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7 posts tagged kerry washington

7 posts tagged kerry washington
Kerry Washington and Don Cheadle Talk Race in Hollywood: “I’m Good With [Being] Defined By My Race”
Kerry Washington and Don Cheadle offer insightful and eye-opening commentary on race in Variety‘s…
Awaiting New Scandal Season: What we’re looking for
One of the hottest and highest rated shows on TV is hands-down Scandal. Since the creation of…
Project Unsure: Five Tips to Survive Your “Frog Years”
George Washington University alum Kerry Washington ushered the newest graduates into post-college…
Kerry Washington: ‘Scandal’ Star Shares Memories From Her College Years
Commencement season has arrived and Kerry Washington was not only the commencement speaker at her…
Tyler Perry and Kerry Washington’s “Peeples” Flops —- Did You Go See It?
Kerry Washington is having a successful run in acting right now, starring in the runaway hit show,…
People Magazine released details on its annual “Most Beautiful” issue, which featured Beyonce on the cover last year. This year, the ever-esteemed title goes to actress and mother of two, Gwyneth Paltrow.
The issue also features such beauties as Kerry…

Over time, I’ve noticed that We the Blacks, collectively, have an annoying habit of criticizing so many things to death. We — some, not all — can look at something that is widely perceived as fair and decent (or at least way better than he standard reality TV fare we’re mostly offered) and then stare it down, scour, and overanalyze it until we can’t see any good in it, only the problems galore. It’s not constructive criticism; it’s just complaining.
Last night, I checked into The Root for my digest of what’s new in politico world and found more complaining. This time is was from Tom Burrell, a 45-year vet of the advertising industry, moaning about — out of all the things actually worthy of complaint on TV — Scandal. Burrell told The Root:
I’ve got major problems with Scandal. It comes dressed up and masqueraded as something new, but Scandal is basically a continuing perpetuation of the stereotype of a black woman whose libido and sexual urges are so pronounced that even with an education and a great job, and all these other things, she can’t control herself.
He adds:
But the message that is really being delivered is that no matter how much education you get and how much power you get, you’ve still got that “around the way girl” in you. It’s basically saying that black women are innately, inherently, hot to trot. He doesn’t seduce her. She seduces him.
Are we watching the same show?