What was that Documentary called?Here is the thing breh. The koreans like everyone else except black folks monopolize a industry and tax folks or make it extremely expensive to get into the field. The koreans monopolized the production and distribution aspect of the weave where you have to go through them no matter what and if you weren't korean they made you pay more.
White kat years ago even did a documentary on how they monopolized the industry.
The messed up part is BLACK FOLKS once controlled the wig (weave back in the day) industry and all these hair stores in the black community were black owned.
But once korean folks moved in (with the help of financing in from korea) the black neighborhoods and started selling hair at a cheaper cost blacks basically went to where the hair was cheaper and kicked the black shops to the curb.
Now what has helped the market is that the chinese in china now have gotten into the market and with the help of alibaba and the rest regular folks can buy weave and get it at reasonable prices. But overwhelmingly black folks still buy their weave from koreans cause they still have the best infrastructure that was built from the ground up and have the largest footprint in the black community.
Do you remember which therad?Hell no indeed. Their not gonna tolerate that shyt in their communities.
I think we had a thread on here a few years back where the jews up in NYC talked about how easy it is for/to get black folk to sell out![]()
Do you remember which therad?
What was that Documentary called?
Here is the thing breh. The koreans like everyone else except black folks monopolize a industry and tax folks or make it extremely expensive to get into the field. The koreans monopolized the production and distribution aspect of the weave where you have to go through them no matter what and if you weren't korean they made you pay more.
White kat years ago even did a documentary on how they monopolized the industry.
The messed up part is BLACK FOLKS once controlled the wig (weave back in the day) industry and all these hair stores in the black community were black owned.
But once korean folks moved in (with the help of financing in from korea) the black neighborhoods and started selling hair at a cheaper cost blacks basically went to where the hair was cheaper and kicked the black shops to the curb.
Now what has helped the market is that the chinese in china now have gotten into the market and with the help of alibaba and the rest regular folks can buy weave and get it at reasonable prices. But overwhelmingly black folks still buy their weave from koreans cause they still have the best infrastructure that was built from the ground up and have the largest footprint in the black community.
What was that Documentary called?
Was it that 2009 Chris Rock documentary "Good Hair"?Let me see if I can find it brotha. It had to be back in like 2008 maybe. Been a while, but I remember Micheal Baisden talked about it on bis national show back in the day.
Was it that 2009 Chris Rock documentary "Good Hair"?
Off topic but that redhead CAC is ugly as HOLY fukk.....

When I start seeing that shyt in a target last year that's in a predominately white area, that's when I knew...

Who cares. If you don't buy this one you're a c00n.
![]()
Good point.Mind blowing black women have yet to capitalize on an industry that they are literally the only target consumer for.

There's quite a few black owned, natural hair products on the market. It's just that Carol's Daughter & Shea Moisture were the most prominent ones...well, they won't be any longer.