500 Female Emcees: Meet Hime Holding Down Tradition

HimeHime hails from Japan and connected to famed Hip Hop icon DJ Honda.  She released her debut solo album Hime hajime in October 2003 which was notable because of  its use of Japanese cultural themes, including tanka metre and sampling of kabuki and bunraku narrations.

She has also been given props because her work  often touches upon themes of female empowerment. Hime  describes herself as the voice of the ‘Japanese doll. One example of the incorporation of traditional Japanese poetry and contemporary hip-hop can be heard in the song Tateba shakuyaku or Standing, she’s a peony

“this sound,
giri and ninjo
the spirit of harmony
will the surprise attack
come from the peony”

In the chorus of the song, as seen above, Hime writes in a thirty-one-syllable tanka

Hime’s embrace of the ancient form of poetry in her rapping, as well as her frequent use of Japanese cliche’s and traditional rhythms, show a trend in some Japanese hip hop to localize at the same time that they are embracing a global musical form. “Hime’s use of Japanese cliches is provocative in a club setting where the latest slang from MTV tends to be most valued”. Yet she also uses rhyme, something imported, since Japanese does not have much of a structure for rhyming.

At the same time that she is embracing aspects of Japanese culture into her hip hop, we also see how Hime presents herself. Often in her videos she is dressed in ways that are clearly taken from American, and specifically hip hop, culture as was the case when she appeared on the 2008 BET Hip Hop Awards.

Hime’s songs “Black List”, “Himehajime 2006”, “In The Rain”,and “Fuyajo” are featured in The Fast and the Furious video games.

Hime Ukina’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUcQUBnzpjk

Hime ‘In the Rain’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFp9pl5EE5Q

Hime ‘Blacklist’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2aWRzqZCbXg

500 Female Emcees: Meet Brier, Japan’s Strong Woman

BrierBrier hails from Japan and has one of the dopest flows around. Its been hard finding a lot of information on her and her careers. What we do know is that she released an album called ‘Colors’ a couple of years ago that was banging.

Prior to that she did a few tracks with a Peruvian born artist named El Nando. Many were anticipating her to drop some more music, but  she kinda dropped out of sight. It’s been hard to both track down the album except for a few cuts that were uploaded on Youtube as well as any in depth articles on her…

Brier ‘Strawberry Punch”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=24ncuaAHH14

Brier ‘Strong Woman’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BK18P1k595M

Brier ‘Street Cude’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wm36eK6ED4M

Brier ‘Happy Birthday’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O9JOSpdo_QY

500 Females Emcees: Meet Lecca from Japan

LeccaOne of Japan’s most popular artists is Lecca. She’s half Latina-half Japanese Jamaican inspired, reggae, hip hop, dance hall singer, songwriter. She’s considered a major ambassador for reggae inspired music in Japan.

She cut her teeth and got what she described as ‘warrior’ training in 2002 when she graduated from college and decided to spend close to a year living in New York and Toronto so she could attend open mics, work with local artists and be a part of showcases. The experience was invaluable.

When she returned to Japan in 2003 she joined she joined a Hip Hop group Legnis.  A year later she left and hooked up with popular reggae performer Pang where she found her groove and calling.It wasn’t long before Lecca went solo and the rest they say is history.

Her indie debut, Recca (2005), featuring guest appearance by Pang, was delivered in 2005; it was acclaimed as one of the best reggae/ska releases of the year, allowing Lecca to play festivals along with the greats like Gregory Issacs and Marcia Griffiths and bringing her a contract with Cutting Edge, where she debuted in 2006 with the EP Dreamer, followed by Urban Pirates (2006), which charted at number 57.

Her most recent album ‘Zoolander‘ came out in 2012 and is still making noise all over the world. Stand out songs include ‘Golden Lion‘ and ‘Clown Love

 

Lecca ‘Sky is the Limit’ w/ Rhymester

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jtnpBgKc1Y

Lecca ‘Lets Begin’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0EIMU-h_8oE

Lecca ‘Start Line’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B36VveqGqzU

Lecca ‘Golden Lion’

When White Happens: Gentrification, Drug Dealing, and the American Dream

Was film maker Spike Lee right or wrong when he addressed the issue of gentrification? Below is another insightful article from authors, educators and racial justice activists J-Love Calderon and David Leonard that tackle this question and shows how gentrification manifests itself with those entrusted to protect and serve and their long standing policies… -Davey D-

Spike_Lee_(2012)Intended to be a celebration of Black History Month, Spike Lee reminded an audience at Pratt Institute that February was not simply about speeches and celebration but demanding justice and accountability, spotlighting white privilege and persistent forms of violence.  Asked about the “other side of gentrification,” Lee scoffed at the premise, making clear that racism sits on all sides:

 I grew up here in Fort Greene. I grew up here in New York. It’s changed. And why does it take an influx of white New Yorkers in the South Bronx, in Harlem, in Bed Stuy, in Crown Heights for the facilities to get better? The garbage wasn’t picked up every motherfuckin’ day when I was living in 165 Washington Park. P.S. 20 was not good. P.S. 11. Rothschild 294. The police weren’t around. When you see white mothers pushing their babies in strollers, three o’clock in the morning on 125th Street, that must tell you something …. I mean, they just move in the neighborhood. You just can’t come in the neighborhood. I’m for democracy and letting everybody live but you gotta have some respect. You can’t just come in when people have a culture that’s been laid down for generations and you come in and now shit gotta change because you’re here? Get the fuck outta here. Can’t do that!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKDtVF8aog8

John Mcwhorter

John Mcwhorter

While many dismissed his “rant” as “self-serving,” “hypocritical, or “Spike being Spike,” John McWhorter took the opportunity to celebrate gentrification (“a once sketchy neighborhood is now quiet and pleasant”) and to castigate Lee as a racist.  To McWhorter, Lee’s analysis and criticism of gentrification has nothing to do with the displacement of Black and Brown families, the eradication of communities of color, or white privilege, but Lee’s own bigotry toward whites.

“What’s really bothering Lee is that he doesn’t like seeing his old neighborhood full of white people,” noted the associate professor of English and comparative literature at Columbia University.  “Or whitey, perhaps. Just as ‘thug’ is a new way of saying the N-word in polite society, Lee’s ‘m—–f—– hipster’ epithet for the new whites of Fort Greene is a sneaky way of saying ‘honkey.’

Lee is less a social analyst than a reincarnation of George Jefferson with his open hostility to whites.” So much wrong here; so little time.  But let us say that whereas the commonplace stereotype of Black youth as “thugs,” as “criminals,” as “dangerous,” as “destructive” and “toxic” leads to racial profiling, mass incarceration, and #every28hours, being “m—–f—– hipster” leads to a new brownstone, a new yoga shop, and a triple shot latte.  It leads to more of the same: privilege and opportunity.

El Puente muralBut is the fight against gentrification a lost cause? Some say yes, some say no, and  others are not pausing to engage in that conversation because they are busy being in action.  El Puente is  a 30-year old human rights organization sitting in the heart of Williamsburg Brooklyn, founded by Luis Garden Acosta, with Gino Maldonado and Frances Lucerna.  Their latest initiative is their response. “The Green Light District seeks to flip the disempowerment of gentrification by putting long-time invested residents at the forefront of change in their communities,” explains Anusha Venkataraman, Director of the Green Light District.

“The Southside of Williamsburg has changed radically but is still 46% Latino, but the narrative of ‘gentrification’ leaves out the stories and lived experiences of folks that have been here, invested in this community, and are still here. Through arts and cultural programming in public spaces, such as our annual ¡WEPA! Festival for Performing Arts, our organizing work with artists, and even through community gardening, we collectively amplify the visibility of the Latino community and culture. We also create safe spaces for newer residents to build bridges, relationships, and common ground with those there before them.” This organization with indigenous leadership continues to help sustain and empower the local community residents against the tide threatening to uproot their culture, contribution, and home.

Whiteness not only allows “hipsters” to claim space, transforming communities, but to be immune from the very same forces that have enacting violence for decades: the police.  We need to look no further than a recent piece on The Huffington Post to understand the privileges resulting from gentrification and whiteness.

I spent a day deliverying weedIn “I Spent A Day Delivering Weed In New York City,” Hunter Stuart celebrates the gentrification of Williamsburg and its drug market.  Chronicling the story of “Abe” and “Brian,” Stuart reminds readers over and over again that these are not your “normal” drug dealers: they drink “French-pressed coffee,” they wear suits, deliver drugs on bikes, and are “exceedingly well-mannered.”  Whereas others enter the drug trade because of  – a) single mothers; b) poverty; c) pathological values; d) all of the above – Abe and Brian took up drug dealing (the article actually calls them “couriers”) because they are “risk takers.”

As with their non-drug dealing counterparts that have gentrified neighborhoods throughout New York and communities across the nation, Abe and Brian are imagined as “good” since they are different type of drug dealers.  They are changing the way marijuana is delivered and the stigmas associated drug use/dealing.  According to Abe, they want to show, “That you can be a successful, active, social person, that you can affect people positively and that you can still smoke weed.” They are different.  “Even though what we do is illegal, we’re both morally sound people.  We try to do right by people. That’s what I always tell my mom, anyway.”

Not surprisingly, Abe and Brian (and all their employees) have built up their business without any consequences.  Noting how “things have gone smoothly” and that “no one’s been robbed, and no one’s been arrested,” Stuart makes clear that they can deal drugs without any of the associated the problems that seem to follow others.

“Working for our former boss, I saw around a dozen people get arrested,” Abe says, referring to the three years he and Brian spent as couriers for another New York City cannabis delivery service. “I don’t think we’re going to have that problem. We screen our riders and our clients really well.”

NYPD Weed ArrestsYes, the reason why nobody been arrested or charged with crimes that could lead to up to 15 years is about “screening.”  Not whiteness; not white privilege; not institutional racism, not the ways that racial profiling, and stop and frisk contribute to a racially stratified war on drugs.

As Jessie Daniels notes, New York is the “marijuana arrest capital of the world.” Notwithstanding an almost 40-year old decriminalization law, NY police arrested 50,000 people in 2011 for “possessing or burning marijuana in public view.”  Neither Abe or Brian could be counted amongst those arrested, a fact not unexpected given that 84% of those arrested were people of color.

From 2002-2012, the NYPD arrested about 440,000 people; 85 percent were Black and Latino. Whiteness has its privileges. The Huffington Post profile, not surprisingly, never acknowledges this context or Abe and Brian’s whiteness; the message is that their intelligence and cultural differences rather than racism and white privilege that has made their “business” successful.

Their ability to carry and sell with relative impunity reflects the privileges of whiteness; their ability to be reimagined as “moral” drug dealers, as “righteous” and ultimately beneficial to this gentrified community, tells us all we need to know about whiteness in America.  Their ability to move into neighborhoods like Williamsburg, displacing families and communities of color, generating wealth that they will pass onto the next generation, highlights the value of whiteness; their ability to “get rich with limited possibility of dying” is the personification of whiteness.

Michelle Alexander

Michelle Alexander

Speaking about the shifting economic landscape of drugs in America, Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow, notes, “After 40 years of impoverished black men getting prison time for selling weed, white men are planning to get rich doing the same things,” she added. “So that’s why I think we have to start talking about reparations for the war on drugs. How do we repair the harms caused?”

White privilege, gentrification, the media choosing who to admire and who to criminalize are all part of the ways that white supremacy plays out in our day to day.  It’s time to speak up and act, to demand justice and opportunities for all people. We must keep the fight up until Black and Brown life is truly respected and treated as valuable and important as white peoples lives. In the end, this will be the ultimate victory.

Stand up for what’s right

JLove and David

See, Judge, ACT for Racial Justice:

Speak Up

Speak Up to Media: the Huff Post article we referenced is a perfect opportunity for you to point out the obvious mis-step not naming white privilege. Talk about it, blog about it, help people see why white privilege and racism must be named for us to create more justice.

Spike Lee: whether you like him or not, the media circus had a great time calling him out because he spoke the truth about race and gentrification with no sugar coatin’! People of color are often demonized when speaking out about racism. Step up your game and support the truth of the argument! Don’t let Black and Brown people become scapegoats to the larger system of racism.

Knowledge

Check out El Puente’s groundbreaking Green Light District initiative in response to rampant gentrification in Brooklyn.  Donate to them! Spread the word of how this powerful community is proactively working toward sustainability of the residents of color in Williamsburg. http://elpuente.us/content/green-light-district-overview

Action Ideas from El Puente’s GLD Team

  • Get involved in community institutions, and recognize and get to know the culture and community that was there before you arrived
  • Get comfortable with discomfort! Building community with those from different backgrounds and life experiences isn’t easy, but it is important. Tasks the risk of stepping outside your comfort zone, talk to your neighbors, and LISTEN!
  • Invest in public spaces, like community gardens, where community building can happen
  • Invest time and energy in your neighborhood! It builds collective ownership

Join—Calling white folks who want to stand up for racial justice!

Showing Up For Racial Justice (SURJ is a national network of groups and individuals organizing white people for racial justice. Become a member and get involved directly: http://www.showingupforracialjustice.org/

About the Authors

David Leonard is a professor in the Department of Critical Culture, Gender, and Race at Washington State University. http://drdavidjleonard.com/

JLove Calderon is a conscious media maker, social entrepreneur, and author of five books, including her latest: Occupying Privilege; Conversations on Love, Race, and Liberation. www.jlovecalderon.com

Who Within LAPD Killed the Notorious BIG? That’s what we should asking today?

Screen Shot 2014-03-09 at 8.46.01 AMWho within LAPD shot and killed Notorious BIG is a question not only all of us should be asking on the ‘anniversary’ of his death March 9th 1997… But its also something with all the money, fame and political access folks have in 2014, we should be aggressively pursuing. Heck his  boy Jay-Z is buddies with the most powerful man on the planet, President Obama. At the very least why not ask him to launch some sort of special investigation into his death.

When Cynthia McKinney was in Congress she held several hearings on the death of 2Pac and put forth her own investigation on modern day Cointel-Pro. She even proposed a bill to look into his death. That was years ago and she came up with a lot of disturbing info..With all that we know now and and theoretically who folks know, the proverbial envelop should be pushed.

At the same time we all should be seeking to find out who really knocked down those twin towers sitting in the background of this picture of Notorious BIG.  We know it wasn’t some fools running around with box cutters…

Anyway the ‘Brooklyn Way‘ is such that folks should not let any of these unsolved atrocities slide. We should not get comfortable with unsolved Black deaths even if its become a profitable industry onto itself for some within the music biz.  Perhaps in vigorously pursing the circumstances surrounding his death, it’ll move the ball of justice a bit closer for all those other deaths of Black and Brown folks at the hands of a corrupt state that has never been held accountable…

Lastly we need to find out who killed ‘Do or Die Bed-Stuy‘, Biggie’s home. The man who many deemed the King of NY old stomping grounds  is over run with hipsters who probably could care less about his legacy much less who killed him…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GFylz0zo2qg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xixhs9hvGeU

 

The Killing of Unarmed Louis Rodriguez by Oklahoma Police is Beyond Troubling

Oklahoma PoliceBy now folks know of this story out of Moore, Oklahoma where a father Louis Rodriguez was killed in front of his wife and daughter.  I hesitated in posting it because at this point in time its one of far too many… It’s at a point where its apparent the police who commit these acts of terrorism get off and relish the notoriety…At the same time repeatedly showing such brutal acts is not empowering.. It fosters a climate of fear, which is what the police want…

With that being said, its important that those who choose to read and watch the video be thinking about solutions to this epidemic… One must be cautious not to allow our brains to slip into the realm where such videos become a macabre form of entertainment. Nor can it be something we talk about in such a way to indicate how rough things are and one is using such incidents as a way to brag about how you are navigating its effects…

Whats the solutions? whats the practical solutions? We already know to film.. People are doing that.. This incident below was caught on tape? Take the cops to trial??

First we have to be assured the prosecutors who work the police everyday and depend upon them, hence forming strong bonds centered around enforcing the law, will break that bond and dedicate the full force of their office and bring every resource to press charges and prosecute them in court..

Up to now we’ve seen prosecutors throw away cases for non cops shooting Black people.. ie the high profile Florida cases involving  George Zimmerman and Michael Dunn..where state attorney Angela Corey and her office did a terrible job.

Santa Rosa DA Jill Ravitch

Santa Rosa DA Jill Ravitch

We see prosecutors who look like us,  refuse to appoint special prosecutors even when there are clear conflicts of interests…That would be the refusal of Kamala Harris,  a Black woman who won’t remove the prosecutor in Santa Rosa, Jill Ravitch over the police killing 13-year-old Andy Lopez.

Ravitch had 90 days to press charges on the sheriff deputy Erick Gelhaus who shot unarmed Andy last November..She has steadfastly stalled  with many organizers pointing out her extreme bias.  Ravitch is running for re-election and has taken quite a bit of money from the sheriff department that is pushing for her to be re-elected. Ravitch in turn has been supportive of the sheriff’s re-election bid.  Harris has not removed the DA to ensure a clean slate and unbiased justice pool..

That leads us to the question of what other solutions can be put forth if the justice system is not working? Its been suggested that communities hold their own public tribunals, where they issue subpoenas for those being charged to show up. Such activities may good for helping heal the community even if penalties can’t be ‘legally’ forced. However it does put the issue on record. Important information can be shared and ideally it’ll inform folks in the community as to what steps to take legislatively and electorally.

Others have suggested that communities return to armed patrols and basically police the police..That requires a committed body of folks and serious discipline. It might be helpful for folks to consult with groups if any already doing similar actions.

Others have suggested that folks push to have laws on the books that allow one to stand their ground against police which is what they basically have in Indiana. It might be a good idea for folks to look at that law, see whats practical and start the process of pushing this..

Oklahoma Cops 2Personally I have long advocated that there should be s special office and prosecutor that is not connected to local law enforcement that only deals with the wrong doings of  police and elected officials. How that office is established needs to be worked out. Is it an elected position which leaves it vulnerable to big money interests? Is it appointed by an elected official which means whoever is appointed will be the result of political leanings?  In any case we should be thinking long and hard about how to eradicate these types of brutal incidents.

For those unfamiliar, here’s the 4-11… A family went to a movie, father, mother daughter.. The mother and daughter got into an argument, the mother slapped the daughter the father went to calm down his wife. The police were called for a domestic violence disturbance and assumed Louis Rodriguez  was the one who did it.. He was pepper sprayed  as 5 police piled upon him and was killed. While they were killing him, the wife was calling for them to stop and even asked if he was still alive.. Police are on paid leave..

As noted earlier with the current climate, even with video and scores of witnesses, they are unlikely to vigorously prosecuted much less convicted.. There are simply too many people in America who wind up sitting on juries who can’t fathom the police doing anything wrong..This can’t be allowed to be swept under the rug. There has to be push back on all levels even as we know the justice system is biased. How do we help this family heal? How do we heal the community from such trauma?

Below is the raw video as well as a link to the story as reported to CNN

http://www.cnn.com/2014/02/26/justice/oklahoma-arrest-death-video/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTKrYEX-9Fs

500 Female Emcees: Meet Brooke Candy Exotic Dance Turned Rapper

Brook Candy (Oxnard, Ca)

Brook Candy (Oxnard, Ca)

Brooke Candy is from Oxnard California and  is best known for co-starring in the music video for Grimes‘ hit single “Genesis.” She released a music video for her song “Das Me” in October 2012. Her second video, “Everybody Does,” was released on January 3, 2013. Her third video for “I Wanna Fuck Right Now” was released on February 11, 2013. Her debut album, an EP titled Freaky Princess, came out in 2013 and she appeared as guest vocalist on the lead single of Kylie Minogue‘s twelfth studio album..

Candy’s father is the CFO of Hustler magazine and CEO of Hustler Casino, and Candy herself has been employed by Hustler as a mannequin stylist. Her industry ties helped her snag an internship with reality star and stylist Rachel Zoe. Before becoming a pop singer, Candy worked in a strip-club called Seventh Veil for eight months. Although she has been approached by four major record labels, she has not signed a recording contract. Best known for sporting metallic bikinis and pink cornrows, Candy has been compared to Gwen Stefani, Lady Gaga, and Nicki Minaj. Candy cites transhumanism and superhero-culture as the inspiration for her metallic costumes.

Reach her on twitter at http://www.twitter.com/brookecandy

Check out our master list of 500 Female Emcees You Should Know

Brooke CandyDas Me’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHULK1M-P08

Brooke Candy ‘Everybody Does’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xrfvIr7cfbY

Brooke Candy ‘Dumb’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YP9vjglx8sE

Brooke Candy ‘I Wanna F–K’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tOx96K141SU

500 Female Emcees: Meet Apani B Fly from Queens, NY

Apani B Fly-Queens NY

Apani B Fly-Queens NY

Apani aka Apani B-Fly Emcee, often referred to as Apani B. is a revered hip hop artist, author, entrepreneur and activist from Hollis, Queens in NYC. She is a founding member of the hip hop super-group Polyrhythm Addicts, along with fellow members DJ Spinna, Mr. Complex, and Shabaam Sahdeeq. Apani emerged during the golden era of the 90’s to be considered a pioneer of New York City’s underground hip hop scene.
Apani has toured internationally and been embraced by a loyal and ever growing fanbase as new listeners discover and relate to her music. She is singularly set apart by her ability to use her vocals to confidently project a large presence throughout every performance with her agile delivery as well as inspire with socially conscious themes while managing to not forget to entertain the listener.

Now although a busy and dedicated mom of 3 beautiful and talented children, Apani continues to remain relevant as an important figure on the indie music scene. Apani continues to reach new levels artistically, always making new music and collaborating with varied artists, working as a makeup artist for several high end brands, expressing creativity through fashion, authoring books, as well as producing live shows and events through her company 2040MM.

Reach her on twitter at http:/www.twitter.com/apaniclassic

Check out our Master list of 500 Female Emcees Everyone Should Know

Apani B-Fly Estragen

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDc-QaS3XCw

Apani B-FlyA Million Stories

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uiE0WPiYRsk

Apani B-FlyLet Me Know

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdT3d5So6Q8

HKR: A Tribute to the Black Arts Movement-The Battle Over Ethnic Studies

Amiri Baraka and Marvin XHard Knock Radio 02-25-2014: We had insightful discussions on HKR about the Black Arts Movement and the fight to keep Ethnic Studies alive and well in California..We also talk about the importance of Bone Marrow and its impact on communities of colors.

We start off by speaking with  Marvin X who was co-founder of Black Arts Movement on the West Coast. He breaks down the details  about the upcoming Black Arts Conference at UC Merced and the impact the Black Arts Movement had American culture and the academia.

Marvin X  noted that the conference initially was designed to talk about ways to bring the history of  BAM to the masses for clearer understanding. The late Amiri Baraka was scheduled to be a major part of the conference. Sadly with his passing last month, the conference this weekend will be more of tribute. During our interview, Marvin talked about his long friendship with Baraka which spans 47 years.

He also talked about how the conference will pay particular attention to the important role women played in the Black Arts Movement as well as ways in which the Hip Hop generation can better take up BAM’s mission 

you can get more info on the conference by clicking the link below:

Black Arts Movement Conference Program Highlights, UC Merced, Feb 28 thru March 2, 2014
http://blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com/2014/02/black-arts-movement-conference-program.html

Ethnic studies In our second segment, we speak with Professor Melina Abdullah, who is in the Pan-African department of CSULA.. We talked about the current fight to keep Ethnic Studies as a requirement at CSULA and ways to keep it alive and well at all colleges in California.

Abdullah noted that there is a trend all over the country to re-write history books and downplay the important contributions of People of Color. Many feel its a harsh reaction to the Blackening and Browning of America by those who are determined to hold on to power at all costs.

We also talked about the fact that there are attempts to marginalize ethnic studies and make it seem the classes taught within it aren’t credible. Many of the folks pushing that narrative are vying for power and feel threatened by peers in the academy challenging and dismantling long-held erroneous theories and notions ..

We conclude our show by speaking with Carol Gillespie of the Asian American Donar Program about the importance of folks donating to the program, the impact Bone Marrow donation has on Communities of color and mixed race kids. We talk about their upcoming fundraising comedy show

Guests: Marvin X, Professor Melina Abdullah and Carol Gillespie

HKR-02-25-14 Black Arts Movement-Save Ethnic Studies-Bone Marrow

 

HKR: Uganda’s Harsh Anti-Gay Law| A Conversation w/ Hip Hop Pioneer Afrika Bambaataa

afrika-bambaataa-pointHard Knock Radio 02-27-2014: Anita Johnson talks with guest Edward Wycoff Williams about Uganda’s harsh Anti-Homosexual Law. They talk about its short and long term implications.. The culture that led to it being passed and the role that US Evangelicals played in bringing forth this law..

Here’s some additional food for thought about that law ..It’s a commentary from Ana Kasparian of the Young Turks

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dI30z5X-Oqs&feature=youtu.be

Later on in the show Davey D talks with Hip Hop Legend and pioneer Afrika Bambaataa about a number of topics ranging from the work he did to raise money for Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress during the time Apartheid was in effect, to his current love for Trap music.

Guests: Edward Wycoff Williams and Afrika Bambaataa

HKR-02-27-14 Uganda Anti-Gay Laws-Afrika Bambaataa