Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Steve Harvey: Please Go Sit Down!

I applaud anyone for building his or her brand. Let's be honest, in today's shaky economy, I think it is important to have multiple streams of income.

But there is a point when you also have to know your limitations, and stay in your lane.
Apparently, Steve Harvey did not get that memo!

A few years ago, he wrote a book Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man. There have even been two movies centered around the book. Steven Harvey is thrice married, and twice divorced, has cheated on each wife with the current, and when the two previous Mrs. Harveys would not go away quietly, he drug them through the court systems with nasty divorces and child custody hearings. Does this sound like someone who you want to take relationship advice from?

Like one of his tenets in the book is that a woman should wait 90 days before she has sex with her new man. Not when there is chemistry. Not when she feels comfortable. Not after they have taken mutual STD tests. Just when the clock strikes 90 days. Steve's claim is that a man will respect you more, and you have more chance of becoming his wife, like that is every woman's ultimate goal (rolls eyes).

This was one of those books that I knew was not for me, so rather than blast Steve for it, I just simply passed on it, and kept it moving.

Recently, he acquired Paul Deen to mentor black boys in culinary arts. The same Paula Deen publicly ridiculed for publicly uttering a racial epithet and treating her minority employees like modern day slaves, and again, I gave Steve a pass.

Now Mr. Harvey has a dating website, and this is not just any website, It is website to teach women how to become more dateable. Yep, you read that correctly!

So now ladies, you can find your soulmate, but only if you are dateable, and maybe you can find and marry a man like Steve Harvey, who will only respect you if you make him wait 90 days for sex, while he cheats on you with the next Mrs. Harvey, and then divorces you while disparaging and defaming your character during divorce and custody proceedings.

Doesn't that just sound like a prince ladies?

Steve, I liked you better when you just told jokes, made us laugh, and went on about your business. Go back to that, and leave the relationship advice to the experts, you know the ones with actual psychology and counseling degrees, or the ones who have actually sustained a healthy, monogamous relationship for more than a Hollywood minute.

 Above all, cut the misogynistic bullshit. I am sure that if any woman wants relationship advice, there are plenty of mothers, aunts, female cousins, and other community women who could do a much better job building their self-esteem and giving relationship advice.

Until next time....

Monday, October 13, 2014

black-ish Is Not The Cosby Show and I Am Glad

Since 1992, when the last Cosby Show episode aired, network television executives, black people, even Bill Cosby and anyone who was a cult follower of this iconic show have tried to get the magic that was once the Cosby Show, back!

Many have tried and failed, and let's be honest it is difficult to even mimic or follow that iconic recipe for a good family sitcom.Even some 22 years after the airing of the last episode, The Cosby Show still makes us laugh, and revert to childhood memories.

Many black intellectuals (you know that group who gets on my damn nerves) have often lamented about finding a Cosbyish show to fill the void, or that there aren't enough positive images of black people on television (rolls eyes and stomps feet because they have beaten this particular horse to death), so imagine my surprise when I heard about black-ish, a new comedy starring the wonderful comedic talent, Anthony Anderson, the immensely talented Laurence Fishburne, and the amazing Tracey Ellis Ross.

After the first episode, the pilot, I was not impressed. I felt they were doing too much, trying to cover too much territory, and I was not interested in a show trying to define or make the black culture all-inclusive. In fact, I had already told my sister to take it off the dvr rotation.

Thankfully, she did not listen to me, and after viewing episodes 2 and 3, I can honestly saw that the show has found its stride. You will love the children the most of all. All of them are newcomers to the entertainment field, but they shine, especially the two youngest, who are fraternal twins.

The basic premise of the show is that you have two upper class African-American parents, living in an affluent area of Los Angeles, trying to make their children more aware of their African-American heritage, or it seems to be of prime concern for the father (Anthony Anderson). Mom seems just fine with the children, but let me tell you, hilarity ensues.

So no black-ish is not the Cosbys, and to be honest, I am glad that it is not. The Cosby Show had its day. I will always respect the great work that Bill Cosby and the talented cast did, and will still watch episodes when I am afforded the opportunity.

But give black-ish a chance. I think that you will enjoy it!


Until next time.....

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Gay Marriage Doesn't Need a Defense But Your Self-Righteousness and Hypocrisy Do

The human attention span is short. Every few years, there becomes a "pressing" issue, which demands our total attention. We talk about it at length, and thanks to social media, and anyone with a smartphone and internet access, people don't mind sharing their views with you.

Over the last several years, gay marriage has become a hot topic. Christians, gays, heterosexuals, anyone with a voice tries to give his or her input on this subject, to the point that you either don't care or just wish they would find something else to talk about.

On Friday, an Asheville judge refused to uphold Amendment One, thus paving the way for gay unions to be recognized in North Carolina.

People took to social media in droves either to express their jubilation or their disgust, and I must say it was quite hilarious.

Let me just say that at thirty-eight, I am still single, and will probably be so, because the idea of giving half of my stuff to someone, when I have worked so hard to get it, just does not appeal to me. I can get the benefits of marriage without all the bullshit (Take that however you want, judge all you want, your opinions means nada to me).

But I recognize that others have a fascination and/or strong desire to be tied to someone, so I say go for it, whatever your sexuality. Love is love.

It is self-righteous and hypocritical to preach the Bible to someone, unless you have made a lifetime of living by the book.

Do you need me to clarify?

What gives you the right to ridicule, place someone else's life under a microscope or judge, just because you took one fateful trip to the altar during one Sunday service, or weeknight revival, because the preacher "guilt tripped" you into confessing your sins. You know the same preacher who was probably sleeping with some members of your congregation or molesting some of the children, but let's not get sidetracked.

I have known men who have had two women pregnant at the same time, married to neither, but that's okay because they are heterosexual right?

I attended high school with young ladies (I use that term loosely) who had accumulated more sex partners before age 18 and graduating from high school, than I have had in my entire thirty-eight years, but that's okay because they are heterosexual right?

I have seen women knowingly have affairs with other women's husbands, and not only have said affairs, given birth to these men's children, but that's okay because they are heterosexual right?

I have seen married men not only sleep with other women, but sleep with their wives' best friends, family members, but that's okay because they are heterosexual right?

While we are talking about heterosexuality, the Bible and Christianity, let me give you a story. The Pharisees hated Jesus. They were always were looking for ways to catch him in a lie, or try to "trip" him up for not following the law.

One day they brought him a woman caught in adultery. The law was that the two individuals caught were to be publicly stoned. The Pharisees, per their MO, pressed Jesus, while he just stooped on the ground and wrote. Jesus finally stopped and said, and I quote, "He that is among you without sin, let him cast, the first stone." He continued to write on the ground. When he looked up again, only he and the woman remained. He asked her, "Woman where are thine accusers?"...she responded, "Lord, I have none." Jesus responded, "Go ye in peace, and sin no more."

I wrote the above story from my limited Bible knowledge without research, so I may have missed some parts, but you get the point.

See what I just did there? I am making a point about not judging, and I found a scripture and/or story to serve my purpose.

Christians do it all the time, but while you are doing it, make sure that you read the entire book, because I am sure you will find a treasure trove of scriptures that fit both your sins and your shortcomings.

But what it all amounts to in the gay marriage debate, is as humans, we feel it is our duty to be morally superior to others.

As long as I tell little white lies (don't know where that term originated from), I am just a little better than the man who commits adultery. And since, he is committing adultery with a woman, even though he is wrong, because he is having heterosexual sex, he is a little better than the man who chooses to share his bed with another man. It is all a vicious snowballing cycle of blame, judgment, and finger pointing, and it is actually quite childish..

 I am just glad that the "real Jesus" who I have come to personally know, not that fabricated one that you claim to know, doesn't operate like this.

I have one final thought to leave you with tonight...how many of you were virgins when you got married? If you weren't I don't think you have a leg to stand on, when it comes to what goes on in other people's bedrooms. Because although one fateful trip to the altar may have absolved you of your "sins", it didn't mend those broken hearts that you collected along the way, didn't repair those marriages that you broke up, families that you destroyed. So while God forgave you, there are earthly humans still paying the price for your sins...think about that the next time you wag your tongue about someone's bedroom affairs.


Until next time......

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Gone Girl is Not Misogyny; It is Simply a Wonderful Book and Film

I love to think deeply, which is why I majored in English in college. I can discuss anything from Shakespeare, Chaucer, Blake, Hawthorne, the Bible, and I am quite entertained.

Then there are those contemporary works, which aren't really that thought provoking, which are very entertainment purposes, and Gone Girl fits in this category.

I actually went to see the film before I read the book, and my opinion about it hasn't changed. I love it, and I am actually currently reading the author two works by the author.

So imagine my shock and surprise when I see an article on the internet labeling the author a misogynist. Don't you at least have to be a man to be a misogynist? Don't you at least have to hate women?

Without giving too much of the plot away, the female protagonist is a sociopath. She is motivated by her husband's affair with a much younger woman, to turn his life upside down.

Let's be real for a moment here. There are some mean, bitter women out there. There are some women who are vindictive, sociopaths even.

This does not take away from the fact that women are domestically abused every day, nor does it take away from the rape culture, as both are prevailing problems in our society.

What I love about this author, this book, this film, is that it is outside of the box. The female protagonist, is not some weak victim, waiting for some man to save her. She takes action to get what she wants. Now her methods are sociopathic and vindictive, but she does what she wants, on her own terms.

So feminists, I need you to pipe down on this one. Gillian Flynn is one of you. She is simply a nice wife, mother, who has a great imagination, and for that she should be applauded, not ridiculed.

After all, isn't the central tenet of feminism about uplifting and supporting each other as women?

Until next time....