- Oct 2, 2011
- 27,294
- 15,002
malone is a sucka for abandoning his kid
Thank you. THAT is a sell out.
Everything else is opinion, but fact is, you turn your back on your family, your kids? Thats selling out, the definition of ***** made.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
malone is a sucka for abandoning his kid
"I don't believe in quotas. America was founded on a philosophy of individual rights, not group rights." Clarence Thomaswhy is he a sell out?
That's all fine and dandy, but BET isn't owned by a black person, and hasn't been for some time. Does that make Robert Johnson the sell out. I admit I'm a little more lenient when it comes to media, because I tend to lean towards the belief that we get what we ask for.Let's forget about the obvious targets for a minute (agree or not) and focus on the not so obvious ones. But before we do, we should be clear on what it means to sell out. I think its easy to define. It means intentionally causing damage to the health (mental and physical), well-being or reputation of the people who share your culture and history for your own benefit. In extreme cases, it means abandoning your culture completely for financial and social gains from the masses.
I haven't watched tv for months, but the last time I did, I couldn't sit through more than a few minutes of BET. Maybe it has changed since I last watched, but most of what was on that station (music included) did nothing to advance the state of the average black viewer. Sure they threw in an "educational" show here or there, but it was mostly garbage television that kept black folks chasing an image that does us no good. Most of the music videos and the subject matter of the music itself revolved around violence and hustling at the detriment of the communities the entertainers were from. I can't say much about the sitcoms because I didn't watch those, but the award shows and some of the religious crap they aired was embarrassing and difficult to watch.
For anyone who knows nothing about black culture but goes to BET for their dose of black reality, they're mostly going to see a bunch of cut throat buffoonery with some half-hearted "socially aware special" sprinkled over it that does nothing to reverse the effects of the majority of its programming. I guess I shouldn't forget VH1 and its shows that make black women look like a bunch of gold-digging skanks and black men look like caricatures of thugs. The casts of those shows are mostly sell outs. Most rappers are sell outs. A lot of these black preachers are sell outs. There's nothing wrong with being hood, but if they make it out and tell the people they're rapping to, to do what they left behind to pursue a career in art, knowing damn well the only drugs they touch are the ones they consume, they're sell outs.
That's all fine and dandy, but BET isn't owned by a black person, and hasn't been for some time. Does that make Robert Johnson the sell out. I admit I'm a little more lenient when it comes to media, because I tend to lean towards the belief that we get what we ask for.
By your definition Louis Farrakhan comes to mind. He killed one of our people's greatest leaders Ever, all while making millions of dollars, and helping Nobody, oh and all the while blaming Jews for every one of our problems.
By your own definition of selling out, race has everything to do with it." Black folks is pretty vague" just like your post.What does the race of BET's owners have to do with the black folks on there who are selling negative images and glorifying lifestyles that they no longer or worse yet, never lived?
Did you read my post or skim it?
Nooo way. If anything, he was a person who didn't sell out. I would have never thought someone was going to try to bring weed mainstream like that, and be successful at it.
Stay out of the showers......![]()
you're just mad because you're poor
Must be a 90's baby...
Wiz wasn't the first person to bring weed to the mainstream...far from the first.
@ "bringing weed mainstream"Am I bored ? You seem to not read your own posts, which entertainers? Which negative images? The only thing you have been clear on is your def of selling out, which I agree with.My post was vague? I just reread it and no, I specifically called out the entertainers portraying negative images, not the owners of BET and VH1. Do you need a list of of every example to see my point or are you being argumentative because you're bored?
QFT!So then why aren't rappers considered sellouts considering many of them rap about violence and drug selling to make a dollar? But no, we want to point at tyler perry.
What's wrong with pointing fingers at Tyler Perry? Exploiting your own people is selling out. Most musicians don't control their image. The white owned record label molds them to their liking and then pushes that onto the public.So then why aren't rappers considered sellouts considering many of them rap about violence and drug selling to make a dollar? But no, we want to point at tyler perry.
I don't believe in quotas either and he's right, but quotas are a necessary evil due to the sins committed by previous generations. If it wasn't for Affirmative Action and laws like the Americans w/ Disabilities Act groups like women, blacks, latinos, Native Americans, handicaps and veterans just to name a few would be on the outside looking in."I don't believe in quotas. America was founded on a philosophy of individual rights, not group rights." Clarence Thomas
![]()
Well said hank, I never saw that article, good read. I would also agree that Thomas is a lot of things, sellout is one noun that doesnt come to mind.
Taken from the article...How is Clarence Thomas a sell-out? By all accounts, he's been a staunch Constitutionalist and has been out of step with mainstream black consciousness since his college days. I recently listened to a Leonard Lopate podcast about a special program for black men at the College of Holy Cross which Thomas participated in and there were anecdotes about Thomas' divisive positions. Now you might consider him ridiculously wrong about many issues, as do I, but I can't consider him a sell-out.
Here's a lengthy profile of Thomas in The New Yorker last year: http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/08/29/110829fa_fact_toobin?currentPage=all