Fans Flock to TV Guide Magazine’s X-Files 20th Anniversary Comic-Con Panel

Cover of "The X-Files: Fight the Future"

Cover of The X-Files: Fight the Future

By William Keck

The truth is out there, but after 20 years, it’s not always so easy to recall all the details. TV Guide Magazine West Coast bureau chief Michael Schneider sparked the memories of The X-Files stars David Duchovny (Fox Mulder) and Gillian Anderson (Dana Scully), along with show creator, Chris Carter, at the July 18 Comic-Con panel celebrating the 20th anniversary of Fox’s landmark sci-fi mystery series.

Duchovny and Anderson, who rarely appear at such fan events, kicked off the audience hysteria by entering the darkened stage brandishing their character’s familiar flashlights. “Thank you all for coming,” said one fan, acknowledging that the duo is not “regulars on the convention circuit. And it really means a lot that you’re here.”

Much of the audience adoration was focused on Anderson, who inspired many female fans in their careers. “A lot of women have actually come up to me and told me they’ve gone into physics because of Scully,” said Anderson — to which the routinely cheeky Duchovny kidded, “Men often come up to me and say they got into Scully because of Mulder.”

Carter confessed that Scully was “my fantasy woman: strong and smart and opinionated and resourceful, tough. All those things that I like.”

Read More Fans Flock to TV Guide Magazine’s X-Files 20th Anniversary Comic-Con Panel – Today’s News: Our Take | TVGuide.com.

Posted in News from the Soul Brother | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Controversy Lifts CBS’ ‘Big Brother’ to Season High

Posted in News from the Soul Brother | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Chris Matthews apologizes to black co-workers on behalf of ‘all white people’

Posted in News from the Soul Brother | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Family

MV5BMjE2MzI0MzkyNV5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwMjQ2MDM2OQ@@__V1_SX214_Luc Beeson’s (Taken series, Transporter series, The Professional) newest film arrives on these shores on Sepember 13, 2013. It’s the story of the Manzoni’s – a mob family. In witness protection, and relocated to France they discover that old habits die-hard. The Family stars Robert De Niro, Michelle Pfeiffer, Dianna Agron, Tommy Lee Jones, and Dominic Chianese.

Posted in Soul Brother's Trailers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Coping with Trayvon pain: 10 ways to heal your broken heart

By Terrie M. Williams

imagesWith the senseless killing of Trayvon Martin, we once again find ourselves mourning a young Black spirit taken from us far too soon. As survivors, we are charged with honoring Martin and the countless others we’ve lost by standing strong, supporting one another and taking time to consider both our individual well-being and the collective well-being of our community.

At every turn in our lives, we learn that no matter our credentials, we are often treated as “less than” our white counterparts. Taught that we have to be twice as good to get comparable compensation. Treated as if we are at once both invisible and highly conspicuous—ignored when we are in need and profiled when we are simply proceeding.

That a self-appointed neighborhood patrolman targeted Martin because he looked “suspicious” speaks volumes about the experiences we have in communities across the country each and every day.

The trauma of racism is accompanied by post-traumatic stress disorder for many and a great, hidden sense of pain for most. For those who have been following the events that occurred after the killing of Martin last year, this weekend’s not guilty verdict has been particularly soul crushing—bringing all that pain, that Black pain,to the surface. So how do we address our heartbreak? Here are some steps we can all take in the service of our individual and collective healing.

Read More Coping with Trayvon pain: 10 ways to heal your broken heart – New York Amsterdam News: Health Care.

Posted in News from the Soul Brother | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Touré – The internal response to racial slights

Posted in Soul Brother Presents | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Obama: ‘Trayvon Martin Could Have Been Me 35 Years Ago’

President Obama Ends Birth Certificate Discussion

(Photo credit: Talk Radio News Service)

By Mark Memmott

“When Trayvon Martin was first shot, I said that this could have been my son,” President Obama told reporters Friday afternoon. “Another way of saying that was Trayvon Martin could have been me 35 years ago.”

In extensive and personal comments concerning last Saturday’s not-guilty verdict for George Zimmerman, the Florida neighborhood watch volunteer who shot and killed 17-year-old Trayvon in February 2012, the president said he wanted to add “context” to what’s become an intense national discussion about the case and race relations.

“When you think about why, in the African-American community at least, there’s a lot of pain,” Obama said, “it’s important to recognize that the African-American community is looking at this issue through a set of experiences and history that doesn’t go away.”

Obama said that “there are very few African-American men in this country who haven’t had the experience of being followed when they go shopping. That includes me.”

He said many African-American men have heard car locks click when they cross a street — “that’s happened to me.” And he spoke of African-American men getting on elevators to see “a woman clutching her purse nervously and holding her breath until she has a chance to get off.”

“Those sets of experience inform how the African-American community interprets what happened one night in Florida,” said the president.

Adding that he doesn’t want to “make excuses” for the fact that young African-American men are “disproportionately … both victims and perpetrators of violence,” Obama also wondered whether if Trayvon had been a “white teen” instead of a young African-American, “from top to bottom both the outcome and the aftermath might have been different.”

As for how to respond, Obama:

— Said violent protests would dishonor “what happened to Trayvon Martin and his family.”

— “Stand your ground” laws and any others that might “encourage” altercations rather than diffuse them need to be reexamined.

— The nation needs to do some “soul searching.”

He ended, though, by saying Americans should not “lose sight that things are getting better. … Each successive generation is making progress in changing attitudes on race.”

He sees that in his own daughters, Obama said: “They’re better than we were.”

via Obama: ‘Trayvon Martin Could Have Been Me 35 Years Ago’ : The Two-Way : NPR.

Posted in News from the Soul Brother | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Ugly Opposition to Immigration Reform Comes Back to Capitol Hill

English: March for America brings 200,000 peop...

English: March for America brings 200,000 people to Washington, DC, to call for comprehensive immigration reform. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

By George Zornick

If there’s one media failing in the immigration debate, it is that many mainstream reporters hedge around the fact that at least some conservative opposition to the bill is based in cultural and even racial animus towards Hispanics.

It’s not the only reason people oppose immigration reform. There are many good reasons, and many bad reasons that have nothing to do with race. But a non-trivial portion of conservative opposition reform is couched in those terms, particularly among the activist crowd organizing against the bill.

It’s ugly, but it happens to be true. One could forgive mainstream reporters for largely dancing around this fact—if these activists didn’t regularly plan large rallies in the shadow of the Capitol building, and then say a bunch of plainly racist and nativist things into a microphone.

Such was the case Monday, where several hundred people gathered in Upper Senate Park to denounce immigration reform as a job-killer. As ThinkProgress noted, a white nationalist named John Tanton organized the rally; he is famous for works such as “The Case for Passive Case Eugenics” and saying that black Americans are a “retrograde species of humanity.”

Read More Ugly Opposition to Immigration Reform Comes Back to Capitol Hill | The Nation.

Posted in News from the Soul Brother | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Living in the Land of the Free Doesn’t Make You Free

Walter Mosley at the 2007 Brooklyn Book Festiv...

Walter Mosley at the 2007 Brooklyn Book Festival. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

By Walter Mosley

I remember when I was 17 years old, in 1969; three of my friends dropped by in one of their cars and asked me if I wanted to go out with them to the beach or the woods, I forget which. I told my father that I was going and he came out to see my friends. He knew them all and liked them. I went to high school with two of them.

“I’ll see you later,” I said to my dad.

“OK, Walter, but let me tell you something first. If the police stop you guys, your friends will be going home and you will go to jail.”

These particular friends were young, long-haired white kids.

My father was telling me, teaching me that my rights and those of my friends were not the same in midcentury America. People were watching me, suspecting me, fearing and hating me. Not all people. Not all white people. But there was an active shooting range on the streets of every big city in the country, and there was an indelible target on every black man’s chest and head.

Living in the land of the free doesn’t make you free—that’s what my father taught me.

This lesson was repeated every day for many and most young black men in America. The older generation, through gritted teeth, was passing on despicable wisdom that had been true since the United States had been colonies.

Read More Living in the Land of the Free Doesn’t Make You Free – The Daily Beast.

Posted in News from the Soul Brother | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Trayvon Martin And Why The Right-Wing Media Spent 16 Months Smearing A Dead Teenager

Fox News Channel

Fox News Channel (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

By Eric Boehlert

Appearing on Fox & Friends in the wake of a Florida jury found George Zimmerman not guilty of murdering Trayvon Martin, Geraldo Rivera’s claim that Martin brought about his own death by dressing in a hooded sweatshirt the night of the killing was shocking, but not surprising. Echoing earlier comments he made on the program, Rivera proclaimed: “You dress like a thug, people are going to treat you like a thug.”

It was shocking because the idea of a well-paid commentator going on television and blaming an unarmed teen for being shot while walking home inside a gated community because he wore a hoodie — because he tried to look like “a thug” as Rivera put it — is repellent.

So yes, Rivera’s comments were shockingly awful and irresponsible. As was his claim that the all-female jury “would have shot and killed Trayvon Martin a lot sooner than George Zimmerman did.” But his comments weren’t surprising, because Fox News and too much of the right-wing media have spent the last 16 months zeroing in on the memory of a dead teenager and doing their best to denigrate it.

Apart from the far right’s gleeful and disrespectful response to the not guilty verdict, there remains a separate thread of loud tastelessness that dates back to 2012 and focuses on the victim for all the wrong reasons, suggesting he somehow got what he deserved. (Or what he “sought.”)

Remember the fake, menacing photo of Martin that right-wing sites passed around last year? And when The Daily Caller published tweets from the slain boy’s closed Twitter account? Tweets that conservatives then used to portray the teen as a thug?

This week, Fox favorite Ten Nugent practically danced on Martin’s grave, accusing the dead teenager of being a “dope smoking, racist gangsta wannabe” who was “responsible” for being shot by a volunteer neighborhood watchman on the night of February 26, 2012.

Read More Trayvon Martin And Why The Right-Wing Media Spent 16 Months Smearing A Dead Teenager | Blog | Media Matters for America.

Posted in News from the Soul Brother | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment