Tonight’s program opens with a salubrious report on a singular family reunion: the gathering of generations of Rands in Atlanta. What makes the Rand band notable in the context of the documentary is that family historians have traced the family back to England and to a landowner named William Rand, who had a white wife and a black mistress — and beaucoup children by both. Thus do white descendants meet black and pose for smiling family photos. O’Brien struggles to hold on her lap a gigantic scrapbook that includes the family tree, as well as data on the far-flung Rands and how they grew.
Throughout all four hours, seeming “good news” competes with bad for dominance. One shameful fact of life in black America surfaces more than once: Parents recall the moment they sat their children down and instructed them how to behave if ever stopped by the police. The advice is uniform: to “cower,” as one parent says, casting all self-respect aside and groveling before authority figures who could find, even invent, an excuse to be abusive.
In tomorrow’s Part 2, comedian D.L. Hughley says he knows that skin color matters to cops and says he has warned his son to be sheepishly compliant in any dealings with the police. The impressions are supported by one of O’Brien’s ever-ready statistics: Seventy-five percent of African Americans believe they are treated more harshly than whites by the “criminal justice system.”
Other celebrities who figure in the reportage include filmmaker Spike Lee, showbiz entrepreneur Russell Simmons and actress Whoopi Goldberg, who says bluntly, “Thank God for the welfare system” because it helped her survive early years of demoralizing poverty and raise a daughter as a single mother. She says she is distressed, however, by “reforms” in welfare that have made it less accessible to those who need it.
The most memorable personalities in “Black in America” are not the celebrities but the everyday people whose experiences reflect aspects of the African American experience. There’s a man born Kenneth — he later changed that to a West African name — who talks frankly about robbing the only bank in Sherrill, Ark., to get drug money at age 22 (he revisits the site with O’Brien), for which he was sentenced to 21 years in prison.
His story is an example of the savage toll taken by crack cocaine, especially on black Americans, during the crack craze of the 1970s and ’80s. “It was better than sex” when he first used it, he recalls, but his life became the proverbial “living hell” once he was hooked. He is now a preacher and counselor to youth: “I didn’t find God; God found me.”
A man known as Butch epitomizes the emergent black middle class. He moved into a previously all-white suburb (and experienced little hostility from neighbors, he says), drives a Mercedes, says he “can’t wait to go to work” each morning and has raised three sons. The happy story takes a downward turn; one son was involved in a “drug-related” shooting.
As a documentary must contain statistics, it must also have a contingent of experts. In the case of “Black in America,” those have been particularly well chosen — especially Roland G. Fryer Jr., 31, an economics professor who this year became the youngest African American ever to receive tenure at Harvard. He makes several appearances throughout the documentary, always with something insightful or provocative to add.
Some of the editing tricks in “Black in America” are irritating or at least repetitious — a kind of progressive cutting, one-two-three — of ever-closer shots as a talking head talks. It’s an attempt to animate a static shot, but viewers should be given more credit: The picture doesn’t always have to move for people to be engaged. Sometimes we even listen to the words.
The words and the pictures of these four remarkable hours complement and supplement each other. There’s little if any waste; the report has been edited to a tight, bright pace that makes it seem considerably shorter than it is. “Black in America” looms as a tremendous accomplishment for O’Brien and for the many producers, editors and crew members who poured themselves into it. And if no good comes of it, it won’t be their fault.
The two-part Black in America series debuts tonight with “The Black Woman & Family” (two hours) on CNN at 9; “The Black Man” (two hours) airs tomorrow
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2 comments for “What CNN is Doing With Black America”
2 Responses to “What CNN is Doing With Black America”
Posted: Aug 6th, 2008 at 8:32 pm
very interesting and incitelful..great work
Posted: Aug 6th, 2008 at 8:33 pm
i agree.
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