CNN looks for different angle in Black in America 2

Categories: African-American, Culture, Featured, Media, Racial Issues
Written By: Shawn Williams

One of the biggest complaints that I heard regarding last year’s groundbreaking spcecial Black in America on CNN, was that it painted the African-American community with a negative brush.

Struggling fathers and mothers, Black women who can’t find a man, people in prison, the argument was there for the making.  But it was also the place I remember hearing that White Americans with a felony have a better chance of getting a job than African-Americans without one.

This time, CNN is touting a solutions oriented approach with Black in America 2 that airs Wednesday night at 8 PM Central, and Thursday night at 7 PM.  Without directly responding to criticism of their generally well received first attempt, marketing for the program has promised something more.

Last night my family and I sat down to watch the 40 minute screener sent to us by CNN.  There were five impactful segments which were included:

  • The story of “Journey for Change,” a youth empowerment program founded by activist Malaak Compton-Rock
  • A segment on Black Marriages and one couple’s fight to stay together
  • A look at the Tyler Perry phenomenon and the success of his studio
  • Steve Perry and Capital Prep, a school he founded in Hartford, Conn.  Capital Prep has mostly African-American students in an urban setting and 100% of the students go on to attend a four year college upon graduation.
  • John Rice, brother of U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice, and his program which grooms minority executives

I was captivated by the stories of Rice and Steve Perry.  These two young men identified a need and are working to meet that need.  It’s a route that more individuals are going to have to take if our communities are to succeed.

The same can be said for Tyler Perry.  For people like me familiar with Perry from his stage play days, there really wasn’t anything new here. But it was still good to see the model of a man not just  complaining about lack of African-Americans on T.V., but employing African-Americans on camera and behind the camera.

Rock’s program didn’t strike me the same way, but some of the kids highlighted in the piece did.  One young man (I think he was 15) was a tall and outstanding basketball player, yet when Rock interviewed him for the program he was barely audible.  He constantly looked down and mumbled as he spoke, a far cry from the confidence he displayed in clips shown of him on the basketball court.

Similarly I was impacted by a young lady from Capital Prep who said when she was 15 her only goal was to get her G.E.D. and move into an apartment.  How many African-American girls across the country have also set such a pitifully low bar for themselves?  She’s now on track to attend college due in large part to her time at Steve Perry’s Magnet School.

I applaud CNN and Soledad O’Brien, as I did last year, for attempting to highlight the unique challenges that face African-Americans.  I also welcome their decision to focus on solutions and highlighting those who are out busting down walls, myths and stereotypes.

It’s easy to forget that prior to 2007, a show like Black in America barely made it to the idea phase, less known onto the screen.  NBC Nightly News  kind of got it rolling in November ‘07 before Black in American in ‘08.  Now show’s like TV One’s Stand in 2009 don’t not seem like outliers anymore.  Now that we see a Black President on TV everyday, it’s easy to forget that just a couple of short years ago -before Jena 6- Black folks on television was a rarity.

I will be locked in tonight (after the President’s Press Conference) at 8 PM Central to support CNN’s Black in America.  I hope it will inspire people to do more than just keep score, but to also get in the game and work to make a difference.

4 Responses to “CNN looks for different angle in Black in America 2”

  1. Kristin Says:

    Shawn,

    I was one of those highly critical people of the first Black in America. I should first begin with saying I applaud their effort in trying to present an account of blackness in America however, I felt they fell way short. They presented a group of people that made poor decisions, which is not regulated to just Black people, and did not accurately represent the different facets being black in America.

    I will view the second series but I swear fo’ Gawd if they attribute the rise and success of black people in this segment to the election of Obama it will be on.

  2. Bill Says:

    In what capacity/roles were there not enough blacks on TV? And what did Jena have to do with it? Maybe from a reporting/commentating point of view you have a point, but generally speaking I don’t agree with your statement about black folks on TV being a rarity.

    Your post got me thinking of all the black sitcoms I watched growing up. I think my favorite was “Good Times.” The whole JJ “dynomite” thing was a pretty weak hook, but I can still remember the episode where they were rioting in the streets after the MLK assassination, and the episode where the father died. I was just a kid then, watching the show in syndication in the 80s, but it seems like they tried to address the issues of the day in that show (at least to a white kid growing up in Texarkana).

    I know I’ve strayed way off topic. I hope to catch “Black in America 2.” I missed the first one.

  3. Forrest Williams Says:

    Bill: I am black and there are many facets about us that only we would understand. Sure you can be raised around black people, have black friends, have black relitives and even have a child that is half white (or other race) and half black and still not completely understand. But its ok. When it all boils down to it, as a whole we’re behind. I hate stats, but they don’t lie. All people have problems and that is a givin, but there are problems and issues that we face that are technically not our fault speaking as both a historian and economist. We’ve inherited them and its a debt that cannot be forgiving. If CNN and other networks were honest, they would first show how indirectly nothing has changed. And not in the manner in which they did so.

  4. V.Bates Says:

    The statement made in the second paragraph of this article about Whites with a felony having a better chance at getting a job than Blacks without one is very true, just look in Cleveland, Ohio.

    Recently a channel 19 news I-Team report revealed that the current Deputy Commissioner of Cleveland Emergency Medical Service holds her $80-k a year position with a high school certificate and a felony for forgery and bad check writing. This discovery was uncovered in 2009 and to date she has not been dismissed for her false statements made about her background. See the story on 19 Action News Cleveland website.

    However, there are no African Americans on the City of Clevelands Civil service roster that hold any position with a felony. They were never considered.

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