• Roseanne Doesn’t Normalize Trump-Supporting Racists. It’s a Documentary

    Although I might be in the minority of black people, I am willing to admit that I love ABC’s reboot of Roseanne. I haven’t watched a single episode—nor do I plan to—but I like the idea that it exists. As one of America’s foremost wypipologists, I didn’t enter this field of study because I find…

    By










  • The Root’s Clapback Mailbag: The Wypipo Participation Trophy

    As “one of the real racists,” I admit that I have intentionally omitted one of the most underappreciated groups of people in America: The good white people. So today I sifted through The Root’s emails, comments, letters and tweets searching for good white people, hoping to acknowledge their efforts to end racism. They should be…

    By










  • 7 Rules for White People With Black Friends

    7 Rules for White People With Black Friends

    If you’re here, that means you probably have a newly acquired black friend and you are looking for a few tips.

    By










  • Government Study: School Is Racist

    That headline could go down as the greatest clickbait of all time if it weren’t for the fact that a new report found that—regardless of the racial makeup of the school, the type of punishment, the level of poverty in the school or grade level—black students are much more likely than their white counterparts to…

    By










  • Memphis, Tenn., Honors 1968 Sanitation Workers With I Am a Man Plaza

    Perhaps no phrase encapsulates the sentiment of the struggle for freedom, justice and equality more than “I am a man.” Every day during the 1968 Memphis, Tenn., sanitation workers’ strike, Memphis’ black sanitation employees would meet downtown at the historic Clayborn Temple. When the men arrived, they would pick up picket signs that read, “I…

    By










  • America Did This: An Open Letter to Memphis, Tenn.

    You are beautiful. The way you sparkle in the reflection of the mighty Mississippi River. The way the trumpets bellow from the bowels of Beale Street. The way you don’t give a damn about consonants when you talk. The way you bathe yourself in blues riffs, barbecue smoke … and pain. A lot of pain.…

    By










  • From Most Hated to American Hero: The Whitewashing of Martin Luther King Jr.

    There is a recipe for making a hero. Greatness is neither the singular nor most necessary ingredient. Fame is important because no matter how benevolent or worthy someone’s actions may be, people must know about them. And though it might seem antithetical, hate is a crucial factor. Abraham Lincoln was disliked by many Americans when…

    By










  • Michael Rapaport Is the Worst Kind of White Man

    The story of the scorpion and the frog is an ancient African proverb that explains the importance of knowing whom to trust. In the story, a frog is preparing to cross a river when it is approached by a cool-ass scorpion. The scorpion asks the frog to give it a ride on its back to…

    By










  • The Root’s Clapback Mailbag: Let Wypipo Go

    It’s Good Friday and Passover Eve. The Root’s deputy managing editor, Yesha Callahan, is not here to force me to write an extensive lede because last night, Very Smart Brothas and The Glow Up had their first joint event, Urban by Nature, in Los Angeles. A lot of the staff from The Root attended, but…

    By










  • Comfortably Numb: Stephon Clark, Alton Sterling and the Value of Being Punched in the Face

    I was 9 years old the first time I was punched in the face. During a church service, I absconded from the sanctuary with two of my older cousins and headed to a neighborhood store. When I returned, my mother asked where I had been and I snitched: “I went to the store with Bernard…

    By










Michael Harriot Avatar