King
The black man is always targeted.
Listen up, brehs!
This applies to black women, especially those in their early 20s to mid-30s.
It’s time to expose the treacherous brainwashing scheme that ensnared the minds of young black girls, leading them astray to believe that white men are the epitome of desirability. Heretofore creating the modern black wench.
Let's take a minute to remember the Disney Channel and their slick tactics. They created a boyband that had a massive impact on our black girls' minds.
Allow me to bring forth a Disney Creation some of you may not remember: the Jonas Brothers.
They were put on by Disney and broadcasted all over the country, intentionally targeting impressionable young girls.
Y’all have to understand that never in the history of media a boyband was promoted on that level. They weren’t just backed by a record label - they were backed by DISNEY. They were given their own TV show to go along with their music.
And guess what? The Jonas Brothers set the stage for other WHITE MALE ACTS like One Direction and Justin Bieber to become mainstream sex symbols.
These dudes had millions of adoring female fans, while there was NO black male artists that filled that niche. Record labels stopped promoting black artists to that degree.
Can you believe that during that period, there was no equivalent black male representation in the mainstream? Nope, not a single one. Usher was fading away after 2006, and Chris Brown's career got derailed after what happened with Rihanna in 2009.
So, from 2006 to 2016, there were barely any, if any, black male artists that had the same appeal. And especially not in that impressionable age demographic.
And that's how the modern-day dilemma started. The black women we see today were once young impressionable black girls who turned on their TVs and radios, being taught by these CORPORATIONS to idolize WHITE MEN.
Brehs, we can't ignore the power of media and how it shapes our perceptions and who we value as partners.
I firmly believe that these young black girls were taught to hate themselves and love white. And that is why wenching as a phenomenon is so large today.
And that’s WHY a lot of these women in their early 20s to mid 30s, if they do have twitter pages, have cringe shyt on there like: “oh I love white boys” or some other wenching shyt like that. Because a lot of their first crushes were white men they saw on TV. Plain and simple.
A LOT of you are crazy to think that shyt like this doesn’t matter, how it’s just entertainment, and how it doesn’t effect how girls grow up to become women. This shyt is real.
And if you DO HAVE DAUGHTERS - make DAMN SURE that they are appropriately exposed to black influences so they don’t grow up to become wenches.
This applies to black women, especially those in their early 20s to mid-30s.
It’s time to expose the treacherous brainwashing scheme that ensnared the minds of young black girls, leading them astray to believe that white men are the epitome of desirability. Heretofore creating the modern black wench.
Let's take a minute to remember the Disney Channel and their slick tactics. They created a boyband that had a massive impact on our black girls' minds.
Allow me to bring forth a Disney Creation some of you may not remember: the Jonas Brothers.
They were put on by Disney and broadcasted all over the country, intentionally targeting impressionable young girls.
Y’all have to understand that never in the history of media a boyband was promoted on that level. They weren’t just backed by a record label - they were backed by DISNEY. They were given their own TV show to go along with their music.
And guess what? The Jonas Brothers set the stage for other WHITE MALE ACTS like One Direction and Justin Bieber to become mainstream sex symbols.
These dudes had millions of adoring female fans, while there was NO black male artists that filled that niche. Record labels stopped promoting black artists to that degree.
Can you believe that during that period, there was no equivalent black male representation in the mainstream? Nope, not a single one. Usher was fading away after 2006, and Chris Brown's career got derailed after what happened with Rihanna in 2009.
So, from 2006 to 2016, there were barely any, if any, black male artists that had the same appeal. And especially not in that impressionable age demographic.
And that's how the modern-day dilemma started. The black women we see today were once young impressionable black girls who turned on their TVs and radios, being taught by these CORPORATIONS to idolize WHITE MEN.
Brehs, we can't ignore the power of media and how it shapes our perceptions and who we value as partners.
I firmly believe that these young black girls were taught to hate themselves and love white. And that is why wenching as a phenomenon is so large today.
And that’s WHY a lot of these women in their early 20s to mid 30s, if they do have twitter pages, have cringe shyt on there like: “oh I love white boys” or some other wenching shyt like that. Because a lot of their first crushes were white men they saw on TV. Plain and simple.
A LOT of you are crazy to think that shyt like this doesn’t matter, how it’s just entertainment, and how it doesn’t effect how girls grow up to become women. This shyt is real.
And if you DO HAVE DAUGHTERS - make DAMN SURE that they are appropriately exposed to black influences so they don’t grow up to become wenches.