Wednesday, March 27, 2013

The Grand Bargain / More Time

Since it seems that the class has been working hard on their rough drafts, I'm offering the extension of the due date until Tuesday. This offer is only valid if the class continues working on their rough drafts as diligently as they were today. The essays must be handed in at the beginning of class on Tuesday in a package including the brainstorm, game plan and rough draft. All of the rough drafts must be ok'd by me by the end of class tomorrow.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Essay Deadline Approaches

Be aware that the essay Deadline is on Thursday and you have to get your rough draft (edited) approved before you start your final copy on the computer. Really this means that you have to have your rough draft finished by tomorrow's class. The will be no extensions for this assignment.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Essay process and mark break down.

Today I showed the class the mark breakdown for the essay. The preproduction (brainstorm, game plan and rough draft) is worth 30% of your mark. The final edited copy is worth 70%. You cannot begin the word processing until the rough draft is ok'd by me. The rough draft is hand written.
See the breakdown of the writing process to be followed in the green board pictures below:

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Cliff Washburn

Our special guest today was Cliff Washburn. Cliff was a four year scholarship basketball player at the Citadel, a military school in South Carolina. In his fifth year he played football after which he went on to become an NFL journeyman playing for a number of teams. Following his NFL career he played in the CFL with Saskatchewan, Calgary and Toronto.
After his football career was over he worked as a sales person here for a large corporation in the city.

We were lucky enough to have him as a guest speaker where he talked about his life, his motivations and his convictions. Cliff stayed long after the bell and 'hung out' with many of the Harvey gang discussing many of the things he spoke of in the auditorium.

On behalf of George Harvey and staff and students I'd like to thank Cliff for offering his time, energy and experience and hope he can return and be a part of the class again.

Frame of reference FOR

What is a Frame of Reference? It's the total of all your memories and experiences, all of who you are. It's the bank or database from which you pull from to make decisions.
The smaller that FOR, the smaller the pool is for decision making and of course vise versa.
My job is to expand your FOR so that your decisions come from an informed base rather than making decisions about life from a small uninformed platform.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Mid-term Assignment

Based on all of the work completed in class as well as the information contained in this Blog you have to demonstrate understanding of what's been studied in the class to date.
See the assignments attached:

Monday, March 18, 2013

Modern Minstrel Show

Watch "Minstrel Show" on YouTube
Watch this video. Are these parallels real or constructed? How do you feel about the images shown in the YouTube video?

Step n Fetchit / this is an example of one of his movies.

Watch "Excerpt from "Miracle in Harlem" (1948)" on YouTube
During the height of the depression Step n Fetchit made more money than the President of the United States portraying the stereotypical Black man.
Was he a sell out, our was he just getting paid?

Being White in Philly / what do you think of this?

Check out this article written in Philadelphia.
What do you think about it. Does anything ring true?

ENOUGH by Juan Williams

This is one of the most critical books we will study in the class. Juan Williams' book Enough is a careful study of the present day Black experience. We will be examining the chapters on Hip Hop and Crime and Punishment and their impact on the Black community. I highly recommend this book for any of my students who wish to read it and have an extra copy specifically for those who want to.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Rhymes and Punishment

Rhymes and Punishment is a dynamic and engaging expose on the lives of successful Hip Hop artists whose decisions have landed them in prison with all of the trappings and consequences of the prison lifestyle.
The opulent life of a rap star is soon juxtapose to that of a convicted criminal. The extremes of incredible choice  versus being completely controlled are examined by director Peter Spirer and narrated by Hip Hop legend KRS 1.
See link to the YouTube trailer below :

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Who are the real phonies?

How do you feel about people who aren't really genuine about who they claim to be?
Is someone who's made it out of the traps and negative aspects of the Black community and become successful in today's world say, as a doctor, yet, has animosity towards those within the community who remain better than someone who has made their money as a rapper delivering stereotypical images of Black people to the world, yet doesn't live that life anymore?
Are they both phony?
Both exhibit the symptoms of a slave mentality, the self hatred that allows for the direct hurting of your people versus the dismissal and abandonment of that same group.
I personally believe that the acknowledgement of a slave mentality and the conquering of it wouldn't allow for either mindset. There would be an obligatory sense that you must uplift the community and support it. Success breeds a mindset of sacrifice and creates an atmosphere of education and even rescue. One would neither damage or leave the ones who need one's understanding.
When you create an environment of self awareness, self-definition will follow.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Bottling Manhood and the Concept of Cool

We read from Cosby's book 'Come on People', and discussed his 'concept of Cool'. How the detachment of emotions was and is necessary to avoid the negative consequences of conflict when dealing with a discriminatory world. But, when that detachment causes a suppression of all emotions the situation becomes dangerous to that person and those around them. When you cool becomes hot and all of those bottled emotions are unleashed, hot becomes unmanageable.
It questions what the Black community considers 'manhood'?
That being said, what happens when young people within our community realise that they've been fooled and manipulated for the sake of a dollar; when they figure out that many of their artists are unwilling, or worse, willing puppets for people, from outside the community, to slowly destroy and exploit it.
Are our youth willing to give up the comfort of ignorance to embrace the discomfort of truth?

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Misogyny in our community.

Why is it ok for Black women in our community to be treated the way they are? Why does the community allow women to be treated as objects? We treat them as though women are lesser while at the same time we praise our mothers and act as though we protect our sisters.
Do we forget that every women is someone's daughter, maybe sister, cousin, possibly a mother, grandmother?

Shouldn't every woman be special and important? Why do we have to be related to a woman before we can respect them?

Friday, March 1, 2013

Questioning Hip Hop

We can now start to examine the Hip Hop genre. Using the question sheet I drew up use the documentary as reference to answer some of the more difficult questions that come up when discussing Hip Hop.
Is there an excuse for some of what comes out of the music. What are the pros and cons of a music that defines so much of what the Black community represents?