Tallulah Bankhead

Entries tagged as ‘Michelle Obama’

Isn’t She Lovely?

November 17, 2008 · 12 Comments

I laughed when media observers clucked over the supposed need for Michelle Obama to soften her image to become First Lady worthy. The fuss over Michelle’s image seemed to stem from some observers’ realization that a Michelle Obama can exist and thrive. For people who live as citizens of the world, Michelle Obama is not new.  She is a human and humane integral part of the world.

In other words, we get her because she has an authentic, heartfelt commitment to her family, her various roles and (equally important) her self.    Because of who she is, her new role as the first African American First Lady of the United States will have ripple effects for years to come.  Historically, sartorially (Love the red dress she wore on Monday to the White House!) and culturally.  Lucky for him, President Elect Barack Obama also got her, too.

Watching their obvious affection for each other, I’ve become mildly obsessed about how Obama’s choice of a life partner might impact dating and colorism for black men who due to talent, skill or luck are in the public eye.  Because Michelle doesn’t fit the prototype of the women often chosen to be on the arms of the powerful, wealthy and/or famous black men.

http://nonstriker.files.wordpress.com/2007/06/tiger-woods-baby-10.jpg?w=225&h=319

Exhibit 1 – Tiger and Elle Woods with daughter

I’ve been discussing this with my girlfriends but have been reluctant to write it down until I was spurred by two things.  A comment (from Emma) on Ta-Nehisi Coates’ thoughtful, humorous blog post, Who Knows What Lies in the Heart of sistahgirls, which explored what would be the fallout from black women if it was discovered that Barack Obama cheated on Michelle with a white woman:

I have often wondered if Barack would have deemed Michelle “good enough” because of her dark skin if he had grown up in the AA community and had the same kind of preference for light skin/long hair drilled into him by other black folks. White beauty standards may be the historical source of our colorism, but we are engaging in self-inflicted wounds at this point. Your daughter was probably dealing with boys who wanted the kinds of girls in hip-hop vidoes. When I see a dark skinned girl in a music video it still catches my attention.

Emma, I hear you.

Then I read Entertainment Weekly’s Margeaux Watson’s blog post Beauty and the beat which explores how colorism is possibly impacting the current crop of women in R&B/hip-hop:

As Michelle Obama prepares to take her place in history as the nation’s first African-American First Lady, it feels regressive to have to point out that the female presence on today’s R&B/hip-hop charts looks alarmingly pale in comparison to the abundance of guys like T-Pain, Lil Wayne, and Kanye West. Before you get your knickers in a twist, let me be clear: I’m not talking about the crossover success of pop stars such as Fergie and Gwen Stefani, but rather the current lack of diversity among black women in music. Hugely talented as they are, Beyoncé, Rihanna, and Alicia Keys have all undoubtedly benefited from a color-conscious double standard that favors artists who look like them over, say, Estelle and Kelly Rowland. Of course, it wasn’t always like this. Back in the day, Lauryn Hill, Brandy, Foxy Brown, and Missy Elliott were among the hottest names in the game; India.Arie had a Grammy-winning moment; and Mary J. Blige remains an inspirational trailblazer. But now it appears that vocal powerhouses such as Jennifer Hudson and Fantasia are increasingly rare exceptions to the widely held notion that darker-hued black women don’t sell records.

More fuel for me to wonder if Michelle in her dark & lovely glory will make the best and brightest black men reconsider their years of living and loving the light skin, long hair and/or white is better aesthetic.

Yeah,  I’m looking at Tiger.   I’m eyeballing Russell Simmons. And, oh hell, most of the NBA.

http://clutch3.files.wordpress.com/2008/03/kg_and_wife_brandi.jpg?w=177&h=323http://www.celebspin.com/wp-content/uploads/2006/09/carmelo-anthony-lala.jpg

Exhibit 2 – Kevin & Brandi Garnett

Exhibit 3 – Carmelo Anthony & La La Vazquez

(Not pictured: Grant Hill, Kobe Bryant, Gilbert Arenas, Lil’ Wayne)

Okay statistically the choices of Kevin and Carmelo may not prove my point, but there is some truth to the urban wisdom that famous (and the not so famous) black men seem to prefer women with lighter skintones.  I can’t presume to know the specific reasons for this. Do their parents whisper a mantra into their ears after reading a bedtime story? Is it self-hatred?  Is it peer pressure? Who knows the cognitive roadmap that deposits so many successful black men at that point.

I do know the history.  A quick visit to a make-up counter showcases the limitless range of African American skin tones. Tawny, cocoa, antelope, warm caramel, sheer espresso, toffee are just a few of the enticing names that reflect this diversity.  Years of involuntary and voluntary miscegenation has made it so.  The sadness is how many people nurture and nourish the belief that the closer a black person approximates whiteness in skin tone and hair texture automatically translates into being the best.  (It is my guess that every black person in America has a story about an older relative who admonished them to get out of the sun at one point in their lives. Crazy, right?  Just a gut feeling.) Translation: a black woman can be a thief, a backstabber, a liar, but as long as she has the look deemed desirable and worthy, it’s all good:

“It’s rare that I do dark butts – that’s what I call dark skinned women…I [don’t date women] darker than me.” “I love the pool test. If you can jump in the pool exactly like you are and you don’t come out looking better than you looked before going in the pool – then that’s not a good look. Any woman that uses brown gel to set down her baby hair is not poppin.”

-Yung Berg

There was a stage in my life where I went crazy with dating white women. I have nothing against black women, but they’re raised differently. White women are raised to respect and serve their men.  Black women are taught to question [their men]. Black women look at submission as being weak. White women look at submission as being a woman. And anyone who has a problem with this statement is ignorant.  Just look at the divine order: it goes God, man, woman, child.

-Polow Da Don

It’s this type of shallow, vapid thinking that infects us all.  Makes us question each other and ourselves in dimly lit crowded bars and at quiet, dignified dinner parties.   From my friend RockStar:

College repeated the same social pattern among the black students, but having gone to a racially-mixed high school in New York City, i was used to having all kinds of friends.  Can’t say it didn’t hurt at times to be overlooked.  i had a roommate once who told me that the reason boys didn’t notice me was because they couldn’t SEE me in the dark of a party.

I wonder how many women can relate to RockStar’s experience and how many will find it relatable in the years ahead.  I wonder if there will be any acknowledgment of the contempt and fuckedupness of practicing this bigotry.  And if there are any attempts to rewire the thought process that keeps such ugliness in circulation.

“If it wasn’t for race mixing there’d be no video girls. Me and most of our friends like mutts a lot. Yeah, in the hood they call ‘em mutts”.

-Kanye West

I don’t know what’s going to happen during an Obama Presidency.  I will admit my  concern for black men to reconsider their worship at the light skin altar is not the biggest problem facing the world. But I would like to imagine that every time Barack and Michelle emerge from Air Force One, take a trip abroad or host a State Dinner, there will be one, two and then hundreds of black men expanding their horizons of who they can love.

In the meantime, I will listen to Brother Stevie sing:

Categories: Movies · Politics
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Link Slut, November 14

November 14, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Is it wrong that I don’t care Lebron has found the courage to support Barack Obama? Wealthy and indulged athlete wakes up and realizes that there’s more to the world than him getting a championship ring.  Oh gawd. [Page 2]

Michelle: The Book Liza Mundy, Michelle Obama’s unauthorized biographer is interviewed. [Democracy Now!] Excerpt:

AMY GOODMAN: Talk about the—well, it has become infamous—thesis of Michelle Obama, well, then Michelle Robinson, which I thought was very interesting, when you laid out exactly what she was trying to do in the survey that she conducted of black Princeton alumni.

LIZA MUNDY: Well, I think that every Princeton alumnus felt—you know, we all felt a collective shudder when we learned that her thesis had been posted online, because, you know, anybody who’s written a senior thesis would identify. You know, God forbid my thesis ever be posted online. I know the circumstances under which they’re written, and, you know, paragraphs written at the last minute at the suggestion of your adviser. And then twenty-five years later, somebody’s picking over the sentences, you know, to use them against your husband. It’s really just mindboggling.

Luxuriating in the language, passion and clarity of President Elect Barack Obama’s acceptance speech [The New Yorker]

I feel bad that I want to see this movie.  It makes me feel like some person trapped in a time warp who needs to be comforted by the visual of a white knight action hero while critiquing the First World assumptions that will, undoubtedly, litter the cinematic landscape of the action hero.  My contradictions make me uncomfortable yet I wonder if it’s better to ignore or embrace them.

Because it’s a love song that makes me happy:

Steve Forbert Romeo’s Tune

A Jennifer Hudson Gap campaign triggers cognitive dissonance for me.  [Yahoo News]

Categories: Politics · Sports · Television
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For those of you who feel sorry for Sarah Palin….

November 11, 2008 · 1 Comment

http://img5.allocine.fr/acmedia/medias/nmedia/18/35/26/06/18377537.jpg

Mean Girl for President 2012!

…I share the following from Newsweek’s ‘Secrets of the 2008 Campaign]:

“I’m worried,” Gregory Craig said to a NEWSWEEK reporter in mid-October. He was concerned that the frenzied atmosphere at the Palin rallies would encourage someone to do something violent toward Obama. He was not the only one in the Obama campaign thinking the unthinkable. The campaign was provided with reports from the Secret Service showing a sharp and very disturbing increase in threats to Obama in September and early October. Michelle was shaken by the vituperative crowds and the hot rhetoric from the GOP candidates. “Why would they try to make people hate us?” she asked Valerie Jarrett. Several of Obama’s friends in the Senate were shocked by the GOP rabble-rousing. Dick Durbin, the U.S. senator from Illinois who pushed for early Secret Service coverage for Obama, called Lindsey Graham, who was traveling with McCain. (Graham scoffed at the call as “an orchestrated attempt to push a narrative” about McCain going negative. He said he told Durbin, “OK, buddy, but remember—that goes both ways.”)

Sarah Palin, due to the fact that McCain had no platform during his Presidential run, was assigned the task of throwing coded slurs at Obama.  Anti-American! Socialism! Terrorist! Redistributor! Muslim! Her screeching on the campaign trail appealed to certain Americans who take comfort in ignorance and fear and shun all original thought.  She preyed on their biases.  Again and again and again.

(An aside: What the $%$^@$^ BB are these people in the video doing today? How are they coping?  Are they doing crystal meth?  Having sex with their children?  Reading the Bible while watching Fox News and listening to Rush Lardbucket? Committing mass suicides? One can only hope.]

There should be no tears for Sarah Palin.  Zero forgiveness.  TFB that she is now the victim of slurs and innuendo from unnamed McCain operatives.  Did she think she would be immune because she did the bidding of McCain’s version of The Three Stooges, Mark Salter, Steve Schmidt and Rick Davis and they liked her?

Nanook, please.

So when she comes sleazing her inarticulate, science mocking, delusional, lying ass back to be the face of Rethuglicans for 2012 under the cloak of Christian hypocrisy, Americans who know better should rebuke her because we don’t believe in divisiveness and ugliness as a way of life.

Secrets of the 2008 Campaign [Newsweek]

McCain Owes Sarah Some Straight Talk [Wall Street Journal]  (I enjoyed this because of the wobbly comparison of Barack’s intellect to Sarah’s.  It must be so hard to be a Republican right now because they are reduced to making laughable assertions and I LOVE IT!)

Palin’s Trip to the Land of Karma [Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]

Palin Looks To God Over 2012 Bid [BBC News] (Yeah God is worried about her Christ loving arse, right about now.)

The ‘Times’ Is Kind of Mean to Sarah Palin [NYMag.com]


Categories: Politics
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From George W. to Michelle Obama*

November 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The Jets

Crush On You

*Bush called Michelle good bride last week and said she was an impressive lady the first time he met Barack pre-the new day in America.

That sounds like someone is crushing QUITE HARD.

Stay tuned…

Categories: Music · Politics
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The day after the day after.

November 6, 2008 · 2 Comments

http://www.suitable-puppies.com/images/cute-puppy-gallery-02-Large.jpg

I’m not saying that this will be Malia and Sasha’s new puppy.  I just love the picture!

A photo essay of the next President of the United States of America [Boston.com]

Robert Gibbs, the Obama strategist who handed Sean Hannity his arse,

will be the White House press secretary. Damn IT FEELS AWESOME TO KNOW THAT COMPETENCY IS RETURNING TO THE WHITE HOUSE! [Politico.com]

Joe The Plumber feels that the McCain campaign used him. [The Guardian]

But he vented frustration at the way McCain thrust him into the spotlight by mentioning him more than a dozen times during a televised debate with Barack Obama, in which Wurzelbacher was held as an example of an aspirational working man.

“I was unhappy that my name was used as much as it was because I think there were real other issues that should’ve been discussed during the debate,” said Wurzelbacher. “I was happy that I was used as a focal point but I didn’t think I was going to be the only point.”

Seemingly disillusioned by his treatment during the election, Wurzelbacher continued: “You know, fame is fleeting, leaves you hungry, leaves you cold, leaves you tired. Fortune never comes with it.

Why do I get the feeling that he’s miffed that McCain didn’t send Cindy’s jet to fly him out to Phoenix?  I think Joe protests too much — he can start getting paid to make promotional appearances and possibly become a reality show contestant?  Or get his own show on HGTV?

Photo analysis of the night Barack Obama became the POTUS.  There’s a shot of Barack and Michelle that is enthralling. [BAGnewsNotes]

Someone else thinks Palin thought she was going to be the VP elect, too! [Jack & Jill Politics]

And she wanted to give her own concession speech too! [NY Times]

As far as I’m concerned, the GOP deserves to be in the wilderness for A LONG TIME! [CNN]

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Randomness…

August 13, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Cokie Roberts, what is wrong with you? Hawaii is where Obama’s sister and grandmother live ….what is so wrong with him choosing to visit family on his vacation? Isn’t that what you sometimes do when you take your pole stuck in your ass on vacation? [Oliver Willis, HuffPo]

I don’t care about Britney Spears. Don’t care if she ever puts out another album. Don’t care if she appears in another TV show or movie. Don’t care about anything she will ever do except raise her kids not to be celebrity toolage.

Why do men who are shorter than me think that I want to get with them? I don’t. Seriously. And I’m not being a heightist for saying so!

What if this were a TV show: Vapid, self-absorbed famous for blogging poster children Julia Allison and Emily Gould at a dinner party with Chelsea Clinton, human rights activist Samantha Powers and green activist Majora Carter? And then it could rotate from there with Constance Rice, Margaret Thatcher and Michelle Obama. Furthermore on JA and EG: Tallulah loves frivolity in her celebrity fluff. But JA and EG don’t seem to have any of that … their life mission comes across as a desperate, sweaty grubby grab at fame while mocking it and doing a minimal job of being entertaining. Who needs it?

Categories: Music · Television
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