Watching the Nikole Hannah-Jones/Chuck Todd interview it’s impossible to not think about the 1993 David Bowie/Mark Goodman MTV interview.
— Rex Chapman🏇🏼 (@RexChapman) December 26, 2021
Same thing almost 30-years later. Why is it always “what’s acceptable to white people”?? pic.twitter.com/kWx4UxVwqu https://t.co/AORIwZNDzJ
Bowie said he had seen really good music videos made by Black artists on a Black station (believed to be BET) and wondered why they never featured on MTV. Goodman reveals that geography plays a role in deciding the programing and thus sugar coating racism. “We have to try and do what we think not only New York and Los Angeles will appreciate, but also Poughkeepsie or the Midwest, pick some town in the Midwest that would be scared to death by Prince, which we’re playing, or a string of other black faces. We have to play the type of music the entire country would like.”
A lotta people may NOT know that David Bowie put MTV on blast back in the day for NOT playin Black artists.. He side stepped the double talk… Bowie was a REAL ONE. 👊 https://t.co/c5ShmKgqN1
— ICE T (@FINALLEVEL) December 26, 2021
Goodman went on to argue that teenagers of 1983 wouldn’t appreciate artists like the Isley Brothers. Bowie flipped it on Goodman and laid bare what he was covering up with wordplay. “I’ll tell you what, maybe, the Isley Brothers or Marvin Gaye means to a black 17-year-old,” said Bowie. “And surely he’s part of America as well." It brings to mind the protests that broke out across America after George Floyd, a Black man, was killed by cops. Isn't George Floyd a part of America? Rapper Ice-T shared the video and called Bowie a 'real one.'
It just so happened that it was also the year Michael Jackson released videos for “Thriller” and “Billie Jean,” turning him into one of the most popular faces of music in the whole world. The video went viral again after former NBA player and social media commentator Rex Chapman posted the video. Chapman posted it in the context of an interview Chuck Todd conducted of New York Times Magazine staff writer, Nicole Hannah-Jones. As they discussed race education in American, Hannah-Jones corrected Todd for referring to white parents as 'parents,' while specifying 'parents of color' for the rest. Todd admitted his mistake but it highlighted how media still plays its part in centering the world around white people.
Todd: "Parents are saying 'hey don't make my kid feel guilty." And a parent of color is going...'I need to teach reality.'"
— Jan Wolfe (@JanNWolfe) December 26, 2021
Hannah-Jones: "You should just think a little bit about your framing. You said 'parents.' And then you said 'parents of color.' So the 'white' is silent." pic.twitter.com/D0RA7HzQDn
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