Black Creativity Abounds in These Latest Project Announcements From Issa Rae, Kenya Barris, John Legend and Sanaa Lathan

The multi-hyphenate creatives are truly living up to the creed "Booked and Busy."

Look, whoever said I have the same 24 hours as Issa Rae lied.

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

I donโ€™t. And chances are, you probably donโ€™t either. You wanna know how I know? Itโ€™s because despite the fifty-leven projects Rae always seems to have going on at any given moment, she always finds the time and energy to add one more.

I get tired if I have to go to Publix, Target, and Walmart in one day. Itโ€™s tew (read: too) much.

Apparently though, Raeโ€™s more than equipped to handle it all, Variety reports that the Insecure star will be partnering up with The Daily Social Distancing Show with Trevor Noah correspondent and comedian Jaboukie Young-White to develop Vanessa R. Panfilโ€™s 2017 book, The Gangโ€™s All Queer: The Lives of Gay Gang Members at HBO. The half-hour series will tell the tale of โ€œa closeted twenty-something in Chicago, grieving a gang-related death, [who] ditches college to find reckless closure.โ€ Rae will serve in the executive producer role while Young-White tapped to write.

But if you thought Issa Rae was the only one in Hollywood with a million and one projects coming down the pipeline, think again!

Kenya Barris, mastermind behind the seemingly never-ending -Ish franchise (or as The Rootโ€™s staff Entertainment Writer Tonja Renรฉe Stidhum calls it, the โ€œKenya Barris Cinematic Universeโ€), will also be bringing the funny in a new feature at Netflix. Per The Hollywood Reporter, Barris and actor Jonah Hill are set to explore the themes present in the 1967 classic film Guess Whoโ€™s Coming to Dinner?, but with a modern twist. While plot details are being kept to a minimum, what we do know is that Barris and Hill have already co-written the script with filming expected to begin this fall in Los Angeles. The untitled project will also make for Barrisโ€™ film directorial debut, as well.

Now this is usually the part where I make some sort of tie-in to the next project, but before I do that Iโ€™d just like to point out that a modern adaptation to Guess Whoโ€™s Coming to Dinner has already been done. In fact, itโ€™s been done myriad times, in a variety of different ways. The one that immediately comes to mind? The loose remake starring Bernie Mac and Ashton Kutcher in 2005, titled Guess Who. I didnโ€™t really like that one too much, but I love Bernie so Iโ€™d like to just let him have that.

And apparently so would a lot of other folks online:

https://twitter.com/SolidlyShaky/status/1403359453248897031
https://twitter.com/karlogan_/status/1403159490007076867
https://twitter.com/xoxotaye/status/1403132460649664525
https://twitter.com/colliecharles/status/1403378162625613827

Speaking of the OG King of Comedy, THR also reports that the life and career of Bernie Mac will be headed to a screen near us soon. In tandem with the Bernie Mac estate, John Legendโ€™s production banner Get Lifted will oversee the โ€œfeature film biopicโ€ of the late comedian. The news was announced on Thursday by Legendโ€™s producing partner Mike Jackson during a panel discussion at the 2021 Tribeca Film Festival. America, you better get ready!

But before you do that though, America, Iโ€™ve gotta tell you about Sanaa Lathanโ€™s upcoming directorial debut! According to Deadline, the actress is set to adapt Angie Thomasโ€™ New York Timesโ€™ best-seller, On The Come Up. The film comes from Paramount Players with This Is Us writer and director Kay Oyegun penning the script.

On the Come Upโ€™s synopsis, per Deadline:

On the Come Up centers on 16-year-old Bri, who wants to be one of the greatest rappers of all time. Or at least win her first battle. But itโ€™s hard to get your come up when youโ€™re labeled a hoodlum at school, and your fridge at home is empty after your mom loses her job. So Bri pours her anger and frustration into her first song, which goes viralโ€ฆfor all the wrong reasons. Bri soon finds herself at the center of a controversy, portrayed by the media as more menace than MC. But with an eviction notice staring her family down, Bri doesnโ€™t just want to make itโ€”she has to. Even if it means becoming the very thing the public has made her out to be.

Straight From The Root

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