p.s.
speaking of Cowboy hats: dont even get me started on that silly looking 
sidekick on
"Walker: Texas Ranger"!!! :^)

sean deason wrote:

> okay. youre right. i dont always have my *P.C.* hat on when I write, but I 
> should not
> have used the term "ghetto kids" when speaking of innercity youths.
> but to explain further and beat a dead horse: I also see humor in white 
> suburban
> uppermiddle class kids insisting on acting and dressing like gangster 
> rappers. It's
> funny as hell to see a city dwellers wearing cowboy boots and cowboy hats 
> too! maybe
> it just me though :^)
>
> Lester Kenyatta Spence wrote:
>
> > On Tue, 22 Feb 2000, sean deason wrote:
> >
> > > dude! dont get all sensitive on me now.
> > > If you lived in the southeastern section of Michigan I wouldnt have to 
> > > guide you
> > > to the humor in the image I was trying to conjure (think Carlton on "The 
> > > Fresh
> > > Prince"). The *funny* part is that Grosse Pointers are not notoriusly 
> > > known for
> > > thier individual fashion sense and we would try to emulate such 
> > > blandness. sorry
> > > to you other out of towners for my regional sociolgical references, I 
> > > sometimes
> > > forget how small the internet makes the world seem :^)
> > > sean
> >
> > I'm in Ann Arbor now....and grew up in Detroit during the period you speak
> > of.  It's hard for me to take off my intellectual hat, because that's what
> > I do for a living....
> >
> > Here then, I understand where the humor is supposed to come from.  But at
> > the same time this is the period I lived in, and I knew that the supposed
> > "ghetto kids" weren't really ghetto....except for the fact that they were
> > black and lived in Detroit.  Black Detroiter=ghetto kid.  This equation
> > doesn't quite hold though....even the distinction that Dan makes in the
> > book was a bit more fluid.
> >
> > I went to Bishop Borgess....a private working class school on the West
> > Side.  (For those of you not from here, this isn't an oxymoron in Metro
> > Detroit.)  We had a strict dress code....but this dress code still allowed
> > for a great deal of stylistic freedom.  What was interesting here is that
> > you had some people who were preppy...but only at school.  At home they
> > sported patent leather addidas, kangols, and addidas jogging suits.  And
> > then you had kids who did the exact opposite.
> >
> > All to say that I get the joke....but recognize that race, class and space
> > are different.  The black preps mimicked Grosse Pointers like May mimicked
> > Kraftwerk.
> >
> > peace
> > lks

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