Showing posts with label black media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black media. Show all posts

Monday, January 5, 2009

Dr Boyce Media Tour Schedule - January 09



Hey peeps,

I will be out and about discussing my new "Financial Lipo" program, encouraging all Americans to engage in acts of financial fitness to begin the New Year. The goal is to help Americans rethink their relationship with money, learn strategies for negotiating with bill collectors and to embrace the underlying concepts of financial literacy. I will also be discussing my new television pilot called "Ying Yang: Two Sides to Every Story" co-hosted with Dara Cook from BET/MTV. The pilot episodes will feature Dr. Marc Lamont Hill (Fox News), comedian Tracy Morgan (30 Rock) and popular celebrity gossip columnist Lady Drama (AllHipHop.com and The Wendy Williams Show). We will discuss issues related to diversity within academia, and advocate for the labor rights of college athletes (whose families should be compensated for the billions being earned by the NCAA every year).

For more information, please visit http://www.boycewatkins.com. The media tour schedule is below:
- The Ed Lover Show - Power 105.1 - 1/8/09 at 8:10 am.
- The Morning Show with Mike and Juliet - Nationally Syndicated Television at 9 am on 1/9/09 - The Wendy Williams Experience - 1/9/09 at 4 pm EST
- Hot 97 Street Soldiers - NYC - Sunday night at 9 pm
- The Steve Harvey Morning Show - TBA
- Essence Magazine - Smart Money Moves for 2009 - February, 2009

Respect,
Dr. Boyce
www.BoyceWatkins.com

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Fox News Doctors Photos: Now I know Why I Looked So Bad

by Dr. Boyce Watkins
www.BoyceWatkins.net


Here is a before/after picture of what Fox News did to one of the people it that it attempted to villify on its network. Notice that the first image looks normal, and the second one looks like the guy should be starring in a horror film.

I know this first hand, since that is what I speculated Fox did to me. Last month, when Bill O'Reilly spent 5 days calling for me to be fired from Syracuse University (fortunately, Olbermann and others around the country backed me up and called Bill out for the liar he is), he consistently ran a picture of me that made me look like I was out of "Killer Negroes r Us". If Willy Horton and Flava Flav had a baby together, that would have been my picture.

I didn't think much of it, since I just thought that maybe I was actually that ugly. But many of my friends called and asked "Why do you look so crazy in that picture?" I couldn't tell them why. Even I never thought that Fox News would sink so low as to possibly photoshop a picture to make the villain look even more villainous than before.

Now we have evidence.

Working behind the scenes with Fox, I can tell you that they are, in my opinion, one of the dirtiest networks in the country. When I was booked for back-to-back appearance with Hannity & Colmes and Keith Olbermann, the producer from MSNBC asked me not to tell the Fox producer that they were booking me in the same studio. She said that there are times when the Fox producers will deliberately book the hour they don't need just to make sure that I cannot get onto Olbermann's show. Whether this is true or not, I'm not sure. But based on the other silly things Fox does, I wouldn't doubt it.

Perhaps rather than calling them Fox News, we should call them "Dirty Dog News" or "Fux News", or perhaps we should just call them "Old News", because their journalistic credibility is gone. Perhaps Juan Williams is working for the right network after all.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Fox News Protestors: Are We going to Act?

by Dr. Boyce Watkins

www.BoyceWatkins.net

At Your Black World, we had a strong and powerful protest of Fox News and the racist Bill O'Reilly. Shortly after our protest, I started to notice protests by other websites, such as ColorofChange.org, Moveon.org and others. I love the fact that groups are working hard to challenge Fox News for what they are doing to this election.

However, I am concerned that we in the blogosphere are starting to actually believe that getting petitions and having people sign them is going to actually change something. I spoke with the people at Color of Change, whom I respect for their amazing campaigning ability. When I asked what they planned to do with their petitions, I was told that they plan to present the signatures to Fox News when they reach 100,000. Fine idea, but I think that more might be required.

You see, Fox News can be like the devil: The devil enjoys when you pour grease on a grease fire. Fox enjoys the protests, they enjoy the petitions. They will receive the stack of signatures and likely throw them in the garbage. These individuals are intelligent enough to realize that controversy means ratings, and that the more liberals hate them, the more their conservative (sometimes highly racist) base loves them.

When it comes to Bill O'Reilly and others, you have to hit them where it hurts.

Corporate sponsors are a bit different from highly charged, Jerry Springer-like media outlets such as Fox. They are truly CONSERVATIVE (and not in a cutting-edge, insanely racist, Michelle Malkin- Ann Coulter sort of way...more like the "we don't like rocking the boat" kind of way). They don't like the controversy, because it puts their corporate brand at risk. Shaking their foundation makes the board members nervous and they take away their sponsorship of Fox News. That's how you hit em hard. Well, that's at least how you can marginalize them a bit more than they've already marginalized themselves.

Also, good old fashioned protest works as well. I agree with Rev. Jesse Jackson, who explained that bloggers do a lot of writing, but we don't actually get out there and get it done. I recommend forming protests and having people with picket signs, standing in front of Fox News' top 2 or 3 corporate sponsors.

That might be more effective than a list reminding Fox that 100,000 people hate their guts. To be honest, I think they already know that.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Black Media, Black People, Black News: The Good Negro Behavior Protocol
















Does this look like a professor to you? Or do you picture a thug, convict, athlete or criminal?


When it comes to diversity and integration, I have some critics. I created a website called YourBlackWorld.com, a website for African-Americans. The site was created in response to my experience dealing with mainstream media, which typically provided a 1 or 0 dimensional perspective to black points of view. Although I have a PhD in Finance, I was never called by CNN, FOX or CBS to discuss money or financial issues. I was usually called whenever they had a conversation on “black stuff”.

The fact that they saw me as a black man before they could see anything else was no fault of my publicist. A wonderful and energetic woman, my publicist called all the major networks to introduce me as a person well-qualified to discuss the economy, money management, stock markets or global finance. I have trained literally thousands of Suzie Ormans and Wall Street experts through the years, so it was only logical that this be an area that I speak on as a public scholar.

The problem was that many Americans do not see a black man when they envision a financial expert. A black man is more likely to be seen as a rapper, athlete or criminal. At best, they see a black scholar willing to discuss black rappers, athletes and criminals. That became my role with CNN.

I don’t mind discussing black people, for I have a very strong black identity. However, the limitations of my role bothered me a great deal, and what bothered me most was that it didn’t bother anyone else. If anyone else was bothered, it was for all the wrong reasons. I remember having a debate with a black conservative on CNN about why African-Americans have such a negative image in the world. The conservative, buying into some of the basic tenants of white supremacy, truly believed that the reason black Americans have such a negative image throughout the world is because black people simply choose to behave like criminals. He argued that if black people would simply mind their manners and stop getting arrested so much, the media would have nothing to report.

Apparently, this man had forgotten that there are over 30 million black people in America. So, even if 95% of these individuals were to choose to become perfect angels (or engage in what I call “The Good Negro Behavior Protocol”), there will, by simple statistical fact, be at least 1 million individuals doing things that could embarrass the rest of the community. By virtue of the fact that the media’s lens focuses most on those individuals in the black community who engage in embarrassing behavior, it would be these 1 million individuals who receive the most airtime.
I strongly believe in the idea of freedom. I believe that the black community has a right to be as diverse as any other group of people in America. Rappers have as much a right to exist as professors do. The idea that we can get angry at rappers because CNN and other networks focus on rappers more than anyone else is not the fault of the artists, but rather, due to the one dimensional perspectives of the networks themselves. It’s not who is in front of the camera, it’s where the camera chooses to focus itself.

Another problematic dimension to the “good negro behavior protocol” is this idea that all of us should be “embarrassed” when there is a black person on TV behaving in a comical or criminal fashion. I hear educated African-Americans speak of how embarrassed they are by the behavior of Flavor Flav, the ex-rapper turned reality TV star. I personally find Flavor Flav to be funny and I feel that he has as much of a right to be himself as the white guys on the great MTV show “Jackass”. I have never once heard a white man express that he is embarrassed for the white population because of what the guys on Jackass do on television. I have never once heard a white female say that she is embarrassed for the white race when Paris Hilton is arrested for drunk driving for the 1,000th time. The reality is that they know clearly that Paris Hilton and Jackass do not represent the white experience or dominant white expression.

For some reason, black people are the opposite. Rather than questioning why the media gives us an either-or reality for how we express ourselves in media, we get angry at one another for choosing to express ourselves in a unique fashion. The truth is that Flavor Flav has a right to be a comedian, he has a right to be a jack ass. If anyone in the world watches Vh-1 and thinks that all African-Americans behave like Flavor Flav, then their ignorance is their problem, not mine.

This was an excerpt from the book "Blinded by the Bling: The Plight of the Black Middle Class" by Dr. Boyce Watkins, set to be released August 15, 2008. For more information, please visit www.BoyceWatkins.net.