OUT NOW as part of Black History Month
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Hey Friend,
We’re back and excited to release "That's So Black" Volume 2: AfroNet ([link removed]) .
In this episode, we briefly recap the history of AfroNet—an early Black digital space—to explain why today’s Internet is the result of corporations and white tech CEOs valuing profit over connection.
Watch on Twitter ([link removed]) , Instagram ([link removed]) , or YouTube ([link removed]) . We'll meet you wherever you're at! Here's what else is coming up this month:
* TUE, FEB 22: #MeToo and digital cultural organizing
* MON, FEB 28: Black Twitter and the history of Black news distribution
In Solidarity,
Eteng Ettah
Narrative Director, MediaJustice
Previous Messages
Sent: February 8, 2022
Hi Friend,
It's here 🎉 We're excited to release "That's So Black" VOL 1: Ballroom Slang ([link removed]) .
In this episode, we break down how white media has profited off popular phrases and slang with roots in Black, queer, and trans ballroom culture.
Watch on on Twitter ([link removed]) , ([link removed]) Instagram ([link removed]) , or YouTube ([link removed]) . We'll meet you wherever you're at! Here's what else is coming up this month:
* FEB 15: AfroNet and new media as a form of creating community
* FEB 22: Digital cultural organizing through the lens of #MeToo
* FEB 28: Twitter and the history of Black news distribution
In Solidarity,
Eteng Ettah
Narrative Director, MediaJustice
Sent: February 1, 2022
Hi Friend,
To commemorate Black History Month, MediaJustice is proud to present “That’s So Black ([link removed]) ,” a new content series spotlighting how Black people created Internet culture as we know it today.
Tea? #MeToo? Digital interest groups? Yeah, that all came from Black folks.
From the ways we communicate with one another to how we build community across borders, Black culture has served as the blueprint for Internet culture and popular culture at-large.
After all, pop culture is just expired Black culture and with the prominence of social media, the lines between Internet culture and pop culture are blurred.
What was once underground is now mainstream and the perfect product for the attention economy. White supremacy and capitalism extract from our communities and the Internet is yet another site for corporations to profit off of our culture while exploiting and dehumanizing us.
All month long, follow along on Twitter ([link removed]) , Instagram ([link removed]) , and Facebook ([link removed]) as we share how Black people have always been the earliest adopters of media platforms and how we’ve created Internet culture, including:
* Queer ballroom slang
* AfroNet and new media as a form of creating community
* Digital cultural organizing through the lens of #MeToo
* Black Twitter and the history of Black news distribution
In Solidarity,
Eteng Ettah
Narrative Director, MediaJustice
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