382 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2021
    1. Negroes be running through the block shootin'

      Shows how the world is evil more and more gangs promoting violence in the streets

    2. Reminiscing about the last time the Task Force flipped

      missing them old days when life was simple

    3. G-packs get off quick, forever negroes talk stuff

      He's explaining how his haters be talking about him

    4. I be kicking, musician, inflictin' composition

      seems like hes getting into it already

    5. Laughing at baseheads trying to sell some broken amps

      you have to do what you have to do to make money

    6. Or either on the corner betting Grants with the cee-lo champs

      On the corner playing dice betting money

    7. I keep some E&J, sitting bent up in the stairway

      shows us what New York looks like but maybe this is his mind also

    8. Y'all know my steelo with or without the airplay

      seems to me he is higher then ever hes on top of the world

    9. Hand me a nine and I'll defeat foes

      again with the gun line

    10. Bullet holes left in my peepholes, I'm suited up in street clothes

      seems like he lives in a dangerous part of town where he blends into the street

    11. Holding an M-16, see with the pen I'm extreme, now

      M-16 is a type of gun. Many rappers boast about guns and money and drugs

    12. Of pain, I'm like Scarface smelling amphetamines

      scarface was this young man who became something crazy and the money got to his head the power got to his head the girls go to his head and Scarface ended up dying

    13. Rappers, I monkey flip 'em with the funky rhythm

      says his rhymes or so hard that they make other people flip

    14. I don't know how to start this stuff, yo

      What is he going to start?

    15. Where fake negroes don't make it back

      Back in the day black people would stay in prison until they died

    16. Straight out the friggin dungeons of rap

      seems like rap music is from his soul and its been locked up

    17. Yeah, it's time man (aight negro, begin)

      reminds me of all the old rap music and how they talk before the bass drops

    18. (Word, it's time negro?)

      He's getting ready to spit the truth

    19. Yeah yeah, aiyyo black it's time (word?)

      Sounds like a start of a song

    20. NY State of Mind

      Reminds me of one of Jay-z song's

    1. floating perfectly through the net.

      This poem is about the sport many love basketball and even says at the end floating perfectly through the net so all that work he did was for a good cause

    2. and swiveling back to see an orange blur 

      The orange blur is the ball either going in the basket or missing it

    3. for the game he loved like a country

      everyone has a sport they love but stuff can happen that makes you take a break from the sport or game

    4. with a wild, headlong motion

      You can tell by the word choice that this might be his last game for a while

    5. inexplicably falling, hitting the floor

      did he get hurt?

    6. but losing his balance in the process,

      You can tell that something bad is going to happen

    7. against the glass for a lay-up,

      Did he make it?

    8. by himself now and laying it gentl

      taking a layup to provide and basket

    9. in a fury, taking the ball into the air

      Maybe he is upset that the guard is ball hogging

    10. while the power-forward explodes past them

      Seems like the power forward was wide open

    11. and commits to the wrong man

      Maybe the defender jumped up and blocked his shot that could have been the game winning basket

    12. until the guard finally lunges out   

      he is jumping out to get a basket

    13. a single bounce hitting the hardwood

      Hardwood could be the floor

    14. between them without a dribble, without 

      They don't have the ball but they still provide help with screens and crashing the paint and moving around all the time

    15. together as brothers passing the ball

      A lot of teams are like family because you will be with them forever until you either get traded or retire

    16. and filling the lanes in tandem, moving

      Trying to provide help for the flashy guard

    17. the way that forwards should, fanning out

      They are going to the perimeter to help the guard out by either setting screens or just getting open

    18. both forwards racing down the court

      The power and small forward are either on the move to stop him or on the move to help him

    19. like a coach’s drawing on the blackboard,

      This right here is him referencing the coach drawing up plays

    20. n slow motion, almost exactly

      reminds me of a movie scene

    21. etting the play develop in front of him

      the defender seems like he doesn't want to play or lacks the skill of playing defense

    22. of a high, gliding dribble and a man   

      I can see how the people watching could be caught by surprise

    23. in the wrong direction, trying to catch sight

      he got his ankles broke

    24. who looks stunned and nailed to the floor

      Stuck by the quick moving guard

    25. scissoring past a flat-footed defender

      He caught the defender lacking and went past him

    26. n underhand pass toward the other guard   

      either passed it to the point or shooting guard

    27. to the outlet who is already shoveling

      Another person now has the basketball

    28. and spinning around to throw a strike 

      This here reminds me of a ufc move

    29. from the air like a cherished possession

      Its like you want the ball all the time

    30. perfectly, gathering the orange leather

      the orange leather is the basketball

    31. boxes out his man and times his jump

      When you box out a man you make it hard for them to get a rebound

    32. and for once our gangly starting center

      Center is a position in basketball

    33. angs there, helplessly, but doesn’t drop

      You can tell he just dunked the ball

    34. A hook shot kisses the rim and

      Reminds me of basketball with the kisses the rim

    35. Fast Break

      Maybe this is about starting something new and getting it done on a fast break

    1. in the chalk and choke

      Maybe at last she is free and passed away

    2. n the many many mornings-after

      This will continue until you cant take it anymore

    3. in the non-cheering dark,

      not everyone will support you

    4. ultivation of strength to heal and enhance

      she needs someone to help her through this

    5. you. I call for you

      maybe she needs help

    6. what wants to crumble you down, to sicken

      Maybe she is struggling with a past event or even an event right now

    7. Over

      What is she over?

    8. ong blows that you want to give and blows you are going to get.

      Maybe she is going through dark times

    9. cultivation of victory Over

      Maybe what this is about is the victory of a past event

    10. I call for you

      Maybe she is bored

    11. Where it is dry.

      Why mention this twice

    12. Where it is dry.

      Maybe she is physically hot and in the dark

    13. Under the wolves and coyotes of particular silences.

      Wolves and coyotes attack the prey at a slow pace and a quiet pace

    14. in the hot paralysis.

      Seems like they couldn't move but for what reason

    15. in the vertigo cold.

      Shows us that the dark can also mean the cold

    16. Dark gardening

      Reminds me of like a witch or something planting something dark

    17. I call for you cultivation of strength in the dark.

      Cultivation has many meanings but for this particular line I think it stands for the strength throughout the dark like a field.

    1. Nor any Placard boast me ‑Itʹs full as Opera

      Went from one genre to another and how the mood swings from graceful to intense

    2. Nor any know I know the ArtI mention ‑ easy ‑ Here

      No one knows that she is a piece of art

    3. Till I was out of sight, in sound,The House encore me so

      Shows me that she was finally free

    4. I cannot dance opon my Toes ‑No Man instructed me ‑But oftentimes, among my mind,A Glee possesseth me,That had I Ballet Knowledge ‑Would put itself abroadIn Pirouette to blanch a Troupe ‑Or lay a Prima, mad,And though I had no Gown of Gauze ‑No Ringlet, to my Hair,Nor hopped for Audiences ‑ like Birds ‑One Claw opon the air ‑

      She doesn't want the center of attention she wants to be like every other man and have rights

    5. Nor hopped for Audiences ‑ like Birds ‑One Claw opon the air

      She doesn't have to entertain people just because she is a women.

    6. And though I had no Gown of Gauze ‑No Ringlet, to my Hair

      Seems to me that beauty isn't everything to a women.

    7. n Pirouette to blanch a Troupe ‑Or lay a Prima, mad,

      Shows us her moves

    8. That had I Ballet Knowledge ‑Would put itself abroad

      Shows me that she is smart

    9. I cannot dance opon my Toes ‑No Man instructed me ‑But oftentimes, among my mind

      This shows me that she is independent and can do stuff by herself and doesn't need help from a man.

  2. Apr 2021
    1. We need to be more thoughtful, more deliberate and more fluid about the many spaces that we navigate, which require different levels of conscientiousness and clarity, so that we aren't misunderstood.

      We should be more positive then negative

    2. We don't need universal rules around this stuff

      We really don't we need to man up and just not say this slur it hurts others and can start drama

    3. In that aforementioned workplace harassment case, Carmona's lawyer argued that black folks use nigger among one another with a specific, affectionate, intra-racial understanding. But that, too, is wrong:

      If its wrong why do they still use it

    4. alking about nigger requires us to hold different and at times contradictory ideas in our heads at once. We have to actually acknowledge that we have different histories and live in different spaces

      White people don't know how it was being a slave or being whipped or getting your children taken from you

    5. "baby" might be affectionate between two lovers at home but grounds for a sexual harassment complaint if a boss were to say it to another employee work.

      Always be careful with what you say because in the long run it can affect you big time

    6. Paltrow's music industry friends were more forgiving, but the larger Twitterverse, full of people who have different orientations to Paltrow, was predictably much less willing to extend her the benefit of the doubt.

      Even thought she didn't meant it others didn't know that, that's why it happened

    7. didn't mean any harm.

      See when this happens we should know to stop saying the word but no one listens

    8. When nonblack folks ask why they can't say it but black people can, the question misses the point. Anyone can say it — but that doesn't mean there won't be fallout for doing so.

      You can say it but expect some retaliation

    9. should be clear, simple rules around its usage, so that we might point out transgressors (and avoid transgressing ourselves). There shouldn't be a double standard, the arguments go. Just one standard.

      What I say is I don't think we should use it but if you want to go ahead I'm not stopping you

    10. this is a singularly slippery word, with complicated, ugly histories baked into it.

      It is that's why we shouldn't say it at all

    11. called another woman a "whore" and dismissed a separate sexual harassment complaint because he said the woman in question was "too ugly" to be the target of such a thing — but most of the attention centered on the act-like-niggers bit.

      This guy needs to get fired or something

    12. You and her are very bright ... but y'all act like niggers ... seriously."

      This is just wrong

    1. It is important to consider the context of the word’s use in these situations. One thing I think we can all agree on is that “n-----” is offensive language. In fact, you could probably make the argument that no one should be using the word. Regardless of your race, I argue that we should be better at policing ourselves with the term if we really want to change what so many complain about.

      If you use it in the right manner then its not negative but if you don't then there is a problem

    2. I argue that if the black community really wants to see the change in others, then the black community needs to make a change too.

      Once they change I believe that whites will change

    3. Frowning on white people who enjoy listening and singing along to songs with the N-word insinuates that it is only OK for black people to say “n-----,”

      I agree with you why should they be the only one who can say it why ant everyone say it in a positive way

    4. he books “To Kill a Mockingbird” and “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” have been eliminated from the curriculum because of their use of racial slurs.

      This makes me upset both are good books but I can see why they took it down

    5. While I neither believe nor support the notion that the black community should be solely responsible for spearheading the end of the word’s use, I do believe that the black community has a large role to play in the issue.

      I believe we should control our mouth before we say something

    6. Head coach John Sung extended his apology for the team’s actions

      I am glad he apologized

    7. the team received immediate backlash

      I blame the coach for letting them do this

    8. It is also worth noting that in order for Lil Dicky to use “n-----” in the song, it was necessary for him to bring in a black person to be the one to sing the word

      That's interesting to me but I wonder what he was feeling while he was saying it

    9. Freaky Friday” by Lil Dicky featuring Chris Brown, which uses “n-----” in the lyrics. The song tells the story of a white man, Lil Dicky, who switches bodies with a mixed man, Chris Brown, and then asks if he can say the N-word now since he is black

      I think this is disrespectful

    10. peek into the world of what it means to be black

      White people don't know how it felt to be a slave they don't know the pain of this word

    11. “N-----” is, undoubtedly, offensive

      I agree but why do African Americans use it so much if it is

    12. He argues that white people can’t seem to accept this because of white privilege.

      Maybe this is true maybe its not

    13. has led to some white people also saying the word

      When you hear the word so much it gets stuck in your vocab and you begin to say it

    14. African-American rappers.

      A lot of rappers use this word repeatedly

    15. He asserts that white people have been raised in a society whose laws and culture communicates that “everything belongs to you

      I do not agree with this

    16. “If the word is so offensive to the black community, then why does the black community still use it?

      I agree why do they use it?

    17. friendly when used by the black community and derogatory when used by non-black people.

      I see this a lot of times during school

    18. word has re-emerged

      You probably hear this word everywhere nowadays

    19. white people branded Africans with the term and used it to abuse and belittle them for decades

      Africans have dealt with this word for a while

    1. I don’t agree with the argument that use of the word niggerat this social stratum of the black community was an internalization of racism

      I think in our society today black people use the n word in a positive way then what it was used for back then rappers will use this word and say the n word my brother

    1. Black people cannot drive without fear of being pulled over or even killed by police

      I hear this in a lot of rap songs

    2. Because to be black is to walk through the world and watch people doing things that you cannot do.

      To be black you have to have gone through what they been through.

    3. everything belongs to you

      I do not feel that this is right. All ,y life I have worked for what I want and it feels good to know that I worked for it

    4. white trash

      I here this a lot in movies and or in YouTube videos

    5. My wife with her girlfriends will use the word ‘bitch

      This word is very offensive

    6. while it is OK for his wife to refer to him as “honey,” he noted, it is probably not cool for a strange woman walking down the street to do so.  

      To me I disagree I think if you are working at a restaurant it is ok for them to call you honey because they might have to say it but if it is a complete stranger then I understand

    7. Words don’t have a meaning without context

      To me this is true in many eyes

    1. For him to delight in blackness, even in the ways that were really kind of pushing it and that made people uncomfortable, is liberating for me

      Many people did not like his actions

    2. He was a white man with a passion for blackness.

      Does this mean he wanted to be black?

    3. It's shocking that he didn't realize how unmoored some people would become. W.E.B. Du Bois said the title was "an affront to the hospitality of black folk." That response really unnerved him, and I think he came to regret the title late in life.

      Shows us many hated the book and others loved the book

    4. racial slur

      Was it used in a good or bad way?

    5. Carl Van Vechten and the Harlem Renaissance: A Portrait in Black and White."

      Shows us that he might have had a good affect on some people

    1. mind too strewn

      Shows that he mind is a very powerful place and if you put your mind too something you can accomplish anything

    2. Sisyphus

      Sisyphus: the founder and king of Ephyra

    1. Most of my own poems are racial in theme and treatment, derived from the life I know. In many of them I try to grasp and hold some of the meanings and rhythms of jazz

      I see this in rap music too

    2. Now I await the rise of the Negro theater

      Many people are waiting for this

    3. against an undertow of sharp criticism and misunderstanding from his own group

      This is true many get judge for this and other stuff

    4. A colored man writing poetry! How odd!

      I think we need more Colored people writing poetry

    5. But she told me a few weeks before she would not think of going to hear "that woman," Clara Smith, a great black artist, sing Negro folksongs

      Why wouldn't she?

    6. Negro artist can give his racial individuality, his heritage of rhythm and warmth, and his incongruous humor that so often, as in the Blues, becomes ironic laughter mixed with tears

      Trying to fit in and express himself but no one listens

    7. for the American Negro artist who canescape the restrictions the more advanced among his own group would put upon him, a great field of unused material ready for his art.

      What restrictions does he have?

    8. jazz is their child

      Jazz to them is something more then just music its like its there own child

    9. hey do not particularly care whether they are like white folks or anybody else. Their joy runs, bang! into ecstasy

      We should all be like this and not let the haters get to us

    10. A very high mountain indeed for the would-be racial artist to climb in order to discover himself and his people

      Its gonna take a lot to get the respect for a person of color to be noticed and get respected

    11. And in the South they have at least two cars and house "like white folks.

      Tells me that the Black people are finally getting what they deserve and are getting respected

    12. Don't be like niggers

      Shows me that still not a lot of people trust black people

    13. Negro middle class

      Not necessarily poor but not at all rich

    14. And I was sorry the young man said that, for no great poet has ever been afraid of being himself

      As a writer you shouldn't want to be someone else your style might be like someone else's but you should never want to be someone else you should always stay true and be yourself

    15. I want to be a poet--not a Negro poet

      They don't want to be treated special just because they are a negro poet they want to feel special because there work is special and creative and inspiring to all

    1. The tallest tower Can tumble down If it be not rooted In solid ground

      Even the most positive, smartest, athletic person can crumble and break down.

    2. A joker was lucky To be alive. But Booker T. Was nobody's fool: You may carve a dream With an humble tool

      Shows us that he had a dream and he did everything he could to succeed that dream

    3. He built a school With book-learning there And the workman's tool

      Shows that he wants blacks to learn but also wants blacks to work

    1. On this foundation we may build bread winning, skill of hand and quickness of brain

      The more we study and work the more our brain grows with the information we receive

    2. Higher Education

      The higher education the better job you get and the more money you make

    3. If we make money the object of man-training, we shall develop money-makers

      This reminds me of the the American dream from everyone they say we need to graduate High school then graduate collage then get a job and make money for the rest of your life until you retire.

    4. The Negro race, like all races, is going to be saved by its exceptional men

      This reminds me of how Moses saved his people and they were finally free from pharaoh.

  3. drive.google.com drive.google.com
    1. approved

      Means to accept someone no matter what

    2. approved him and not simply because he was a great singer

      Accepted him because he was just like them he was equal to them

    3. Then a foreign land heard Hayes and put its imprint on him and immediately America with all its imitative snobbery woke up.

      Shows that America was sleeping on this young man

    4. true of the white world it is infinitely more true of the colored world.

      You can see that whites and blacks are not that different in many situations

    5. ability and genius

      Black people are just like us they have the ability to be smart some are smarter then us

    6. We have had many voices of all kinds as fine as his and America was and is as deaf as she was for years to him

      Many voices have spoken out about the propaganda of this world but only a few listen. This reminds me of how Martin Luther King jr was such a vital person in history

    7. After all, in the world at large, it is only the accident, the remnant, that gets the chance to make the most of itself

      In this world you only have one chance to make the best of what you are doing if you fail you can always pass but if you screw up something and end up in jail your life is over

    8. the accidents of education and opportunity have raised on the tidal waves of chance

      Many who don't succeed don't focus in school and luck out on a good job and good money

    9. few recognized and successful Negro artists; but they are not all those fit to survive or even a good minority

      Many blacks have been successful many in the music industry many in pro sports and many in other jobs

    10. artists we face our own past as a people

      People will bring up the past just to try to get a hold of you

    11. the Negro youth, is a different kind of youth,

      They now have dreams of graduating high school or going pro in football or basketball may have dreams to be a rap star

    12. Who shall let this world be beautiful

      I think we determine if the world is beautiful

    13. What is it

      What is beauty? its different some say its a sunny day others say its the beautiful cut grass on a Saturday morning some say its the ocean and the waves crashing down but too all nature is involved

    14. what the world could be if it were really a beautiful world

      This is very much true our society today is just negative. Polluted skies from the factory's make our skies gloomy. The hatred towards others is the reason we are divided.

    15. what is it that you would want?

      What I would want is a very hard question there is stuff that i need to live and succeed but there is stuff that I want to look cooler and to fit in.

    16. We want to be Americans

      They want to be like everyone else they want freedom they want to be treated right they want to be what it is said about our country the land of the free.

    17. You and I have been breasting hills; we have been climbing upward; there has been progress

      Shows that Black people have came along way from being Slaves to now being something they dreamed off.

    18. struggling for the right of black men to be ordinary human beings

      All through history Black men have been treated like animals which brings my thoughts back to slavery

    1. I hope we shall not remain at this negative pole

      I agree I hope everyone gets to a positive faze with each other and treat everyone right

    2. Should we not then have a journal of free discussion, open to all sides of the problem

      We should people everyone's voice matters

    3. We need, I suppose in addition to art some substitute for propaganda.

      We do need propaganda in our world I think like he stated. I do not think we could live straight without people constantly judging or criticizing us

    4. The three journals which have been vehicles of most of our artistic expressions have been the avowed organs of social movements and organized social programs

      It is saying that our souls are the ones driving us to succeed and keep working and protesting what is wrong.

    5. To date we have had little sustained art unsubsidized by propaganda;

      Where has the art gone?

    1. Hughes’s essay delivers a lesson

      To teach that the black community can do anything no matter there skin religion and or gender

    2. With a focus on increasing authentic representation of people of color, Milestone Media created a world of splash pages and panels that is both inextricably bound to the music, politics, and energy of its time—much like the Black Arts Movement

      This site is here to help the Black community get more involved in poetry and music and other jobs that we may think only white people run

    3. “My problem—and I’ll speak as a writer now—with writing a black character in either the Marvel or DC universe is that he is not a man. He is a symbol. Like Wonder Woman—if you write Wonder Woman, she is all women

      I agree with this not a lot of people go out and say my favorite hero is Wonder woman or my favorite hero is Black panther. I think we need more male black hero's

    4. felt the paucity of characters of color, queer characters, and women characters within American comics needed to be addressed

      We need more hero's that are of different origin's I know of a few hero's that are black (Black Panther, Storm, and cyborg just to name a few.

    5. Black artist downtown became more and more isolated from that so-called ‘mainstream’ by the growing need to fully express [their] soul and mind connection with Black struggle in [their] art and in the street”.

      Shows me that black artists are dying down which isn't a good thing

    6. If white people are pleased we are glad.

      To me you shouldn't do something just to please someone do it because you like to do it

    7. Be stereotyped, don’t go too far, don’t shatter our illusions about you, don’t amuse us too seriously. We will pay you,’ say the whites.”

      Shows me that the whites don't understand where this young poet is coming from and now yawl want to be nice to him just doesn't make sense

    8. The Negro artist works against an undertow of sharp criticism and misunderstanding from his own group and unintentional bribes from the whites.

      People are gonna hate you for what you do and that's the truth I make music and not everyone likes it but I'm still standing tall

    9. no great poet has ever been afraid of being himself

      This is true through everything like being a song writer don't be someone your not just because a certain crowd doesn't follow you be yourself and your time will come

    10. the young poet tells Hughes that he wants to be “a poet—not a Negro poet,” which Hughes takes to mean that, at best, the young poet seeks to downplay his race

      This shows me that this young poet doesn't believe in his race it shows me he is less confident about his race.