RE: [scifinoir2] Black Presidents: A pop-cultural survey By Troy Patterson

2008-12-03 Thread Martin Baxter
As do I, Sable, as well as Dennis Haysbert's David Palmer in 24.





-[ Received Mail Content ]--

 Subject : RE: [scifinoir2] Black Presidents: A pop-cultural survey By Troy 
Patterson

 Date : Tue, 2 Dec 2008 21:23:22 -0600

 From : Sable Grey [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com


I would love the Morgan Freeman character to be president…lol. This is an
awesome survey – good job!

 

Sable Grey, LLC

www.sablegrey.net

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

From: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of tdemorsella
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 5:40 PM
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [scifinoir2] Black Presidents: A pop-cultural survey By Troy
Patterson

 

Over the past decade, their have been a number of films and TV shows
featuring Black Presidents. Now that we have a real one, I thought
this overview might be relevant

culturebox
Black Presidents
A pop-cultural survey.
By Troy Patterson
Posted Friday, Oct. 24, 2008, at 10:26 AM ET

The first movie to imagine a black president of the United States at
any length was Joseph Sargent's satirical drama The Man in 1972.
There, Douglass Dilman, president pro tempore of the Senate, happens
into the Oval Office after the president and the speaker of the House
die in a ceiling collapse. Unavailable on DVD, The Man is now a
rarity, and yet it clearly forecasts the screen existences of
subsequent black presidents.

James Earl Jones uses his commanding, paternal, universally
presentable voice in the title role—a harbinger of baritones to come.
Notably, the job of adapting Irving Wallace's novel went to Twilight
Zone creator Rod Serling. Black presidents have most often existed in
science-fiction scenarios, lending a futuristic tint to the
proceedings. Next summer, Danny Glover will play one President Wilson
in 2012, Roland Emmerich's forthcoming special-effects spectacular.

What might any of this mean for Barack Obama? Beats me. But the next
two weeks will see much talk and many pixels devoted to race and his
candidacy, and in a nation drunk on entertainment, the legacy of his
fictional forebears has to count for something. Herewith, a scan of
the most prominent black presidents in American pop culture and a stab
at understanding their significance.

24 (2001-Present)
Actors: Dennis Haysbert, D.B. Woodside
Presidents of the United States: David Palmer, Wayne Palmer

Tellingly, the first black actor cast as the president on Fox's action
series was most famous as the voice of an insurance company. We were
in good hands with David Palmer and his race-neutral Allstate
baritone, and his looks—mainstream manliness shaded brown—radiated
dependability. The same can't be said of the black president who
succeeded him on the show. David's brother Wayne—24 is, of course,
energetically ludicrous, so don't bother about the plot twists that
preceded his swearing in—has a shaved head and a jazzman's goatee
altogether too slick for the West Wing. The actor playing Wayne, D.B.
Woodside, looks like NBA point guard Gary Payton—and perhaps not for
nothing. Is there anything to the fact that Fox's online profiles for
both characters mention their athletic prowess? Wayne Palmer went to
Stanford on a baseball scholarship, and David was a basketball star at
Georgetown. It's as if they've vaulted into politics from a more
familiar field for African-American heroes. Whatever—they're tough on
terrorism.

Deep Impact (1998)
Actor: Morgan Freeman
POTUS: Tom Beck

Not to be confused with the same year's Armageddon, about astronauts
nuking an asteroid on a collision course with the Earth, Deep Impact
is about nuking a comet on a collision course with the Earth. It's
also about an MSNBC reporter so darling, as played by Téa Leoni, that
the president gives her something of a scoop about the comet-nuking
mission. Freeman looks and sounds conventionally presidential in the
way that only a Visa pitchman can (cf. Dennis Haybert and his
underwriter's reliability). The actor shades his quiet
righteousness—that Bruce Almighty-style rigor—with just a smidgen of
Driving Miss Daisy deference. There's no subtextual reason for Beck to
be black—beyond patting America on its broadly inclusive back, maybe,
or signaling an EEO solidarity with Leoni's girl reporter.

The Fifth Element (1997)
Actor: Tommy Tiny Lister
POTUS: President Lindberg

Luc Besson's wiggy fantasia tells the story of a planet representing
pure evil on a collision course with the Earth in the 23rd century.
Instead of nukes, our weapon against it is Milla Jovovich's
bandage-attired supernatural sylph, and one President Lindberg
oversees her deployment. (Technically, Lindberg leads an entity called
the United Federation, which is headquartered in New York City, but
the geopolitics of blockbusters rule him in as our commander in
chief.) Among its many bits of delirium, The Fifth Element presents a
quasi-ironic festival of retrograde racial images, with Variety's
review noting that Chris

[scifinoir2] Black Presidents: A pop-cultural survey By Troy Patterson

2008-12-02 Thread tdemorsella
Over the past decade, their have been a number of films and TV shows
featuring Black Presidents.  Now that we have a real one, I thought
this overview might be relevant


culturebox
Black Presidents
A pop-cultural survey.
By Troy Patterson
Posted Friday, Oct. 24, 2008, at 10:26 AM ET

The first movie to imagine a black president of the United States at
any length was Joseph Sargent's satirical drama The Man in 1972.
There, Douglass Dilman, president pro tempore of the Senate, happens
into the Oval Office after the president and the speaker of the House
die in a ceiling collapse. Unavailable on DVD, The Man is now a
rarity, and yet it clearly forecasts the screen existences of
subsequent black presidents.

James Earl Jones uses his commanding, paternal, universally
presentable voice in the title role—a harbinger of baritones to come.
Notably, the job of adapting Irving Wallace's novel went to Twilight
Zone creator Rod Serling. Black presidents have most often existed in
science-fiction scenarios, lending a futuristic tint to the
proceedings. Next summer, Danny Glover will play one President Wilson
in 2012, Roland Emmerich's forthcoming special-effects spectacular.

What might any of this mean for Barack Obama? Beats me. But the next
two weeks will see much talk and many pixels devoted to race and his
candidacy, and in a nation drunk on entertainment, the legacy of his
fictional forebears has to count for something. Herewith, a scan of
the most prominent black presidents in American pop culture and a stab
at understanding their significance.

24 (2001-Present)
Actors: Dennis Haysbert, D.B. Woodside
Presidents of the United States: David Palmer, Wayne Palmer

Tellingly, the first black actor cast as the president on Fox's action
series was most famous as the voice of an insurance company. We were
in good hands with David Palmer and his race-neutral Allstate
baritone, and his looks—mainstream manliness shaded brown—radiated
dependability. The same can't be said of the black president who
succeeded him on the show. David's brother Wayne—24 is, of course,
energetically ludicrous, so don't bother about the plot twists that
preceded his swearing in—has a shaved head and a jazzman's goatee
altogether too slick for the West Wing. The actor playing Wayne, D.B.
Woodside, looks like NBA point guard Gary Payton—and perhaps not for
nothing. Is there anything to the fact that Fox's online profiles for
both characters mention their athletic prowess? Wayne Palmer went to
Stanford on a baseball scholarship, and David was a basketball star at
Georgetown. It's as if they've vaulted into politics from a more
familiar field for African-American heroes. Whatever—they're tough on
terrorism.

Deep Impact (1998)
Actor: Morgan Freeman
POTUS: Tom Beck

Not to be confused with the same year's Armageddon, about astronauts
nuking an asteroid on a collision course with the Earth, Deep Impact
is about nuking a comet on a collision course with the Earth. It's
also about an MSNBC reporter so darling, as played by Téa Leoni, that
the president gives her something of a scoop about the comet-nuking
mission. Freeman looks and sounds conventionally presidential in the
way that only a Visa pitchman can (cf. Dennis Haybert and his
underwriter's reliability). The actor shades his quiet
righteousness—that Bruce Almighty-style rigor—with just a smidgen of
Driving Miss Daisy deference. There's no subtextual reason for Beck to
be black—beyond patting America on its broadly inclusive back, maybe,
or signaling an EEO solidarity with Leoni's girl reporter.

The Fifth Element (1997)
Actor: Tommy Tiny Lister
POTUS: President Lindberg

Luc Besson's wiggy fantasia tells the story of a planet representing
pure evil on a collision course with the Earth in the 23rd century.
Instead of nukes, our weapon against it is Milla Jovovich's
bandage-attired supernatural sylph, and one President Lindberg
oversees her deployment. (Technically, Lindberg leads an entity called
the United Federation, which is headquartered in New York City, but
the geopolitics of blockbusters rule him in as our commander in
chief.) Among its many bits of delirium, The Fifth Element presents a
quasi-ironic festival of retrograde racial images, with Variety's
review noting that Chris Tucker's mincing sidekick sounds like
Butterfly McQueen on speed. As played by Lister—a 300-pounder best
known for playing a larcenous thug in Friday—Lindberg is not a
suitable role model. Too angry. Too hostile. Too much bestial
grunting. That said, his menacing glares somehow suggest he'd stand
firm against lobbyists.

Head of State (2003)
Actor: Chris Rock
POTUS: Mays Gilliam

In the only film on this list that does not qualify as fantasy or
science fiction, a presidential candidate dies in a plane crash.
(Shades, here, of The Man.) Party bosses, believing that defeat is
certain, select a small-time D.C. alderman to head their ticket and
take a fall so that an insider can cruise to victory four years later.

RE: [scifinoir2] Black Presidents: A pop-cultural survey By Troy Patterson

2008-12-02 Thread Sable Grey
I would love the Morgan Freeman character  to be president…lol. This is an
awesome survey – good job!

 

Sable Grey, LLC

www.sablegrey.net

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

From: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of tdemorsella
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 5:40 PM
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [scifinoir2] Black Presidents: A pop-cultural survey By Troy
Patterson

 

Over the past decade, their have been a number of films and TV shows
featuring Black Presidents. Now that we have a real one, I thought
this overview might be relevant

culturebox
Black Presidents
A pop-cultural survey.
By Troy Patterson
Posted Friday, Oct. 24, 2008, at 10:26 AM ET

The first movie to imagine a black president of the United States at
any length was Joseph Sargent's satirical drama The Man in 1972.
There, Douglass Dilman, president pro tempore of the Senate, happens
into the Oval Office after the president and the speaker of the House
die in a ceiling collapse. Unavailable on DVD, The Man is now a
rarity, and yet it clearly forecasts the screen existences of
subsequent black presidents.

James Earl Jones uses his commanding, paternal, universally
presentable voice in the title role—a harbinger of baritones to come.
Notably, the job of adapting Irving Wallace's novel went to Twilight
Zone creator Rod Serling. Black presidents have most often existed in
science-fiction scenarios, lending a futuristic tint to the
proceedings. Next summer, Danny Glover will play one President Wilson
in 2012, Roland Emmerich's forthcoming special-effects spectacular.

What might any of this mean for Barack Obama? Beats me. But the next
two weeks will see much talk and many pixels devoted to race and his
candidacy, and in a nation drunk on entertainment, the legacy of his
fictional forebears has to count for something. Herewith, a scan of
the most prominent black presidents in American pop culture and a stab
at understanding their significance.

24 (2001-Present)
Actors: Dennis Haysbert, D.B. Woodside
Presidents of the United States: David Palmer, Wayne Palmer

Tellingly, the first black actor cast as the president on Fox's action
series was most famous as the voice of an insurance company. We were
in good hands with David Palmer and his race-neutral Allstate
baritone, and his looks—mainstream manliness shaded brown—radiated
dependability. The same can't be said of the black president who
succeeded him on the show. David's brother Wayne—24 is, of course,
energetically ludicrous, so don't bother about the plot twists that
preceded his swearing in—has a shaved head and a jazzman's goatee
altogether too slick for the West Wing. The actor playing Wayne, D.B.
Woodside, looks like NBA point guard Gary Payton—and perhaps not for
nothing. Is there anything to the fact that Fox's online profiles for
both characters mention their athletic prowess? Wayne Palmer went to
Stanford on a baseball scholarship, and David was a basketball star at
Georgetown. It's as if they've vaulted into politics from a more
familiar field for African-American heroes. Whatever—they're tough on
terrorism.

Deep Impact (1998)
Actor: Morgan Freeman
POTUS: Tom Beck

Not to be confused with the same year's Armageddon, about astronauts
nuking an asteroid on a collision course with the Earth, Deep Impact
is about nuking a comet on a collision course with the Earth. It's
also about an MSNBC reporter so darling, as played by Téa Leoni, that
the president gives her something of a scoop about the comet-nuking
mission. Freeman looks and sounds conventionally presidential in the
way that only a Visa pitchman can (cf. Dennis Haybert and his
underwriter's reliability). The actor shades his quiet
righteousness—that Bruce Almighty-style rigor—with just a smidgen of
Driving Miss Daisy deference. There's no subtextual reason for Beck to
be black—beyond patting America on its broadly inclusive back, maybe,
or signaling an EEO solidarity with Leoni's girl reporter.

The Fifth Element (1997)
Actor: Tommy Tiny Lister
POTUS: President Lindberg

Luc Besson's wiggy fantasia tells the story of a planet representing
pure evil on a collision course with the Earth in the 23rd century.
Instead of nukes, our weapon against it is Milla Jovovich's
bandage-attired supernatural sylph, and one President Lindberg
oversees her deployment. (Technically, Lindberg leads an entity called
the United Federation, which is headquartered in New York City, but
the geopolitics of blockbusters rule him in as our commander in
chief.) Among its many bits of delirium, The Fifth Element presents a
quasi-ironic festival of retrograde racial images, with Variety's
review noting that Chris Tucker's mincing sidekick sounds like
Butterfly McQueen on speed. As played by Lister—a 300-pounder best
known for playing a larcenous thug in Friday—Lindberg is not a
suitable role model. Too angry. Too hostile. Too much bestial
grunting. That said, his menacing glares somehow suggest he'd stand
firm against lobbyists