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Tom Joyner, Steve Harvey, Tavis Smiley, and the Impoverishment of Black Media

joyner, havey, smileyby BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon

When the Tom Joyner Morning Show was pulled first from Chicago, and then from other markets early this month, Joyner counseled listeners that "...black radio will never be what it once was, and there is absolutely nothing we can do about it."  This message of powerlessness and permanent defeat, of resignation to someone else owning and controlling the black conversation may be all we can expect from Joyner and the rest of the black elite.  But is it the real answer? Does it even address the crucial question of how we might have and own our own black civic conversation?

 

James Brown -- The Man Who Named a People

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James Brown: The Man Who Named A People
by BAR Executive Editor Glen Ford 

"Overnight, it seemed, the great bulk became 'Black' people."

In death, James Brown last weekend vied for headlines with two other passing luminaries: a former US president, Gerald Ford, and the man a generation of Americans have been taught to hate, Saddam Hussein. That's world class celebrity -- no doubt about it. However, despite all the accolades, I believe the historical James Brown has been short changed. Even Brown's many, mostly self-authored titles -- "Hardest Working Man in Show Business," "Godfather of Soul," "Soul Brother Number One," to mention just a few -- fail utterly to convey the Barnwell, South Carolina native's seismic impact on the modern age. James Brown can arguably be credited with a feat few humans have achieved since the dawn of time.

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