MySpace


Around Harlem



Last Updated: 8/17/2009

Send Message
Instant Message
Email to a Friend
Subscribe

Gender: Female
Status: Single
Age: 40
Sign: Gemini

City: NEW YORK
State: New York
Country: US
Signup Date: 7/4/2006

Blog Archive
[Older      Newer]
 /  / 
Friday, November 02, 2007 

denzel.jpg

Denzel Washington as Frank Lucas on
120th Street and Lenox Avenue in Harlem

*

Like most people, I love a good movie. Especially a gangster movie.

Loved, loved, loved Denzel in Training Day. (Yes, cops are gangsters too). And, like most people, I'm eagerly awaiting the release of his latest flick American Gangster about Harlem drug lord Frank Lucas.

The anticipation started to build when the filming began around the streets of Harlem over a year ago. It grew after seeing the trailer a couple of months ago. The soundtrack with classic soul hits helped a little too.

But now, after everyone has jumped on the highlight, promote gangsters and gangsterism bandwagon, the line is beginning to blur between entertainment and pure promotion of gangsters and gangsterism. Yes, all of the stories don't have happy endings, but with all the cash, women and glory, many people still consider the lifestyle. Especially our kids.

(more)

Tuesday, October 16, 2007 

Have you checked us out lately? http://www.blog-aroundharlem.com/

Sign up for the mailing list here ---> http://www.aroundharlem.com/

Stay tuned for lots of good stuff.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007 

Harlem — Just Like Iowa

September 11th, 2007 --> --> --> --> --> -->

housingproject1.jpg

I explain to East Coast friends that in Iowa, people have tornado nightmares. You are on the second floor of your house or office, you open the blinds and see a killer tornado 20 feet away. You know you will not have time to get to the basement, and you are staring at death.

Then you wake up.

As I stood on Fifth Avenue watching the North Tower of the World Trade Center hemorrhaging smoke, the most sickening feeling was seeing the gaping hole of smoke and flames, and right above, several floors untouched. It was knowing there were people who would not get out. And realizing they knew it, too.

(More)

Monday, July 30, 2007 

Harlem Icon Sings Blues Impresario, 90, Facing Eviction

After 60 years Selling & Making Hits, Uptown Icon Faces Eviction

Musician, personality and business owner Bobby Robinson in front of his shop.


Bobby Robinson with Gladys Knight and the Pips.

When World War II ended, Bobby Robinson decided against returning to the South Carolina cotton fields where he grew up and where his grandfather had been born a slave.

He headed north to New York.

There, from a small record shop at Eighth Ave. and 125th St., he helped shape the rhythm and blues that soon exploded into rock 'n' roll. He produced a national No. 1 hit record, Wilbert Harrison's "Kansas City." He produced Gladys Knight's first hit record, and in the late 1970s, he was the first music man to record this strange new sound out of the Bronx called hip-hop.

He didn't sing or play music. He produced music. He sold music. He found music. He promoted music. He lived music.

Today, at 90, he still does, on the same New York street corner.

But as early as this week, it all could end, and for the most prosaic of New York reasons - a form letter from a new landlord saying he has 30 days to pack up his small shop and leave.

Kimco, a real estate giant that owns properties such as the Concourse Plaza and Centerreach Mall, has bought the northwest corner of 125th St. and Eighth Ave. and is asking tenants to leave, including Bobby's Happy House.

Kimco could not be reached for comment, but the letter tells Robinson to vacate by Tuesday.

"We won't close then," says Denise Benjamin, Robinson's daughter, who now runs the store. "We're trying to talk to them and see what we can do."

But there are no guarantees, and the alternatives are bleak. Finding another affordable store "in a prime location," says Benjamin, "is almost impossible."

Robinson himself wants to stay: "I've been on this corner since 1946. I came back from the war, I had some money and I became the first colored man to own a store on 125th St. It isn't fair to make businesses close."

If history counted, he'd stay there forever.

His wall is solid with autographed pictures of artists who came over from the Apollo Theater, a half block away: Al Green, Eddie Kendricks, Berry Gordy, the Miracles with Smokey Robinson. There's Jackie Wilson and Fats Domino together, and of course, James Brown.

"Very good friend," says Robinson.

Robinson has a lot of those.

"I was the only store to stay open the night of the [1964] riots," he says. "The liquor store near me, 10-15 guys smashed the windows, carried it out by the case. But I wasn't touched. Everybody knew me, respected me."

And if it's time to go, he's going in style.

He arrived at the store Thursday in a crisp tailored suit, white shirt, sharp shoes, matching tie and handkerchief, a black-and-white hat over his white hair.

When he recalls the first night he and his brother, Dan, went to the Bronx to hear hip-hoppers, his legs and hips break into a little dance - just like the young and happy Bobby Robinson frozen in a slightly yellowed World War II picture on the wall, dancing with a girl from Hawaii.

Today, times having changed, the golden age of the record store has passed. Shikulu Shange's Harlem Record Shack, his longtime neighbor around the corner, also is facing eviction.

But music endures. And so, happily, does Bobby Robinson.

ORIGINAL LINK:  http://www.nydailynews.com/boroughs/manhattan/2007/07/29/2007-07-29_harlem_icon_sings_blues_impresario_90_fa-3.html?ref=rss

Wednesday, July 11, 2007 
Wednesday, July 11, 2007 
Black Denial
 
Nearly all Dominican women straighten their hair, which experts say is a direct result of a historical learned rejection of all things Black
 
Yara Matos holds her hair extensions as a stylist in the
Herrera neighborhood prepares to give her the
look of long, straight hair.
(Candace Barbot/Miami Herald)

SANTO DOMINGO -- Yara Matos sat still while long, shiny locks from China were fastened, bit by bit, to her coarse hair.

Not that Matos has anything against her natural curls, even though Dominicans call that pelo malo -- bad hair.

But a professional Dominican woman just should not have bad hair, she said. "If you're working in a bank, you don't want some barrio-looking hair. Straight hair looks elegant," the bank teller said. "It's not that as a person of color I want to look white. I want to look pretty."

And to many in the Dominican Republic, to look pretty is to look less black.

Dominican hairdressers are internationally known for the best hair-straightening techniques. Store shelves are lined with rows of skin whiteners, hair relaxers and extensions.

Racial identification here is thorny and complex, defined not so much by skin color but by the texture of your hair, the width of your nose and even the depth of your pocket. The richer, the "whiter." And, experts say, it is fueled by a rejection of anything black.

"I always associated black with ugly. I was too dark and didn't have nice hair," said Catherine de la Rosa, a dark-skinned Dominican-American college student spending a semester here. "With time passing, I see I'm not black. I'm Latina.

"At home in New York everyone speaks of color of skin. Here, it's not about skin color. It's culture."

The only country in the Americas to be freed from black colonial rule -- neighboring Haiti -- the Dominican Republic still shows signs of racial wounds more than 200 years later. Presidents historically encouraged Dominicans to embrace Spanish Catholic roots rather than African ancestry.

Here, as in much of Latin America -- the "one drop rule'' works in reverse: One drop of white blood allows even very dark-skinned people to be considered white.

Capellan Dominquez, center, and Anthony Rosario,
right, join others as they warm up for Carnival in February
in the Cristo Rey area of Santo Domingo.
(Candace Barbot/Miami Herald)

LACK OF INTEREST

As black intellectuals here try to muster a movement to embrace the nation's African roots, they acknowledge that it has been a mostly fruitless cause. Black pride organizations such as Black Woman's Identity fizzled for lack of widespread interest. There was outcry in the media when the Brotherhood of the Congos of the Holy Spirit -- a community with roots in Africa -- was declared an oral patrimony of humanity by UNESCO. "There are many times that I think of just leaving this country because it's too hard," said Juan Rodríguez Acosta, curator of the Museum of the Dominican Man. Acosta, who is black, has pushed for the museum to include controversial exhibits that reflect many Dominicans' African background. "But then I think: Well if I don't stay here to change things, how will things ever change?"

A walk down city streets shows a country where blacks and dark-skinned people vastly outnumber whites, and most estimates say that 90 percent of Dominicans are black or of mixed race. Yet census figures say only 11 percent of the country's nine million people are black.

To many Dominicans, to be black is to be Haitian. So dark-skinned Dominicans tend to describe themselves as any of the dozen or so racial categories that date back hundreds of years -- Indian, burned Indian, dirty Indian, washed Indian, dark Indian, cinnamon, moreno or mulatto, but rarely negro.

The Dominican Republic is not the only nation with so many words to describe skin color. Asked in a 1976 census survey to describe their own complexions, Brazilians came up with 136 different terms, including café au lait, sunburned, morena, Malaysian woman, singed and "toasted."

"The Cuban black was told he was black. The Dominican black was told he was Indian," said Dominican historian Celsa Albert, who is black. "I am not Indian. That color does not exist. People used to tell me, 'You are not black.' If I am not black, then I guess there are no blacks anywhere, because I have curly hair and dark skin."

Manuel Núñez (Candace Barbot/Miami Herald)

THE HISTORY

Using the word Indian to describe dark-skinned people is an attempt to distance Dominicans from any African roots, Albert and other experts said. She noted that it's not even historically accurate: The country's Taino Indians were virtually annihilated in the 1500s, shortly after Spanish colonizers arrived.

Researchers say the de-emphasizing of race in the Dominican Republic dates to the 1700s, when the sugar plantation economy collapsed and many slaves were freed and rose up in society.

Later came the rocky history with Haiti, which shares the island of Hispaniola with the Dominican Republic. Haiti's slaves revolted against the French and in 1804 established their own nation. In 1822, Haitians took over the entire island, ruling the predominantly Hispanic Dominican Republic for 22 years.

To this day, the Dominican Republic celebrates its independence not from centuries-long colonizer Spain, but from Haiti.

"The problem is Haitians developed a policy of black-centrism and . . . Dominicans don't respond to that," said scholar Manuel Núñez, who is black. "Dominican is not a color of skin, like the Haitian."

Dictator Rafael Trujillo, who ruled from 1930 to 1961, strongly promoted anti-Haitian sentiments, and is blamed for creating the many racial categories that avoided the use of the word "black."

The practice continued under President Joaquín Balaguer, who often complained that Haitians were "darkening'' the country. In the 1990s, he was blamed for thwarting the presidential aspirations of leading black candidate José Francisco Peña Gómez by spreading rumors that he was actually Haitian.

Dominican girls Luz Freiney Paulina, from left, Esther
Celeste Santana, Mayelin Eloisa Valdez and Melisa Valdez,
comprise the dance troupe Las Nizas. Below, Dominican author
Manuel Nunez writes about the issues of 'black' and 'Dominican'
as they relate to the history in his country.
(Candace Barbot/Miami Herald)

"Under Trujillo, being black was the worst thing you could be," said Afro-Dominican poet Blas Jiménez. "Now we are Dominican, because we are not Haitian. We are something, because we are not that."

Jiménez remembers when he got his first passport, the clerk labeled him "Indian." He protested to the director of the agency.

"I remember the man saying, 'If he wants to be black, let him be black!' '' Jiménez said.

Resentment toward anything Haitian continues, as an estimated one million Haitians live in the Dominican Republic, most working in the sugar and construction industries. Mass deportations often mistakenly include black Dominicans, and Haitians have been periodically lynched in mob violence. The government has been trying to deny citizenship and public education to the Dominican-born children of illegal Haitian migrants.

When migrant-rights activist Sonia Pierre won the prestigious Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award in 2006, the government responded by trying to revoke her citizenship, saying she is actually Haitian.

"There's tremendous resistance to blackness -- black is something bad," said black feminist Sergia Galván. ''Black is associated with dark, illegal, ugly, clandestine things. There is a prototype of beauty here and a lot of social pressure. There are schools where braids and natural hair are prohibited."

Galván and a loosely knit group of women have protested European canons of beauty, once going so far as to rally outside a beauty pageant. She and other experts say it is now more common to see darker-skinned women in the contests -- but they never win.

Mariana Ramirez smiles as she sits in Daisy Gran
Salon in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.
(Candace Barbot/Miami Herald)

CULTURE PULL

Several women said the cultural rejection of African looking hair is so strong that people often shout insults at women with natural curls.

"I cannot take the bus because people pull my hair and stick combs in it," said wavy haired performance artist Xiomara Fortuna. "They ask me if I just got out of prison. People just don't want that image to be seen."

The hours spent on hair extensions and painful chemical straightening treatments are actually an expression of nationalism, said Ginetta Candelario, who studies the complexities of Dominican race and beauty at Smith College in Massachusetts. And to some of the women who relax their hair, it's simply a way to have soft manageable hair in the Dominican Republic's stifling humidity.

"It's not self-hate," Candelario said. "Going through that is to love yourself a lot. That's someone saying, 'I am going to take care of me.' It's nationalist, it's affirmative and celebrating self."

Money, education, class -- and of course straight hair -- can make dark-skinned Dominicans be perceived as more "white," she said. Many black Dominicans here say they never knew they were black -- until they visited the United States.

"During the Trujillo regime, people who were dark skinned were rejected, so they created their own mechanism to fight it," said Ramona Hernández, Director of the Dominican Studies Institute at City College in New York. "When you ask, 'What are you?' they don't give you the answer you want . . . saying we don't want to deal with our blackness is simply what you want to hear."

Hernández, who has olive-toned skin and a long mane of hair she blows out straight, acknowledges she would "never, never, never'' go to a university meeting with her natural curls.

Product promoter Margarita Munoz, right, tidies
up the shelf displaying her company's hair-straightening
products in a Santo Domingo market.
(Candace Barbot/Miami Herald)

"That's a woman trying to look cute; I'm a sociologist," she said.

Asked if a black Dominican woman can be considered beautiful in her country, Hernández leapt to her feet.

"You should see how they come in here with their big asses!'' she said, shuffling across her office with her arms extended behind her back, simulating an enormous rear-end. "They come in here thinking they are all that, and I think, 'doesn't she know she's not really pretty?' "

Maria Elena Polanca is a black woman with the striking good looks. She said most Dominicans look at her with curiosity, as if a black woman being beautiful were something strange.

She spends her days promoting a hair straightener at La Sirena, a Santo Domingo department store that features an astonishing array of hair straightening products.

"Look, we have bad hair, bad. Nobody says 'curly.' It's bad," she said. "You can't go out like that. People will say, 'Look at that nest! Someone light a match!' ''

'IT WAS HURTFUL'

Purdue University professor Dawn Stinchcomb, who is African American, said that when she came here in 1999 to study African influences in literature, people insulted her in the street.

Waiters refused to serve her. People wouldn't help Stinchcomb with her research, saying if she wanted to study Africans, she'd have to go to Haiti.

"I had people on the streets . . . yell at me to get out of the sun because I was already black enough," she said. "It was hurtful. . . . I was raised in the South and thought I could handle any racial comment. I never before experienced anything like I did in the Dominican Republic.

"I don't have a problem when people who don't look like me say hurtful things. But when it's people who look just like me?"

ORIGINAL LINK: http://www.miamiherald.com/multimedia/news/afrolatin/part2/index.html

Tuesday, July 10, 2007 

Current mood:  cheerful
Category: Quiz/Survey

Hey MySpace Family,

I'm behind the scenes working hard to make AroundHarlem.com happen.

I'd like to thank you for your tremendous support thus far. Your interest and comments continue to motivate me each day.

I have a question for my friends and would like you to respond below.

What does Harlem represent to you?

Why does AroundHarlem.com interest you?

For some of you it's home, or it used to be. For some of you Harlem and El Barrio (East Harlem) mean something more.

Please respond below and share your thoughts.

Until next time.

April 

P.S. Are you on the list? Click here to sign up for the official mailing list.

Tuesday, May 08, 2007 
AroundHarlem.com
Editorial Departments


What's the 411?
An all-inclusive list of when and where you need to be Around Harlem and Around NYC.

Stay tuned for highlights of the hottest upcoming events from our online calendar. 

Arts & Culture
Music / Film / TV / DVDs / Art / Theater / Museums / Books

Our Arts & Culture section will present features highlighting the latest and the greatest in urban culture Around Harlem, Around NYC and Around the world.

Choosing Health
Fitness, Nutrition, Weight Loss, Mind & Body: All the information you need for healthy living.

Cliques
Networking at its best happens in when you know who's who. Read Cliques to checkout featured groups aroud town.

Enterprise
Career, Entrepreneurship and Success Stories: Whether you work for yourself or someone else, Enterprise will bring you information to help you achieve success along with profiles of those who've made it.

Finance
Money Management and Wealth Building: Critical information to ensure a better financial future for you and your family.

Politics
Elected Officials / Voting & Elections / Politicians: What They're Saying and Doing / The People: What's on Their Mind

Hits & Misses
A recap of events that were "musts" and those that completely went bust.

Kiddie Korner
Parenting Concerns, Kiddie To-Do Ideas and More.

Movers & Shakers
AroundHarlem.com brings you stories about people simply doing their thing.

News & Views
An insider's view of any and everything that impacts Harlemites and the New York urban community.

Photos & Podcasts
Can't make every hot happening? No problem. We'll take you there and show you the familiar faces you missed.

Publisher's Page
Random thoughts from AroundHarlem.com Publisher April Davis

Rants & Raves
If you want to sing, shout, compliment or complain, we say express yourself here. Let us know what's on your mind.

Reveal
AroundHarlem.com uncovers Harlem's best-kept secrets and points you to its treasures inside each article.

Role Call
Looking for a way to brag about your promotion (without actually bragging about your promotion)? Just send us a blurb about your new responsibilities and a recent headshot.

Sports
Everything About the Game: On the court, on the field, and even on the links. Also, your favorite players in the news, on their game and on life.

Start Trippin'
Weekend Getaways / Vacations / Travel Abroad Business Travel / Overseas Excursions and More

Style Watch
Fashion & Beauty: What's hot and what's not. Beauty basics and fashion features. Unique finds for the urban trendsetter.

Taste
Food, drinks, recipes and reviews:  What to eat, where to eat and why you need to indulge.

Tech Talk
Must haves for the tech savvy or mechanically impaired.

Insight: Up Close & Personal
Your personal life is our business that's why our experts tell you everything you need to know on relationships, self-care, and handling the home-front. If you need advice to help you manage the madness in your personal or professional life, ask our experts.