuade you to send your kids to DC public schools. (Please don't respond by making her Secretary of Education, as some rumors have suggested you might do; DC needs her, and she's just getting started.) Her motivation is plainly obvious. She needs the PR. DC schools have such a bad rep that our own mayor, who has made education reform his signature issue, refuses to send his kids to one, so luring in the Obama girls would be an enormous coup.

I'm not asking you to sacrifice your children's education and well being for a good cause. I firmly believe that your kids can receive a perfectly good education in public school here. It takes some work, but it can be done. Besides, private school no more guarantees future success than public school guarantees failure (case in point: Al Gore III, a graduate of the prestigious St. Alban's). Regardless of which public school you pick, your family's mere presence in the building would force the school bureaucracy to rise to the occasion. And think about this: For four -- or maybe eight -- years, your kids will live inside the White House bubble. What better way to give them a daily reality check than to send them to school with regular folks?

Here's hoping we see you at math night.

UPDATE: At Barack Obama's first press conference as president-elect, Chicago Sun-Times reporter Lynn Sweet asked whether Obama would be sending his children to private or public schools in Washington. He replied that no decision has yet been made and that he and Michelle would be "scouting out schools."

-- Stephanie Mencimer

Share your thoughts below.

comments () | | e-mail

 

What's Your Blood Pressure Reading?

Blood Pressure

iStockphoto.com

If you don't know, that's a problem.

"High blood pressure -- often called the 'silent killer' because it has no symptoms -- increases a person's chances for heart disease, stroke and other serious problems. But it's easy to check for and usually can be controlled through exercise, diet and medicine."

The Associated Press has more:

The lives of nearly 8,000 black Americans could be saved each year if doctors could figure out a way to bring their average blood pressure down to the average level of whites, a surprising new study found.


The gap between the races in controlling blood pressure is well-known, but the resulting number of lives lost startled some scientists.

... Former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. David Satcher said changes need to be made to make sure minority patients can get good medical care when they need it. But there also needs to be more done to make sure patients understand medical directions and feel comfortable asking questions when they don't.

comments () | | e-mail

 
November 5, 2008

Should We Forgive Jesse Jackson?

Barack Obama
Credit: Joe Raedle, Getty Images

With tears streaming down his face, Jesse Jackson stood among the crowd of thousands who watched Sen. Barack Obama address the nation after winning the presidency last night.

But few can forget the words Jackson uttered just months ago, using a pejorative phrase in reference to Sen. Obama, for what Jackson saw as the senator "talking down" to black audiences. At the time, your reaction on our blog was overwhelmingly negative.

Jackson is popping up all over TV today, sharing his reaction to Obama's win and, in some cases, having to explain away (again) his incendiary words.

So ... should bygones be bygones?

Flashback:
Jesse Jackson Uses N-Word on Fox News Tape
Jesse Jackson: 'The Message Remains The Same'

comments () | | e-mail

 
November 4, 2008

What Was Your Voting Experience Like?

Flag Banner

After almost two years, Election 2008 is drawing to a close. What was your experience at your polling place today?

Culver City Polling Place

A polling place in Culver City, Calif.

Geoffrey Bennett, NPR

As for me, I arrived at my voting precinct at 5:30 in the morning, attempting to beat the crowd expected at the official 7AM opening. And when the doors finally swung open, I was struck by this memorable scene: A black cowboy, who happened to be the precinct captain, brought out a large American flag and planted it in the ground. As the flag started to wave in the morning California wind, Public Enemy's "Don't Believe the Hype" bled from the iPod earphones of the guy standing behind me. Then the line, which had swelled from five people to about 200 in the course of an hour, made its way inside.

Come back to our blog throughout the night, as News & Notes will be posting reaction and videoblogging as the results come in. Farai Chideya will be joined by a group of our regular bloggers and NPR's Tony Cox.

comments () | | e-mail

 
November 3, 2008

Should McCain Have Played Up Rev. Wright?

The Rev. Jeremiah Wright

The Rev. Jeremiah Wright, former pastor of the Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, addresses the National Press Club in April.

Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images

With most polls showing Sen. Barack Obama leading rival Sen. John McCain heading into Election Day tomorrow, some political watchers are wondering if more ammunition could or should have been squeezed from Obama's relationship with the fiery Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

Politico.com is wondering what if:

What most all Republican strategists agree on is that in order to use Wright against Obama effectively, the assault would have needed to have been begun earlier in the campaign and as part of a broader message -- unlike the McCain camp's halfhearted attempt to link the Democrat to 1960s-era domestic terrorist William Ayers in early October, a line of attack McCain himself never fully embraced and that the campaign ultimately removed from Sarah Palin's stump speech.


Yet there would have been challenges, even with an early anti-Wright message.

First, if McCain's campaign could have coaxed the candidate into signing off on hammering Wright, the candidate's unease with the topic may have diluted its effectiveness.

... And even if McCain been willing to drive a Wright message beginning in the summer and done so consistently, keeping it up during the financial crisis may not have been plausible.

"[Targeting Wright] pre-Labor Day may have gotten lost in economic news," said Carl Forti, who runs the conservative group Freedom's Watch.

Alex Castellanos, a veteran Republican media consultant, said that Obama was lucky in a way that Wright got so much exposure in the spring as to become effectively old news.

That hasn't stopped a political action committee called The National Republican Trust from trying to capitalize on the Rev. Wright controversy. Here's their last-ditch effort, airing now in key states:

What do you think?

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 31, 2008

Major Voter Turnout A New Beginning Or A One-Time Fluke?

Election 2008 is historic in a number of ways, including Sen. Barack Obama and Gov. Sarah Palin's candidacies and record-breaking early voter turnout.

But do you think this high level of civic engagement among African Americans this year -- especially among younger black voters -- can be sustained, barring the presence of a candidate like Barack Obama? Share your thoughts.

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 30, 2008

What Did You Think Of Obama's TV Infomercial?

Obama on TV

Sen. Barack Obama is reflected on a glass table, as he appears on television screens at an electronics shop in Wheaton, Maryland.

Nicholas Kamm, AFP/Getty Images

Did you watch Sen. Barack Obama's half-hour TV infomercial last night? If so, what did you think of it? New York magazine sums up the TV event this way:

Of course Obama's prime-time infomercial was sappy, overstuffed with images of Americana, and pretty much devoid of anything new for people who've been paying attention to the campaign. But it's not trivial that Obama appeared nothing like the terrorist-friendly, paycheck-snatching secret socialist he's being portrayed as in these closing days. We got so comfortable watching Obama calmly explain his solutions to downtrodden Americans that if he started reading Goodnight Moon, we would have passed out on the spot. Maybe that's exactly the feeling that those miraculously still-undecided voters were waiting for.

Related Links:
Money Doesn't Mean Victory, But It Does Buy Major TV Time
The Root: Closing the Deal

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 29, 2008

Problems At The Polls? Questions About Voting?

Early Voting

Residents stand in line to cast their ballots in Washington, D.C.

Tim Sloan, AFP/Getty Images

For Monday's show, we are looking for folks willing to share their experiences with early voting or ask questions of our experts about the voting process.

We plan to focus on last-minute voting issues and how to make sure your vote counts after you've left the polling place.

If you want to share your story on our air, leave us a comment below, and we'll contact you.

Meanwhile, be sure to check out our month-long, special series on voting.

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 27, 2008

Money Doesn't Mean Victory, But It Does Buy Major TV Time

Photo Illustration

Graphic Illustration: Geoffrey Bennett, NPR

He's got the time ... but what should he do with it?

For the first time in 16 years, a presidential candidate -- namely Sen. Barack Obama -- has purchased a half-hour of TV programming to speak directly to the American people ... in this case, a week before the election.

The campaign infomercial is scheduled to air in prime time this Wednesday, Oct. 29. He's even preempting Game 6 of the World Series preempting the World Series pre-game show. So whatever it is, it better be good.

Saturday Night Live thinks he should go the variety show route:

How do you think Obama should craft this infomercial? Will you be watching?

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 22, 2008

Gay Rights Vs. Civil Rights In Same-Sex Marriage Debate

Same-sex marriage

iStockphoto.com

As political analyst Earl Ofari Hutchinson once wrote, "The gay rights vs. civil rights comparison has long been a sore spot for many blacks."

Here in California, that comparison has special significance. Voters head to the polls next month to vote on a ballot measure, which could overturn a state Supreme Court ruling legalizing statewide, same-sex marriages.

According to an article in today's Los Angeles Times, "African American voters could play a crucial role in the fight over same-sex marriage. Though they make up only about 6% of the electorate in California, they are expected to vote in record numbers this election because of Barack Obama's presence on the ballot."

Here's more:

A "yes" vote on the measure means that the Constitution would be amended to disallow gay marriage.


... The Yes on 8 campaign is counting on them [blacks], arguing that some polls suggest African Americans are generally less open to same-sex unions than other groups.

"They are our strongest supporters," said Frank Schubert, who is managing the Yes on 8 campaign.

But opponents of the proposition say they think that black voters may be more tolerant than many political professionals predict.

"People have this impression that black people in general are more homophobic than the population as a whole," said Ron Buckmire, who heads the Barbara Jordan/Bayard Rustin Coalition, a black gay rights group in Los Angeles.

Both sides, meanwhile, are contending that Obama would approve of their view. That's because the first black presidential candidate of a major party has said that he is against Proposition 8 but has also expressed opposition to gay marriage.

"He said both sides. We are picking the one we like," said Derek McCoy, a minister who came from Washington, D.C., in August to organize African American clergy across the state to oppose the measure.

What do you think?

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 21, 2008

Do Black Women Give Too Much?

Are black women generous to a fault? That's what a new study indicates:

The study of 1,000 professional black women and 454 non-black professional women by financial group ING, found that among the reasons black women didn't save enough was that they regularly gave money to family, friends and religious institutions.


More than 50 percent of the black women polled said they have loaned $500 or more to a friend or family in the last year. A third had loaned family more than $1,000.

"Black women's sense of obligation to community and family is both extraordinary and commendable," Rhonda Mims, president of the ING Foundation, told the website Diversityinc.com.

"When you are pulled in so many directions financially, something or someone has to pay the price. For black women, it appears their financial well-being suffers."

Do you agree? Read the rest.

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 20, 2008

You Know What Time It Is: HBCU Homecoming Season

"'Tis the season for HBCU homecomings," writes Natalie P. McNeal for The Root:

From now through November, thousands of college alumni from historically black institutions will descend on campuses across the South.


Employers, please understand why the few African Americans at your workplace are taking Fridays off from now until November. Non-HBCU grads, please be patient with your black college friends who keep crowing about how excited they are for homecoming. They mean no harm with their college chants and incessant telling of tales from the yard.

HBCU homecomings are like a black family reunion, minus the tacky T-shirt with an oak tree on it. It's a posh celebration and mass arrival of those who feel they've arrived.

Read the rest. But in the meantime, take our poll:

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 17, 2008

Singer Dee Dee Bridgewater Tells of Past Racism

Renowned singer Dee Dee Bridgewater recently sat down with NPR's Tony Cox, and opened up about her life and career. Among many topics discussed was Dee Dee's hair -- specifically how the dreadlocks she sported some years ago invited discriminatory remarks and reactions from strangers.

In November, News & Notes will launch a month-long series all about race in America. Please share your own stories and thoughts in the comment section below, and let us know what types of race-related subjects and questions you would like to hear discussed.

The entire interview with Dee Dee Bridgewater will air on News & Notes this Monday, October 20th.




comments () | | e-mail

 
October 16, 2008

Who Won The Final Presidential Debate?

Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain met for their final -- and perhaps most substantive -- debate last night. Check out today's show for morning-after analysis.

Oh, and as for "Joe the plumber," he (real name Joe Wurzelbacher) spoke to ABC's Good Morning America after having his name mentioned 23 times during last night's debate. Check out the interview.

Then, take our last presidential debate poll:

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 8, 2008

Did McCain Refuse to Shake Obama's Hand After the Debate?

Following last night's second presidential debate, pundits and political watchers are weighing in. The consensus: It wasn't a true town hall meeting and the candidates didn't beak new ground. Most polls -- including our own unscientific one -- indicate Barack Obama came out ahead.

Get your fill of post-debate analysis here.

One lingering question: Did John McCain refuse to shake Barack Obama's hand after the debate? You be the judge.

UPDATE: Not only a handshake ... but a hug.

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 7, 2008

Who Won The Town Hall Presidential Debate?

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 6, 2008

Union Leader Gives Impassioned Anti-Racism Speech

On today's bloggers' roundtable, our crew dissected a new video circulating around the Web of AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Richard Trumka giving a very impassioned speech against racism, in support of Sen. Barack Obama.

Watch the clip and tell us what you think.

comments () | | e-mail

 

Insert The Caption: Oprah Winfrey + Sidney Poitier = ???

Oprah Winfrey and Sidney Poitier
Credit: Rick Diamond, Getty Images for Sunshine Sachs & Associates

Oprah Winfrey and Sidney Poitier attend the historic opening of the new, 30-acre Tyler Perry Studios facility in Atlanta.

Register below (if you haven't already), and insert the caption!

Then, check out more photos from the event here.

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 2, 2008

Who Won The VP Debate?

Tune into tomorrow's show for analysis of tonight's vice presidential debate. In the meantime, take our unscientific poll:

Compare these results to our poll taken before the debate.

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 1, 2008

Voting 101: Fact Vs. Fiction

If you're a regular News & Notes listener (thanks, by the way), you know that we feature topical series each month. We just wrapped our month-long series on addiction. Next up is voting.

On tomorrow's show, we'll be taking your questions about the basics of voting and dispelling some myths -- some more outlandish than others -- like:

* You can't vote if you have outstanding parking tickets or loans.

* You will get an FBI file if you show up at the polls on voting day.

* You can't vote for a Republican, if you're registered as a Democrat (or vice versa).

So if you have any questions you want answered or myths you want addressed, leave us a comment below.

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 29, 2008

Rapper David Banner Has A Question For You

We had hip hop star and outspoken activist David Banner in the studio today, and he didn't hold back any of his opinions. The whole revealing interview will air at a later date, but for now we'd like to present a short segment for your consideration.




With the presidential election right around the corner, how do you feel about our democratic process? Is the Electoral College an outdated means of representation?

Join the conversation -- and the NPR community -- by registering here. We can't wait to hear your opinions!

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 22, 2008

Some Women Choosing The Single Mother Route

 
“I don't need a man to have a baby.”
 
 

With the marriage rate for African Americans reportedly on the decline since the 1960s, more black women are faced with tough decisions about when and how to start families. Some simply go it alone -- choosing to be single mothers.

Blogger Kira Craft offers her insight:

"I don't need a man to have a baby. I don't have to find "The One" and fall in love and get married to procreate. My body doesn't actually care if Cupid has shot my heart straight through with arrows. Love and sentiment technically have nothing to do with the fact that since my menstrual blood began I have been able to have a baby -- whenever I want.


My eggs are sitting inside of me, waiting, waiting, for their chance to engage. They've been here all my life, hundreds of thousands of them, clustered so patiently. They are quiet, tucked away from the outside world in a semblance of security. For most of my life I've barely given them a thought, hidden away as they are in the dark, deep red recesses of body and emotion.

But it feels like a both a blessing and a curse, this gift, as I have woken to the knowledge that my ability to generate life is a choice bound by time. Suddenly, it seems, I am thirty- four and single and my horizon has become a tipping point of fertility. How did I get here so quickly?

... Here I am, faced with choices. I feel lucky to have them, to be a free woman in a free country, with the financial and emotional capacity to provide for a baby. I wonder at this weaving path that embracing love can conceive. For the first time in my life, when people ask me, 'Do you want children?' my answer is yes. But I have begun to consider the question: What does family mean to me?"

Can you relate to her experience?

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 19, 2008

McCain Playing 'Race Card' Via Economic News?

So much for suspending the partisan bickering over the economy.

Karen Tumulty of TIME magazine writes in a blog post titled, "McCain Plays the Race Card" the following about Sen. John McCain's latest TV ad:

When politicians interject race into a campaign, they seldom do it directly. Consider McCain's new ad, which the campaign says it will be airing nationally:


This is hardly subtle: Sinister images of two black men, followed by one of a vulnerable-looking elderly white woman.

Let me stipulate: Obama's Fannie Mae connections are completely fair game. But this ad doesn't even mention a far more significant tie--that of Jim Johnson, the former Fannie Mae chairman who had to resign as head of Obama's vice presidential search team after it was revealed he got a sweetheart deal on a mortgage from Countrywide Financial. Instead, it relies on a fleeting and tenuous reference in a Washington Post Style section story to suggest that Obama's principal economic adviser is former Fannie Mae Chairman Frank Raines. Why? One reason might be that Johnson is white; Raines is black.

And the image of the victim doesn't seem accidental either, given the fact that older white women are a key swing constituency in this election.

Watch the ad, and tell us what you think.

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 17, 2008

What Should Katie Couric Ask Sarah Palin?

Katie Couric and Sarah Palin

TV news anchor Katie Couric (left) and Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin (right).

Composite, Getty Images

CBS News' Katie Couric has scored the next major network interview with Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin. (Palin also plans to speak with Fox News' Sean Hannity.)

More from the AP:

The CBS anchor will spend two days on the road with the Republican vice presidential candidate as well as presidential hopeful John McCain, the network said Tuesday.


Couric's interview material will be aired Sept. 29 and 30 ... It's timed for just before the Oct. 2 vice presidential debate between Palin and Democrat Joe Biden.

As you'll remember, the McCain campaign granted Palin's first interview to ABC's Charlie Gibson.

Left out in the cold (so far): NBC's Brian Williams. The McCain campaign has snubbed the network over what it considers biased coverage on MSNBC in support of Barack Obama.

If you were conducting the interview, what would you ask Palin? What topics should Couric be sure to cover?

Related: Gov. Sarah Palin Sits for First Post-VP Interview

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 11, 2008

How Are You Marking Sept. 11?

9/11

iStockphoto.com

As we observe the seventh anniversary of the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, we want to know how you are marking the day where you live.

On today's show, we got a homeland security status update and spoke with NPR's Maria Hinojosa, who interviewed families of 9/11 victims the year following the attacks and who experienced post-traumatic stress firsthand.

Share your thoughts, as the nation marks this somber day.

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 5, 2008

What Did You Think Of John McCain's RNC Speech?

John McCain / Credit: Getty Images

Republican U.S presidential nominee John McCain speaks during day four of the RNC. / Credit: Win McNamee, Getty Images

The AP's David Bauder said John McCain's Republican National Convention address was "marred by some demonstrations, a technical glitch and a plodding delivery." Fox News said McCain "stressed his military service." A major paper in McCain's home state of Arizona said he "fired up his party." And CNN's Jeffrey Toobin said it was "the worst speech by a nominee that I've heard since Jimmy Carter in 1980."

What did you think of his speech? In case you missed it, watch it here.

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 4, 2008

What Did You Think Of Sarah Palin's Speech?

Gov. Palin / Credit: Getty Images

Republican vice presidential candidate Alaska Governor Sarah Palin speaks to the RNC. / Credit: Robyn Beck, Getty Images

The New York Times said Palin "electrified" the GOP with her RNC speech last night; the Wall Street Journal said it was "combative." And the AP said it stretched the truth. What did you think of her speech? In case you missed it, watch it here.

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 1, 2008

Have You Been Affected By Hurricane Gustav?

Hurricane Gustav

Hurricane Gustav, although still powerful, was downgraded to a Category 2 storm as it began to hit the Gulf Coast.

Mario Tama, Getty Images

If you live in the Gulf Coast region and have a firsthand story related to the impact of Hurricane Gustav, we want to hear your story. Have you relocated? Or maybe you've taken in family members.

We may contact you to be on an upcoming show. Please leave an accurate e-mail address (which will not be made public.)

comments () | | e-mail

 
August 29, 2008

What Did You Think Of Obama's DNC Speech?

Obama Addressing DNC / Credit: Getty Images

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama addresses the audience at the 2008 Democratic National Convention. Credit: Emmanuel Dunand, AFP/ Getty Images

Sen. Barack Obama stepped into the history books last night, accepting his party's nomination for the presidency.

Writes the New York Times: "On Thursday night, the speechmaker showed, in words, that he was also a man of experience, and a man who wanted to give something back to the people who gave it to him."

Watch his full speech -- along with a transcript, and share your thoughts.

comments () | | e-mail

 
August 28, 2008

What Did You Think Of Bill Clinton and Joe Biden?

Bill Clinton and Joe Biden / Credit: Getty Images

Former president Bill Clinton and vice presidential nominee Joe Biden (left and middle) address the DNC. Biden points to his mother Jean Finnegan Biden (right) on stage. Credit: AFP/ Getty Images

Last night at the DNC, former president Bill Clinton addressed the gathering, saying, "Barack Obama will lead us away from the division and fear of the last eight years back to unity and hope." Vice presidential nominee Joe Biden followed, going on an attack against Republican rival John McCain: "Again and again, on the most important national security issues of our time, John McCain was wrong, and Barack Obama was proven right."

Tell us what thought of the speeches ... and of Joe Biden's adorable mother.

comments () | | e-mail

 
August 27, 2008

What Did You Think Of Hillary Clinton's DNC Speech?

Obama Watching Hillary Clinton DNC Speech / Credit: Getty Images

Sen. Barack Obama watches Hillary Clinton address the Democratic National Convention from the home of a supporter in Billings, Montana. Credit: Emmanuel Dunand, AFP/ Getty Images

After all the hand-wringing about what Hillary Clinton would or wouldn't say during her address to the DNC, she took the occasion to stress party unity, saying "Barack Obama is my candidate."

Watch her full speech here -- along with a transcript. And share your thoughts.

comments () | | e-mail

 
August 26, 2008

What Did You Think of Michelle Obama's Speech?

Michelle Obama With Daughters / Credit: Getty Images

If you missed it last night, you can watch video of Michelle Obama's DNC address -- along with a rolling transcript -- care of the New York Times. Share your thoughts.

comments () | | e-mail

 
August 14, 2008

How Did You Use Your Stimulus Check?

Gift of Money

iStockphoto.com

Not to get too much into your business ... but did you get any or all of the $600 economic stimulus payment this year?

If so, what did you do with it? Save it? Buy a flatscreen? Pay for childcare? We want to know.

We may ask you to be on the show for an upcoming economics segment.

comments () | | e-mail

 
August 12, 2008

What Do Obama, McCain's Offices Say About Them?

Obama and McCain Senate offices
Barack Obama's office (left) and John McCain's office (right) / Credit: AP

Wondering how John McCain or Barack Obama would fare as leader of the free world? Their Senate offices may offer some indication. Here's more from the Associated Press via the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

(The following hotlinks take you to photo galleries.) "McCain's office oozes comfy clutter and informality: random piles of books, a fortune-cookie message taped to the desk, an abundance of tchotchkes and bric-a-brac. Obama's office feels more like a gallery of modern art: precisely placed objects, sparsely adorned surfaces, clean lines, choreographed displays."

Play armchair psychologist for a minute: What tales do these dueling offices tell about their occupants?

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 30, 2008

Making Marriage and Money Work

Marriage & Money

iStockphoto.com

For an upcoming economics segment with Dr. Julianne Malveaux, we're going to focus on how to best handle your finances in a marriage.

Should you and your spouse have separate accounts? How much do you put in? How do you handle the bills? What about creating trusts and wills? What about beneficiaries (especially if there is an ex involved)? And what are the financial legalities of living together, before and after marriage?

Tell us how you make it work. Or, if you have a question you want to ask on the air, leave us a comment -- with an accurate e-mail address, which will not be made public -- and we'll get back to you.

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 29, 2008

Share Your Stories of Addiction

Addiction

Geoffrey Bennett, NPR

In August, we'll kick off a new, month-long series on addiction. We'll hit issues like drugs and alcohol, but we'll also delve into lesser known topics, the physiology of addiction, and interventions.

To that end, we're soliciting your stories. Have you or a friend/family member suffered from or battled back from addiction? If you are open to speaking with us on the air, please leave an accurate e-mail address -- which will not be made public -- and we'll get back to you.

comments () | | e-mail

 

Oliver Stone's 'W.' Trailer Released Online

Last we checked, this isn't supposed to be a comedy ... but Thandie Newton as Condi Rice (1:10) sure is special.

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 28, 2008

To Whom Does Harlem Belong?

Row Homes

iStockphoto.com

Harlem, New York -- home to a famed cultural renaissance ... and an age-old debate over gentrification, some of which played out on today's show.

Tony Cox explored both sides of the issue, in conversations with the so-called "Queen of Harlem Real Estate," Willie Suggs, and Nellie Hester Bailey, executive director of the Harlem Tenants Council -- a non-profit, social justice organization.

Suggs explained newcomers' migration to Harlem this way: "Nobody that I know wants to live in a slum. If you can bring crime down and eliminate vacant buildings, people will simply feel safer and want to move there," said Suggs.

But Hester Bailey added this cautionary note: "I am not one of those community activists who see development as all bad. ... But people who have stayed there [in Harlem] are being priced out, pushed out and harassed out by landlords who want to see a maximum return on their investment."

Though Suggs admitted the "face [of Harlem] is changing," she says "the culture is not going anywhere," adding, "the culture is even more vibrant because we have people now that have money to contribute to [cultural organizations]."

What do you think? Have you seen gentrification play out where you live? If so, tell us about it.

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 25, 2008

What Did You Think Of CNN's 'Black In America'?

CNN's Black in America was a ratings success. And now that it's over, the reviews are rolling in ...

Here's a sampling:

* "The documentary's failing is that it provided little historical context for what it showed."

* "Man, I miss Ed Bradley. Now HE would have put together a heck of a series on Black people and not just rehashed and reheated the panels from Tavis Smiley's State of the Black Folk's Union, presented by Exxon Mobil, McDonald's and Rudy Ray's Rib Shack and Waffles."

* Overall, the series does a bang-up job of demonstrating so much that is troubling about the "state of blacks in America." But it does little to provide underlying context.

Farai spoke with CNN's Soledad O'Brien on Monday. She explains the motivation behind the docu-series and how it came together.

Flashback: CNN Airs 'Black in America'; Will You Watch?

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 22, 2008

'Vanity Fair' Takes On Obama 'New Yorker' Cover

Vanity Fair
Vanity Fair

So ... what do you think?

Related: Vanity Fair Covers The New Yorker

comments () | | e-mail

 

Poll Finds Obama Isn't Closing Divide on Race

Obama supporters

Supporters reach out to shake hands with Barack Obama in Bristow, Virginia.

Mandel Ngan, Getty Images

Later this week on News & Notes, we'll take a closer look at the recent New York Times/CBS News poll on race and this election cycle.

The Times' analysis begins:

"Americans are sharply divided by race heading into the first election in which an African-American will be a major-party presidential nominee, with blacks and whites holding vastly different views of Senator Barack Obama, the state of race relations and how black Americans are treated by society."

Among the findings:


-- Nearly 60 percent of black respondents said race relations were generally bad, compared with 34 percent of whites. Four in 10 blacks say that there has been no progress in recent years in eliminating racial discrimination; fewer than 2 in 10 whites say the same thing.


-- Black voters were far more likely than whites to say that Mr. Obama cares about the needs and problems of people like them, and more likely to describe him as patriotic. Whites were more likely than blacks to say that Mr. Obama says what he thinks people want to hear, rather than what he truly believes.

-- Among black voters, who are overwhelmingly Democrats, Mr. Obama draws support from 89 percent, compared with 2 percent for Mr. McCain. Among whites, Mr. Obama has 37 percent of the vote, compared with 46 percent for Mr. McCain.

And as political analyst James L. Taylor wrote for us in our Political Positions column:

"There is nothing novel about the responses in this poll as they relate to how different groups see race progress. Black Americans have been perennially skeptical of group to group relations, no matter how individual African Americans might excel in society."

What do you think of the poll and its findings? If you have a question you'd like us to consider on-air -- or if you want to help us frame this conversation in a new way -- leave us a comment.

comments () | | e-mail

 

Media Coverage Skewed In Obama's Favor?

McCain and reporters

John McCain talks to reporters in front of his bus, the Straight Talk Express, in February 2008.

Don Emmert, AFP/Getty Images

On today's show, Farai spoke with NPR senior Washington editor Ron Elving and media analyst Andrew Tyndall about the enormous media coverage surrounding presidential candidate Barack Obama compared to that of rival John McCain.

For example -- reporters are swarming the Obama campaign as he continues his fact-finding travel abroad. In contrast, only one reporter and one photographer met John McCain's plane last night, as it landed in New Hampshire.

Do you see a disparity? If so, to what do you attribute it?

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 21, 2008

CNN Airs 'Black in America'; Will You Watch?

CNN Black in America

CNN.com

On today's show, Farai spoke with CNN's Soledad O'Brien about the network's "landmark multimedia event," Black In America.

The series kicked off in April with a retrospective on the King assassination and picks up this Wednesday and Thursday (9 PM ET) with special reports on black men and women.

In a previous comment, reader Jon J. wrote, "You can bet CNN's little series will be fluff." Do you agree? What are you expecting from this series? And will you watch?

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 14, 2008

Satirical or Offensive? You Decide

Cover of The New Yorker
The New Yorker

Related Links:
Huffington Post: Barry Blitt Defends His 'New Yorker' Cover Art
CNN: Obama Campaign Calls 'New Yorker' Cover Offensive

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 8, 2008

What's Your Mother/Daughter Relationship Like?

Alice and Rebecca Walker

Alice and Rebecca Walker photographed in 1992, before the two were estranged.

Corbis

On tomorrow's show, Farai Chideya will speak with author Rebecca Walker -- daughter of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Alice Walker -- about Rebecca's new memoir, Baby Love: Choosing Motherhood After a Lifetime of Ambivalence.

In it, Rebecca expands on her estrangement with her feminist mother. Here's part of how Publishers Weekly sums up her book:

"[Rebecca] Walker tells of her physical and emotional journey toward motherhood, poignantly reflecting on the ambivalence that has delayed her dream of having a child for years. Like many 20- and 30-somethings, she was raised to view partnership and parenthood as the least empowering choices in an infinite array of options. This tension comes to the fore as Walker's mother, Alice Walker, opposes her decision to have a baby and challenges her account of their relationship in Black, White and Jewish. Alice ends their relationship and removes Rebecca from her will, and Rebecca endures a tumultuous pregnancy, estranged from her mother as she prepares to become one herself."

The conversation with Rebecca Walker -- given context by Dr. Phyllis Chessler (also on tomorrow's show) -- raises a host of questions about feminism and the dynamic between mothers and daughters.

For our women readers, how would you characterize your relationship with your mother and/or daughter?

Listen to the segment.

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 3, 2008

How Are You Celebrating July 4th?

July 4th Fireworks />		
		<p></p>
<span class=iStockphoto.com

The July 4th holiday is upon us. How are you marking the day? Frequent News & Notes guest Melissa Harris-Lacewell offers this perspective on TheRoot.com:

I don't know about you, but I have mixed emotions about this holiday. I love any chance to have friends over to cookout. (By the way are you coming over on Friday?) But the 4th always forces me to carefully consider how I feel about our country.

I am an American. I genuinely love many things about this country. As any of my students can tell you, I am passionately obsessed with the Declaration of Independence. It is astonishing that Thomas Jefferson, a man who owned his own children in slavery, wrote "we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights; that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness."

In 1776, a period of monarchy, colonialism, slavery and gender inequality, it certainly was not self-evident that all persons were endowed with fundamental equality and that governments existed to serve the just interests of the people. But Jefferson, as limited as he was as a human being, looked beyond his own circumstances and crafted a document of great vision, flexibility and higher purpose. That is worth celebrating.

On the other hand, we cannot ignore Frederick Douglass' admonition that the 4th of July does not mark freedom or self-determination for black Americans. Langston Hughes wrote, "America never was America to me." And Martin Luther King Jr. called Jefferson's document the nation's promissory note and said that the country had bounced its check to African Americans. So any celebration of the 4th also needsto be tempered with a sober reflection on our nation's sins: genocide and land theft perpetrated against Native Americans, chattel slavery and Jim Crow against African Americans, second class citizenship for white women, internment camps for Japanese Americans, brutal labor practices against Chinese immigrants, imperial aggression in Latin America and the Middle East.

What do you think?

Flashback: "What to the Slave is Fourth of July?"

comments () | | e-mail

 

What Is Jazz? And Are You a Fan?

Jazz player

iStockphoto.com

This month, News & Notes is focused on jazz music. Though it's the foundation of
black music, some love it ... and some don't.

Are you a jazz fan? If so, who are some are your favorite artists?

Or if you find yourself intimidated by the art form, tell us why.

On today's show, we got a crash course with three renowned experts. Take a listen and share your thoughts.

comments () | | e-mail

 
June 27, 2008

Insert the Caption: Obama, Clinton Unite

Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama sought to unify Democrats earlier today, in their first public appearance together since Obama clinched the Democratic nomination.

Below is a photo of the two, taken on board Obama's campaign plane shortly before the rally.

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) talk on board Obama's campaign plane
Photo Credit: Mario Tama, Getty Images

You know what to do. Insert the caption!

comments () | | e-mail

 
June 23, 2008

Red or Blue: It's Up to You! Predict the 2008 Vote

Thanks to the Los Angeles Times, we can now predict how the 2008 presidential election will play out on the national scene. Their interactive (and addictive) electoral map allows you to pick and choose which states will go to McCain, and which ones Obama will secure.

To get started on your own map, head over to the L.A. Times. After you're done, click Share to pass your picks on. We would love to see your predictions, so make sure to include a comment below with a link to your own electoral map.

comments () | | e-mail

 
June 18, 2008

Open Thread: What's On Your Mind?

Open Thread

iStockphoto.com

We're handing the reins over to you for a bit. Tell us what other big stories have your attention at the moment.

What's going on in your hometown that big media is overlooking?

Anything on your mind that you want to share?

This is your space.

comments () | | e-mail

 
June 16, 2008

How Much Does Gas Cost Where You Live?

Gas Prices

iStockphoto.com

For an upcoming series of reports, we want to know:

1) How much does gas cost per gallon where you live?

2) How have high gas prices affected your daily life, if at all?

3) If you own an SUV, have you seriously considered getting rid of it in favor of a more fuel-efficient car?

Drop us a message below ... and please be sure to leave an accurate e-mail address, so we can contact you if necessary.

comments () | | e-mail

 
June 5, 2008

Let's Play Six Degrees of Obama

Chalk this up to another stroke of genius resulting from one of our epic editorial staff meetings.

Everyone seemed to have a source on Obama -- a friend of a friend of a ... so it seemed only fitting: Let's play Six Degrees of Obama.

Here's mine: I am friends with L.A-based actor Voltaire Sterling. Sterling is friends with TV actor Hill Harper (who's going to be on our show soon). Harper went to Harvard Law with Obama. Two steps, folks!

Six Degrees of Barack

How many steps does it take for you to get to Barack?

comments () | | e-mail

 

School's Out for Summer! Now What?

Today on the show, we kicked off our month-long 'Kids' series with a look at what the young ones are up to over the summer.

Now that school's out, parents can be left wondering how to (constructively) fill up their child's day. Well, fear not! There are plenty of fun and stimulating things for the kids to do while they patiently wait for math class to start up again in the fall.

Summertime Fun!

Swim Classes

We cannot emphasize enough the importance of teaching your children how to swim. While private lessons can run around $40 a pop, there are cheaper alternatives that will produce the same fantastic results -- your baby's safety. Look into public pools and your town's parks program for the best deals.

Summer Camp

Nothing beats the memory of summer camp, except the experience itself. Give your child the gift of a lifetime and enroll the little one in a day camp, or -- if they're older -- a stay-away camp. Your kids will come back more enriched and wiser, not to mention amazing boondoggle makers.

Arts & Crafts

This one is a no-brainer. Nothing occupies a child's imagination better than the opportunity to splatter a hundred different colors on to one giant piece of paper. From finger paints to the reliable Crayon, introduce your kids to art and you never know what you'll end up with. (Just make sure to invest in an artist smock/garbage bag to protect their clothes.)

Please share your own summer ideas, plans, and memories by leaving a comment below. How will you make your child's summer a season to remember?

comments () | | e-mail

 
June 3, 2008

How Far Would You Go for Concert Tickets?

Janet Jackson dropped by The View today to surprise co-host Sherri Shepherd with a pair of tickets to her upcoming tour.

Watch it unfold:

What would you do for Janet tickets? And if Miss Jackson's not your thing, what would you do (or what have you done) to nab tickets to see your favorite artist perform?

comments () | | e-mail

 
May 28, 2008

Does 'Sex and the City' Reflect Reality?

Jennifer Hudson

Wireimage.com

Women of all ages are eagerly awaiting the return (to the big screen) of their favorite fashion-obsessed gal pals. The Sex and the City movie opens this Friday, May 30th and features the entire original cast from the popular HBO series. Some complain that the film's characters only reflect a small slice of the urban experience; namely, affluent white women. Yet among the film's surprises is a small, but pivotal, role played by Oscar-winning actress Jennifer Hudson.

AOL Black Voices interviewed Ms. Hudson about her follow up to Dreamgirls, and the rising star just seemed excited to be involved:

"I definitely wanted something without any singing involved, and then I didn't want to pick something that I was biting off more than I can chew; so I think this was like the perfect part. It wasn't too much and it wasn't too little, but it was just right to get my feet wet in the door with just acting. And then it's 'Sex and the City.' What else could you ask for?"

Last week, News & Notes spoke with Twanna Hines of FunkyBrownChick.com about what it's like to be black, sexy, and single in the big city. Which point of view suits you best?

comments () | | e-mail

 
May 15, 2008

Is Facebook (et al) Taking Over Your Life?

Social Networking

iStockphoto.com

Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, Flickr, Twitter, MeetUp ... these days, there's a social networking site for your every need. But can you be too connected?

Blogger Natalie P. McNeal (via The Root) is feeling the urge to unplug:

"I manage my actual social life far better than my virtual one. I have my own operating hours, for instance, to coordinate time with friends who hang out too late on work nights. I take them to events like receptions that end by 10 p.m.

But with social networking sites, there isn't a clear beginning, middle or end. You start by snooping on friends' pages and posting pithy status updates, and next thing you know, you're losing hours playing Scrabulous, and you've slipped into a networking vortex.

... Between my multiple e-mail accounts, IMs, and my blog, I am a fully connected woman. I am not saying these social networks aren't fun. I'm just saying I need to unplug."

How connected are you? And where do you draw the line?

comments () | | e-mail

 
May 12, 2008

Would You Rather Buy Lies or the Awful Truth?

R. Kelly

R&B singer R. Kelly arrives at the Chicago courthouse where jury selection is scheduled to begin for his child pornography trial.

Scott Olson, Getty Images

It's been six years since famous R&B crooner R. Kelly was nabbed on child porn charges.

Even with the subsequent release of a sex tape supposedly documenting the entire affair, and plenty of sordid details related to his alleged crime being made public, the man's popularity has hardly suffered. Certainly, he has still been touring and making money. (The same could not be said for Michael Jackson after his first court battle over similar charges.)

In fact, on today's roundtable discussion, we learned that listeners actually complained when radio stations pulled R. Kelly from the airwaves following his arrest.

Then there is the Senegalese Singing Sensation, Akon. According to TheSmokingGun.com, he faked his way to the top by exaggerating a largely benign criminal past.

"Police, court, and corrections records reveal that the entertainer has created a fictionalized backstory that serves as the narrative anchor for his recorded tales of isolation, violence, woe, and regret. Akon has overdubbed his biography with the kind of grit and menace that he apparently believes music consumers desire from their hip-hop stars."

AOL Black Voices has more on Akon's fraudulent past, including video of his now-refuted debut hit "Locked Up."

Do you agree that the hip-hop community lends a level of respect to performers who have served time? Do you care that Akon may have invented a troubled past to sell records? If child porn charges aren't enough to turn the public off a performer, what are?

Subscribe to the "News & Notes" RSS Feed to remain current on all the hottest topics.

comments () | | e-mail

 
May 9, 2008

Did Clinton Play the Proverbial 'Race Card'?

Making the case that she appeals to a wider swath of voters than Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton offered some blunt remarks about race.

We debated Clinton's comments on today's reporters' roundtable. Take a read and tell us what you think:

"I have a much broader base to build a winning coalition on," she said in an interview with USA TODAY. As evidence, Clinton cited an Associated Press article "that found how Sen. Obama's support among working, hard-working Americans, white Americans, is weakening again, and how whites in both states who had not completed college were supporting me."

"There's a pattern emerging here," she said.

comments () | | e-mail

 
May 5, 2008

Who's On Your List: The Most (and Least) Influential

Oprah Winfrey and Marla Gibbs

We say Oprah Winfrey (left) and Marla Gibbs (right) are the most and least (respectively) influential black folks in the world.

Getty Images

TIME magazine is out with its list of the "100 Most Influential People in the World". Among the black faces: Oprah, Chris Rock, Barack Obama and Tyler Perry.

Fair enough.

But it got us thinking: whom would you consider the most -- and, for that matter, least -- influential black folks in the world?

As for us, we'll stick with Oprah for most influential. (Her qualifications needn't be repeated here.)

And for least influential ... how about Marla Gibbs? A lovely woman to be sure, but not much influencing happening there.

Your turn. Who's on your list?

comments () | | e-mail

 

White Men Can't Jump ...

... and black kids can't swim.

"Nearly 60% of African-American children can't swim," reports the AP via USA Today, "almost twice the figure for white children, according to a first-of-its-kind survey which USA Swimming hopes will strengthen its efforts to lower minority drowning rates and draw more blacks into the sport."

Can you swim? And if you have kids, is it important to you that they learn how? AOL Black Voices has more.

comments () | | e-mail

 
April 22, 2008

Insert the Caption

Consider this "a very special" Insert the Caption -- Pennsylvania primary style. Here, Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, eat breakfast at Pamela's Diner in Pittsburgh today, as polls opened in Pennsylvania.

Barack and Michelle
Emmanuel Dunand, AFP/Getty Images

What's really going on here? And while we're on the topic ... what do you think will be the outcome of today's voting?

comments () | | e-mail

 

How Green Are You?

If you haven't heard, today is Earth Day.

Thanks, in part, to Al Gore, "going green" has gone mainstream, but that doesn't mean it's easy ... or cheap.

What do you do, if anything, to be environmentally friendly?

Related: Going Green on the Cheap

comments () | | e-mail

 
April 9, 2008

Have You Managed to Hold Onto Your Home?

For an upcoming show segment, we're looking for people who've weathered the troubled housing market and managed to hold onto their homes despite trick mortgages, cash shortfalls or lender defaults. If you fit the bill and want to share your experience on our show, we'd like to hear from you. Leave us a comment below, and we'll be in touch.

comments () | | e-mail

 
April 8, 2008

'News & Notes' Is Heading to the ATL!

Atlanta Skyline

iStockphoto.com

Next week, News & Notes will be broadcasting from Atlanta, Ga. If you live in the city and want to flag us to a story, person, or place you think deserves attention, let us know!

Please be sure to leave an accurate e-mail address, in case we need to follow up. [It will not be made public.]

comments () | | e-mail

 

Casting Couch Picks: The Obama Life Story - Part II

Following up on this post about who should star in an Obama biopic ... several people have suggested that actor Harry Lennix (Fox's 24) would make a better Barack Obama than Will Smith.

On second look ... I think you guys got that one right.

Obama and Harry Lennix

(Photo Credit: Getty Images and IMDB.com)

comments () | | e-mail

 
April 3, 2008

Casting Couch Picks: The Obama Life Story

When we heard Tyler Perry was considering a film script inspired by the life of Michelle Obama ... we took the opportunity to kick around names of actors we'd cast in an Obama biopic.

So, here are our picks.

Obama and Will Smith
As Barack Obama ... Will Smith (this was an easy one)

Michelle Obama and Regina King
As Michelle Obama ... Regina King (in the no-nonsense/loving wife role she knows well)

Hillary Clinton and Meredith Baxter
As Hillary Clinton ... Meredith Baxter (or Cybil Shepperd, but we're still creeped out by her Martha Stewart portrayal)

Marian Robinson and Margaret Avery
As Michelle Obama's Mom (Marian Robinson) ... Margaret Avery (a dead-ringer)

Malia and Sasha Obama and Willow Smith and Jamia Simone Nash
As the Obama Kids (Malia and Sasha) ... Willow Smith and Jamia Simone Nash (the ages are a little off, but still ...)

David Axlerod and James Eckhouse
As Obama Chief Strategist David Axlerod ... the Dad from Beverly Hills 90210 (whatever happened to that guy, anyway?)

Agree? Disagree? Weigh in!

(Photo Credits: Getty Images, The Boston Globe, IMDB)

comments () | | e-mail

 
April 2, 2008

Fatism More Widespread than Racism?

Overweight

iStockphoto.com

A new report in the current issue of the International Journal of Obesity suggests that weight discrimination is on the rise.

"Overweight women are twice as vulnerable as men, and discrimination strikes much earlier in their lives," the report states.

The reason used by some to justify the bias: weight is modifiable, race isn't.

The study offers these findings:

-- Men are not at serious risk of discrimination until their body mass index (BMI) reaches 35, while women begin experiencing an increase in discrimination at BMI 27.

-- Moderately obese women with a BMI of 30 to 35 are three times more likely than men in the same weight group to experience weight discrimination.

ABC News has more analysis. What is your experience with weight discrimination? Is it more culturally accepted than racial bias?

comments () | | e-mail

 
March 31, 2008

Cotton-What? You Be the Judge

Take a look at this clip from Friday's Situation Room on CNN. Lou Dobbs gets caught up in the moment, responding to Condoleeza Rice's comments on race in America and appears to almost say ...

So ... what's your verdict?

Related: CNN Scrubs Dobbs' Racially Charged Comment From Transcript

comments () | | e-mail

 

It's All About Choice and Convenience

Tapes and CDs

iStockphoto.com

"The need to hold media that you consume -- the physical purchase -- is going away."

That quote comes from a New York Times article about how choice is driving the way Americans consume media.

The beleaguered recording industry should take note. Says the Times:

"Maybe changing the equation isn't so much a matter of throwing out old media as adjusting to hybrid models that enable an infinite inventory on a digital shelf -- embracing, rather than trying to control, choice."

So ... here's an informal survey:

When was the last time you held a hard copy of a photo you took? Do you still file your pictures into albums, or do you upload to photo-sharing sites like Flickr and Snapfish?

When you rent a movie, is your preference Hollywood Video and Blockbuster ... or Netflix and Blockbuster online delivery?

What was your last music purchase? Did you download it on your computer or go to the store to but it old-school style?

comments () | | e-mail

 
March 26, 2008

Open Thread: You Take the Mic

Open Thread

iStockphoto.com

Taking off our Election '08 blinders for a minute ... what other big stories have your attention at the moment?

What's going on in your hometown that big media is overlooking?

Anything on your mind that you want to share?

This is your space.

comments () | | e-mail

 
March 25, 2008

Racially Insensitive Photo or Oversensitive Response?

Lebron James and Gisele Bundchen

Lebron James and Gisele Bundchen appear on the cover of Vogue's April 2008 issue.

Professional basketball player LeBron James made history this month, as the first black man to ever appear on the cover of Vogue magazine.

But the fanfare was short-lived. Some say the Annie Leibovitz photo, showing LeBron in a gorilla-like/King Kong pose plays on racial stereotypes.

ESPN.com writer and News & Notes sports roundtable regular Jemele Hill said the photo is "memorable for the wrong reasons." She adds:

"Vogue deserves criticism, but more blame should go to LeBron and other black athletes, who need to exercise stricter control of their images. If LeBron is brave enough to wear a Yankees cap at an Indians playoff game, picking up a history book and educating himself shouldn't cause a strain."

Tell us what you think. Then, take a poll over at AOL Black Voices.

comments () | | e-mail

 
March 17, 2008

Have You Experienced Voting Irregularities?

If you have had problems registering to vote this election season or experienced any irregularities inside the voting booth, we want to hear from you.

News & Notes is working on an upcoming story about this issue, and we're looking for firsthand accounts.

If you would like to share your story, drop us a comment below. Please be sure to leave an accurate e-mail address -- which will not be made public -- and we will get back to you.

comments () | | e-mail

 
March 6, 2008

Insert the Caption

Obama on press plane
Win McNamee, Getty Images

Check out the reporter to Obama's right. Insert the caption.

comments () | | e-mail

 
March 4, 2008

Style Wars: Dissecting the Candidates' Graphics

Campaign Logos

Courtesy Campaign Websites

Has election coverage burnt you out?

We at News & Views decided to examine the candidates in a different way: by their looks.

No, we're not waxing poetic on any yellow pantsuits or baby-blue ties. Instead, we're looking at each campaign's graphic designs.

We talked to graphic designers, artists, and art professors in a no-holds-barred dialogue on the visual elements of the presidential campaign.

Watch our video, featuring analysis by graphic design guru Shepard Fairey.

On Hillary:

"The Hillary design is safe. This is more a bland strategy than a brand strategy. LCD design. Lowest Common Denominator. Design by committee. We've never met, but right away we are on first name terms, with friendly chubby serif type. The partial flag says patriotic but not nationalistic. A polite democratic 'take back the flag' from the hardliners move."

- Simon Johnston
Professor, Director of Print Design
Art Center College of Design

On McCain:

"John McCain's visual identity is on point with his militaristic and conservative message. His campaign directly appropriates the symbolism of the 'Army of One' campaign through the use of the lone star of the Brigadier General and the color palette of gunmetal with gold flourishes."

- Garland Kirkpatrick
Associate Professor of Graphic Design
Loyola Marymount University
Head of Helvetica Jones Design

On Obama:

"Obama's name and logo are not only surprisingly small, but light blue against dark blue doesn't pop out as do the other two candidates' names. He uses the flag's colors and stripes, but in a more abstract way and non-literal way, evoking a rising sun or new horizon, synonymous with his message."

- Carol A. Wells
Executive Director
Center for the Study of Political Graphics

Who do you think has the most successful marketing campaign? What do you see in the candidates' logos?

comments () | | e-mail

 
March 3, 2008

Black Fathers Talk Reality vs. Reality TV

Snoop Dog

Rapper Snoop Dog and his family, as depicted on Snoop Dogg's Father Hood on E!.

Courtesy of E!

Perhaps you've seen Snoop Dogg, Irv Gotti, or Rev. Run try their hands as TV dads. Heathcliff Huxtable they are not ... but this Boston Globe writer seems impressed nonetheless:

The parenting abilities displayed in these shows play against persistent stereotypes in pop culture that present black men as absent fathers. It's not only celebrities who are fighting this perception. Plenty of black men have become effective parents despite lacking a father figure growing up. Until recently, these men's struggles were barely recognized. Now a number of books, television shows, and films are celebrating this movement by showing black fathers responsibly parenting their children.

Read the rest. What do you think of the depiction of black fathers in popular culture?

comments () | | e-mail

 
February 28, 2008

From Lead Belly To Led Zeppelin

On today's show, we examine the family tree of rock 'n' roll; tracing Led Zeppelin's amp-busting anthems to their roots in the blues of the American South. Each of Jimmy Page's guitar riffs or Robert Plant's soulful wails is an homage to the great blues musicians from Biloxi to Nashville.

But sometimes seeing is believing.

So check out these videos of the real thing.

Do you think the blues is dead? Is there a modern equivalent? What other black musicians do you think are underrated or forgotten about? If you could go back in time and catch any artist's performance, whose would it be?

Lead Belly (You may also remember his song re-envisioned by Nirvana for MTV Unplugged in 1994.)

Led Zeppelin's "How Many More Times"

Muddy Waters "Got My Mojo Workin'"

comments () | | e-mail

 
February 26, 2008

How Do You Describe Your Religious Identity?

One of the largest polls ever conducted about Americans' view of religion shows that the "country increasingly exploring different faith identities and ways of worship."

"More than 40 percent of respondents told pollsters that they had changed their religious affiliation since childhood. Experts say the growth of religious minorities, American mobility and intermarriage are key factors in the churn documented in the Religious Landscape Survey."

According to the study, the Catholic Church lost the most followers of all faith groups. [Read more about the U.S. Religious Landscape Survey.]

How do you describe your religious identity? How has it changed over the years and why?

comments () | | e-mail

 
February 6, 2008

Today's Blogger's Roundtable: What's in a Name?

On today's bloggers roundtable, our panel -- including Lauren Williams, Desmond Burton, and Jozen Cummings -- talked about the surprises of Super Tuesday, the importance of celebrity political endorsements, the role of race and gender in the election, and the controversial police shooting of a mother and her 1-year-old child in Ohio.

Toward the end of the conversation, blogger Desmond Burton said the following about that case:

Burton: ... In looking at that story, I saw pit bulls being mentioned; drug dealing; stereotypical, underclass Afrocentric names -- those kind of things. No one really wants to talk about it. I feel that we have to speak honestly about what is actually happening with some of our underclass black folk ...

Farai Chideya: Don't tell me you are blaming Afrocentric names.

Burton: ... If we're going to talk about LaKiesha, TryKiesha, LoKiesha, there's a constant theme we're seeing with these kind of stories. I think that we're going to have to really be honest about what's happening with some of these communities.

Listen to the full segment to hear the comment in context. We ran out of time to address the issue, but feel free to continue it here -- or debate any of the other topics brought up today.

comments () | | e-mail

 
February 5, 2008

Open Thread: Super Tuesday

Obama, Clinton, McCain and Romney

(From left to right) Sens. Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, John McCain and former Mass. governor Mitt Romney photographed at CNN debates.

Getty Images

So Super Tuesday is finally here! Almost half the country is headed to the voting booth.

This is your space to weigh in on the latest polls, share stories from your polling places, and react to the latest returns.

Related: Super Tuesday's Origins

Delegate Breakdown: Dems | GOP

More: NPR Special Coverage

comments () | | e-mail

 
February 1, 2008

Open Thread: Oprah, Wesley, Tom, or Your Pick ...

Constitution

iStockphoto.com

Some late breaking news, heading into the weekend: Oprah is set to appear in California on Sunday in support of Barack Obama; Wesley Snipes ducked federal tax prosecution; Exxon posted a record $41 billion in profits; and some are wondering if Tom Brady is the best QB to ever play the game.

Here's your space to weigh in on that, throw in a few issues we missed, or start a conversation of your own.

comments () | | e-mail

 
January 29, 2008

Got a Dollar Bill, Y'all?

Dollars

iStockphoto.com

The House approved a $146 billion economic stimulus package today, which calls for one-time tax rebates for many Americans.

More from the Washington Post: "Under the House [economic stimulus] plan, most workers would receive $600 from the government, $1,200 for couples, plus $300 per child. Eligibility for the full check would be capped at $75,000 in adjusted gross income for individuals, $150,000 for couples. Workers with at least $3,000 in earned income last year but too little earnings to pay income taxes would receive $300, along with $300 per child."

So ... if you got a rebate from Uncle Sam, what would you do with it? Would you spend it? If so, how?

comments () | | e-mail

 
January 24, 2008

Your Reaction: Obama Talks Education, Faith, Race

Barack Obama

Presidential candidate Barack Obama speaks at a campaign event in Sumpter, S.C.

Chris Hondros, Getty Images

News & Notes is still in South Carolina, broadcasting live from the state leading up to Saturday's Democratic primary. On today's show, Farai spoke with Ill. Sen. Barack Obama, following up on her first interview with him back in July.

During the Q&A, Obama explains his plans for improving the nation's public school system, addresses persistent rumors about his religious faith, and considers the role that race in playing in his bid for the White House.

Take a listen and tell us what you think.

Flashback: Obama on the War, Race and America's Future

comments () | | e-mail

 
January 17, 2008

Signs of the Times?

 
“The stock market's already-brutal start to the new year grew even worse today, driving some major indexes into bear-market territory, as fear of a recession triggered another barrage of selling.”
 
 

Some have called it a dark cloud on the horizon, while others see it as the invisible elephant in the room. Economists and politicians are reluctant to give it a name. But one thing is for certain, we all know it's here.

It's recession and Michael Grynbaum of the New York Times puts it best:

"The Dow Jones industrial average plunged 306.95 points Thursday as investors confronted new chapters of a well-worn story: the economy is in trouble."

With the tumultuous housing market and the plummeting stock market, the symptoms of this impending ailment are already being felt by people around the country.

So, how have you been affected? Have you felt it in dramatic ways? Did you sell your house, lose your job, or have to move to another town?

Or have you coped with it in smaller ways-- spending less by not going out, driving less to avoid high gas prices, or even second guessing that lavish Valentines Day vacation?

Tell us your story...

comments () | | e-mail

 
January 16, 2008

We're Heading to South Carolina!

Next week, News & Notes will be broadcasting from South Carolina, in time to cover that state's primary election. We're looking for real people (that means you) who can give us a feel for what it's like to live there and offer reaction to the campaigning you're seeing in your neighborhood. And if you're a blogger or news watcher who is heading to S.C. for the same reason we are, we want to hear from you too. Drop us a line below, and be sure to leave an accurate e-mail address so we can contact you. Your e-mail address will not be made public.

comments () | | e-mail

 
January 7, 2008

Name Your One-Hit Wonder

Jade

Cover of Jade's "Don't Walk Away"

Warner Brothers

Blogger Clay Cane takes us back to the days of Cross Colours and box braids with this post about his favorite R&B girl group one-hit wonders.

Now that's a lot of qualifiers, but check the list and name your pick.

What's yours? Mine (as pictured) is a little gem from the group Jade called "Don't Walk Away."

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 31, 2007

What's In Store for 2008?

Predictions

iStockphoto.com

As we close the door on 2007, take a look ahead into 2008.

What are your predictions for the coming year?

Here's what some news watchers predict:

Media | Music | Entertainment

Business | Politics | Technology

What do you think will be the big stories of the coming year?

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 26, 2007

What Was Your Favorite 'N&N' Story of 2007?

Based on input from our producers and you [judging by online performance], we've assembled a list of our best and most memorable reporting and interviews from the previous year.

What was your favorite?

Maybe it was our interview with literary great Chinua Achebe, or the Q&A with two of The Family Stone's original members. Our reporting on the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Division? Or Farai's interview with Russell Simmons ... when the conversation turned volatile? ["Did they tell you why I came here?"]

Take a look at our "Best Of" list and weigh in.

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 21, 2007

Open Thread: 'Tis the Season

Open Thread

iStockphoto.com

"News & Views" is taking time off for Christmas and will be back on Wednesday.

News & Notes, however, returns Monday, featuring an interview with Three Mo Tenors and Tuesday, with Farai talking to Kirk Franklin.

In the meantime, use this space to share what's going on in your world. What are some of the issues and topics you are your friends are talking about?

Read something online and want to share the love? Post it.

And if you develop a bad case of holiday stress, feel free to vent about that, too.

Until then ...

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 10, 2007

Can You Pass the 'Chitling Test'?

Exam

iStockphoto.com

Taken from today's news headlines ... this story from the Houston Chronicle -- 'Chitling Test' Stirs Emotion at School -- about how a Civil Rights Era relic is spurring drama at a Texas high school.

A teacher used the so-called "Chitling Intelligence Test," in an attempt to teach her students a larger lesson about cultural bias in IQ tests. The exam includes questions like this one:

Hattie Mae Johnson is on the County. She has four children and her husband is now in jail for non-support, as he was unemployed and was not able to give her any money. Her welfare check is now $286 per month. Last night she went out with the highest player in town. If she got pregnant, then nine months from now how much more will her welfare check be?

Should such a test be presented in a high school class? Or is nothing off limits in the name of education when presented in the proper context?

And, while we're talking about it ... can you pass the "Chitlin Test"? Published in 1971, much of the lingo is dated, but try anyway and tell us how you scored.

comments () | | e-mail

 
December 6, 2007

Be on 'News & Notes': Mortgage Rate Freeze

Housing

iStockphoto.com

In a move that may spell relief for cash-strapped homeowners, President Bush has announced a five-year freeze of interest rates for those whose mortgages are scheduled to rise.

About 1.2 million people could be eligible for help under the plan, but not everyone will be eligible for the rate freeze. Bush said interested people should call a new hot line: 1-888-995-HOPE.

Read more about it.

Now here's where you come in: If you have been struggling with mortgage payments and think you'll benefit from the rate freeze, drop us a line.

We may invite you to come on the show and share your story. Please be sure to leave an accurate e-mail address so we can contact you. It will not be made public.

comments () | | e-mail

 
November 21, 2007

Open Thread: Keeping the Lights On

Open Thread

iStockphoto.com

Though News & Notes will still be on the air this Thursday and Friday, "News & Views" will be laid up on the couch suffering the effects of tryptophan, a.k.a "The Itis."

Tune in the rest of the week for tips on how to survive holiday family drama, how to mind your diet at the Thanksgiving dinner table, advice for safe online shopping, and a colorful conversation with the R&B group Sounds of Blackness.

In the meantime, this open thread is your space.

What are some of the issues and topics you are your friends are talking about?

Read something online and want to share the love? Go on and post it.

comments () | | e-mail

 
November 15, 2007

'Divorce Court' Judge Is Taking Your Questions

Judge Lynn Toler

Divorce Court's Judge Lynn Toler

Courtesy Agate Bolden

This month, News & Notes is focusing on the family. In an interview set for tomorrow, Judge Lynn Toler -- of Divorce Court fame -- will talk to Farai about dysfunctional families and how best to set boundaries for "toxic" relatives.

We want you to share your personal experiences on the issue and submit questions to Judge Toler if you are in such a situation and need advice on how to cut off certain members of your family.

Please leave an accurate e-mail address so we can contact you if we use your question on the air. It will not be made public.

More: Television Judge Lynn Toler's Real-Life Struggles

comments () | | e-mail

 
November 6, 2007

Open Thread: What's Going On In Your World?

Open Thread

iStockphoto.com

Enough talk about Oprah and black CEOs for now.

(Scroll down for those posts if you want to weigh in.)

Instead, we want to know what's going on in your world?

What are some of the issues and topics you are your friends are talking about?

Read something online and want to share the love? Post it.

Here's your space to sound off.

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 9, 2007

How Do You Stay Informed?

News

iStockphoto.com

In an effort to get to know you better and understand your news consumption habits, please take a moment to answer the following questions in the comment field below:

-- Which news Web sites keep you informed?

-- What TV news programs do you watch?

-- What blogs are your must-reads?

-- What newspapers do you read?

-- Do you subscribe to any RSS feeds? If so, which?

-- How often do you visit Web sites to catch up on the news?

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 5, 2007

Open Thread: What's on Your Mind?

Open Thread

iStockphoto

We've been focused on Marion Jones' steroid scandal to a degree, but there are plenty of other issues making headlines.

Here's your space to start a conversation about the other topics and news stories on your radar.

In case you need a tutorial, check out last week's thread sparked by Moji.

Note: "News & Views" is taking Monday off (Columbus Day), but News & Notes is not. So be sure to catch Monday's show.

comments () | | e-mail

 
October 3, 2007

Talk About Today's Roundtable

Roundtable

iStockphoto.com

Some provocative topics on our bloggers' roundtable today ...

Bloggers Jehmu Greene, Leon Scott, and Casey Lartigue talked about the white residents of Logan, W. Va., apologizing to black residents for the torture of a black woman; comments from presidential candidate John Edwards about the future of black men; and Morehouse College's new president considering a dress code.

[Read Leon's thoughts about his participation in the roundtable.]

If you missed it, take a listen. Here's your space to state your case about the bloggers' positions and your own.

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 27, 2007

Open Thread: It's All Up to You

Open Thread

iStockphoto

We're trying something new.

In these open threads, it's your chance to spout off on whatever issue you want -- whatever random topic is on your mind -- in the comment section below.

And if you feel the need to write something a little lengthier, a bit more substantive, check out "Speak Your Mind," our online series that gives you the chance to sit in the blogger's seat.

That said ... open thread ... have at it.

Update: Read Moji's open thread post about "Republicans snubbing the black and brown vote."

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 13, 2007

Submit a Question for Sen. Clinton

Submit a Question for Sen. Clinton
Photo: Getty Images / Art: Geoffrey Bennett

Have a question for Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton? If there's more you want to know about her stances on the issues and policies you care about, let us know.

Here's how: Submit your question via the comment box below, providing an accurate e-mail address.

[Your contact information will not be made public; it will be used by News & Notes staff for the sole purpose of contacting you.]

comments () | | e-mail

 
September 5, 2007

If You Could Go to Oprah's Obama Fundraiser ...

Oprah's House

A home in Oprah's Montecito estate.

Courtesy Village Properties

This Saturday, Oprah Winfrey is hosting her much talked-about fundraiser for Sen. Barack Obama. It's a garden party to be held in the backyard of her $50 million, 42-acre estate in Montecito, Calif., right outside Santa Barbara.

The price of admission: $2,300 -- the maximum primary campaign contribution. Oprah is circling the wagons on this event. There's a media blackout and cameras are prohibited -- along with a list of other interesting protocols.

Magic Johnson is hosting his own fundraiser for Hillary Clinton later on.

If you could be a fly on the wall at Oprah's bash, what would you keep an eye out for?

UPDATE (Sept. 10): News & Notes found an inside source -- Voltaire Rico Sterling, an actor living in Los Angeles -- who attended Oprah's fundraiser. Listen to his account of what transpired.

comments () | | e-mail

 
August 17, 2007

Having Trouble in the Housing Market?

Foreclosed Home

iStockphoto.com

Our economics experts are still taking your questions about personal finance, but the recent stock turmoil has us looking for folks having trouble in the housing market.

- Are you experiencing problems paying your mortgage because of changes in your adjustable rate?

- Is your house in foreclosure?

- Do you have money in real estate-investing companies, like E*TRADE? If so, are you seeing your stock shares shrink?

If you want to ask a question or share your story, leave a comment below. Please be sure to include an accurate e-mail address, so we can follow up. (It will not be made public.)

And if you want to hit us up privately, click here.

comments () | | e-mail

 
August 9, 2007

You Said It: Roundtable, 'Speak Your Mind' & More

Web

iStockPhoto.com

As she told you earlier this week, Farai is attending the annual National Association of Black Journalists convention in Vegas ... and I'm out-of-pocket today, as well. Nevertheless, you all have kept the lights on at "News & Views" with your commentaries and reaction to the week's news and segments heard on the air.

Here are just a few:

In response to Moji Oderinde's "Speak Your Mind" essay, "Defining Blackness," a reader named James said the following about the "blackness" of African Americans contrasted to those born of African parents:

"The fact of the matter is that as time goes by we, as the decendants of uniquely involuntary immigrants, have got to figure out a way to peacefully reconcile, from within, the violent, inglorious and oftimes dehumanizing paths generations of our families have negotiated to get where we are today in 21st century America. The ironic, bittersweet reality is that this America, our America, is the only 'back home' many of us will ever really know."

To which Moji replied:

"I and a couple of generations ahead of me will never understand the horror of slavery. However, I have read that life after the "involuntary immigrants" left their native land during the slave trade didn't turn out peachy for those that were left behind ... So I really don't understand your implication that other blacks from other countries (specifically Africa) will not empathize with what African-Americans have been through to make the 21st century America of today."


For our month-long series on the black literary imagination, we asked you to name your favorite book. Edward P. Jones' All Aunt Hagar's Children, New England White by Stephen L. Carter, Nervous Conditions by Tsitsi Dangarembga, To Be Young, Gifted and Black by Lorriane Hansberry, Richard Wright's Black Boy and Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison are among your must-reads.


Farai blogged about the dog fighting allegations surrounding Michael Vick and her own run-in with a wounded dog. Many of you empathized and shared your own experiences of encountering wounded animals.

But a reader named Mo said this:

"I find it difficult to understand the difference between the rush to judgement that 'white' America has against Mr. Vick and the rush to judgement 'black' America had against the Duke LaCrosse team members who were accused of rape ... Most of black America had them 'guilty' before any trial ... We must come to the realization that 90 to 95 percent of our black athelets go to work and pretty much stay out of trouble. It's the five to ten percent that do get into trouble that a lot of black people feel obligated to support. Mr. Vick had everything going for him with his fame, fortune and access that 99 percent of us will never have. He put all of this in jeopardy just to 'hang out' with his boys."


And finally, here's what you said about this week's bloggers' roundtable:

"I appreciated the guests comments on the lack of black leaders addressing black-on-black crime. What really stuck with me was the comment that since these crimes cannot be blamed on white people, the black leaders are not addressing this issue."
-- izzow

"I am sitting at work listening to your bloggers roundtable ... it is all I can do not to run through the building screaming "FREE AT LAST, Free AT LAST...THANK GOD ALMIGHTY WE ARE FREE AT LAST. These young people have the courage to call our hypocritical leaders on the carpet for enabling these THUGS in our community ... Keep "PREACHIN" children."
-- Melissa


It goes without saying that these conversations are on-going, so jump in and let your voice be heard.

comments () | | e-mail

 
August 2, 2007

What's Your Favorite Book?

Another month, another in-depth series. For the month of August, we're tackling the black literary imagination every Tuesday and Thursday.

We're going to explore African Americans' connection to the written word and how our history and experiences shape what we read.

We want to hear from you: What's your favorite book? Who is your favorite author? And what's the one book you wish you could read again for the first time?

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 19, 2007

What Did You Think About Our Tancredo Interview?

Tancredo at NAACP convention
Getty Images

On today's show, Farai spoke with controversial Colorado Congressman and Republican presidential candidate Tom Tancredo.

You may remember that he was the only GOP member to attend the NAACP's Republican presidential forum during its convention in Detroit.

Plus, he is -- so far -- the first and only Republican to accept our invitation to share his vision for America with News & Notes' listeners.

Listen to the interview again, and tell us what you thought of it and of the Congressman's vision for America.

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 17, 2007

Have a Question About Africa?

Africa

NASA

Devastating inflation in Zimbabwe. Genocide in Darfur. Class tensions in South Africa.

It's not all bad news in Africa, but we realize each news story emerging from the continent leaves folks with pressing questions.

What created the crisis in Darfur? How and why are parts of the continent underdeveloped? And what will it take to resolve some of these decades-old crises?

If you have a question about Africa that you've always wanted answered, we're here to help.

Drop us a line via the comment box below, and we'll submit your question to one of our guests or another expert. It may be used on the air during our weekly "Africa Update" segment.

We ask that you provide us with an accurate e-mail address, so we can contact you. (It will not be made public.)

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 11, 2007

Submit a Question for Our Interview With Sen. Obama

Submit a Question for Sen. Obama

News and Notes has landed an interview with Democratic presidential contender and Ill. Sen. Barack Obama, and we're asking you -- our listeners and readers -- to submit questions about the issues that matter most.

Here's how: Submit your question via the comment box below, providing the following information: your real name, hometown,
e-mail address and phone number. Your contact information will not be made public; it will be used by News & Notes staff for the sole purpose of contacting you should your question be used on the air.

7/12/07- 9:43 AM (PT): A hearty "thank you" for your submissions, but at this time we have stopped accepting questions for Sen. Obama. Farai's interview is scheduled to happen later this afternoon; check back tomorrow -- Friday,
July 13 -- to hear it.

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 9, 2007

Is Your Money a Little Funny?

Money

iStockphoto

Trying to make that last dollar stretch? Or do you have a nice nest egg that's been gathering dust in a savings account? Whatever the case, News & Notes is here for you (sort of ... just don't ask us for money).

If you missed today's show, Dr. Julianne Malveaux offered some useful tips about making the most of your summer travel. And now each Monday during our economics segment, one of our expert contributors will answer your pressing questions about personal finance. So ask away!

Leave your comment below, along with an accurate e-mail address so we can follow up if we plan to use it on the air. (Your e-mail address will not be made public.)

comments () | | e-mail

 
July 5, 2007

What's In a Name?

So you've heard the story about the twin boys named Oranjello and Lemonjello, right? Well, this one is no urban legend: a New Zealand couple tried to name their son ... wait for it ... 4Real.

Pat Wheaton, the boy's father, said the name popped into his mind after he saw the first ultrasound scan.

"We started thinking 'Jeez, he is for real?'" he said.

Luckily, they were prohibited from giving their child a name beginning with a number by the New Zealand Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages.

The agency's registrar said the rules are designed to prevent names that are "likely to cause offense to a reasonable person."

What's the craziest (real) name you've ever heard?

comments () | | e-mail

 
June 25, 2007

You Tell Us: What Should We Discuss?

This week, we're wrapping up our month-long series on hip-hop with a journalists' roundtable discussion.

NPR's Tony Cox will talk to three reporters -- including Complex magazine editor Noah Callahan-Bever and Los Angeles Times writer Soren Baker -- to get the low down on some of the topics we've covered.

That's where you come in: If there's a topic you think the journalists should discuss, leave us a comment and let us know. It can be about anything: old school hip-hop, the contemporary rap scene or rap's place in the music industry at large.

If we use your idea, we'll let you know in advance so you can brag to all your friends.

comments () | | e-mail

 
June 15, 2007

Send Us Your Photos

To coincide with our series on hip-hop, we thought it fitting to dust off those old photo albums and search for the "back in the day" shots we'd much rather forget -- back when everybody was rocking shell top Adidas, rope chains, Lee jeans and high-top fades.

We're extending the invitation for you to do the same. If you have photos hidden away -- no matter how embarrassing -- send it to us! If your entry is among the best, we'll post it for all to see and catapult you into "News & Views" infamy.

Here's how to do it:

Continue reading "Send Us Your Photos" »

comments () | | e-mail

 
June 14, 2007

Feedback About Our Russell Simmons Interview

Farai Chideya and Russell Simmons

So it seems folks are still talking about Farai's provocative interview with Russell Simmons last week. Even our friends at EURweb took note.

Here's a sampling of your comments:

From Albert Harum-Alvarez:

"I think Farai should have gently insisted on being treated better by this bigheaded man. That would have been the most direct way to deal with the issue of misogyny."

Continue reading "Feedback About Our Russell Simmons Interview " »

comments () | | e-mail

 


   
   
   
null


 

SPECIAL PROGRAMMING NOTE

 
 

About 'News & Views'

News & Views is the companion blog of NPR's news magazine show, News & Notes. It extends News & Notes' ongoing conversation about the diversity of the African-American experience. For more information, read our Frequently Asked Questions guide and our Discussion Rules.

 
 

News & Notes Podcast

NPR PodcastsListen to the News & Notes podcast for a look at fascinating issues and people from an African-American perspective.



» Get the Podcast

 
 

Staff & Bloggers

Tony Cox

Host,
News & Notes

 

Nicole Childers

Executive Producer,
News & Notes

 

Christabel Nsiah-Buadi

Sr. Supv. Producer,
News & Notes

 

Geoffrey Bennett

Producer,
News & Notes

 

Geoffrey Gardner

Web Producer,
News & Notes

 

 
 

Search 'News & Views'

Search for the word(s):
 
 

Contact Us Privately:

Have something you want to say to us directly? Write Us!

 
 
 

Related News Feeds

 
 

Browse Topics

Services

Programs