culture

  • Biracial Cheerios-Ad Star Thought Attention Was for Her Great Smile

    (The Root) — Last week a Cheerios commercial featuring an interracial family generated such a strong racist reaction on YouTube that the comments section had to be closed. The video had received more than 1,600 likes and more than 500 dislikes, as well as references to Nazis, “troglodytes” and “racial genocide.” Of course, that reaction…

  • How 1 Black Doctor Compensates for Racism

    Dr. Gregory McGriff’s contribution to NPR’s Race Card Project, which asks listeners to send in their six-word summaries of their experience with race and cultural identity, was “55 mph means you black man.” His explanation: “I am an Ivy League graduate and a board-certified medical doctor. The subject of race comes up all the time, but…

  • Support for Affirmative Action Dropping? Or Just White Support?

    As the country awaits the Supreme Court’s decision on the constitutionality of the University of Texas’ consideration of race (among other admissions factors) to ensure a diverse student body, NBC reported on Tuesday on the results of a poll whose results show that a “record low number of Americans support such programs.” Just 45 percent…

  • For-Profit Colleges: Preying on Black Ambition?

    In a Salon piece, Kai Wright explains why we all need to take a look at the economic structures that are causing degree-seeking students to take on a boatload of student-loan debt. He argues that the wealth for-profit universities are amassing at the expense of black Americans is akin to the subprime-mortgage fiasco that engulfed the nation’s economy…

  • Touch My Hair? That Will Never Be Cool

    (The Root) — I’m still not entirely sure what to make of “You Can Touch My Hair,” an interactive public art exhibit put together by Un’ruly, which actually encouraged people to touch the hair of black women and ask questions about it. Basically, three black women with fabulous hair — a poofy ‘fro, long locks…

  • Trust Eric Holder's Wisdom

    Writing for the Huffington Post, New York Democratic Rep. Charles Rangel encourages folks to simmer down about the national-security scandals plaguing Attorney General Eric Holder’s administration at the Department of Justice. He suspects that much of the furor has to do with political theater and the Republican Party’s attempts to get one up on the…

  • Not All Gays Are Rich White Men

    Michael Arceneaux, in a piece for Ebony, describes how, contrary to popular belief, not all gay people are rich white men living the good life. He uses findings from a report issued by the Williams Institute to draw attention to the nonwhite members of the gay community and the economic constraints they face. Their plight…

  • Racist Testimony in Death-Penalty Case Inspires New Doc

    The new documentary A Broken Promise in Texas: Race, the Death Penalty and the Duane Buck Case, released by the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, sheds light on the 1997 Texas death-penalty trial of Duane Buck, an African-American man who was convicted of shooting three people, two of whom died. The controversy: Jurors listened…

  • In 1600s Brazil, Blacks Stuck in 2 Worlds

    (The Root) — This image is part of a weekly series that The Root is presenting in conjunction with the Image of the Black in Western Art Archive at Harvard University’s W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research. In 1636 Count Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen was appointed governor-general of New Holland, a…

  • Watch This: NBA Players Read Their Hate Tweets

    Jimmy Kimmel’s latest “Mean Tweets” segments on his ABC show featured NBA players reading out loud some of the comments they receive on Twitter. Some were more observations than attacks (“Has anyone noticed that #chrispaul has #MichaelJacksons original nose?”), some were mean, some were funny and some were just weird. We thought the guys were…