culture

  • In Confessions of a Peppermint Pattie, a ‘Whiteblack’ Girl Asks if She’s Black Enough

    When Barack Obama arrived on the national political stage and emerged as a presidential contender, more than one observer asked whether the young, biracial, Ivy League-educated U.S. senator was black enough to be the first African-American president. And this kind of authenticity challenge isn’t new: Many other black Americans—upwardly mobile and highly educated—are sometimes seen…

  • Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly Is a Sonic Tribute to Black Lives

    If the phrase “Black lives matter” conjured a sound, it might be something like that of the music heard on Kendrick Lamar’s new album, To Pimp a Butterfly. Not to try to connect Lamar to a movement of which he’s not necessarily a part, or to artificially box him in, but if we could take…

  • Happy Birthday, Divas!

    Editor’s note: This week we’re celebrating the birthdays of three phenomenal performers—Chaka Khan, Aretha Franklin and Mariah Carey—who not only share late-March birthdays but who also have voices that have defined their generations. First up, on Monday, is the Queen of Funk, Chaka Khan. On Wednesday we’ll honor the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin, and…

  • Ain’t Nobody Like Chaka Khan: 10 Songs That Will School a New Generation

    Editor’s note: This week we’re celebrating the birthdays of phenomenal performers who not only share late-March birthdays but who also have voices that have defined their generations. First up is the Queen of Funk, Chaka Khan. On Wednesday we’ll celebrate the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin, and on Thursday we’ll celebrate the boss, Diana Ross.…

  • Growing Up White Until a Family Secret Revealed She Was Not

    Lacey Schwartz grew up as a white, Jewish girl in the predominantly white community of Woodstock, N.Y., raised by Peggy and Robert Schwartz. But what she didn’t know at the time was that her biological father was black. The idea of “passing” for white has long been a part of African-American culture. But Schwartz’s story…

  • You’re Gonna Love What Taraji P. Henson Did After Her Son Was Racially Profiled on Campus

    Taraji P. Henson apparently protects her son in real life just as Cookie, her engaging character on Fox’s Empire series, fiercely protects her sons. In the February/March issue of  Uptown magazine, Henson recalls how her 20-year-old son was once profiled by police at the University of Southern California. After that, she says, she found a…

  • ‘I Go to UVA,’ Martese Johnson’s Cry of Millennial Disbelief

    Earlier this week I participated in a PBS NewsHour Twitter chat on race and millennials. We discussed members of the University of Oklahoma’s Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter, a white fraternity founded in the antebellum South, being caught on video singing one of their traditional songs about hanging “niggers” from trees. The chat was partially built…

  • Jazz in the Gardens? More Like Jazz in a Stadium

    For the 10th consecutive year, Miami Gardens, Fla., will draw in swarms of people like moths to a flame—or music heads to a festival—this weekend for the annual Jazz in the Gardens Music Festival, held at Sun Life Stadium and co-hosted by D.L. Hughley and Rickey Smiley. But before the festival boasted legendary names such…

  • Spending His Birthday With His Boys Instead of Her Proves She’s an Option, Not a Priority

    I’ve been with my boyfriend for almost a year. It’s our first time spending our birthdays with each other. I was planning something for his birthday, but he told me he might go out of town with his friends. I told him it was fine because it’s his birthday and he can spend it how…

  • American Crime Recap: Regina King Finally Makes an Appearance

    Over at the Gutierrez house, Jenny is still giving her dad, Alonzo, the silent treatment for allowing her brother to get thrown into juvenile hall. As he’s leaving the house one morning, Alonzo is approached by a TV news reporter about his son’s involvement in Matt’s murder. He tells the reporter that they should be…