So I Just watched Amos & Andy for the first time

a murda

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The buffoonery was on EPIC proportions :ohlawd:

I cant blame bill cosby for trying yo black market this shyt off the shelves :scusthov:

:salute: to dave chappelle btw

see if ya'll can handle the first 2 mins of this c00nery :mjhat:

 

ugksam

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the neighbors gonna think the cat fell in the washing machine again
 

Mr.Black

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I personally ain't never see anything wrong with this show, it was fukking comedy, no worse than the honeymooners or the odd couple or the 3 stooges

nikkas was too uptight then and now
 

Doobie Doo

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man this shyt is no different than Martin. But this show has slightly less c00ning and less nikkas in dresses than a Tyler Perry movie and it employed more black actors.
 
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Gospel

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My dad put me on to the older radio version Mp3s....

Was straight comedy.

:salute::blessed: the Kingfish and his ridiculous goonery.
 

Scientific Playa

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Do you have audio of actual sharecroppers?

ur question jogged my memory banks



George Johnson's song Whistling c00n was one of the most popular of the c00n songs of the 1850-90s. While the records and the imagery that goes along with them are offensive, these are pioneering African-American recordings and songs. There are a number of virtually lost African-American songwriters from this period who tend to be left out of the Great American Song Book. Virtually none of these recordings are available today, although at one point 1 in 15 new records released by the major phonograph companies (Edison, Victor, Columbia) were c00n music.

The amazing thing about the earliest of Johnson's recordings is that each one was unique. Each record was recorded and cut ON THE SPOT, so he had to do each take perfectly, and was then paid for the session. He made a decent living, but there weren't any copyright laws, or even any recorded industry at this point. It's said he did this song 56 times in one day.

There were comic songs that offended almost every ethnic group, although to be fair, African-Americans portrayal on the sheet music and the art works are pretty horrific. If you dig deep enough, you can find examples (like the ones on my walls:-) that contain images that arent so offense, so you can appreciate it. Johnson's other big song "The Laughing Song" eventually become known around the world and was a hit around the world for whites and blacks alike.It was also a hit in 1947 by Phil Harris sans the offensive lyrics.

Johnson was born to freed slaves, sometime in the early 1840s. He was an actual slave in Virginia, but was freed in 1853 and lived through the Civil War. He drifted to New York in the 1870s and attracted small bits of money whistling on ferry boats for a living, which is how he was discovered and recorded. Johnson led a controversial life and was also accused of killing and murdering his alcoholic girlfriend. His trial was quite a sensation in the early 1900s. I didnt feel like transcribing the words. I will later

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_W._Johnson



 

concise

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I looked up the lyrics to that whistling song... :what:
Oh I've seen in my time some very funny folks
But the funniest of all I know
Is a coloured individual as sure as you're alive
As black as any black crow
You can talk until you're tired but you'll never get a word
From this very funny queer old c00n
He's a knock-kneed, double-jointed hunky-punky mook*
but he's happy when he whistles in tune.

(Verse 2)
Oh he's got a pair of lips like a pound of liver, split
And a nose like an india-rubber shoe
He's a limpy, happy, chuckle-headed huckleberry nig
And he whistles like a happy killy* loon
He's an independent, free-and-easy bad and greasy ham
With a cranium like a big baboon
Oh I never heard him talk to anybody in my life
but he's happy when he whistles in tune.

(Verse 3)
Oh he'll whistle in the morning through the day and through the night
And he whistles when he goes to bed
He whistles like a locomotive engine in his sleep
And he whistled when his wife was dead
One day a fellow hit him with a brick upon the mouth
His face swelled like a big balloon
But it didn't faze the merry happy huckleberry nig
And he whistled up the same old tune.

:what: :what: :what:
 

tater

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You know I watched a documentary and it had this show in it (it was about the origins of black comedians, I forgot the name), and they made a lot of good points. Everyone was gainfully employed and was building the community. Aside from Kingfish, but it was funny. Besides, my grandma had me watching this and to listen to her reminisce and laugh about this show was nice. Honestly, it's funny. If anything this show was miles ahead of all those basketball b1tches, and hip hop hoes shows that are out. The NAACP was so quick to get this thrown off the air, yet sit idly by while those c00n ass shows stay on the air now. In the age of technology no less, where the majority of the world can access that BS...
 
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