wbur.org
support wbur today!
Listen to this story
The Imus Controversy
photo

These young women are valedictorians, future doctors, classical musicians, even a Girl Scout, said Rutgers women’s basketball coach Vivian Stringer yesterday, as her NCAA national championship finalists stood beside her for the world to see.

But radio’s aging shock jock Don Imus famously called them “nappy-headed hos” last week. Now he’s fighting for his job. He’s called Colin Powell a “weasel” and New Mexico’s governor a “fat sissy.” But this is different.

The hatchet is out for Imus. And the country’s asking: where is the line here?

This hour On Point: race, the Imus firestorm, and the women of Rutgers.

Quotes from the Show:

“It’s been framed in the media as a race debate but it’s also about gender as well because both the National Association of Black Journalists has called for Don Imus to resign and also the National Organization for Women. … So, it’s really a controversy about race and sex.” Christopher John Farly

“This is another example in a long trajectory of recent examples that reveal both the deep illiteracy about [the] cultural and political history [of racism and sexism in America] and the particular lives that many African-Americans continue to lead and why these kinds of statements in the mass media, particularly by whites, but in general is something that is really troubling, and upsetting and problematic. The lack of literacy is what keeps reproducing this dynamic.” Tricia Rose

“When we’re talking about gender oppression, about racism, about homophobia, about classism, all these different kinds of issues that continue to divide people in this country — a lot of folks have no idea where they’re getting this information from, where it started, and they end up regurgitating some very ignorant stuff.” Kevin Powell

“[This controversy] is not just about Don Imus, it’s about a large society that thinks it’s ok to be sexist, racist, homophobic and classist, all in the name of making commentary humor.” Kevin Powell

“It’s not excusable for black people, hip-hop artists, for anyone to denigrate women.” Listener from Boston

Guests:

Christopher John Farly, editor for the Wall Street Journal;
Tricia Rose, professor of Africana Studies at Brown University and author of “Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America”, “Longing to Tell: Black Women Talk About Sexuality and Intimacy”

Damali Ayo, conceptual artist, comedienne and author of ” How to Rent a Negro”

Kevin Powell, poet, activistst, historian and author of “Someday We’ll All Be Free.”

 

You can join the conversation. Tell us what you think — here on this page, on Twitter, or on Facebook.

 
 
Leave a comment

We welcome comments from all of our listeners. We ask that you stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.

While we encourage a robust, open debate on the topic at hand, these comment threads are moderated by On Point and WBUR, and we may delete comments that we judge to be off-topic, unduly repetitive, or that descend into personal, ad hominem attacks. 

You are solely responsible for the content of your comments. On Point and WBUR cannot verify the accuracy of comments posted here.

On Point Today
Eric Bogosian’s Tough Role
Thursday, September 2, 2010 Eric Bogosian and Alicia Silverstone in a Manhattan Theatre Club production of "Time Stands Still,” 2010. (AP/Boneau/Bryan-Brown, Joan Marcus)

We talk with actor, writer, and performer Eric Bogosian about sex, death, celebrity, talk radio, and his new novel, “Perforated Heart.”

 
Speaking Invented Languages
Thursday, September 2, 2010 People in Star Trek costume as a Klingon, center, and Mr. Spock in Germany. (AP)

Klingon poets, Esperanto rock stars, and other bards of invented tongues. We explore, with linguist Arika Okrent.

Comments [10]

Recent Shows
Pat Conroy’s “South of Broad”
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 Pat Conroy after the publication of "The Prince of Tides." (AP)

Master storyteller Pat Conroy’s novel “South of Broad” is his first in more than 14 years. It’s set in his beloved Charleston, SC. And everything is on the table again: love, lust, race, religion.

Comments [8]
 
Eve Ensler on Global Girlhood
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 Eve Ensler with girls from eastern Congo (AP).

“Vagina Monologues” playwright Eve Ensler is now looking at the lives of teenage girls, from American suburbia to the Congo.

Comments [61]
On Point Blog
Wash Post: Elizabeth Warren Drops Harvard Class, Fuels More Speculation

The Washington Post reports today that Harvard professor Elizabeth Warren — a leading candiate to head the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — has suddenly dropped out of teaching this fall, prompting more speculation that she may take a permanent job in the Obama administration.

More »
 
VP Biden in Iraq, Changing Command

Following Pres. Obama’s Oval Office address last night, Vice President Biden spoke in Iraq today, on the occasion of Iraqi troops taking command. Here’s the text.

More »
 
Climate Skeptic Lomborg’s New Tune?

The U.K.’s Guardian reports that the world’s most prominent climate skeptic, Bjorn Lomborg, has taken a “U-turn” of sorts in his views. Lomborg spoke recently with On Point. Are his latest comments indeed a “huge boost” to flagging environmental efforts?

More » | Comments [5]