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- Racism is a problem that the American people have grappled with since colonial times. The 1960's saw the rise of Martin
- Luther King, Jr and Malcolm X, who not only influenced the civil rights movement but attempted to solve the problem of racism
- in this country. On February 16, 1965, Malcolm X gave a speech called Not Just An American Problem, but a World
- Problem. In his speech he provides a theory on the relationship between media and racism called image making which still
- has validity today. On first reading, Malcolm's tone is angry and his theory on image making sounds absurd. He states:
- They (racists) use the press to get public opinion on their side. . . this is a science called image making. they hold you in check
- through this science of imagery. They even make you look down upon yourself, by giving you a bad image of yourself. Some of
- our own Black people who have eaten this image themselves and digested it -- until they themselves don't want to live in the
- Black community.
- Yet, current television programming seems to favor this idea. Local news programs continue to show colored communities as
- dangerous and gang-infested. They continually rely on the reports of these areas for the bulk of their news and overlook the
- positive images that residents of these areas try to create. For example, KNTV news continually reports on the thefts and
- shootings in East San Jose but does not make an effort to show how residents are dealing with these situations. The day a local
- East San Jose church helped sway the city council to put a streetlight on a very busy intersection, the news pre-empted the
- report with an accident on another East San Jose intersection. As a result, most people in these communities do not realize that
- they have power to change their area and have a great desire to move out of these areas. They have become prisoners who
- have bought into the image of East San Jose. Yet, local news programs are not the only ones to blame for image making;
- documentaries have played a part in the negative images of blacks. Malcolm X makes the claim that the negative image of
- communities in America are just a small part of the image making process. The documentary film has done the same for their
- African homeland. He states: They (the press) projected Africa in a negative image, a hateful image. They made us think that
- Africa was a land of jungles, a land of animals, a land of cannibals and savages. It was a hateful image.
- Current documentaries of Africa are still about their jungles and their tribes. Although they do not have a racist tone, the idea
- that African people are still uncivilized continues. The result is: Black people here in America who hated everything about us
- that was African. . . it was you who taught us to hate ourselves simply by shrewdly maneuvering us into hating the land of our
- forefathers and the people on that continent.
- These films do have an influence on today's society. From watching today's black TV, the actors on these shows make fun
- of these images. Recently, Martin Lawrence made fun of one of his friends; calling him a spear-thrower on his hit TV show.
- The larger problem that Malcolm X did not discuss in his speech is the result of the image making. The effectiveness of
- today's media on young minds is great. Only several years have passed since the introduction of a Black Barbie doll. The great
- action heroes are not colored but are white; only their sidekicks are colored, e.g., Lone Ranger and Tonto. Consequently, the
- serious Black actor is a precious commodity. It is the Black comedian who is more accepted in today's society because they
- are able to laugh about the negative black images. The white man, as Malcolm X might agree, would favor the comedian over
- the serious actor because white men do not want to be reminded about their crime. The comedian often supports the negative
- black images that the media has created: large lips, large buttocks, the criminal and the slave. Eddie Murphy is famous for his
- Mister Robinson character on Saturday Night Live. Robinson is a spoof on Mister Rogers; however, Robinson is a criminal.
- The image of the black man as a thief continues. Television is not all to blame. The media has made many efforts to create a
- more positive image of Black America. There is a cable station, BET, targeted at black programming. The commercials shown
- on the station feature black actors rather than the white actors on the large network stations. Black TV has been introduced
- to mainstream TV. Most programs are outrageous, such as Homeboys in Outer Space, which shows how the media favors the
- black comedian. However, the introduction into network TV provides an open door for more quality programming and more
- positive images in the future. Malcolm X concludes his speech by stating, ... make the world see that our problem was no
- longer a Negro problem or an American problem but a human problem. A problem for humanity. And a problem which should
- be attacked by all elements of humanity.
- America has come a long way from its days of slavery and segregation. Malcolm was right. Americans must attack this problem
- as a hate issue and not a race issue. But we must stop blaming each other for this problem. We live in a media dominant world.
- The owners of today's media conglomerates are white males, who influence what is being shown on their networks, magazines,
- films, etc. It is time that America takes control of what influences their society and take responsiblity for creating more positive
- images of humanity.
- Endnotes
- Not Just An American Problem, But A World Problem, Humanities 2B Reader, Spring 1996, p
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- Words: 981
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