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Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Dr. M at Black Fatherhood Challenge 2012
Dr. M/Marvin X will participate in a discussion on black fatherhood at New York's Fatherhoodchallenge on Tuesday, October 30, 6-8pm, at Interactive One. You are invited! "Even though my children are grown and have children themselves, they still need and seek fatherly advice from me. One of my students at the Academy of da Corner, downtown Oakland, was so happy the daughter he is raising was soon turning 18 and would be out of his house. I told him, Brother, she might be out of your house but she will hardly be out of your life. Sorry to inform you, your troubles are just beginning, i.e., she will need your help and advice for the rest of her life. One of my daughters told me she was having a mid-life crisis, so I tried to walk her through it. My own mid-life crisis was a most traumatic experience so helping her was easy."
Stop and Frisk Protesters on Trial in Queens, NY
Supporters stand with RCP co-founder Carl Dix and co-defendants on trial yesterday for protesting the Stop and Frisk law. photo Marvin X
On Tuesday jury selection began in the trial of Revolutionary Communist Party co-founder Carl Dix and codefendants. Since the line into Queens County Criminal Court weaved around the block for hours, we decided not to enter the courtroom. We remained outside and caught Carl during the lunch recess. Over lunch, we discussed the trial. "They don't want to discuss the Stop and Frisk law but we were arrested for protesting Stop and Frisk, no other reason. The DA is the same one who wasn't able to convict the police for killing Sean Bell so we have no illusions who we're dealing with. And the judge is very thorough in the jury selection. We want the charges dropped but we could be facing six months in jail."
Carl talked about his activist history, how he spent two years in Federal prison for refusing to fight in Vietnam although he had joined the military. This writer spent years in exile (Toronto, Canada, Mexico City) and five months in Federal prison for also refusing to fight in Vietnam.
Mr. Dix recalled while in prison, the inmates were visited by then US Congressman Ron Dellums from Oakland. "We know Dellums slipped and slider through the years, but he was helpful to our cause when he came to Leavenworth Federal Prison and demanded to meet with us and warned officials he would keep an eye on our condition. Things did improve."
We told Carl how Stop and Frisk was used in the Bay Area during the kidnapping of Patty Hearst and the Zebra killings. All black men were stopped as suspects in the kidnapping and killing of white people, then issued a South African style apartheid pass. Should New York issue a pass as well so that those 700,000 stopped last year do not need another stop, just show their pass?
--Marvin X
Marvin X is a writer, poet, activist on tour promoting his latest book The Wisdom of Plato Negro, Black Bird Press, Berkeley, 2012. He can be reached at jmarvinx@yahoo. Visit is blog: www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com. On Saturday, November 17, 4-6pm, both Carl Dix and Marvin X will speak as fathers of "Black Power Babies" at the Restoration Plaza Gallery on Fulton Street in Brooklyn. Contact Sun in Leo PR for more information: 718-496-2305, prgirl@suninleo.com.
On Tuesday jury selection began in the trial of Revolutionary Communist Party co-founder Carl Dix and codefendants. Since the line into Queens County Criminal Court weaved around the block for hours, we decided not to enter the courtroom. We remained outside and caught Carl during the lunch recess. Over lunch, we discussed the trial. "They don't want to discuss the Stop and Frisk law but we were arrested for protesting Stop and Frisk, no other reason. The DA is the same one who wasn't able to convict the police for killing Sean Bell so we have no illusions who we're dealing with. And the judge is very thorough in the jury selection. We want the charges dropped but we could be facing six months in jail."
Carl talked about his activist history, how he spent two years in Federal prison for refusing to fight in Vietnam although he had joined the military. This writer spent years in exile (Toronto, Canada, Mexico City) and five months in Federal prison for also refusing to fight in Vietnam.
Mr. Dix recalled while in prison, the inmates were visited by then US Congressman Ron Dellums from Oakland. "We know Dellums slipped and slider through the years, but he was helpful to our cause when he came to Leavenworth Federal Prison and demanded to meet with us and warned officials he would keep an eye on our condition. Things did improve."
We told Carl how Stop and Frisk was used in the Bay Area during the kidnapping of Patty Hearst and the Zebra killings. All black men were stopped as suspects in the kidnapping and killing of white people, then issued a South African style apartheid pass. Should New York issue a pass as well so that those 700,000 stopped last year do not need another stop, just show their pass?
--Marvin X
Marvin X is a writer, poet, activist on tour promoting his latest book The Wisdom of Plato Negro, Black Bird Press, Berkeley, 2012. He can be reached at jmarvinx@yahoo. Visit is blog: www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com. On Saturday, November 17, 4-6pm, both Carl Dix and Marvin X will speak as fathers of "Black Power Babies" at the Restoration Plaza Gallery on Fulton Street in Brooklyn. Contact Sun in Leo PR for more information: 718-496-2305, prgirl@suninleo.com.
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Black Power Babies Meet in Brooklyn
Black Power Babies
and father Marvin X. This event
will also celebrate X's latest book
The Wisdom of Plato Negro
Music by Rudi Mwongozi on piano
Mahadevi El Muhajir, Black Power Baby 3.0, at 3 years old, she reads, writes, spells;
knows English, French and Chinese, a little Ebonics too.
INVITED PARTICIPANTS
HRH Oba Adefunmi II, center, will attend
Special guest: the Oba (king) of Oyotunji African Village, South Carolina, discussing the legacy of his father, His Royal Majesty Oba Oseijeman Adefunmi I, who departed Harlem in 1970 to establish Oyotunji African Village in Sheldon, South Carolina.
Malika Iman, who has long strived to keep the legacy of her father alive, Yusef Iman, poet/actor/organizer, one of the founders of the Black Arts Movement and The East.
Other invited participants include Amiri and Amina Baraka, Amiri Middy Baraka, also the daughters of Malcolm X.
Amina Baraka was terrorized by the Newark Police and National Guard during the 1967 Rebellion.
Amiri Baraka was beaten severely. Mrs. Baraka says she shall attend and bring all her sons, if possible. "They all need healing and I suspect this is the forum to do it. I would like to see Fred Hampton, Jr. there also! A lot of these Black Power babies need healing along with their parents!"
Francisco Mora Catlett, son of BAM artist
Elizabeth Catlett Mora will participate
Organizer Muhammida El MuhajirAn intergenerational discussion exploring living the legacy of a movementBlack Power Babies, the children of men and women active in the black power movement of 60s and 70s are now leaders in all aspects of society, e.g., business, arts, politics, academia, and beyond. This panel will explore with personal accounts of Black Power Babies and their parent/s, how revolutionary thinking, activity and legacy has impacted a generation.Saturday, November 17, 20124:00 pm-- 6:00 pmBedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation Skylight Gallery1368 Fulton StBrooklyn, NY 11216
and father Marvin X. This event
will also celebrate X's latest book
The Wisdom of Plato Negro
Music by Rudi Mwongozi on piano
Muhammida El MuhajirCreative DirectorSun in Leo, Inc.o. 718 574 6331m. 718 496 2305
Mahadevi El Muhajir, Black Power Baby 3.0, at 3 years old, she reads, writes, spells;
knows English, French and Chinese, a little Ebonics too.
INVITED PARTICIPANTS
Moderator – Muhammida El Muhajir (Brand Strategist, Filmmaker "Hip Hop the New World Order")
Featuring:
- Oba Adejuyigbe Adefunmi II – King of Oyotunji African Village
- Amina Baraka – Poet/Activist (Black Arts Movement) & Sons
- Francisco Mora Catlett - Musician (son of activist/artists Elizabeth Catlett and Poncho Mora)
- Carl Dix - Revolutionary Communist Party, served two years in prison opposing Vietnam war
- Aaliyah Maydun – Media Professional (daughter of Gail Kenard, Black Panthers and artist/author Julian Madyun)
- Nisa Ra – Entrepreneur, Filmmaker (Black Arts Movement)
- Bunmi Samuel - Educator (son of Tunde Samuel, National Black Theater of Harlem)
- Aishah Shahidah Simmons – Filmmaker, Cultural Worker
- Michael Simmons – Human Rights Activist (SNCC)
- Marvin X - Author, Poet. (Black Arts Movement, Nation of Islam)
- Malika Iman, daughter of Yusef Iman, BAM actor, poet, singer, educator at the East
Also celebrating the latest book release from Marvin X, “The Wisdom of Plato Negro”
This is a free event with RSVP rsvp@suninleo.com
HRH Oba Adefunmi II, center, will attend
Special guest: the Oba (king) of Oyotunji African Village, South Carolina, discussing the legacy of his father, His Royal Majesty Oba Oseijeman Adefunmi I, who departed Harlem in 1970 to establish Oyotunji African Village in Sheldon, South Carolina.
Malika Iman, who has long strived to keep the legacy of her father alive, Yusef Iman, poet/actor/organizer, one of the founders of the Black Arts Movement and The East.
Other invited participants include Amiri and Amina Baraka, Amiri Middy Baraka, also the daughters of Malcolm X.
Amina Baraka was terrorized by the Newark Police and National Guard during the 1967 Rebellion.
Amiri Baraka was beaten severely. Mrs. Baraka says she shall attend and bring all her sons, if possible. "They all need healing and I suspect this is the forum to do it. I would like to see Fred Hampton, Jr. there also! A lot of these Black Power babies need healing along with their parents!"
Francisco Mora Catlett, son of BAM artist
Elizabeth Catlett Mora will participate
Black Power to Hip Hop Conference
Marvin X will participate in this discussion, along with his daughter, Muhammida El Muhajir, producer of the film Hip Hop the New World Order. On Saturday, Novermber 17, Muhammida will present "Black Power Babies" at Restoration Plaza in Brooklyn, NY. Participants include Francisco Catlett Mora, Carl Dix, Amina Baraka and sons, Oba Adefunma II of the African Village, Nisa Ra, Jitu Weusi, Malika Iman, Rudi Mwongozi, et al. This is an intergenerational healing session.
Monday, October 22, 2012
Revolution on the Rocks Hits Newark, New Jersey
We are so honored to join my revolutionary friends and comrades in liberation, Amina and Amiri Baraka tonight at the Blue Mirror in Newark, New Jersey. This will be a rare occasion since we think Mr. Baraka will allow me to read more than one poem on his gig. lol
--Dr. M/Marvin X
Admission Free
For more information, please call 973-732-7979
Food available for purchase and cash bar
Francisco Mora Catlett Bio
From Mexico to Detroit, With Love
Elizabeth Catlett's grand legacy came to Detroit through her son Francisco Mora Catlett
LORI S. ROBINSON
Photo courtesy of Francisco Mora Catlett
Some African-American artists create art for art's sake. Others do it for money or fame. Still others make art as a commitment to serve Black people.
Elizabeth Catlett falls firmly in the latter category. Nothing says commitment like continuing to produce art at age 96.
She's sculpted the archetypal loving African-American mother and child many times over, portrayed the Black sharecropper with undeniable dignity, created powerful prints of our most fierce leaders like Harriet Tubman, Malcolm X and Angela Davis, and immortalized—just last year—the incomparable singer Mahalia Jackson in the form of a 10-foot statue now in New Orleans.
That's a minute sampling of the work Catlett has produced, all the while speaking, and acting, against injustice. Over the course of her life it's had consequences, like getting arrested and being denied entry into the country of her birth.
From her long-time home in Mexico, Catlett describes her living legacy in simple terms: "The explanation of our position [and] what we need to do about it."
This extraordinary granddaughter of slaves has been boldly expressing opinions and practicing her craft on behalf of her people for nearly a century. Although she never lived in Detroit, her legacy is uniquely, deeply imprinted on this city. The native Washingtonian's energy and lifestyle of creating art with and for community rumbled into town in the mid-1970s embodied in Francisco Mora Catlett, her first-born son.
"Sculptor, printmaker and painter Elizabeth Catlett has been a trailblazer for African-American artists," says Patrina Chapman, the Charles H. Wright Museum's curator of exhibitions. "To say that Catlett is important within the canon of African-American art might be an understatement. She has been one of the most prominent artists of the 20th century."
As an activist-artist, she has been uncompromising. "Within the canon of African-American art, Elizabeth Catlett is extremely important for her achievement in consistently developing powerful sculptures and prints that demonstrate her skillful balancing of aesthetics with social and political concerns," says Valerie Mercer, curator and department head of the DIA's General Motors Center for African American Art.
"She built an impressive body of work emphasizing women as her dominant subject for the purpose of improving their circumstances. The fact that the women depicted in Catlett's art throughout her career are often obviously African-American or women of color, makes her approach distinct because such a steadfast commitment to this type of subject matter is unprecedented in art," Mercer adds. "Her talent and example as a professional artist continue to influence a new generation of artists."
Catlett's focus on Black women—those who have struggled for human rights or simply struggled to survive—certainly illuminates the experiences of many Detroiters, past and present. That such art is now in this city's museums is only part of her long footprint here.
From the '70s up through the early 2000s, consummate jazz drummer Mora Catlett was nurtured by and contributed to Detroit's Black community. He also connected the African Diaspora of Detroit with some of its Latin American branches. Now based in New York, he's still collaborating with Detroiters.
"I have roots in Detroit. Musicians in New York recognize me as musician from Detroit, not from Mexico," says Mora Catlett, 64, who was raised in Mexico City. "I have the right to claim I'm from Detroit. I have a responsibility to people in Detroit."
One of the many rare things about his mother is that she became an iconic African-American artist while living most of her adult life in Mexico. Born in 1915, Catlett first traveled there on a fellowship in 1946. The following year, it became her permanent home. Her late husband, Mexican national Francisco Mora, was also an artist.
Although Catlett worked collaboratively with Mexican artists over decades and created art featuring images of Mexican people, she never abandoned her primary focus: "To show the beauty of Black people, and to express the opinions and feelings of [the] Black woman in the United States."
On the issue of identity, her son is clear. "I am Black to begin with, with a Mexican father," says Mora Catlett, the oldest of three brothers. Born in 1947 at Freedmen's Hospital—now Howard University Hospital—in Washington, D.C., his birth certificate lists his father's race as Mexican, his mother's race as Negro and his race as Negro.
"When I grew up in Mexico, I was never Mexican enough. And then when I came to the states, because of my light skin tone, I'm not Black enough. White folks don't know who I am," he laughs. "But I know what I am."
Mora Catlett left Mexico to study at Berklee College of Music in Boston in 1971. "I was very fortunate to meet people like Duke Ellington," he says. "I was really exposed to the African-American jazz musicians in Boston. That is what encouraged me."
Several years later, he says, "I established myself in Detroit. Detroit became a source of nourishment to understand what the Black community was all about." Over the years, he worked with dozens of local artists, such as jazz greats Marcus Belgrave and the late Kenny Cox.
Mora Catlett taught at a Detroit summer youth program through most of the 1980s and at Michigan State University throughout the 1990s. He toured with electronic music maestro Carl Craig, also in the '90s. And he formed his own bands.
"I had the opportunity of nourishing or giving ideas to some of the new great ones that came out of Detroit," says Mora Catlett, also a composer and arranger. "For example, [saxophonist] James Carter was in my original Afro Horn band, which performed at Baker's Keyboard Lounge. [Double bass player] Rodney Whitaker, his first album was with me." And Ali Jackson Jr., a son of musicians who attended the summer youth program, is now a drummer for Wynton Marsalis' Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra.
Elizabeth Catlett would have influenced Detroit even if her son had never lived here. "I'm a huge fan of her work," says renowned jazz bass player Marion Hayden, who owns a rare artist's proof of Catlett's famous "Sharecropper" linoleum cut print. "She's been an extreme inspiration to me. My intention has been to write a piece in her honor."
Still, Hayden is delighted that Catlett affected Detroit even more directly through her son. "Francisco had a great sense of the importance of the community," she says. Hayden explains that Mora Catlett's years here enriched the city culturally and positively influenced many individuals personally and professionally.
"Musicians as family was very much a part of his concept," she says. "When we rehearsed at his house, it was always in the context of family."
Mora Catlett's wife at that time, Teresa Mora, was a vocalist who often rehearsed and performed with him. "They were always playing music and practicing in the basement," says Naima Mora, one of Mora Catlett's daughters, of her parents. "We always had musicians over and I remember helping my parents with music equipment, especially my dad with his drums."
Mora Catlett raised four daughters—Crystal, Ife, Nia and Naima—in Detroit. Naima, the season four winner of the "America's Next Top Model" reality TV show, is following her father's and grandmother's example of giving back to the community in her own way. In August, she came to Detroit from her new home of Los Angeles to lead a model clinic and judge a fashion design competition. Both events were part of the African World Festival.
She remembers hearing West African, Cuban and Mexican music, as well as jazz, throughout her youth. She was even named after a John Coltrane tune.
"I remember waking up really angry because he'd be playing records so loud you could hear them down the block and I was preteen who just wanted to sleep," says Mora, 27, of her perspective then. "I totally am so appreciative to have been given that upbringing."
Mora was also raised enjoying periodic visits from Catlett, who she calls "Grandma," and regularly seeing her art. "My whole family is artists or musicians. So I was like, 'This is normal. Isn't everyone like this?' But when I was 20, I started going to [Catlett's New York] art openings," she recalls. "As an adult is when I realized the significance she has as an artist, political figure, a woman and a woman of color."
Mora Catlett explains that Detroit native saxophonist Salim Washington once said, "You're Elizabeth Catlett's son. You really don't know who your mother is." Washington remembers the conversation, too.
"She's someone I admire greatly. In fact, I have a print screen of hers that I bought when I was a freshman in college in 1976," Washington says of his "Sharecropper" piece. "[Mora Catlett] was telling me, 'Wow, this is really valuable because even she doesn't have a copy of it.
"He made it sound like this was just a good artist as opposed to someone who is historically significant," says Washington. "We live in a society in which artists of all stripes, and particularly African-American artists, are undervalued… So it's very easy for us to be walking around giants and not realize that that is what we're doing."
According to Washington, in this case, the same thing can be said about mother and son. "Francisco played with two of the most important musicians of the 20th century, Sun Ra and Max Roach. For him to be a percussionist and to in the M'Boom ensemble led by [Roach,] one of the master percussionists of our tradition, that's a very special thing. It would be easy, with the fame of his daughter, to not realize that Francisco is actually a very accomplished and important artist in his own right."
Mora Catlett is known for having exposed Detroit artists to international musical influences. He founded a cultural exchange program, which took Detroit jazz musicians to Zacatecas, Mexico, and brought Mexican artisans to Detroit. Hayden enjoyed the trip with her ensemble Straight Ahead in 1990. And she credits him with "bringing us into a fuller appreciation of Afro-Cuban music" which has become part of her repertoire.
Having impacted the city beyond the music community, Mora Catlett helped facilitate exhibits of his parents' work in Detroit in the '80s and '90s. "They came to Detroit with several double exhibitions," he says. "The Mexican community and the African-American community had joint interest in both of them."
According to Catlett's self-titled biography by Melanie Anne Herzog, Catlett protested lynchings as a high school student in front of the Supreme Court with a noose around her neck. Despite being warned there were no Black students at the institution now known as Carnegie Mellon University, she applied for and won a full scholarship there. (It was rescinded when her race became known.) After graduating from Howard University, she became the first student to earn a master of fine arts degree from Iowa State University. She was the first woman professor of sculpture at Mexico's largest university—the Universidad Nacional Autónoma De México—and was appointed chair of the sculpture department. She's been winning awards since the 1940s—too numerous to name.
"It's one thing to be good. It's another thing to be excellent. And then it's quite another thing to be important. Ms. Catlett is important," says Washington. "That's a distinction that sometimes we only realize posthumously."
But everyone can be aware of this distinction while Catlett, and her son, still walk this earth.
"I have a debt of gratitude with Detroit because I did so much growing in Detroit—as a human being and as a musician," he says. "Living in Detroit and having the opportunity of sharing stages with Detroit musicians had a tremendous effect on my artistic life."
It's an artistic life that's still evolving. Just last month, Mora Catlett recorded a jazz album with the latest incarnation of his Afro Horn band. It includes musicians from Cuba, Washington and three saxophone players from Detroit: Alex Harding, Vincent Bowens and JD Allen.
When asked how he would like Detroiters to view his family, Mora Catlett responds without hesitation: "As their own."
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WBEZ challenged on Smiley and West Show
WBEZ challenged to reinstate the Tavis Smiley and Dr. Cornel West show
Activists, National Black Wall Street Organization Leader, Father Pfleger join activist and "Urban Translator" Wallace "Gator" Bradley and others in challenging WBEZ to reinstate the Tavis Smiley and Dr. Cornel West show.
Mark S. Allen, Chairman of National Black Wall Street Chicago, Father Michael Pfleger have joined Wallace "Gator" Bradley and others in their call for the reinstatement of the talk show of Tavis Smiley and Dr. Cornel West on WBEZ and have proposed some immediate dates to meet directly with WBEZ officials on the issue. Wallace "Gator" Bradley stated that after the initial coalition of leaders met and talked with others, that he placed a personal call to the station management on October 19th and that a return call was placed immediately back to him by Daniel Ash, Vice President of Strategic planning and development for WBEZ who in response responded to Bradley and opened the door for a specific meeting on the subject. Pfleger also made a call to the station in support of the West and Smiley show. Bradley stated that conversations are taking place for a meeting one day next week. Allen said that before he calls for an extensive public demonstration on the subject that he will seek to attend the meeting with Bradley and WBEZ officials and a restoration date could be set for "whether we agree or disagree with Tavis Smiley and Dr. West, we can not stand by and let a major Black information voice be silenced without protest" said Allen.
Copy of Tavis Smiley’s Open Letter to Challenge the Cancellation of His Show in Chicago
This letter was written by Tavis Smiley, co-host of the radio show, “Smiley & West,” along with Dr. Cornel West. The letter is addressed to Torey Malatia, President and CEO of Chicago Public media.
Dear Mr. Malatia,
In my 20 years of being a broadcaster, this letter represents the very first time I have felt compelled to write a personal note to the head of a local station.
I was content to simply move on beyond a cancellation decision I vehemently disagreed with, because I respect the public media model that stations know best. That is until I was made privy to the content of your written response to listeners who have been expressing disappointment about the cancellation of Smiley & West on Chicago’s WBEZ 91.5 FM. I must say that the spin found in your letter is beneath you, the station you work for, and moreover the people you serve. Say nothing of the fact that to my knowledge, at no point did you or your staff ever attempt to communicate to me any of the impressions you so freely shared in your letter to listeners.
The disregard and disrespect for my work one reads in your letter to listeners is too extreme to adequately address in this email; but when you suggest that I have become “far less inclusive” in my work, you advance a lie. A big lie. I’m about to celebrate 10 years on PBS and 12 years on public radio. As an African American in the still-too-lacking-in-diversity world of public media, one does not survive in these environs — much less thrive — if one’s interview style is remotely akin to the intellectual bullying of Bill O’Reilly. To compare my work to his in your letter to listeners is to defame me in the worst way. I take pride in being the first African American in the history of PBS and NPR to simultaneously host his own signature weekday public television and radio shows, opening the doors for other persons of color to now host or co-host award-winning programs over public media.
Furthermore, I have two public radio programs as you well know. One that I continue to host solo, the other co-hosted with Cornel West. These two programs, deliberately and unapologetically, could not be any more different in content and style. NOTHING has changed about the format of my solo show which has NONE of my opinion expressed as a part of the production. You no longer carry that program either, which again, is absent of my personal opinion and continues to feature guests almost weekly who express differing opinions on the issues of the day. Additionally, nightly on my PBS program I provide a national platform to a variety of guests, including an entire week this past summer featuring exclusively conservative voices. I am as “inclusive” as I have ever been because I am as curious as I have ever been. I reject and resent the very suggestion by you in letters to listeners that I do not demonstrate a willingness to “respect and hear opposing views.”
IF Smiley & West has experienced any erosion in listenership, it might have something to do with being heard over WBEZ on Sundays at 12Noon when most Black Chicagoans are in worship service. To so blatantly disregard an obviously critical mass of listeners in the scheduling of this program suggests one and or two things: that you don’t get it or that you don’t care. A premier station in a world class city should not be still struggling with how to truly represent the voices of ALL fellow citizens in the most multi-cultural, multi-racial and multi-ethnic Chicago ever. That’s a leadership deficiency. One could argue that it is easier for an African American to be president of the United States than it is to host a primetime radio program on Chicago Public Radio. It seems that WBEZ thinks that just because WVON exists, that it is somehow exempt from being “inclusive.” Respectfully, Mr. Malatia, it takes brass for you to accuse me of being less than “inclusive.” Your job is to program a station that is “reflective of a complex society of varied and uneven life experiences, backgrounds, races, cultures and economic circumstances.” Is this the best that WBEZ can do? How does cancelling Smiley & West advance that mission?
When Smiley & West was rolled out two years ago at the annual PRPD convention, Dr. West and I made it abundantly clear that we were trying something a bit different for some public radio stations. A program that would feature our opinions, but a program that would also have built into every show a segment called “Take ‘Em to Task,” where everyday people all across America could call in to do just that — disagree with us over the airwaves. It has turned out to be one of the most popular parts of the program, giving listeners a say, whether their disagreement with us is cosmetic or monumental. In addition, we heavily promote in each show our “Speak Out Network” where the conversation continues seven days a week on-line, and listeners can at anytime register or post their feedback. Indeed they do. Smiley & West couldn’t be more democratic. Finally, since each of my radio shows is produced by a different team of professionals, I find it curious that you would suggest to listeners in your letter that my programs were “showing signs of significant declines in production effectiveness and focus.” It’s hard to imagine that all of my producers and engineers suddenly just lost their way. That particular statement in your letter to listeners hurt most. I do not abide insults to my hard-working and dedicated staff. I would never insult the fine team at Chicago Public Radio in that way. Besides, have you paid any attention to our most eclectic guest roster? High caliber guests keep appearing on my programs week in and week out.
I have only a First Amendment right to free speech, not to a radio program that WBEZ is mandated to broadcast. You’re entitled to your opinions of that program and your executive decisions concerning it, but you’re not entitled to your own set of facts. Particularly when those “facts” are demeaning, derogatory and dead wrong.
I appreciate the opportunity to have been heard over Chicago Public Radio all these years. Even as other stations around the country continue to add Smiley & West (including stations in Chicago we are in talks with even now), I regret that you chose to deny the listeners of WBEZ an opportunity to hear something a little different ONE HOUR a week. To make room for yet another repeat of a program about cars that isn’t even in production any longer. Is that what we need right now as fellow citizens prepare to decide who is best to lead a nation where our democracy is being threatened by poverty, where schools are failing our children, where crime is out of control?
At some point, those who steward public media have to stop insulting those who support public media.
All best, Tavis Smiley
P.S. Since I do not know how far and wide your letter to listeners has spread, I feel compelled to release this particular letter publicly, so that those who have read your letter and heard the station’s position via various Chicago media outlets can now hear the other side of the story
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