RACE-O-RAMA puts race in spin cycle

posted January 11, 2005 12:00:00 AM CST | 0 comments

Bold as Rosa Parks requesting a front row seat, this year Black History Months
usual television line-up will be shaken up by another definitive racism-bashing
moment.

Race-O-Rama, a potently funny, yet serious look at Americas biggest taboo
subjectracepromises to propel our cultures both subtle and blatant lingering
racism into the forefront of national debate.

Direct, in-your-face, humorous and irreverent, VH1s Race-O-Rama series is an encore engagement and on-going collaboration with groundbreaking underground culture
provocateurs, the ego trip collective. Based on the success of their previous
collaboration with VH1, TVs Illst Minority Moments special that aired last
February, the series promises to open up minds with a stark but humorous look at our
ignorance on the R word, the race issue, a.k.a. the new pornography according to ego trip.

Three one-hour shows, Blackaphobia, Dude, Wheres My Ghetto Pass and In Race We Lust, scheduled for late February are based on the vision of ego trip, a quintet of multi-cultural and racially-mixed mavericks: Sacha Jenkins, Elliott Wilson, Chairman Mao, Gabriel Alvarez and Brent Rollins.

Nailing a place on Entertainment Weeklys list of the Top 25 Funniest People in America, the crew of agit-pop journalists and publishers of the defunct, indie cult-hit mag, ego trip, are co-authors of ego trips Book of Rap Lists and ego trips Big Book of Racism!, the latter of which caught the attention of executives at VH1.

Joey Anuff, a producer at VH1, contacted us, telling us he was extremely interested in seeing if we could turn some of the content in the Big Book of Racism into a TV series, Elliott Wilson says, original co-founder of ego trip magazine with Sacha Jenkins and currently editor-in-chief of hip-hops fastest growing magazine, XXL, After doing a magazine and two successful books, its fine time for us to get another shot at the small screen.

Most of the time VH1 just looks back at the stuff we love, or makes us laugh or
whatever, Joey Anuff, supervising producer at VH1 says, But when you look at ego trips books, you see theyre looking at the same stuff with a much more charged
lens. In a way theyre the perfect VH1 project.

VH1 and ego trips first collaboration, TVs Illest Minority Moments, aired last February and asked provocative questions like;

Who was more gangsta, Florence from the Jeffersons or Nell Carter from Gimme A Break? It also made a strong case for Daffy Duck being a black man and outed Big Bird as a Vietnamese drag queen.

Of last February's show, Entertainment Weeklys Ken Tucker reported," I saw no programming more astute about race relations..." and Newsday raved, They've popped the pin on the race grenade and the shrapnels flying...The point is to make you laugh, wince, feel offended and-yes, finally-consider how your state of mind fits into it all.

Highlights of the first show also included hilarious commentary from comedian/actor Anthony Anderson, Wu-Tang Clans RZA,and Boondocks creator Aaron McGruder.

This years eclectic guest list expands in the Race-O-Rama series. Rappers; RZA, Talib Kweli, Too Short, MC Lyte); moguls (Baby); actors/actresses (Bai Ling, Bill Duke, Garrett Morris, Kadeem Hardison, Esai Morales); comedians (Paul Mooney,
Tim Meadows, Joey Medina, Earthquake); a model (Tyson Beckford); a professor (Dr.
Michael Eric Dyson)
and an infamous pimp, Mr. White Folks all join in on the no-holds barred racial debauchery.

Continuing to prove that ignorance is not bliss and laughter is the best antidote to
our cultures history of pride, pain and prejudice, ego trips Race-O-Rama is poised to open minds this February.

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