
Originally Posted by
WaitingWatchingLookingForAChance
Interesting point of view expressed here, but it also shows an amazing abundance of ignorance on at least one point: the writer lobs extra-sour grapes at Motown for packaging its artists in "silly clothes" and making them do "puppet-like dance routines". Did it somehow escape his awareness that Motown weren't doing anything that every other record company had been doing before? Was the writer unaware that for Blacks to get even a fraction of a centimeter of acceptance from Whites that they had to be able to cloak themselves in the same upwardly mobile attire as their hope-for White audience- and do it 10 times better?
Before, and during Motown's early days, Blacks simply didn't have the luxury of presenting themselves in any other way BUT the image of acceptability that Whites had been hammering into America's psyche for centuries. And the whole thing about chasing The American Dream as if it were some kind of sin against being Black is nothing but ridiculous and again, showing tremendous ignorance by attempting to shoehorn every individual Black person into one mind set. A lot of us wanted that fairytale dream- and still do.
Nice and interesting article, but really misguided.
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