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Author Topic: Color Complex In The Black Music Videos!    (Read 14107 times)
Bantu_Kelani
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« on: May 01, 2005, 02:39:34 AM »

 Angry Angry Angry !!!

I know it’s a tired subject but I can’t stand it! I watched African and Caribbean music videos today I am appalled at how it’s full of colorism! These images show many dark-skinned Haitians, Jamaicans, St-Lucians, etc., and continental African males serenading mostly light or damn near white girls! Several black women form the Motherland bleached their skin too much, it’s ridiculous they don't even look good like that! Light-skinned girls are not better than anyone else!!! We have a big problem of color complex in ALL African-descent communities, look at the music videos! IN A WHITE DOMINATED WORLD WE HAVE LEARNED TO BE ASHAMED OF BEING BLACK! IT’S REALLY SAD!

B.K
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We should first show solidarity with each other. We are Africans. We are black. Our first priority is ourselves.
Africanprince
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« Reply #1 on: May 02, 2005, 09:48:15 AM »

You'll have a hard time finding an African woman with her natural hair in any music video. I know from all these Soukous DVD's I own majority of the women are mixed and from Reunion. Soukous star Dany Engobo is a big fan of light skinned women,  since he's started in the 80's he's featured nothing but light skinned women.

It's sad when you can't be proud of your own skin color in your own damn continent.

Women love the bleaching cream in the motherland, anytime I go back home I see these women with severe skin discoloration all over their bodies and faces.

Very very sad

MTV Africa is not going to be any better for us

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The_Pumpster
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My Battle Cry,....One Settler,One Bullet!!!


« Reply #2 on: May 02, 2005, 07:01:59 PM »

Greetings Brothers and Sisters,

I ran accross this superb article on a Hip Hop website, and Brother Minister Paul Scott has truely hit the nail on the head with his analysis of what these Devils have in store for our brothers and sisters on the continent.

Hotep

***********************************************

How MTV Underdeveloped Africa:
Pimps, Pistols and Pan Africanism

Min. Paul Scott

A.F.R.I.C.A. Angola, Soweto, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique and Botswana.

So let us speak....about the Motherland

Stetsasonic

Almost a century ago, the Honorable Marcus Garvey had a vision of a Pan Africanism that would unite all African people under a social, political and economic system of racial pride. In 2005, MTV has realized Garvey's dream with its own version of Pan Africanism: a world filled with Black men shooting at each other and scantily clad Black women, 'droppin it like it's hot.'

On April 20th, MTV will formally celebrate its recent launch of MTV Base, a local African network that is broadcast to over 40 African countries, with a massive 'Death' Jam in tha Motherland. However, based on the history of the media’s propaganda attack on Afrikan people, as well as MTV's role in the mental destruction of African children in America, this endeavor must be viewed with skepticism by those who realize that genocide is not only physical but a mental and spiritual reality, as well.

For my parents and grandparents the image of African people on the continent was one of a bunch of cannibals with bones in their noses chasing a white man in a loin cloth, swingin' from trees and hollerin' like he's lost his darn mind. As a child, I can remember 'Archie Bunker's daughter ' (Sally Struthers) making me feel so bad about starving Ethiopian children that I would break open my piggy bank so that I could get 50 cents so some poor child would have dinner that night. I didn't know that in some parts of Africa our Brothers and Sisters were chillin' in phat cribs watching cable tv.

For African people on the continent the image of Afrikans in America is that of a bunch of heavily armed Black men who only stop fighting each other long enough to put a dollar in Chocolate Thunda's thong at tha strip club. When Afrikans in America meet our Bothers and Sisters from "the continent' we have a fear that they may be considering to literally, have us for lunch. This misinformation by the MEDIA (MisEducation Destroying Intelligent Afrikans) has resulted in a deep distrust amongst Afrikan people, globally.

MTV'S role in anti-African propaganda cannot be overstated, from its humble beginnings in the early 80's when the only Black videos they showed were by Michael Jackson to the present where, as Fred Sanford would say, 'they got more Black folks than a Tarzan movie' MTV has, undeniably, helped shape the world's image of African people.

In its heyday, YO! MTV Raps, showed the world the diversity of Hip Hop and the pleas for Black unity of the Self Destruction video outweighed the sexually explicit 2 Live Crew joints. But the good ole days of MTV Raps is over and Kool Moe D's 'I never ever ran from the KU Klux Klan, so I shouldn't have to run from a Black man' lyric has been replaced by Lil John's ode to Black on Black violence' If ya fall up in tha club and them niggaz wanna mug. When ya step to they face...what they gonna do?Huh'

Although MTV is promoting this endeavor as part business/part humanitarian effort, there are several reasons why the humanitarian aspect is subject to scrutiny. According to news reports MTV base will include performances by local groups to showcase Africa's rich culture. However, one must ask how much rich local talent doing positive Hip Hop is shown on MTV in America ? Also, it was stated that MTVbase will show programing focusing on Africa's AIDS epidemic. It seems hypocritical that a network that is known for videos that promote reckless ' Freak-a-leekin' in America would adopt such a puritanical ethic when across seas. You can't get on the plane in America as Paris Hilton and get off the plane, in Africa as Mother Teresa. It just doesn't work that way. One might also argue that if MTV Base is so Afrocentrically positive, then maybe it is needed more in the United States , where Black children have been exposed to MTV's ugly side for more than a decade, than in Africa.

Yet, while we may bemoan MTV's African Odyssey, the question that we must ask ourselves is why has MTV and Hip Hop in general, succeeded in uniting African people in ways that Garvey never dreamed and why have we not successfully applied these techniques in our effort to reach Black youth.

The failure of the Black Nationalist community to come up with a International Hip Hop Agenda cannot be overlooked. Why hasn't the Black Nationalist community implemented simple strategies such as a Hip Hop Peace Council that will be responsible for squashing "beefs" or groups of Black Power 'missionaries' in communities that will seek dialogue with Hip Hop artists when they travel to different cities.


The lack of a Hip Hop agenda makes many Black youth feel that Black scholars are more interested in teaching Black folks how to build pyramids out of soup cans and paper glue then teaching them how to use Hip Hop to change their realities. In the words of Doughboy from 'Boys in the Hood' 'either they don't know. don't show or don't care about what's goin' on in tha 'hood. '

Unless, we as Afrikan people develop a Pan Africanism to counter MTV's Pan Africanism, company's like MTV will continue to get rich off of our suffering while we continue to dance to our own destruction.

Minister Paul Scott represents the Messianic Afrikan Nation in Durham NC. He can be reached at (919) 949-4352. Email minpaulscott@yahoo.com

website: http://members.boardhost.com/MINPS/
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Bantu_Kelani
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« Reply #3 on: May 04, 2005, 10:47:30 PM »

Quote
You'll have a hard time finding an African woman with her natural hair in any music video.

Yea, women in Africa have so much love for unnatural hair! Straight weaves or wigs ugly, unafrican and unattractive it’s shocking!!!

Quote
I know from all these Soukous DVD's I own majority of the women are mixed and from Reunion. Soukous star Dany Engobo is a big fan of light skinned women,  since he's started in the 80's he's featured nothing but light skinned women.

Soukous singers sings beautiful songs on how they love and are in love with African women but no one can see them….....Soukouss, Kompa and Dancehall videos tend to have a lot of mulattoes and quadroon girls with long hair, a very bad representation of black women I think... I don’t like music videos the self-hate is too bad.

Quote
It's sad when you can't be proud of your own skin color in your own damn continent.

Women love the bleaching cream in the motherland, anytime I go back home I see these women with severe skin discoloration all over their bodies and faces.

Very very sad

I agree with you it’s so sad!

Quote
MTV Africa is not going to be any better for us

MTV music videos will reinforce bias, it’s conscious and intented! That kind of TV and this stupid mentality happening in Africa I am not proud about it.

B.K
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We should first show solidarity with each other. We are Africans. We are black. Our first priority is ourselves.
Jahari Gamba
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Amani na uhuru, nguva ya weusi!


« Reply #4 on: May 05, 2005, 10:21:36 AM »

Its sad to see Afrikan women..and Afrikan people on a whole accepting slavery(psychological and physical) and mockery of their race..they are selling their bodies for fame and glamour and to have nice cars like the white man..gold like the white man and other stupid material possessions like the white man..again we see a fine example of our brothers and sisters being brainwashed and used as a way to destroy our race and to make us even more stereotyped than we are now as "pimps and hoes". MTV and BET show the false image of the Afrikan race..the false that iamge that they want the world to see..the 'successful' image..when in fact they are just the coons and tools used to buy us and brainwash us even more..
Uhuru.
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Omar
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« Reply #5 on: June 19, 2005, 11:57:27 PM »

They also seem to portray the lightest women as the most alluring and respectful that every brutha is trying to creep up on; while the dark skinned women are usually half naked, sweating and being overly sexual like some sort of prostitute.



Sadly, it's not just black men who promote this crap.

Men from Italy to Arabia to India to China seem to praise the lightest skinned women of thier nationalities and hold them up as standards of beauty.

But one thing I've noticed is that all of these men seem to be highly attracted to the darkest of women and usually seek to sexually molest them when given the opportunity.

Most men see dark women as highly sexual...very attractive.

White supremacy just taught them not to respect that sexual attractiveness.

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