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"Making Friends With Black People,"

 
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Dragon Horse
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PostPosted: Tue 18 Nov 2008 17:23    Post subject: "Making Friends With Black People," Reply with quote

Quote:
Obama means change for NBC TV
Network makes 'Friends With Black People'
By MICHAEL SCHNEIDER
Brock Akil


President-elect Barack Obama is already bringing about change -- to the world of network TV development, at least.
NBC is developing a comedy based on the book "Making Friends With Black People," a buddy comedy that will focus on the state of race relations in the U.S.

Show isn't specifically about Obama's rise as the nation's first African-American president -- but "Making Friends" hopes to capitalize on how Obama's success has changed the nation's dialogue on race.

"From time to time, race bubbles up in the consciousness of the country and then dissipates," said "Making Friends" author Nick Adams. "Now, with Obama, people are talking about race a lot more. We hope to capitalize on that and not let the dialogue die down. ... It seemed like a good opportunity to strike while the iron is hot."

"The Game" exec producers Mara Brock Akil (who also created "Girlfriends") and Salim Akil will write the script and serve as exec producers on the project.

"Making Friends" will center on two guys -- one African-American and one white -- who become close friends, but who don't necessarily see things the same way.

Universal Media Studios is behind the project, along with Industry Entertainment.

The "Making Friends" book was penned in 2006 by Adams, a standup comic who took a humorous look at how people dance around issues of race.

Adams will serve as a co-producer on the project, while Industry's Dianne Fraser and Eryn Brown will be co-exec producers.

"Making Friends" could rep the latest in a long line of laffers conceived to reflect, in part, a societal shift in the U.S. In 1982, for example, "Family Ties" bowed in the midst of the country's move toward a more conservative era under Ronald Reagan. Before that, 1970s sitcoms like "All in the Family" highlighted the nation's generational culture clash, while "Maude" embraced the women's movement.




I don't like the idea of this. It is obviously singling black people out as some type of aliens, seperate...I doubt they will make a tv show "Making friends with Asians or Making Friends with Hispanics..."especially not the former.
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G-Man
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PostPosted: Tue 18 Nov 2008 17:47    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Show isn't specifically about Obama's rise as the nation's first African-American president -- but "Making Friends" hopes to capitalize on how Obama's success has changed the nation's dialogue on race.


How has Obama’s victory changed the nation’s dialogue on race, which is fundamentally scripted and dishonest and will continue to be so in the future?

Quote:
I don't like the idea of this. It is obviously singling black people out as some type of aliens, seperate...I doubt they will make a tv show "Making friends with Asians or Making Friends with Hispanics..."especially not the former.


It’s because black people (African Americans) are rooted in U.S. history. The other two are primarily derived from immigrants to the U.S. Plus “dialogues about race” in the U.S. have always been about blacks and whites.
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Dragon Horse
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PostPosted: Tue 18 Nov 2008 20:01    Post subject: Reply with quote

G-Man wrote:
Quote:
Show isn't specifically about Obama's rise as the nation's first African-American president -- but "Making Friends" hopes to capitalize on how Obama's success has changed the nation's dialogue on race.


How has Obama’s victory changed the nation’s dialogue on race, which is fundamentally scripted and dishonest and will continue to be so in the future?

Quote:
I don't like the idea of this. It is obviously singling black people out as some type of aliens, seperate...I doubt they will make a tv show "Making friends with Asians or Making Friends with Hispanics..."especially not the former.


It’s because black people (African Americans) are rooted in U.S. history. The other two are primarily derived from immigrants to the U.S. Plus “dialogues about race” in the U.S. have always been about blacks and whites.


That maybe true, but it singles out blacks as some type of "aliens" in American society...when as you said blacks are American and have always been part of U.S. history.
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HastaLaPasta
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PostPosted: Sun 23 Nov 2008 02:55    Post subject: Reply with quote

I guess this will be in s similar vain as "Aliens in America" which addressed some post-9/11 social issues concerning Muslims.
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