The New York Times recently ran an article lamenting the all-white list of nominees for this year’s Oscars. Randy Shaw (see below) points out that it ain’t just the movies; television offers few characters or programs aimed at the non-white audience.
Shaw references David Simon’s The Wire as a blessed exception to the rule and wonders why such a critical success hasn’t been emulated (except by HBO’s Treme, and that show is also produced by David Simon).
It’s simple; The Wire was always more popular with critics than with viewers. It held its own; but Simon’s programs received only a fraction of the audience that followed The Sopranos, for instance. Why is that?
The answer isn’t pleasant. White audiences don’t relate well to non-white protagonists.
Early on in the Tulia fight, several producers showed a tentative interest in bringing the story to the silver screen. I didn’t pay much attention to the let’s-make-a-movie phenomenon because we were years away from resolution. Secondly, I figured the story was too morally ambiguous for Hollywood. I remember being asked if my family would be interested in playing the starring role in a film. When I protested that the affected community should be at the center of the movie I was assured that the American viewing public would have little interest in poor black people living in an isolated Texas town. (more…)
As an evangelical Christian with a progressive social agenda, Tony Campolo has occupied and defended an uncomfortable patch of territory in the American religious world.
This succinct article summarizes a chapter in Brian McLaren’s excellent book, 

“If all others accepted the lie which the Party imposed—if all records told the same tale—then the lie passed into history and became truth. ‘Who controls the past’ ran the Party slogan, ‘controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.'” – George Orwell, 1984
Reviewed by Charles Kiker
In the dwindling days of the 2009 legislative session, lawmakers in North Carolina, voting along party lines, passed a Racial Justice Act that allows death row defendants to use statistics to corroborate claims of racial bias in the criminal justice system. Then came the 2010 election. With the Republicans now in control of the state legislature, 