Either Robin Thicke is Unworthy of NAACP Image Award or The Image Awards Are Unworthy of Our Support

In 1942, NAACP Executive Director, Walter White, worked with politicians and studio executives to establish an ad hoc committee with the major studios to monitor the image and portrayal of African Americans on the screen. In 1955, the Mississippi Branch of the NAACP, led by Medgar Evers, filed a complaint with the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) that the local television affiliate, WLBT, presented the local news in a racially biased manner that did not serve the public interest.

Finally in 1969, the FCC revoked WLBT’s broadcast license. This, after years of litigation, marked the only time in FCC history that a television station’s license was revoked because of racial bias in programming. This sent a powerful reminder to the rest of the television industry – that we as citizens own the public airwaves.NAACP

In1966, under consistent legal pressure from the NAACP, “The Amos & Andy Show” was taken off the air, and a year later the NAACP Hollywood Branch created the NAACP Image Awards. Now a primetime live special, the NAACP Image Awards is the nation’s premier event celebrating the outstanding achievements and performances of people of color in the arts, as well as those individuals or groups who promote social justice through their creative endeavors.”

– From the NAACP Image Awards website

This is how the organization sees itself, not how I may assume or romanticize its mission statement.

Accordingly, if we can agree this is how the NAACP Image Awards bills itself, then we should be in agreement that on these merits it should be judged and measured.

The latest slate of nominees includes 4 for singer Robin Thicke. That would be the VMAs Miley Cyrus booty-grinding Robin Thicke of falsetto fame, just in case you were unclear.

Outstanding Male Artist
Outstanding Duo, Group or Collaboration – “Blurred Lines”
Outstanding Song – “Blurred Lines”
Outstanding Album – “Blurred Lines”

In truth, there is only one question to be asked (and answered). What message are you trying to send us, NAACP Image Awards?  That’s the question at the heart of the matter, though I have other questions on my mind.

Given the recent announcement of a settlement being reached between Sony and family members of Marvin Gaye, it is anything but “settled” that Thicke did not cross the music interpolation line, hijacking the musical legacy of Marvin Gaye.

http://www.eurweb.com/2014/01/blurred-lines-lawsuit-is-settled-between-marvin-gayes-family-and-sonyatv/

How should I or anyone else familiar with the stated mandate of the NAACP Image Awards look upon these 4 nominations for Robin Thicke, all directly connected to the song, Blurred Lines?

Somewhere in the great beyond, Marvin Gaye is laughing uncontrollably at the idiocy.

Given that the New York Daily News (and dozens of other reputable news sources) had highlighted the questionable lyrical content of the song, suggesting it glamorized date rape, what message are you trying to send us, NAACP Image Awards?

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/music-arts/robin-thicke-blurred-lines-kind-rapey-article-1.1377071

From the NY Daily News article:

Thicke responded to inquiries about the record and his creative thinking behind the production of it. 

“We tried to do everything that was taboo,” Thicke told GQ on May 7, “bestiality, drug injections, and everything that is completely derogatory towards women.”

In fact, a play has opened in London, specifically in relation to the indefensible lyrics and music video imagery of Blurred Lines.

http://www.eurweb.com/2014/01/play-inspired-by-blurred-lines-outrage-opens-in-london/#more-414969

What message do 4 “Image Award” nominations send to the rest of the world, beyond just Black people in America? What does this suggest about the priorities of this supposed “image-conscious” award show? What “social justice” is being promoted through Thicke’s creative endeavor? A better argument is to be made that such misogyny promotes greater social INjustice.

Somewhere in the great beyond, Medgar Evers is sobbing inconsolably.

The aformentioned questions may have been presented in a rhetorical manner but actually they’re not rhetorical in the least.  The questions need to be answered publicly by the Hollywood Bureau of the NAACP.   The body should be forced to answer publicly for the horrendously flawed process which allows to bestow such honors on Thicke or his music without consequence.

And before you go there…

It doesn’t matter that Robin Thicke is white. Fellow nominee Justin Timberlake is a fabulous continuation of the Michael Jackson musical legacy and Timberlake also lent his voice publicly in support of Trayvon Martin, after the Zimmerman verdict. That alone is consistent with “promoting social justice through their creative endeavors.”  Justin Timberlake is a fine addition and his success this year isn’t inextricably linked to twerking, date rape lyricism or music arguably stolen from Marvin Gaye.

http://www.takepart.com/article/2013/07/21/trayvon-martin-jay-z-justin-timberlake

It bears mentioning again; this is not about Thicke being white. It’s about the NAACP Hollywood Bureau being “yellow”…as in cowardly.

As a former employee of NARAS (The Grammy Awards) who worked on the show annually, I understand intuitively how certain artists and their popularity can be a ratings boon for a televised event. I’m not ignorant of the business considerations being made.

Conversely, the Image Awards were supposed to be what the Grammys, AMAs, People’s Choice Awards et al. were not. The Image Awards (allegedly) required more of its nominees. Not because I said so…but the Image Awards said so. It is how it bills itself and how it should be judged and measured.

Now, at the drop of a hat, the organization wants to suggest to you and me that Robin Thicke is worthy of consideration along those lines, 4 times over. Somewhere, Harry Belafonte and Sidney Poitier are likely shaking their heads in sad disbelief. Maybe it’s time to update the Image Awards website to include a picture of Amos & Andy as part of its logo, for we have truly come full circle.

Again, I’m not ignorant of the business considerations which are being made here, but as well, I’m not ignorant of the definition of selling out. I’m completely clear as to how the exaltation of Robin Thicke indicts the contemporary relevance of the NAACP Hollywood Bureau.  I’m clear, and so too should you be.

Don’t glue chicken feathers on a chinchilla and try to sell it as part of a two-piece and biscuit meal at KFC.  Don’t try. Robin Thicke is what he is; unworthy of being honored in such a manner by the NAACP Image Awards.  Not because I say so, but because the mission statement of the organization itself says so.  Given that the present Hollywood Bureau disagrees, maybe it’s time to end the honors altogether.

10 responses to “Either Robin Thicke is Unworthy of NAACP Image Award or The Image Awards Are Unworthy of Our Support”

  1. Mark Norwood Avatar
    Mark Norwood

    The NAACP is outdated in both name and practice. This organization should have been either dissolved or undergone a major overhaul two decades ago.

  2. Linda Husser Avatar
    Linda Husser

    I AGREE! It is crystal clear to me that this is about ratings. And don’t be surprised if Miley Cyrus doesn’t show up! Every thing about this song is wrong. From stealing Marvin Gaye’s beat, the topless women in the video and the lyrics. Either they don’t have any women on the production staff of the NAACP AWARDS SHOW or they too have sold out… I am going to start a petition.

  3. Charles L. Freeman Avatar
    Charles L. Freeman

    Just a question: before you wrote this column, did you bother to find out what the Image Award submission requirements are? Also, did you bother trying to speak with anyone from the Image Awards staff to get their side of things? I ask because whether you know it or not, but the submission and nominating processes for the Image Awards are substantially different from those of the other organization you cited, NARAS.

  4. Mr. Mo'Kelly Avatar
    Mr. Mo’Kelly

    Mr. Freeman,

    The Hollywood Bureau is welcome to speak for itself publicly. I indicate as much in the piece.

    As long as the NAACP Image Award Mission Statement reads as it does, you must acknowledge the accuracy of my stance. I am sure the organization “has an explanation.”

    But this was an editorial, not an AP news report.

    I am sure the Bureau “has an explanation” in as much that Robin Thicke had an explanation for his lyrics.

    It is not about “the process,” but the insult to common sense. Like I said in the piece, Thicke is unworthy not because I said so, but because its stated mission says so. Clearly its “process” is out of alignment with its mission, and if the Hollywood Bureau wishes to respond I will publish it accordingly.

    As of yet…although this piece was sent DIRECTLY to the bureau leadership, there has been yet no response and no acknowledgment.

    The burden of responsibility is on the NAACP Image Awards to explain itself, not me. Not because I say so…but because its mission statement says so.

  5. nicholaspayton Avatar
    nicholaspayton

    Great piece! I am with you 100%. I, too, have written extensively about the Thicke debacle.

    Also of note, I see that Terry Teachout is nominated for his “biography” on Duke Ellington where he attempts besmirch the legacy of one of the greatest artists the Black community has ever produced. I haven’t read it in its entirety, but have seen enough excerpts to know that it’s not worth my time.

    Teachout is just one of many writers whose mission it is to rewrite the historical narrative of great Black artists under the guise of humanizing said figures. It’s racism and not worthy of a NAACP nod. It’s antithetical to what the organization is supposed to be about.

    Somewhere Duke Ellington is writing a blues to express his discontent…

    #BAM

    -Nicholas Payton

  6. Candice Avatar
    Candice

    I agree.

  7. Geri Avatar
    Geri

    The nomination process clearly needs to change. It’s not ok…on any level for THAT song having THOSE lyrics to be nominated in any way, shape or form for an image award…UNLESS that is the IMAGE you want to portray. It’s simple. And Robin Thicke doesn’t get a pass because he’s married to a woman of color and he collaborated with people of color on this song/album. The lyrics are offensive and if they’d been written by Pharrell or TI alone there would be problems, protests and outrage.

    My $0.02. #keepthechange

  8. iliarashad Avatar

    Excellent article! It should come to no surprise that the NAACP was never a Black organization. It has always been and continues to be primarily financed and directed by Whites (Jews in particular) even though Black faces are still used as figureheads. Joel Spingarn and other founding Jews established a philosophy of non-economic liberalism to ensure that Blacks would not focus on being economically and financially independent from them. The same NAACP that’s considering nominating Robin Thicke for an image award is the same NAACP that disinvited the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan from the Commemoration of the March on Washington in 1993 (and 2013?).

  9. John Milton Wesley Avatar
    John Milton Wesley

    Medgar Evers was our family’s Life Insurance salesman when I was a kid growing up in Ruleville, MS. He was killed the night I moved Jackson, June 12th, 2963.

    After college, I worked at WLBT-TV3(1971-1973),after the FCC license decision.

    1986,I served briefly as deputy director of public relations for the National NAACP in Baltimore.

    Then from 2005 until 2011,I represented a major brewery that gave relatively large sums of money annually to the NAACP. Thus I attended the annual Image Awards.

    This year’s nominations reflect a continuous movement toward a colorblind image for an organization pledged to advance “colored people”. The glare hurts my eyes.

  10. Michael Avatar

    All you have to do is change the name to

    National Association for the Appropriation of Colored People

    What would Martin Luther King think?

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xZs3Y03_EDg&feature=youtu.be