UserNameless
Veteran
Is that scrapple?
Similar. I think y’all call it scrapple up north. THere are some small differences however .
Is that scrapple?
i went to a more americanized school (i was in high school at the time) and lived near hamra, honestly in my experience even the less strict muslim girls are still pretty accessible.How accessible were the non-Muslim Lebanese girls?
I can make a mean grilled cheese![]()
Naw, I think a Rib Shack Rib Sammich might have that beat. Bones and all on a piece of bread slathered in BBQ sauce.Ever had a tripe sandwhich?
That's prolly as country black as you can get.
To her credit, there were a lot of hip hop industry people that worked with her who came out in her defense claiming she was legit and was serious about the authenticity of the culture.
Your point about many Black PhD and EdD who grew up in the culture is correct, but just because you have credentials behind your name, doesn't qualify you to tell the story. You can contribute your voice and even be considered a subject matter/expert, but I wouldn't hire you to tell the story.
Her background includes curatorial research and collecting, archival work, collections management, and program production.
This is the type of person that you want to tell a story, and unfortunately, were not promoting archivist work in the black community which is what I was alluding to earlier.
Because one may have first hand experience of the culture, that means one can only tell the story from that perspective.
Curators and archivist collect the many and varied individual perspectives and tell a story at a more macro and all-encompassing level.
The Obama Library right now is having an issue hiring black librarians and archivist because it's just too few out there.
That's about to be the new outrage in a minute when folks find out that the South Side library in the black side of town is being forced to hire white librarians. It's not their fault.
We need more folks getting into this line of work.
I understand your professor's disappointment but clearly the white students were in a better position to tell you all about your own black history in those first few days even though you and your families experience it first hand.
long post, spoilering it so you can read in partsEh... non-profit ceo is not a curator/archivist. And looking at her background, which is in business, I wouldn't exactly hire her to curate an exhibit. To preside over the operations of an organization that specializes in the collection and preservation of historical items, sure. But these are two different roles we're speaking about. Get your point about other academics from the tri-state that have covered/specialized in the subject and if they have any interest in working at a library, send them to DC and Chicago!
What do you think of the following responses regarding Timothy Ann Burnside??
Producer 9th Wonder, a thoughtful voice in the hip-hop community, felt otherwise, taking exception to Burnside‘s position being questioned. He championed the contributions of Def Jam co-founder and pioneering producer Rick Rubin, former Columbia Records A&R Faith Newman, who signed Nas to Sony in 1994, and rapper MC Serch of late-80s hip-hop trio 3rd Bass, who co-executive produced Nas’ Illmatic with Newman. All three are white, largely respected figures in hip-hop. He then stated, “Ya’ll are really… in 2018… challenging white involvement in our culture when a majority of you need that very white validation from White-owned radio stations and White-owned networks to say you even like a black artist.”
Based on the weighted co-signs of 9th Wonder, Chuck D, and popular members of Black Twitter, Burnside works hard and is cognizant of her space as a veritable “guest” at the NMAAHC. Chuck D tweeted that she “has put maximum effort and time into preserving Black culture in the NMAAHC.” Entertainment veteran and artist manager Naima Cochrane, who worked with Beyonce, Maxwell, and John Legend during her time as a music executive, contends that“I know stories of pieces she fought to get into the museum, how she’s worked with artists on exhibits,” and “how much weight she gives the work.” Jamilah Lemieux, a former editor at Ebony, and columnist on issues of race and gender published in The Nation, The New York Times, and other outlets, noted that “I admire her work and I’ve seen her make space for Black folk” and “de-center herself.” But Lemieux also stated that there “ain’t no way in hell I can sit here and say I wouldn’t have had an identical reaction to Chubb’s if I didn’t know Tim.”
It’s Reasonable To Question White Curators Who Curate Black Art
Make sure to pick up a few dolma while you're at it
Finish things off with a baklava
Then it's time for a nap![]()
po boy , no? I always figured that was the (AADOS, was it? ) go to sandwich? I'm sure other cases can be made.
AbsolutelyWhat the fukk is an Afram? :dahell2:
"their" :mjdrinking:
Cacs really outing themselves in these fukken threads.
I swear some of the "topics" that get posted here, it is almost like cacs are studying black people.