newworldafro
DeeperThanRapBiggerThanHH
So......I finally watched the movie Dope on Netflix last week. So this movie which I know got some good reviews, and was definitely seen by many graduating college students......hell, it is one of the main movies Hip Hop movie of their college career.
So this movie is based off the director's half Nigerian/half AA teenage life. So the scene where the white guy is trying to understand why he can't say nikka, even though the Mexican is "apparently" allowed to say it around the black folks was pretty poignant......the director's character said he cared, but he didn't really care cause they were rushed to complete the mission. The girl kept slapping the white guy every time he said it, and said just because of pride is the reason the white guy can't say the word. She was told by the director's Nigerian/AA character to stop slapping him, and laughed, but stopped slapping him. Unconsciously, It made the white guy look like the victim, and the black chick the unreasonable violent person.
So I'm going to suggest that this movie is the final straw for "nikka" emancipation from the lips of non-blacks around blacks....it didn't start anything, but it put the nagging question on movie screens around the nation....around the world actually.....and provided an answer or resolution, no less by a box haircut having/nerdy/punk band singing/computer coding/hip hop loving/drug dealing&processing/NigerianAfricanAmerican protagonist = The Alpha Cool Guy. So around the world non-blacks can feel free to use it
IMHO. Hope Im wrong 
Oh and Drake's racially ambiguous bytch azz
So this movie is based off the director's half Nigerian/half AA teenage life. So the scene where the white guy is trying to understand why he can't say nikka, even though the Mexican is "apparently" allowed to say it around the black folks was pretty poignant......the director's character said he cared, but he didn't really care cause they were rushed to complete the mission. The girl kept slapping the white guy every time he said it, and said just because of pride is the reason the white guy can't say the word. She was told by the director's Nigerian/AA character to stop slapping him, and laughed, but stopped slapping him. Unconsciously, It made the white guy look like the victim, and the black chick the unreasonable violent person.
So I'm going to suggest that this movie is the final straw for "nikka" emancipation from the lips of non-blacks around blacks....it didn't start anything, but it put the nagging question on movie screens around the nation....around the world actually.....and provided an answer or resolution, no less by a box haircut having/nerdy/punk band singing/computer coding/hip hop loving/drug dealing&processing/NigerianAfricanAmerican protagonist = The Alpha Cool Guy. So around the world non-blacks can feel free to use it
IMHO. Hope Im wrong 
Oh and Drake's racially ambiguous bytch azz

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