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What CNN is Doing With Black America

Going back to such ancient classics as “The Plow That Broke the Plains” and “Harvest of Shame,” the best documentaries have been those that engage the heart as well as the brain. Two new entries in CNN’s ongoing “Black in America” project manage precisely that feat, reporting in words and pictures of equal expressiveness on the current state of African American life in the United States.

A viewer is likely to come away with memories not of statistics but of images — the real-life anecdotes and vignettes that supplement numbers with faces and experiences. In Part 1, airing tonight, among the most poignant stories is that of a 60-year-old woman, whom we first meet apologizing for her tears as she languishes in a Harlem hospital bed, correspondent Soledad O’Brien at her side.

Later, after the woman is released from the hospital and back in the poor neighborhood she calls home, we follow her as she embarks on a visit to the supermarket — the nearest one being 20 blocks away at 110th and Broadway. For the woman, O’Brien says, that means an hour’s trip via public transportation just to buy a tomato. It’s no way to live, but she’s living it.

Clearly the result of exhaustive research and reportage, “The Black Woman & Family” (airing tonight) and “The Black Man” (tomorrow night) are rife with evidence that for many African Americans, the American dream is still far beyond arm’s reach. For some, it’s more daydream than dream, so distant is its promise and realization.

But the report is not a lament. Forward steps are acknowledged and documented. Signs of progress are duly noted. Instances of racial conflict and surviving stereotypes are countered with stories of harmony and stereotypes smashed.

And one special promise — though largely unspoken — informs both two-hour broadcasts: the idea that America has arrived at a momentous crossroads spearheaded by the candidacy of Barack Obama, potentially the first black president of the United States. It would be folly to prophesy sweeping reform overnight, and yet great expectations are irresistible. On the other hand, there are African Americans who think an Obama presidency could actually hurt their cause, lulling the country into imagining greater progress on defeating racism than has occurred.

In the program, watershed moments of the past are also evoked — the 40th anniversary of the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., 45 years since his “I Had a Dream” speech and the 50th anniversary last year of the turbulent integration of Little Rock Central High School. O’Brien talks to some of those who were there.

In one of the program’s most disheartening moments, a man who was in high school at the time remembers Southern white children laughing and applauding the news of King’s death. At least such memories allow us the luxury of feeling we’ve come a long way — and the hope that conditions will never deteriorate to such an abhorrent level again. “Never,” of course, is a high-risk word.

O’Brien, an engagingly relaxed yet persistent interviewer, makes it plain from the outset that she is not looking for easy answers or politically correct platitudes. She reports the encouraging and the discouraging with dispassionate impartiality.

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Discussion

2 comments for “What CNN is Doing With Black America”

2 Responses to “What CNN is Doing With Black America”

  1. teresa
    1

    very interesting and incitelful..great work

  2. marco
    2

    i agree.

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