Remember -- I speak not of the truth, but of the imagery
projected in US media.
And we must know that there are millions of people,
perhaps even billions, who consume those media projections,
and because they know little else, believe them to be true.
That is the power of media.
It is impossible to look at how the media works in the US
and not conclude that it is a tool of white supremacy, and a
weapon in the long war against Black life.
When we understand that, we have to ask, how did our
people survive such psychic onslaughts over our long history
here? The short answer is that many of us did not. But the
other side of the coin shows us that many Blacks consumed
their own media, in the form of Black newspapers, Black
radio, Black magazines and Black books. For entertainment,
we appeared so rarely on the TV, that for several decades
Black movie companies produced 'race movies', which were
shown all across Black America, showing us as competent,
wholesome, and feeling human beings. The Black filmmaker,
Oscar Micheaux put together some remarkable work, and surely
these images saved many a Black soul huddled in the dark on
some segregated balcony in a movie house in the South.
That was then; this is now.
In the years since the apparent victories of the US Civil
Rights Movement, we have seen the loss of Black institutions
of all kinds, not just media, under the aegis of
integration.
Black movies, while well beyond the technical skills and
costs of Micheaux, are largely comedy ventures, or poorly
written 'gangsta' flicks.
Black radio stations have been purchased by larger
corporations, and many Black newspapers have ceased
publishing.
By percentile, more Blacks consume TV, and movies, than
any other demographic in the US.
Daily TV is a toxic sludge of stereotype, silliness, and
a race to the lowest common denominator.
There is a lower percentage of Black journalists working
on dailies than 10 years ago.
In the 1960s, Canadian communication researcher, Marshall
McLuhan coined the phrase, "the media is the message." His
work got people thinking about the power of media to shape
ideas, and ways of seeing the world. If 'the media is the
message', and white, corporate media has bought out (or
overwhelmed) most Black mediums of information, what is the
message that they are reflecting to the world?
So, if that's the problem, what's the solution, you ask?
As the saying goes, once you know the pitfall is there,
hopefully you won't fall into it.
Don't think that your mere presence (as a Black
journalist) in a predominantly white institution will change
them.
If possible (and given the fluidity of internet-related
businesses) build your own independent business, and if you
sell it, sell it to someone who shares your vision.
When you get into the business, whether in radio or
newspaper, don't sell out. Remember -- he who owns the
business determines the output.
Only a corporate-owned media could have suckered millions
of Americans into believing that Osama bin Laden and
Saddam's Iraq were homies.
The media that sold the lies that lead to war, chaos and
death, will hardly be changed by the addition of a few
Blacks on their staffs.
Think of it this way; decades ago, the media was always
influenced by corporate and government interests. Today, the
media is owned by larger corporate interests, and that is
the interest they serve.
You can either serve these interests by getting a job at
some soulless radio station, or some dead-end newspaper, or
you can start your own.
In short, *become* the media.
Give your people an intelligent, viable alternative to
the garbage being spoon-fed to the masses.
Tell them the truth. Raise hell. In the tradition of the
ancestors, 'Speak truth to power.'
Make a difference, by being different.
I wish you every success.
Ona Move!
Mumia Abu-Jamal
Speech Writ.
3/26/06
Copyright
2006 Mumia Abu-Jamal