Keith Josef Adkins

Keith Josef Adkins is an award-winning playwright, screenwriter and social commentator.

About On The Dig

In-your-face observations of art, entertainment and the world at large from someone who cares. Can you handle the truth?

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THE BLOG FAMILY

In-your-face observations of art, entertainment and the world at large from someone who cares. Can you handle the truth?

NOVEMBER 30 | NBC Heroes Employee Says There's Too Much Diversity in Hollywood

NOVEMBER 29 | Black Conservative Doesn't Want Oprah to Interview Obama on Christmas

NOVEMBER 28 | Peru Apologizes for Mistreatment of Afro-Peruvians

One man's opinion on very nearly everything. It's hard but it's fair.

DECEMBER 2 | Ten Things You Could Learn from Tiger Woods

DECEMBER 2 | Aunt Jemima and Politics in Darktown

NOVEMBER 24 | Meet The Parents

Manners and mores in modern life? It's about way more than where the fork goes.

DECEMBER 3 | Desiree Rogers' Teachable Moment

NOVEMBER 28 | The Tipping Factor

NOVEMBER 24 | The Turkey Is The Least of It

From finance to foreclosures, layoffs and lack of opportunity, a daily journal of the economic crisis and its effect on black professionals.

NOVEMBER 27 | Making The Most With Less This Christmas

NOVEMBER 25 | Young, Black, and Out of Work

NOVEMBER 24 | Have Blacks Been Shafted By The Stimulus?

Smart, up to the minute takes on politics--from the state house to the White House. Pull up a chair.

JANUARY 21 | Hillary Clinton Stands Up For Internet Diplomacy

JANUARY 20 | SATISFACTION, PRIDE OR DELIRIUM?

JANUARY 17 | Would Martin Luther King Get Out the Vote in Massachusetts?

Engaging commentary, interviews, and reviews that delve into and beyond the world of books. Get read.

NOVEMBER 25 | Conversation for the Dinner Table

NOVEMBER 19 | Reading List: The Poetry Edition

NOVEMBER 12 | Publishing with the Stars

A daily conversation on hot topic culture items. From Zora to Zane, True Blood to Tiny & Toya, TEWW covers high art, low-brow culture and everything in between.

FEBRUARY 5 | Thoughts on a Black Female "Living Legend": Mikki Taylor of Essence Magazine

JANUARY 26 | OMG Look at Your Hair!

JANUARY 25 | Tatyana Ali Misses the Target With "Love That Girl"

One woman's journey to shed 100 pounds in one year.

FEBRUARY 9 | Finding My Fitness Plan

KEITH JOSEF'S BLOG ROLL

    Whoopi Goldberg Defends Marijuana Smoking

    Gold medalist Michael Phelps was allegedly caught at a party using a bong and the View's Whoopi Goldberg defended the use and confessed her history with smoking trees.  Now this could a perfect opportunity for me to comment on Phelps marijuana use or the so-called role model factor, or even Whoopi's pride for admitting something half of the nation does, but I won't.  I'm much more interested in the whys and whos behind weed smoking.  I'll admit:  I smoked a few times during high school and undergrad, but acquiesced due to my fear of brain cell damage.  Don't laugh [I was 16].  I had my eye on a broadcast journalism career and nothing was going to get in the way of that.  It was a naive and ignorant excuse based on urban legend, but honestly:  my imagination was colorful and complicated enough, I didn't need anything to help add to the drama.  And although I had been advised on several occasions that the high would actually soften the color and bring my mind to ease, my experience was different, trust me.

    Now, I have nothing against weed-smoking.  In fact, several of my male friends partake on a regular and have no qualms about it.  But over the years I've noticed a pattern:  within my social circles most weed partakers are black men.  Whether listening to Coltran and Miles, or needing that special "chill" after work, the black men I know trust in weed like a third eye.  I often wondered if we, black men, seek out extra comfort in order to navigate the sometimes immobilizing terrain of America.  And sometimes I wonder—and yes I'm about to take it there—if we, black men, are victims of a society that's much more interested in keeping us docile and/or priming us for more serious drug use.  A peer once said, "I don't trust a brother who doesn't smoke!"  Some of my Etheridge Knight/Mumia-reading friends believe if they didn't have weed then the day-to-day would be a lot more dangerous, for everyone.  Some of my friends say weed is simply a tool used for recreational play.  What's your thoughts? Not about Micheal Phelps and Whoopi, LOL... about black men and weed smoking.

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