Jamie Foxx: How to Use Fame to Step on Your Brother
BENEATH THE SPIN • ERIC L. WATTREE
Jamie Foxx:
How to Use Fame to Step on Your Brother
One of the readers of last week's column, "Why are Black People Killing Themselves?", wrote me a very heartfelt response suggesting that I was being a little hard on Black people. Michele (with one 'L', as she likes to remind everyone), a 36 year old Black single mom, a Staff Sergeant in the United States Marine Corps, and founder/creator of , wrote the following:
"We are a community of thriving thinkers! We accept responsibility for our actions and focus on community based projects, to ensure that posterity has something when it's their time to take the thrown. We love excelling in life, and independently and intuitively find ways to give instead of take, take, take. We promote and instill pride in our community each day when we walk down the street and give a gracious nod to the passerby. We are beautiful, but this is not to be taken as conceit, because we also realize that we are only one small speck in a beautiful world. This is what I see in our community."
I fully agree with most of what Michele said, regarding MOST of our people. But we also have a dark and self-hating side that needs very much to be addressed. A prime example of which is reflected in a video that's making the rounds on the internet, where Jamie Foxx goes out of his way to embarrass the struggling Black comedian, Doug Williams, during a televised roast for NFL player, Emmitt Smith (Jamie Foxx Ruins A Not Funny Comedian).
Next to the picture of the rotting remains of an infant wrapped in a baby blanket in Iraq, that video is one of the most blatant examples of arrogant inhumanity I have ever seen-not because of any special talent that Foxx displayed in carrying it off, but because of his blatant disregard for his fellow man. In fact, I found it so unconscionable that I will never again support any project that either Jamie Foxx or Monique is connected with.
As master of ceremonies, right off the bat Foxx introduced the brother as "A person who doesn't know anything about Emmitt Smith, and you don't know who the F**k he is. Give it up for Doug Williams." After that rousing introduction, Doug tried to make the best of the situation by admitting that he wasn't a part of the clique, that he was the "brokest" person there, and he was only there to try get a deal.
Then in spite of the way he was introduced, he began to win over the crowd, by telling jokes about some of the celebrities in attendance. But Foxx couldn't allow that happen, so he began to interrupt the brother's routine as "YOUR CONSCIENCE." Every time the Williams would say a word, or begin to tell a joke, Foxx would break in, saying things like, "We're here for Emmitt Smith-do you have any jokes for him tonight?" and "I'm your conscience. Man, it sure is getting hot in here. Am I fu**king up? Maybe I should just say something nice about Emmitt and wrap it up." Now, instead of the celebrities laughing at his jokes, Williams becomes the joke--and in the background you can Monique telling Jamie, "Get 'em, Dawg."
But here are the remarks that got me, and I thought were most telling regarding these so-called celebritys' frame of mind. At one point Foxx said, "I wish I were in a movie with Jamie. Maybe I should tell them how Black people have to struggle. Yeah, that'll get 'em on my side." And all the while, the Black celebrities in the room are falling out laughing.
I remember thinking, they're not just laughing at Williams, they're laughing at the struggles of poor Black people in general. While watching the gross arrogance of the situation, you couldn't help being reminded of the times during the Roman Empire when the aristocrats would take pleasure in watching the Christians being fed to the lions.
You had one poor, Black man up there-feeling nervous and out of place--who probably had to spend the entire day getting up all of the courage he could muster just to attend this affair, then you have all of these Black, so-called "stars" pulling out all the stops to drag him down, and laughing at his audacity of thinking he could pull himself up. I remember thinking, that could have been me, or my brother, or son. It was just unforgivable.
I was also reminded of a time, when we really had pride in the Black community, how something like that never could have happened. If Jamie Foxx had pulled something like that in the sixties, his career would have instantly come to a screeching end, because it would have been seen for what it was-the ignorant behavior of an arrogant brat, with no sense of community, who's fame had gone to what passes for his head.
So again, while I agree with much of what Michele said about the importance of always reminding the community of its beauty, it is also important to face reality, and aggressively address that which is ugly about ourselves.
Efficient thought requires that we first, see life as it is, and only then, as we would have it. So while we should definitely teach our children that they are beautiful, we must also instruct them what they need to do enhance that beauty. If my kid is out dealing drugs and verbally abusing his girlfriend, neither he, nor the community benefits from my telling him his behavior is beautiful, and he's just a victim of society.
I don't care how badly society has treated you, what you do with your life, and how you treat others, is your decision and not society's. Yet, we have too many people in our community who are willing to give our young people a pass by telling them that they're beautiful, and their bad behavior is society's fault. That message is killing us as a people.
We should motivate our children by assuring them--through the way that I treat them, not just with words-- that they are beautiful and exceptional people. Then we should help them to develop their skills and talents to reinforce that belief, because it's hard to have pride when you can't do anything. We should also make them aware of the fact that there is a segment of the population that don't perceive them as the beautiful and talented people that we know them to be, then instruct them in how to deal with the possible adversity attendant that situation.
When my son was a youngster, I pointed out to him that he shouldn't be surprised if at some point in his life if a racist pointed at him and told his son, "See that guy over there-he's a ni**er." I advised him that getting mad and acting a fool was just going to prove the man's point. I taught him that the best, and only way, to protect himself from such an occurrence was to look, and carry himself in such a way that the little boy would look at him, then look back and assess his dad, and say, "Daddy, I want to be a ni**er when I grow up. That's the way you overcome adversity.
So the bottom line is, talk is cheap. While we can repeat millions of times that we're Black and we're proud, it won't mean a thing until we can root out the kind of ignorance that Jamie Foxx and friends displayed above-and the world will knows it. Because in the final analysis, we're not judged by what we say-we're judged by what we do.
And beyond the judgement of other people, if you have a persistent headache and refuse to address the issue by insisting that you're Black, beautiful, and in excellent health, eventually you could die of a brain tumor. Because, while positive messaging is a wonderful thing, some things in life require aggressive action, to be rooted out.
Eric L. Wattree
wattree.blogspot.com





Jamie Foxx strikes me as a type that knows no racial boundaries - an immature punk.
December 22, 2008 12:21 PM | Reply | Permalink
ps - love your advice to your son!
December 22, 2008 12:22 PM | Reply | Permalink
I agree with you about Foxx, and thank you for your comment regarding my advice to my son. He obviously took it to heart--he was one of the Air Force's Airmen of the Year two years in a row, was requested by name to go with President Clinton all over the world, and he's currently a Special Agent with the Feds.
What I'm most proud of is that he can interact with anyone from a gang member to a head of state, seamlessly. He once told me that he's found that people are simply people, and regardless to their station in life, they all have the very same strengths, weaknesses, and insecurities.
December 22, 2008 12:59 PM | Reply | Permalink
Good for you and your son. I am a whitey who can't get to far into this discussion.
I can only say that most famous people end up in a club. They may like to brag about where they come from. They will say : I'll never forget.
But they do and end up in it for themselves and their groupies.
All is not lost. At least my kids, their generation and those younger than them look at a different America than I did. They do not notice racial divides. They do not have censured movies and TV and radio omitting all sense of reality on the streets.
December 22, 2008 3:32 PM | Reply | Permalink
Dickday,
I noticed that you said, "I am a whitey who can't get too far into this discussion." It's too bad that people have to feel that way. As a matter of fact there are those who would even object to my bringing the issue up in "mixed" company, but that's exactly why I do it--our diversity is this nation's greatest asset, so we're cutting our own throats by trying stifling it and pretend that everyone is the same. It's just not true.
The fact is, people are indeed people, and Black people don't do anything that White people don't do. But due to cultural differences we do have different ways that we interact with one another within our cultural group.
One of the reasons that Black people don't like to discuss it outside the group is because in many cases our behavior has been directly impacted by our slave past, and it's embarrassing. But as I see it, if we're involved in behaviors that are so embarrassing that we don't want to discuss them, why engage in them? Thus, the best way to an bring end to embarrassing behavior, is to shine a light on them.
What's so disgusting about the behavior of Jamie Foxx, his celebrity friends, and the hangers-on in the article above is not just how fast they've forgotten where they came from, but the fact that they've been motivated to break their necks to forget, as soon as humanly possible. Because the sooner they can forget that they were poor and Black, the sooner they can feel like they've "arrived."
If you take the time to watch the video that I discussed in the piece, you'll notice two things--first, that they're not just abusing Doug Williams, but they're taking great delight in it. And secondly, you'll notice how much effort the hangers-on are putting into Doug's abuse. That's allows them to feel like even though they aren't a rich celebrity, at least they're not a part of the "abused" or slave class.
You see, the vestiges of slavery has taught them that abusing the Black man beneath them is a sign of "arrival." And their activity in that regard is just as blatantly obvious, as their ostintatious, diamond encrusted replica of Big Ben is of their long thwarted desire to own a watch.
But since the rest of the world is not supposed to have enough common sense to recognize the obvious, it's become politically correct to keep it on the down-low. But as I see it, why enter into a conspiracy for the expressed purpose of lending comfort to ignorance?
December 22, 2008 5:47 PM | Reply | Permalink
I appreciate the response Wattree and I have enjoyed your essays. Keep it up. I think I mentioned before, we need a juice. You get me away from having to think about Warren and shoes.
You bring to mind the thought as to why we must pick on those we perceive to be unable to strike back. And we usually do so as a group.
At any rate thank you for the post and your response.
December 22, 2008 6:00 PM | Reply | Permalink
It was a celebrity roast. This guy Doug Williams was not funny. He also tried to get some traction by going after the MC Jamie Foxx by mocking his career. Have you ever seen a celebrity roast, the entire point is to be cruel and mock people, usually with some humor thrown in. I am not justifying it as the highest form of comedy, but accept it for what it is and understand the ground rules, as I am sure this guy Doug Williams did. It's like going to a boxing match and getting mad at a fighter because he keeps hitting a guy even though he is already bleeding. Thats the game.
And comparing it to burnt Iraqi children and "vestiges of slavery", it's a little much isn't it. I watched the video, and I saw a no name comedian get a shot in the spotlight, bomb badly, and the MC try to keep the show going. I am all for the moral to your story, but if this is the example, it is really weak. Get over it, it is a comedy roast, no points for being nice. In the long run, if this humiliation forced this guy out of show business, it might not be a bad thing, because he really was not funny.
December 23, 2008 3:35 AM | Reply | Permalink
Re,
When was the last time you saw an MC at a roast not even allow a person to do his routine? You're acting as an apologist for a bunch of jackles.
You say the guy wasn't funny. If funny being was the standard, Jamie shouldn't have been on there either. I've never thought thought Jamie fox was funny--he's more a clown than a comedian.
Jamie Foxx and company are simply a spoiled brats who are allowing a transient success to drive him crazy:
A little Jamie Foxx class from Sheknows:
"Jamie Foxx partying at Moon Nightclub at the Palms in Las Vegas after dining at 9 Steakhouse. He and his party had the main table on the dancefloor and had a bottle of Right Gin and Ketel One Vodka on the table. He borrowed a Security Officer's flashlight and used it to select girls out of the Moon crowd to party at his table with his friends."
Now, that's real class. I mean, this is a guy who really knows how to handle fame--summoning women in a club with a flashlight. What a guy, Obama could use him on the transition team.
December 23, 2008 6:59 AM | Reply | Permalink
He did get to do his routine, he was bombing after the first couple minutes. The guy isn't that funny. I am just saying, this isn't a big deal, it isn't in the same ballpark as slavery and dead iraqi babies. Lighten up
December 23, 2008 1:36 PM | Reply | Permalink
Sure it is. It is this very kind of hubris, arrogance, and inhumanity that leads to dead babies in the desert--and the fact that you can't see that clearly demonstrates the severity of the problem.
December 23, 2008 8:35 PM | Reply | Permalink