The year is 1760, and Miley Cyrus, in Tennessee, is flipping
back the gums of an African savage, trying to see if she will acquire him.
Don’t be alarmed; she just wants to take something home, “something that just
feels Black*,” according to Planet IV.
Blackness has always been a commodity to America: from the
cotton pickin’ days to Living Single
the 1990s sitcom. Staring Queen Latifah and Kim Fields, the show illustrated the
personal and professional lives of six African American friends in Brooklyn.
The Fox network premiered the sitcom in 1993. Underrepresented on television
during the 1980s, the African American community flocked to the comedic sitcom.
Fox struck gold, again, as it did with In
Living Color, which premiered April 15, 1990 and New York Under Cover, featuring strong minorities leads, which
aired from 1994-1998. When the 1990s ended so did the support of the Fox
network for African-American sitcoms. It’s a popular motif within cable networks.
The WB, UPN, and CW all followed this model as they built there networks on the
viewership of minorities, then once on solid footing these shows were replaced
by White sitcoms and vampires.
Cyrus falls in line with a long tradition of White America
reaping what Blacks have sown by way of the media. Yes, Justin Timberlake and
Eminem borrow from Black culture, but they have shown a true respect for
African American tradition and art. They respect living and past legends, while
only chiming in on gimmicks not building an identity of monolithic Blackness
around these gimmicks. If Cyrus is truly ‘bout that life, I say back to the
auction block with her.






