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Minni's Morning Coffee: He's Making Me Look Bad: Kilpatrick Featured

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Minni's Morning Coffee: He's Making Me Look Bad:Kilpatrick, Drama, and Black Shame

Somewhere between hard news and nail-biting entertainment, there lies a blurry meshing point: It's there that you will find something called infotainment, a phrase coined in the 1980s that’s perhaps is more relevant today.

This is the age of Google, Reddit and Twitter. News media outlets are increasingly lodged at the mercy of clicks, readership and view numbers than ever before.

And while infotainment is arguably harmless and, in some cases, the only way to get a modern-fasted paced audience to pay attention, it’s a slippery slope.

We’re all guilty of falling for the infotainment trap. Whether it’s a psycho shooter in Colorado, a crazed gunman in West Bloomfield, or the high-profile trial of an infamous ex-mayor, we want to be the first to know.

Why? It’s a train wreck effect, so to speak: Just try to tune out of the sexy, fast paced coverage of the Kwame Kilpatrick corruption trail. Try to focus, instead, on the Detroit Works Project’s large-scale plans to re-zone and redistribute resources to Detroit residents.

Boooriing.

Click back to the Kilptarick trial. Wait, that juror said WHAT? OMG, time to follow the Kwame Trail on my Smartphone. And yes, there’s an app for that.

So why do I feel something turn in my stomach whenever I get a glimpse of the Kilpatrick trial coverage? It’s not the infotainment aspect. I love a good news drama, I am a political blogger, hello. And it's not that I think Kilpatrick's actual trial is unjust, but, there’s something different about this.

But it wasn’t until I gave it some serious thought that I figured out what irked me: I’m black. Kilpatrick is black. He’s up there making me look bad, making my sister look bad, making my baby nephew look bad, making some black Joe Shmo in Nigeria look bad.  Let’s not forget whose world we live in. Another black man on trial. Another infamous black crook going down in flames to the I-told-you-so of the majority. Oy.

Maybe it’s just in my head. Or it could be that I’m too caught up in my blackness. But as I click on the images chosen again and again for the Kilpatrick trial coverage, I see a black man frozen for eternity with a stupid frown being referred to by is first name even in cases where AP style calls for a surname.

I can’t look away, but I think I just hurled in my mouth a little bit. 

Last modified on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 10:50
Minehaha Forman

Minehaha Forman is a freelance writer living in Detroit. Born on a farm in Belize, Central America, she moved to the U.S. to pursue higher education and a career in writing. Forman’s work has been featured in many metro Detroit publications including Dbusiness magazine, Hour magazine and Corp! magazine. She has provided event coverage for Real Times Media and The Michigan Chronicle for three years, covering the popular Pancakes and Politics speaker series and other events. Prior to working with the Chronicle, Forman was a blogger with The American Independent News Network where she covered Metro Detroit politics and the 2008 presidential election. She will continue to provide commentary and coverage of Detroit politics as a blogger and feature writer for The Michigan Chronicle’s website.

Website: truthordarestories.blogspot.com/

1 comment

  • The Mighty Lion

    First of all Minni, no one makes you look bad, but you. It's amazing how silly we are as black folk to be so quick to say that we feel personally embarrassed by the actions of one black person. What about the poor educated black people in this city, do they represent you? Do the violence, burned downed houses, trash on the streets represent you? Do the hip hop explotive videos represent you? Do the babies having babies represent you? I understand where you're coming from, but I want to know what else represents you. Do all the positive stories of black accomplishment represent you as well? Does the first lady represent you? I certainly don't see any of your blogs address that. Stop feeding the negative machine and realize that this man (Kilpatrick) is no different from any other money, power hungry, corrupt politician of any other color. If you really wanted to educate your readers, you would research the history of public coruption in city government and talk about the culture of learned negative political behavior instead of hanging decades, centuries of unoticed political corruption around the neck of one black man and then saying he represents you. It didn't magically start with him (the former mayor) and it certainly isn't going to stop with him. Just sayin

    The Mighty Lion Tuesday, 11 September 2012 15:53 Comment Link

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