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NAACP Reacts to ‘Good Times’ Trailer: “Choices Were Made and Approved”

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The civil rights organization spoke with creatives involved with the controversial animated series, who said the show will include social commentary, but notes that Netflix has nonetheless chosen to market the series with negative tropes.

Opinion Column by Kyle Bowser — Shortly after Netflix released the trailer for its new adult animated series Good Times two weeks ago, our office started receiving calls and emails.

Inspired by the iconic live-action sitcom of the 1970s, the new show’s use of the beloved title conjures notions of familial fabric and community cohesion, amid challenges of generational poverty and stifling social policies that perpetuate inequitable caste conditions. Fans of the original series likely expected to see descendants of the Evans family engaging with their circumstances in adherence to the ancestral creed: Love through the pain.

But to the considerable consternation of many viewers, the new Good Times trailer seems to establish a world of Black characters navigating chaos and dysfunction, largely driven by drugs, violence and discord. While sibling tension is a common dynamic within TV family portrayals, the trailer resolves such banter by offering a father’s regret for failing to employ prophylactic measures to avoid parenthood. A voiceover referencing patriarch James Evans’ dedication to providing for the family is then followed by the animated dad’s version of fatherhood: a threat to kill the [N-word] dating his daughter. When asked for advice on advancing son Junior out of a third term in the 10th grade, a school official suggests the young man launch a pornography site. The trailer also offers a rendering of a Black heavenly deity preoccupied with playing video games. But the most absurd portion of the two-minute and 43-second clip is its prominent presentation of a drug-dealing baby. We’re treated to images of the baby shooting dice on the street, lusting for breasts to suckle and ultimately engaging in a shootout with three other thuggish Black babies.

As a leading organization for social justice and civil rights, the NAACP was called on to take action and issue a response. In an effort to gain a more complete and clear understanding of the creative direction for the new series, executive produced by the late Norman Lear, widely recognized as the creator of the original, alongside basketball great Stephen Curry and Family Guy’s Seth MacFarlane, the NAACP requested screeners of full episodes. Netflix declined. So instead, we contacted creatives involved with the production and asked them about their vision and execution. We were told there was a deliberate effort to “push the envelope” in the storytelling and tonality. We were told about real-life events that informed the basis for certain episodic elements, and we were reminded that the mandate of the adult animation genre is to sensationalize and exaggerate realities.

It is true that animation is not confined by the limitations of physical or psychological properties. In cartoons, cars can fly, fish can sing and, apparently, babies can sell drugs. But we wonder whether the historical relationship between Hollywood and the Black community should create caution about the use of distorted imagery and narratives that further pervert the representation of a people.

Series personnel also shared that the show is framed by a recurring indictment of “the system” for creating and maintaining oppressive conditions that plague the Black community. In fact, the promotional trailer includes an articulation of that allegation: Unnamed white men, dressed in suits and sunglasses, drop off crates of automatic weapons in the ‘hood at night, as a voiceover explains, “The system puts the guns and drugs on the street.”

Perhaps an underlying social commentary counterbalances the imagery teased in the Good Times trailer. Perhaps the full episodes provide unique entertainment value while also challenging racist social policy. All will be evident when the series launches this Friday. What is clear today, however, is the choice made by Netflix to market the show based on an interpretation of Black life as an “otherized” experience, replete with abhorrent beliefs and behaviors.

Clips used in the trailer were culled from 10 episodes of content, a vast inventory of options available to fill the short clip used to market the show. Committees of people were involved in the search for proper balance between comedy, absurdity and social commentary. Choices were made and approved. The impact of the campaign probably exceeded expectations, as negative news travels fast and people seem to enjoy commiserating in their contempt. Perhaps that was the plan.

But to be clear, there’s nothing new here. Renderings of Black life in media often serve to buoy the artificiality of white supremacy, as the NAACP explores in our media guide. While we continue to engage with media institutions to encourage reform, we also call upon our constituents to develop greater discernment in their engagement. We must elevate our consciousness for media consumption. Keen awareness of the power and consequences of media will lead us to more informed choices and, in turn, lead the industry to make necessary adjustments. To the extent that media choices are designed to satisfy the need of others to be affirmed in their false sense of superiority, we call for more accurate portrayals of the truth, deeper dimension in the exploration of our humanity and exposure of the deliberate propaganda that supports our oppression.

After all, we want Good Times too

OLLU 5k Confetti Walk and Run

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OLLU News — The Eighth Annual 5K Confetti Run & Walk will be held on Saturday, April 20, 2024 at 9 a.m. on the Front Walk in front of Main Building.

Run/Walk Date and Location
Saturday, April 20, 2024
Main Building, Front Walk

Race Day Schedule
7:30 a.m.- Registration and Packet pickup
8:30 a.m. – Kids Run Begins
9 a.m.- Race Begins
10:30 a.m.- Awards

Packet Includes:
T-shirt, customized bib and finisher medal

Awards
First overall Female/Male
Top 3 Female/Male in the following age groups:
1-14, 15-19, 20-29, 30-39,40-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70+

Sign Up and More Information – Click here

Spurs Avoid Last Place in the West

Spurs Conclude Challenging Season with Hopeful Finish, Avoid Last Place in the West

The sun has finally set on the Spurs for the 2023-24 season following Sunday’s home win against Detroit 123-95. The Silver and Black finish the season 22-60 and managed to not finish dead last in the West. That dubious honor goes to the Portland Trailblazers who finished 21-61

Although this season was nothing short of a disaster, the Silver and Black managed to show signs of life in the second half of the season. The Spurs were 11-16 after the All-Star break and finished the season by going 6-4 in their last 10 games. This included a big win against Denver Friday night at the Frost Bank Center 121-120. That loss to the Silver and Black cost the defending champion Nuggets a #1 seed in the Western Conference playoffs.

“It was a good end to the season, for sure. We were playing better and better throughout the entire year. Each month we were getting better as a team and as a whole and playing more and more like the way we wanted to play offensively and defensively. Obviously, the win the other night was a huge one and then to come out tonight and play well again, I think it just goes to show all the work that we’ve been putting in all year. We continued to stay together, not get too down and just continue to go through all the tough times together and continue to grow.”, said Tre Jones following Sunday’s win.

While expectations were not exceedingly high coming into this season as the Spurs are in the midst of a rebuild, it’s my belief that most people expected the squad to do better than last season pre-VDub in which they also finished 22-60.

Victor Wembanyama was the ONLY bright spot in this clown show of a season. He introduced himself to the basketball world in dramatic fashion, making history along the way. He finished the season averaging 21 points, 11 rebounds, 4 assists, 4 blocks, and a steal. It’s worth mentioning that he only played 30 minutes per game.

It’ll be interesting to see what moves the Spurs make during the offseason to bolster the squad around the Kid, to date they aren’t planning any.

Nonprofit Provides FREE Computers to Families in San Antonio- Sign Up by April 25th!

Compudopt, a Texas-based, national nonprofit is launching services in the San Antonio area on April 25 and is giving 300 free computers to families in need, preloaded with educational materials.

For a chance to receive a free device at the event sign up here before April 25th: https://www.compudopt.org/san-antonio

Photo: Compudopt
Photo: Compudopt

Charity Gala Awards Students Financial Aid in San Antonio

Prince Hall Masons of John T. Maxey Lodge No. 74 host Annual Charity Gala

Article by: Bro. Sidney H. Thompson — In an evening brimming with elegance and community spirit, the Prince Hall Freemasons of John T. Maxey Lodge No. 74 hosted its 10th Annual Black & White Charity Gala at the Marriott Northwest.

The gala drew attendees from all corners of the community, and served as a celebration of unity and recognition, honoring individuals whose unwavering dedication has made a profound impact on our community. Among the evening’s highlights were the presentations of the community recognition awards, which recognized outstanding contributions in various fields.

In total, six students were awarded student aid. Among the recipients were high school students Iman Zakaria who was awarded $1,000.00, Henry Oludare, $750.00, and Alexandria Curtis, $500.00 for their college endeavors.

Student aid for continuing education were awarded to Anahyah Armand, $1,000, Gavin Clark, $750, and Imani Hardin, $500, to support their pursuit of knowledge and personal development.

Additionally, the gala paid tribute to exemplary members of the community, including Bro. Aaron Scott, a member of John T. Maxey Lodge who was named First Responder of the Year, and Bro. Burrell D. Parmer, of San Antonio Lodge No. 1 and commander, Fred Brock American Legion Post No. 828, was honored as Community Activist of the Year. Their selfless service and dedication to improving the lives of others were celebrated and applauded by all in attendance.

Special recognition was also extended to the Lodge’s gold sponsor, Frank Crowder, president/CEO of Defense Consulting Service. Crowder’s generous donation of $5,000.00 towards student aid and the gala event underscored the importance of community support and collaboration.

Notable dignitaries in attendance included Grand Master Michel T. Anderson of The Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge, Free & Accepted Masons of Texas, whose presence added to the significance of the evening. Additionally, the gala featured a captivating keynote address by the Deputy Grand High Priest Keith McMurray of the Most Excellent Prince Hall Grand Chapter Holy Royal Arch Masons of Texas. His speech, titled “Unity is Strength – Division is Weakness,” resonated with the audience, inspiring all to strive for solidarity and cooperation in pursuit of common goals.

As attendees departed from the gala, they carried with them not only cherished memories but also a renewed sense of purpose and commitment to serving their community.

“The annual Black & White Charity Gala was more than just an event,” said Bro. Michael Stuart, master of John T. Maxey Lodge. “It was a testament to the power of unity, strength, and collective action in making a positive difference in the world.”

Special thanks to the Marriott Northwest for providing a fitting backdrop for the gala and to Bro. Edward Jones of R40 Photos for exceptional photography services.

FBI agents are searching the ship that crashed into Baltimore’s Key Bridge

The FBI is conducting a court-authorized search of the vessel that crashed into a Baltimore bridge last month, according to FBI and Justice Department officials.

The Dali hit the Key Bridge on March 26, leading to the death of six construction workers who had been repairing pot holes in the overnight hours on the structure.

The Justice Department does not typically confirm or deny the existence of criminal investigations, but the investigative authority suggests that a criminal probe into the collapse is underway, and that a federal judge has approved the search.

The Washington Postwhich first reported the activity, suggests that federal investigators are exploring whether crew members knew the vessels systems had been malfunctioning before they left the port. NPR has not confirmed the focus of the search.

The FBI probe is separate from an investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board.

The Biden administration has pledged to help rebuild the bridge.

Joe Biden catching up to Donald Trump in 2024, poll finds

President Joe Biden is catching up to former President Donald Trump’s polling lead, highlighting just how close the 2024 presidential election will be, according to a new poll from the New York Times and Siena College.

Trump leads Biden by just one percentage point with both men at 46% and 45% respectively. The survey is a significant boost for the incumbent president who has been lagging behind Trump in recent polling. 

An earlier New York Times and Siena college poll released in March saw Trump leading Biden by 5 percentage points at 48% and 43% respectively. 

But Biden appears to be shoring up support among Americans who voted for him in the 2020 elections. 89% of his 2020 supporters say they would vote for him now compared to 83% who said the same from the earlier poll.

Trump still commands strong support at 94% among his 2020 supporters, but that’s a drop from 97% in the March poll.

Biden, who has seen falling support among Black and Latino voters, has started to make gains with those voters as well, a key coalition behind his 2020 victory. His support with those voters however, still isn’t as high as it was in 2020, according to the poll.

And while age continues to be a major concern for Biden – 69% of voters in the poll say he is too old to be an effective president – that concern has fallen among voters older than 65.

But other campaign issues continue to pose troubles for Biden’s reelection campaign. The former president is leading Biden on both the economy and immigration according to the poll. 

On the economy, 64% approved of Trump’s handling of the economy compared to 63% who disapproved of Biden’s handling of it. And on immigration, 50% of voters approved of Trump’s handling of the issue compared to 64% of voters who disapproved of Biden’s job.

The poll was conducted with 1,059 registered voters and had a margin of sampling error among registered voters by plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.

Article by: Ken Tran

 

O.J. SIMPSON DEAD AT 76 After Cancer Battle

O.J. Simpson – one of the most infamous high-profile Americans of all time — is dead after a cancer battle.

The former NFL great — who stood trial for the double-murder of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ron Goldman, in the ’90s, only to be acquitted — passed away Wednesday in Las Vegas … this according to his family.

They say he was surrounded by his children and grandchildren when he died Wednesday night. Simpson’s attorney also confirmed his death to TMZ.

O.J. had reportedly been battling prostate cancer in recent years, and his health took a turn for the worse of late — with him landing in hospice care within the past few months.

Word about O.J.’s cancer diagnosis first made the rounds in February, when a local outlet  reported it, although the details were hazy … as was O.J.’s response to the news at the time, when he denied he was in hospice, but didn’t address the cancer report.

Adding to the mystery was the fact O.J. actually touched on a cancer diagnosis in 2023 in a video he posted on X — when he said he’d “caught” some form of cancer, but suggested he’d beaten it. In any case, the cancer came back and claimed his life about a year later.

O.J. had been looking frail in the lead-up to his passing … including during an outing in January when he was spotted using a cane.

The last time O.J. posted was a video of himself talking about Super Bowl LVIII, where he said he was rooting for his former team the San Francisco 49ers. He seemed to be in good spirits then. He was seated in the clip and talking from the backyard of a home.

His death marks the end of a multi-decade saga of crime and intrigue surrounding O.J. — which peaked after the brutal slayings of Nicole and Ron in 1994, and in the aftermath of what was dubbed the Trial of the Century … when O.J. was prosecuted on national TV.

Even before he was apprehended by police for questioning in the immediate aftermath of the murders … O.J. led cops on a low-speed chase in his Ford Bronco on L.A freeways — a moment that was nationally televised, and one of the most dramatic, shared experiences in modern American history.

2024 NCAA Women’s Hoops: Historic Viewership Surge

South Carolina Secures 2024 NCAA Championship, Surpassing Iowa’s Caitlin Clark in a Historic Women’s Basketball Season

A year after their perfect season crashed with a semifinal loss to the sensational Clark in the Final Four, the South Carolina Gamecocks defeated the Iowa Hawkeyes 87-75 to win the NCAA women’s basketball championship in Cleveland on Sunday.

The Gamecocks’ win gave them a perfect 38-0 for their 2023-24 season. This is South Carolina’s third national title. Staley became the fifth coach to win at least three national championships, joining Geno Auriemma, Pat Summitt, Kim Mulkey, and Tara VanDerveer.

There was a ton of hype ahead of the women’s NCAA tournament, and it lived up to it with the action that has taken place the last few weeks. Sunday wrapped up a historical season for women’s college basketball, and the women’s NCAA basketball tournament has been full of girl and star power, like UConn’s Paige Bueckers, LSU’s Angel Reese, USC’s JuJu Watkins, with Iowa’s Caitlin Clark front and center. The birth of not one but three WNBA stars, Angel Reese, Caitlin Clark, and South Carolina’s Kamilla Cardoso, head off to next week’s WNBA draft.

“I personally want to thank Caitlin Clark for lifting up our sport. She carried a heavy load for our sport,”  South Carolina coach Dawn Staley said. “She’s going to lift that league (WNBA) up as well. Caitlin Clark if you’re out there you’re one of the GOATs of our game. We appreciate you.”

2024 NCAA Women’s South Carolina Gamecocks, Photo: LA Times

Caitlin Clark has been a singular force in growing the women’s game in ways no college player has.

Clark’s ability to sell tickets both at home and away, is unparalleled. Never before has a player attracted such a significant audience to women’s college basketball. Her impact has illuminated the sport in a manner never before in history. A record 9.9 million viewers tuned in to watch LSU’s win over Iowa in the 2023 national championship game. And on Monday, Iowa’s 94-87 victory over LSU in the Elite Eight averaged 12.3 million viewers, the most watched women’s college basketball game in history and one of the most-viewed games in any sport other than NFL football over the past year. On Friday, Iowa’s semifinal win over Connecticut was the most-watched basketball game in ESPN history, including men and women, averaging 14.2 million viewers (and peaking at 17 million).

Seven television networks and streaming platforms recorded their highest-rated women’s college games ever when Iowa played on their air station in the regular season.

Caitlin Clark has captivated the broader sports fan. The casual sports fan. Even the non-sports fan.

What does this mean for women’s basketball? Will people follow Caitlin Clark to the WNBA, or will that star power remain at the college level? Women’s college basketball has never been more popular, and it may ignite changes in women’s basketball. Finally equalizing the playing field, as always wished, Clark, Reese, and Cardoso just might be what women’s basketball needs to compare with men’s sports. Only time will tell.

The WNBA Draft begins on Monday, Apr. 15, and it is officially set for 7:30 p.m. ET.

Air Force contractor who walked into moving propeller had ‘inadequate training’ when she was killed

Inadequate training, poor lighting and more factors are to blame for the death of a California contractor killed after she walked into a plane’s moving propeller in California last fall, United States Air Force officials have found.

Stephanie Cosme, 32, of Palmdale, was struck and critically injured the evening of Sept. 7, 2023, when she “inadvertently walked into the parked remotely piloted aircraft’s rotating propeller” at Gray Butte Field Airfieldaccording to an Air Force accident investigation report.

Palmdale is a city in northern Los Angeles. The airfield where Cosme was killed is owned and operated by General Atomics and located near Edwards Air Force Base in Kern County.

Civilian contractor Stephanie Cosme, 32, was killed when she walked into an Air Force drone’s propeller. Facebook/Stephanie Cosme

Noisy and poor conditions also factor in engineer’s death

Cosme, a test engineer for Sumaria Systems, was performing test support functions for the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, before she walked into the MQ-9A’s propeller during ground tests and was killed, according to the report released Friday.

Other factors including noisy conditions, poor conditions, and a rush to finish testing, all contributed to Cosme’s loss of situational awareness during the incident, the report continues.

Cosme lost situational awareness, test were rushed

Accident Investigation Board President Brig. Gen. Lance R. French determined that Cosme “was incorrectly instructed or trained on how to take telemetry readings when approaching the MQ-9A while the engine was running” and that she lost situational awareness walking around the aircraft taking telemetry readings with a hand-held measurement device.

According to the report, French also found “a clear lack of communication among the contractor test team and ground support personnel.

He also wrote that due to previous delays and cancellations, the tests conducted on Sept. 7 “were rushed.”

Article by: Natalie Neysa Alund