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Tuesday, March 8, 2011

I'm going to get into trouble for this...

Symbol of the planet and Roman goddess Venus, ... 
A facebook conversation today. And before y'all start trippin', I just want to say. I know, I know! So step off!


Kitty Emsley Apparently it's International Woman's Day. So where's my woman?

Anton Marshall You're obviously not an International Woman. You're a Local Woman.

Kitty Emsley Ooooooh!

Anton Marshall Besides... it's facade to placate y'all. Y'all be distracted by having a day named for y'all. When actually all it really does is perpetuate yo sense of inequality by highlighting it. Y'all need one WHOLE day fo yo issues, apparently! ONE WHOLE DAY! Jim Crow be laffin his ass off alla way de bank now. - (Obviously I've had coffee today. Igno mah ass.)


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Thursday, March 3, 2011

And now I'm fighting about coloureds, too

Trevor Manuel, Development Committee Chairman,...Image via Wikipedia
I'm not normally drawn into online debates. And especially stupid ones like the fallout from the Manyi/Manuel war.

But an op-ed on Thoughtleader got to my nerve centre for some reason.

I think partly because the writer of said Op-ed is currently a post-grad student at my old University. I'm strangely proud of that old building... we learned some good radical leftist liberal stuff there.

Anyway, two particular statements jumped out at me - and got my hair in a twist:

Kim Smith writes:

"In my view, there is a problem with coloured people. The problem perhaps with coloured people is summed up in Minister Trevor Manuel’s letter. On the one hand, he says something to the effect of the idea of “coloured” being a construct of apartheid and that he doesn’t subscribe to it, but on the other hand, and I mean let’s be honest, the reason he’s writing is because he’s coloured! That in itself is a kind of hypocrisy almost, one which translates into a contradiction protruding into the very existence of coloured ethnicity."

And further...

“Coloured people don’t know who they are. Those who say “we are African” or “black” are delusional: coloured men don’t go into the bush to be circumcised. The point is, black people in South Africa have their own culture, separate to the culture of coloured people. And you know what? There is nothing wrong with that.”

Nigger can't let that shit ride... So, I responded - somewhat emotionally and hysterically, it's probably fair to say - in the comments section thus:


“I think there are a number of presumptions in your column, but I will just address two. You say that Manuel responded because he is coloured. I think your presumption is problematic.
It could well be that Manuel responded in the way that he did because he found the offending statement to be dangerously fascist. We are a society built upon the values of a Freedom Charter, which such statements directly oppose.

As for coloured men not being black, or African, or Martian... you offend in the same way that Kuli does when she declares what coloured women ARE, by declaring what "coloured" men are NOT. THAT is the construct... that you make up rules by which you expect others to be measured.”


(Sigh...) There it is... drawn into a an unwinnable argument. So easy. So easy...
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Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Kuli and the blou fish

My new T-shirt idea: A drugged out fish , with its two front teeth missing, and hair rollers in its dorsal fin. Underneath the phrase "Jou Ma Se Kuli".

My colleague Vumani says "Don't wear that in Durban". And just like that it's over.

I might have thought about a long an rational response to the whole debacle – from the article in question (which has now been erased from existence - or at least the web - forevah), to the overreaction from the public and even Ferial Haffajee (for whom I have big respect all round).

But to be honest, I couldn't be bothered. So I think I'll just let iAfrica columnist Rebekah Kendal say it for me:

"A discerning editor should have rejected the piece outright because it was an awful piece of writing. Any editor with a modicum of sense would also have seriously debated publishing an article which offends simply for the sake of offence. This is not a hard-hitting piece of journalism on which to stake the reputation of your publication. In the long run, it is not even worth the easy hits the hype around the piece will generate."

Right, where's my  fish?


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Tuesday, March 1, 2011

What's the Frequency, Gaga?

Michael StipeCover of Michael Stipe

When I was coming up in the Entertainment writer arena, I was taught that coverage of an industry or topic should be balanced, topical and fair. We still (mostly) strive for that principle in News, after all. But Entertainment – and in my case Music - has evolved into an altogether different animal over the years.

Two music stories grabbed opposite sides of the Channel24 Music desk this morning, and in doing so confirmed the evolved nature of "Music" as a public concept.

The first was the exclusive streaming of the newly completed R.E.M. album on Channel24. The second was the release of Lady Gaga's new music video, which generated a lot of buzz around my colleagues' sides of the table, Twitter, the solar system and possibly the Helix Nebula.

Call me a journalistic dinosaur, but I find the idea that Lady Gaga's video release should receive more "airtime" than any other "news" a bit disappointing. Of course it's the nature of what we do now, but it stings a little every time another Top Forty artist gets to pass of some expensive PR as "News".

You could of course say that the R.E.M. stream is pretty much the same thing, but I submit a few issues in comparing the two:

One: There was no question as to which story would lead. Lady Gaga is the highest ranked money earner in the market. R.E.M. is a respected but ultimately almost irrelevant commercial property compared to the machine that is Gaga – at least, according to the bean counters.

Two: It is implied that Gaga's story is more relevant to the "Music" content reader. Whereas the statement (it's not a question) "Who cares about R.E.M.?" will automatically appear in the minds of content editors everywhere when confronted with the same choice.

Three: Gaga's been on the frontpage of every major publication every week for nearly two years non-stop. Do you know what Michael Stipe or Peter Buck might look like today?

But of course all of this is built atop a false premise – that people are only interested in what is new and exciting and "hot right now". The truth is that the market is pretty much told what is "hot right now", because the only thing you get to see and hear with any regularity is the Top Forty's expensive PR. It's a vicious cycle that threatens a lot more than bank balances.

I guess my point is this: On a socio-political level, it is considered critical that national history is learned, remembered, noted, analysed, dissected, reviewed, and carried forth ("balanced", "topical", "fair"). "You don't know where you're going unless you know where you come from" is a common idea associated with this.

Why then is Music reportage – and Entertainment on a broader scale – so easily curtailed as to only service what is currently sellable en masse? Gaga, Katy Perry, Rihanna, etc...

Isn't it perhaps tantamount to keeping the population stupid so that it will just vote for you (and your product) again?


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