Posts Tagged ‘Race’

#browntwitterbird

Monday, August 16th, 2010

Last week, Fareed Manjoo wrote a post for Slate called “How Black People Use Twitter.” Perhaps more controversial than the article itself was the accompanying image, the familiar blue bird Twitter logo, but brown instead, holding a phone and sporting a fitted cap (see below).

slate_twitter01

From NPR.org:

“I was bound to offend people with this article,” Manjoo says. “But I thought that it was kind of worth a risk to ask and perhaps answer some interesting questions.”

His question was why so many popular topics on Twitter, called hashtags, seem to come from blacks, specifically black youth. Manjoo says he made that observation by checking out the Twitter profile photos of tweeters taking part in the popular hashtags.

“Young black people are not a group of people I see every day,” Manjoo says. “I don’t have any teenage black friends. And the fact that they were kind of part of this conversation just a click away from me was something that I was very interested in. I was seeing trending topics every day that were dominated by black people.”

Manjoo’s prediction that he would offend some folks certainly came true. The post sparked valid criticism that attempting to categorically “other” black Twitter users (while providing a stereotyped cartoon as a mascot) is a misguided attempt to “fetish[ize] something that is easily explained by human nature.”

Danielle Belton of The Black Snob says:

It’s like a black person on a bike — I’ve never seen that! Black people ride bikes? There’s a black guy on a skateboard? Black people ride skateboards?! And it becomes a sort of thing. But no, they’re on a bike and a skateboard for the same reason why anybody would be on a bike and a skateboard. There’s no special, racialized way of skateboarding or riding a bike, and that’s the same way it is with Twitter.

Debates about racial identity and stereotyping almost always contribute something of value to our communities and society as a whole. But this debate produced something new and fantastic – brown Twitter bird parodies. Birds with afros. Birds with graduation caps. Birds with dredlocks. Birds in wheelchairs.

slate_twitter01_remix1

Started by Alicia Nassardeen of Instant Vintage, the parodies went viral. Folks across the globe used Nassardeen’s parodies as Facebook and Twitter profile pics and started making their own. Why? To prove the point that is the crux of the initial outrage: black people are not a monolith.

How creative. And how effective. Says blogger and comedian Baratunde Thurston:

That’s a form of activism, that’s a form of community organizing, that’s a form of reasserting a claim to your own identity,” he says. “And countering what you see as a damaging media message.

Twitter is a powerful social media tool. To be offended by the reworking of its icon into an overly-simplistic caricature of one’s racial group is natural. To use the very same powerful social media tool to parody this offensive caricature in a world-wide rejection of racial stereotypes is activism at its best. Hats (and graduation caps) off to the world-wide #browntwitterbird revolt!

His White Privilege Is A Wonderland

Monday, March 1st, 2010

As Jay-Smooth says of John Mayer’s recent buffoonery:

There’s so much wrongness there, you can just swim in it.

As true as this is, Jay doesn’t want us to drown in it. Getting sucked into media soundbites about race can draw us away from the most immediate issues at hand. Jay goes on:

A lot of the most important race issues are institutional, systemic, structural issues. Questions like:

Why in 2010 do Black people not have the same educational opportunities, the same access to health care, the same economic and employment opportunities?

Why are Black people so disproportionately affected by this recession?

Why, in 2010, does it so often seem like on an institutional, systemic, structural level Black people are still disproportionately affected by almost everything thats bad?

Those questions cannot be answered by analyzing the racial awkwardness of a YouTube video. Answering those questions means figuring out how we can change public policy and pressuring the government from inside and outside to make those changes.

Damn. Who wants to listen to John Mayer, anyway, when you can watch Jay-Smooth spit the truth? Check him out at his new site, Nil Doctrine.

Rachel Maddow Reveals Right-Wing Racism

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

What was it that the Department of Homeland Security said back in April about right-wing extremist activity?

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

Case in point.