I'm feeling the same, but a lot of people are calling me prudish and 
conservative. Which is funny because those are the last things i am, but I do 
think we as humans should respect places of great tragedy like this. 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Rogue" <n1ro...@aol.com> 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Wednesday, March 31, 2010 10:12:43 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] OT: Singer Erykah Badu Strips Naked at JFK 
Assassination Site 

  





I saw the video but to be honest, I don't know how she figures this ties in to 
what she done in the video. I feel that she should have at least gotten the 
permits to let people know this was going to happen. I love the singer, still 
do,  but the video was in poor taste. 
--Dax 
I love mankind - it's people I can't stand! 




From: Keith Johnson 
Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2010 10:54 PM 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Subject: [scifinoir2] OT: Singer Erykah Badu Strips Naked at JFK Assassination 
Site 

  



Okay, I guess this is what you call really committing to your art? I do think 
it's...questionable....having the shot fired at the same spot basically where 
JFK was killed. 

video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jF-AKFAtQQ8 

****************************************************** 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jackson-williams/singer-erykah-badu-strips_b_517862.html
 

Singer Erykah Badu Strips Naked at JFK Assassination Site 



Erykah Badu has posted a provocative new video on her website to accompany the 
song "Window Seat." Currently #28 on Billboard's R&B/hip-hop chart, the song 
appears on the album New Amerykah Part Two: Return of the Ankh . 

In the video, Badu walks around Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas, her hometown and 
site of the November, 1963 shooting of President John F. Kennedy. Apparently 
filmed on St. Patrick's Day, onlookers watch as she slowly removes articles of 
clothing until a single shot rings out. Badu then falls down naked in the 
street, near the approximate spot where the presidential motorcade was passing 
by on that fateful day. 

It's an interesting piece of performance art. Gutsy, to say the least, and 
lucky, too, in that no cops showed up. 

UPDATE: The Dallas Morning News reports that city officials say Badu broke the 
law by not securing a permit for the filming. The paper quotes from her Twitter 
account, where she feeds that she was making a statement against "groupthink," 
the "unwritten rule" that "i will not express my true opinion if it opposes 
those i love and fear." She adds: "i was petrified while shooting this video 
... but liberation began to set in. i conquered many fears in that few 
moments." She said she was "too busy lookin for cops" to be embarrassed by her 
nudity. "i been naked all along in my words actions and deeds. thats the real 
vulnerable place." 

She said she knew there were children nearby as she was stripping, and added, 
"i prayed they wouldnt b traumatized." 

She also said that adults nearby were yelling at her, "THIS IS A PUBLIC PLACE : 
YOU OUGHTA BE ASHAMED : PUT YOUR CLOTHES ON : DAMN GIRL! etc." 

UPDATE #2: Badu has now given an interview to her local daily. Highlights: 

Q: To start, what can you tell me about the thought process behind the video 
for "Window Seat"? 

EB: The song "Window Seat" is about liberating yourself from layers and layers 
of skin or demons that are a hindrance to your growth or freedom, or evolution. 
I wanted to do something that said just that, so I started to think about 
shedding, nudity, taking things off in a very artful way. I am from the 
theater, and this is just a part of expression to us, a part of art. And I saw 
a video by a group called Matt and Kim, and it was filmed in Times Square. And 
I thought it was the bravest, most liberating thing I've ever seen two people 
do. And I wanted to dedicate this contagious act of liberation and freedom to 
them. I hoped it would become something contagious that people would want to do 
in some way or another. 

Q: And what was the thinking on the location and the Kennedy element to it? 

A: Times Square is the most monumental place in New York, and when I was 
thinking of monumental places, the grassy knoll was the most monumental place 
in Dallas I could think of. I tied it in a way that compared that assassination 
to the character assassination one would go through after showing his or her 
self completely. That's exactly the action that I wanted to display. 

Q: And I take it you knew that there would be a similar real-life reaction when 
the video was released? 

A: Yeah. I knew that would happen, so as soon as the thought came to my mind, I 
decided to assassinate myself as a gesture. Because it was going to happen 
anyway. The video is a prediction of what is happening now. 





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