Charles Barkley to host new TNT show called ‘The Race Card’

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Trillfate;9228324 said:
Barkley says what whites wanna hear. He says controversial things about black ppl that they cant say publicly

"Slavery wasn't that bad. The unemployment rate was at an all time low for Black people and there were no gangs."
 
Trillfate;9231241 said:
https://twitter.com/ProfBlackistone/status/760280582060474368

Oh yeah I forgot and nobody even brought up how "race card" is an inherently offensive phrase
 
Stiff;9231252 said:
Trillfate;9231241 said:
https://twitter.com/ProfBlackistone/status/760280582060474368

Oh yeah I forgot and nobody even brought up how "race card" is an inherently offensive phrase

Race card, race bait, race pimp (used for sharpton and jesse) are dissmissive phrases used by white bigots in denial
 
ghostdog56;9227044 said:
They just released a preview

1673txu58y71.gif

Manye where da fuck dis gif came from! Lol
 
infamous114;c-9760144 said:
https://twitter.com/richarddeitsch/status/860181165126414336

Charles Barkley has a segment with Richard Spencer on his upcoming show on race. Why? "I want to know who my enemies are."

Who is Richard Spencer and how much shoe polish will Barkley need?
 
Trillfate;c-9760213 said:
infamous114;c-9760144 said:
https://twitter.com/richarddeitsch/status/860181165126414336

Charles Barkley has a segment with Richard Spencer on his upcoming show on race. Why? "I want to know who my enemies are."

Who is Richard Spencer and how much shoe polish will Barkley need?

He's a alt right white supremacist
 
Trillfate;c-9760213 said:
infamous114;c-9760144 said:
https://twitter.com/richarddeitsch/status/860181165126414336

Charles Barkley has a segment with Richard Spencer on his upcoming show on race. Why? "I want to know who my enemies are."

Who is Richard Spencer and how much shoe polish will Barkley need?

5th Letter;c-9760227 said:
Trillfate;c-9760213 said:
infamous114;c-9760144 said:
https://twitter.com/richarddeitsch/status/860181165126414336

Charles Barkley has a segment with Richard Spencer on his upcoming show on race. Why? "I want to know who my enemies are."

Who is Richard Spencer and how much shoe polish will Barkley need?

He's a alt right white supremacist

9mqq0kjdcs53.gif


 
No way I'm watching this shit. How you gonna have a show called "the Race Card" & expect any longevity after that?
 
http://www.herald-dispatch.com/feat...cle_ea9342f5-983b-517c-bde7-52eb9439e545.html

Angela Henderson-Bentley: Barkley's everyman approach lends sincerity to racially motivated series

When you think of people to start an important conversation about race, Charles Barkley is probably the last person that would come to your mind.

But starting that conversation is exactly what Barkley manages to do in the interesting new TNT documentary series, "American Race." Barkley, an executive producer of the show, is all business as he seeks to find real answers in some of the biggest racial hotspots across the country.

In the first of the four episodes, Barkley travels to Baltimore, Maryland, to learn more about Freddie Gray, the young man who allegedly suffered fatal injuries while in police custody. Barkley talks with community leaders and people who knew Gray, not only to find out what happened to him but also why the riots happened afterward. Just as Barkley is ready to rail against the cops, he spends time at the police academy and learns about the split-second decisions officers are forced to make. But when Barkley shares that experience at a town hall meeting he organized to start a community conversation, the audience turns on him and Barkley is faced with backlash he didn't expect.

In the second episode, Barkley seeks out more information about life for Muslim Americans as he travels to Irving, Texas, where 20 percent of the population is Muslim. He specifically wants to find out about a new ordinance the city passed outlawing foreign laws, an ordinance passed in response to the local mosque instituting a tribunal. And once again, just as it appears the issue is fairly cut and dried, Barkley brings out the other side, as he sits down with the mosque's imam to understand the tribunal better. This is the stronger of the first two episodes, as we get some real answers that help shed a light on Islam as a religion.

Barkley is known for his down-to-earth, no-nonsense commentating style, and that same style is what makes "Race" work. He takes on these tough topics from an everyman point of view, asking the same questions many of us have asked ourselves. And by doing that, we learn each side's point of view right along with Barkley, giving us important insight into these controversial issues.

"Race" may not create the change Barkley may have hoped for, but it will certainly spark some conversation. And all important changes must start somewhere.

"American Race" premieres at 9 p.m. Thursday, May 11, on TNT. A special preview of the first hour will air at 11:30 p.m. Sunday, May 7, following TNT's coverage of the NBA Playoffs.
 
http://www.philly.com/philly/entert...TNT-American-Race-Baltimore-Freddie-Gray.html

Charles Barkley: 'Time we talk about race in America'

Charles Barkley, who caught some heat in 2014 for calling rioters in Ferguson, Mo., “scumbags,” might not be everyone’s go-to guy to talk about race, much less to spark a national dialogue on the subject.

But the former Sixers great and Inside the NBA analyst will be talking plenty – and listening, too — in his four-hour docu-series, American Race. (When the show was first announced last summer, its working title was The Race Card.) The first episode gets a preview after NBA playoff coverage Sunday (11:30 p.m., TNT). On Monday, all four episodes will be available on demand, or on the TNT app, before the show runs in its entirety at 9 and 10 p.m. May 11 and 12.

“In this country, we don’t like to talk about race. But race gets into everything, whether we like it or not,” Barkley says in Sunday’s premiere.

“I grew up poor, in Leeds, Ala., in the ’60s and ’70s. We had Selma, we had Montgomery, and now 50 years later we’re more divided than ever,” he says, sounding exasperated. “I just want to give everyone a seat at the table. It’s about time we talk about race in America.”

That first installment takes Barkley to Baltimore, where, in 2015, riots followed the death of Freddie Gray, who’d succumbed to injuries sustained in the back of a police van.

“Police brutality. We’re seeing too much of it. Baltimore, New York, Ferguson, we’ve seen too much. But I’ve always felt there’s no good reason to riot. Baltimore went up in flames, and a lot of people got hurt. I understand, and support Black Lives Matter. But I’ve always thought it was stupid to destroy your own neighborhood. I want to find out what the hell happened in Baltimore,” Barkley says.

He then embarks on a few days of research that includes conversations with residents and police as well as a ride-along with cops and a training simulation at the police academy. It all culminates in a town hall-style meeting that maybe doesn’t go quite the way Barkley intended, as he’s attacked for defending the police and for raising the issue of black-on-black crime.

American Race is at its best when Barkley, who’s confronted more than once about his Ferguson remarks, is listening, not talking. The one episode I've seen isn't enough to say that anyone's changed his mind, or that he's changed the minds of anyone he's met.


It’s possible that his star power will bring people to the show who wouldn’t otherwise tune in to hear someone like civil rights attorney Billy Murphy – who represented Gray’s family – draw a line between the civil rights strides of the 1960s and the ensuing “war on drugs” in which, he says, mass incarceration was used “to nullify political progress.”

“I thought you were a Trump supporter,” the lawyer tells Barkley at one point.

“Be serious,” Barkley replies.

Barkley is clearly intrigued by Devin Allen, whose Instagrammed photo of a man running from the police during what Allen calls “the uprising,” made the cover of Time magazine.

“For media, it was a bunch of angry Negroes destroying their own community,” says Allen, who invites Barkley home to meet his extended family. “What I saw was a shift in Baltimore where we understood our power and woke the city up and showing that they’re not just going to keep killing us. That’s what the uprising was for me. The uprising gave me a purpose, it gave me the power I needed, it gave me my path in life.”

Barkley, while learning from Allen’s mother some of the secrets of her crab dip – he’s surprised to find out crabs are cooked alive — is nevertheless pleased when the young photographer’s family disagrees with Allen, who believes the looting and burning had served a purpose in bringing the media to the streets to see what was happening.

“This is why I’m great at my job,” Barkley says. “You all [are] having a great conversation and disagreeing.”
 

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