whatchusay logo
whatchusay?!

Features whatchuThink whatchuLearn whatchuRead whatchuSee whatchuHear Calendar Community
Lead Story
583980305_b982e504b5.jpg
Clip of the Month: Slave Dungeons on Goree Island
WhatchuTHINK: mine your mind

FORWARDEVER MEDIA CENTER

malcolm x and alex haley

Writer Alex Haley writing The Autobiography of Malcolm X with Brother Malcolm.

"The media's the most powerful entity on earth. They have the power to make the innocent guilty and to make the guilty innocent, and that's power. Because they control the minds of the masses."
- Malcolm X

Mission

The Forwardever Media Center is 100% committed to providing unconventional writing workshops and media literacy training to "at-risk" Black youth, particularly males, ages 14 through 24. Working in partnership with The Mentoring Center in Oakland, CA., the Center's writing workshops, website internship, and film forums, help students develop critical thinking skills and discover their creative talents. We recruit youth for our programs from the California Youth Authority (the state's largest prison for youth) as well as from universities and high schools. This cross-pollination of young minds creates dynamic shared experiences.

Programs

Whatchusay Cinema–A monthly film forum hosted at schools or community centers in Northern California that explores issues such as race, class, gender, and society. Students are joined by a panel of activists, educators, athletes, entrepreneurs, etc. to rate the films and convene roundtable discussions about corresponding relevant issues in society. For info about film screenings and schedules contact: cheo@whatchusay.com

Writing Workshops–We offer intensive seminars in journalism, creative writing, cultural criticism, new media, film production, etc. These seminars are taught at the center, located at 1224 Preservation Park, Oakland, CA, 94612. They are also available on location, at schools, community and detention centers, churches, etc. For info about class schedules contact: cheo@whatchusay.com

Internships–Whatchusay.com offers competitive internships to young writers who have clearly demonstrated a passion for the craft of writing or media production. The 3-month internship covers news writing and reporting, feature writing, creative writing, media literacy and new media. Working in partnership with community based organizations, universities and international and national media outlets, we produce a pipeline of informed journalists of color who will go on to create their own independent media organizations or work for major media organizations.

More...

« 300 Seconds to Save a Black Man | Main | Catch a Fire »

Janet Jackson is 20 Y.O.

By Maya J. Pope-Chappell


Janet (Back).bmp
"I wanna keep it light. I don't wanna be serious. I wanna have fun."

Commemorating Janet's 20 years since her 1986 breakthrough album Control, 20 Y.O. shows a lighter, less serious side of Janet. With help from her man Jermaine Dupri and her legendary team of producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Janet moves her music in a more playful, hip hop influenced direction equipped with pounding bass lines, synthesized melodies, and sexy lyrics.

This Virgin LP which includes remnants of Janet's past productions features high energy dance tracks, airy ballads, and her signature freaky moan music. Unlike her previous albums, Janet's pop meets JD's hip hop approach is for the most part, a good thing.

Take the second single "So Excited" which mixes DJ scratch's with synth piano and Janet's breathy crackling tone. "Get it Out of Me" which samples Afrika Bambaataa's "Looking for the Perfect Beat," is another pulsating hip moving track. "With You," a song about that care-free feeling you get when you're with that special someone is less dramatic, successfully slowing down the pace of the CD. Although the album goes overboard on hand claps and the rhythms at times are overwhelming, this is a fun and revitalized side of Janet, one that signals the lighter side of a mid-life crisis. Grade: B

Posted on October 23, 2006 10:58 AM

Comments (3)

wnexja bcvjqfm vcfstrdu prfot xoqlht ximsdnq jidansfmk

wnexja bcvjqfm vcfstrdu prfot xoqlht ximsdnq jidansfmk

udtxrqakf jhfqnxu cbpvsoka mroilkn agtxifqhw rtvp yjrfdgk

Post a comment

Home
About Us
Forwardever

Subscribe to our Email Newsletter


Do you know the difference between movies and film? We do.

Whatchusee Cinema distills current events, abstract ideas, art, literature and culture from classic, foreign and independent cinema, with a unique emphasis on films by, for or about people of African descent.

More info...