Tag Archives: School Daze

Spike Lee Throws Shots at Bill Cosby; Claims He Stole Something From Him #RobbiReed

Spike Lee said that Bill Cosby jacked him. But did he really steal his cast or was it the high-honored jewel of a casting directed named Robbi Reed.

Many children of the 80s looked up to Bill Cosby as he represented the best parts of Black life. From Fat Albert to Picture Pages to The Cosby Show, there was something about his persona the exemplified “Black Excellence.”

The Temple grad made it a point to highlight HBCUs on his hit NBC series, The Cosby Show, by wearing #Spelbound buttons. He also created a fictional Black institution called Hillman College, as the alma mater for both Cliff and Clair Huxtable.

The first mention of Hillman was during the first season. Hillman would be the place where Cliff would meet a young lady named Clair Hanks. It was also where Cliff ran track and his dad, Russell also attended. This backstory was presented in 1984.

However, the fullness of Hillman that was debut on the show A Different World was not created until September 24, 1987. And for some people, this show produced by Bill Coby, was the first time that you ever saw an HBCU on screen and the characters that made you fall in love with the HBCU experience.

Spike Lee says hold up, wait a minute.

What happened was Bill Cosby hired the infamous Robbi Reed to cast the NBC pilot, after Spike tapped her for his movie. A Different World debuted first on television and School Daze came out February 12, 1988. You know Spike was pissed.

Young actors that made their mark appearing in both projects are Jasmine Guy, Kadeem Hardison, and Darryl M. Bell. Even talented folk like Art Evans, Dominic Hoffman, and Roger Guenveur Smith shared their gifts on both sets. Reed, as one of the few African American casting directors at that time, kept people working.

Here is Robbi Reed’s account of it:

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Three Times Hollywood Made Us Want to be Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.

Believe it or not, Hollywood has always been obsessed with Black women and our culture.

Maybe obsessed is not the word… fetishized by how absolutely amazing we are. We are more than just a hashtag. And while #BlackGirlMagic is a cool idea… there is no such thing as hocus pocus when it comes down to Black women. We are intentional and our stories are more than sister-girl-fairy-dusted tropes. Thus, when we think about Black women and the very sensitive portrayal of their lives in sororities, one can’t help but take caution. Does Hollywood care to get it right? Or will sorors be portrayed as petty girls who are all elite snobs, looking for husbands in their brother frats.

We say “nope.”

Thank goodness three Black cinematic offerings, written or directed by Black filmmakers have gotten it right.

ONE: DO THE RIGHT THING

Many people were exposed to the thrills of Black College by watching Spike Lee’s School Daze in 1988. While it was filmed in the historic Atlanta University Center, this fictional school was a composite of the schools at the time that were housed in the consortium. At one time there were seven: The former Atlanta University, Spelman College, Morehouse College, Clark College, Morris Brown College, Interdenominational Theological Center and Morehouse School of Medicine. School Daze presented them as Mission College and while you might think that the scenes being referenced regarding sorority life are “The Coronation” or the “Wannabe/ Jiggaboo” musicals… there is a more intimate moment that got Delta all the way right.

Do you remember when Dap and Rachel got into an argument in his room?

Rachel had shared with Dap that she wanted to pledge Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. (like of course) and he tried to forbid it. She told him that she like what they were doing, that they were positive and about serving the community.

Old Spike got this all the way right! Delta Sigma Theta Sorority was founded on Jan. 13, 1913, 107 years ago. From the very beginning of her origins, the organization had scholarship, sisterhood, and service at its core. Rachel indeed would have been a great Delta at the fictional Mission College.

TWO: QUEEN SUGAR

There has to be someone on the staff that is either a Delta or Delta-ish, because there have been all kinds of Easter eggs throughout the seasons that point to the largest sorority in the world. Like that time that Mellisa Harris-Perry, a decorated member of Delta Sigma Theta, came on to chat it up with her soror, Nova Bordelon.

While they don’t say it, why wouldn’t she be one? Sure she has some deep-seated thangs going on, by Nova is a go-getter and the exceptional. She and her sister Charlie both ferociously attack social justice and civil rights with all of their hearts, and what makes us believe that is a “Crimson and Cream” family is all those African Violets planted all over the place. The African Violet is the official flower for Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Yup… them two supposed to be Deltas in the show.

THREE: THE BEST MAN HOLIDAY

Oh, how this movie touched so many. Two of the characters, Shelby and Mia seem to be members of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. It also appears that Mia’s husband, Lance is a member of Omega Psi Phi, the fraternity often linked as the brothers to Delta. Delta Sigma Theta has no official brothers… but many folk actually rock with this concept of “Coleman Love.” Don’t think so hard… a whole bunch of folk. Lance even has a conversation with the other men in the film about friendship being essential to the soul… Boom Pow!

But the most endearing part is when Mia transitioned and her “Sands” placed an African Violet on her casket.

Happy Founders Day to the beautiful women of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Hope this made you smile on your day.

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Samuel L. Jackson’s Interview Is Real & Unfiltered…Just Like His Best Characters

On screen, Samuel L. Jackson often plays characters that speak their minds with little compromise. Away from the film, set, the Chattanooga, Tennessee native is no a stranger to voicing his opinions with a similar approach. The unfiltered, often uncensored actor is now 70 years old and is still working within the same industry he broke into during the 1980s.

Jackson has dozens of critically acclaimed roles under his belt and shows no signs of stopping anytime soon. While he’s currently enjoying his praise for playing a young (by way of C.G.I.) Nick Fury in Captain Marvel, Jackson was shadowed and interviewed by Esquire‘s Carvell Wallace. Sam spoke at length about his upbringing, his views on Donald Trump, working with Quentin Tarantino, and overcoming addiction at the exact point his career soared.

Samuel Jackson Joins KRS-One, Talib Kweli & More In The Fight Against Police Violence (Audio)

The versatile actor recalls a diverse set of influences and experiences in his coming of age and collegiate period. “My class, ’66, was famously the first class of sort of street ni**as that they let in. It had to do with folks like Stokely Carmichael, who was in and out of there speaking. And I was radicalized from both ends. From the Black end with Stokely, [H. Rap Brown], and those guys, and the Vietnam vets, and I had an English professor who was driven to Morehouse on the magic bus with [One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest writer] Ken Kesey. And then that was when I started dropping acid, and hanging out with him, and finding out what was happening in Berkeley, and then the white parts of the world,” recalls Jackson. “My whole existence had been Black. I didn’t have a white teacher ’til I got to Morehouse.”

Notably, he pulled from his experience in Atlanta, Georgia for Spike Lee’s School Daze. Of the character “Leeds,” he says he witnessed real-life inspiration during his advanced education. “Those were the dudes that I hung out with when I got to Morehouse,” he recalls. “My mom dropped me off, and I saw a basketball court up the street. So I stopped in the beer store, bought a quart of beer, walked across, asked who was up next. And I balled with them, hung out with them that night, to the point that they didn’t know I went to Morehouse until they saw me at a dance.”

The Academy Awards Finally Do The Right Thing. Spike Lee Wins His 1st Oscar.

The actor admits that the first film where he was clean from drugs was Spike’s Jungle Fever. Released in 1991, the film marked a turning point for Jackson. “All those motherf*ckers at rehab were like, ‘You don’t need to do this movie, because you’re going to have triggers.’ . . . I was like, “Well, sh*t, if for no other reasons, first of all, where the f*ck are you going to get $40,000 in the next six weeks? And second of all, I will never pick up another drug, because I don’t want to see any one of you motherf*ckers ever again.’ I hated them. But that was their job. And I made it through that. So significantly, when ‘Gator’ gets killed at the end of that movie, I always look at it as the death of my…active addiction.”

Jackson’s filmography includes films and casts that have taken home Oscar gold (he was nominated for “Best Supporting Actor” in Pulp Fiction). That same resume includes films that in the eyes of some are not so decorated. When Jackson is told about actors who are picky about taking specific roles for “quality movies,” the actor snaps back, asking, “What’s a quality movie? What the f*ck is that?” He continues, “Quality movies are movies that make me happy, a movie I would’ve gone to see. I’m not trying to make people cry. I’m not trying to do the profound-storytelling thing. I was entertaining. I used to go to movies to forget my f*cking troubles. I used to go to movies to enjoy myself, to get out of my segregated f*cking life, to see what the world was like, to travel. I want people to come, smile, laugh, leave that movie going, ‘Man, that was awesome.’”

Donald Glover Reveals How He’s Hacked The Real Life Matrix

Throughout his career, Jackson has worked closely with Quentin Tarantino. That writer/director, who is white, has received criticism for the dialogue he has written and its use of the n-word. One of Tarantino’s critics has been Spike Lee, another director who Jackson has worked with closely. After defending Tarantino’s use of the n-word in the feature story, elaborating on his roles in banking commercials as of late, and commenting on Donald Trump, Sam Jackson ultimately airs out his entire character. When asked about his opinions alienating or antagonizing fans, Jackson enacts full-transparency.

“I know how many motherf*ckers hate me,” he says to the publication. “‘I’m never going to see a Sam Jackson movie again.’ F*ck I care? If you never went to another movie I did in my life, I’m not going to lose any money. I already cashed that check. F*ck you. Burn up my videotapes. I don’t give a f*ck. ‘You’re an actor. Stick to acting.’ ‘No, motherf*cker. I’m a human being that feels a certain way.’ And some of this sh*t does affect me, because if we don’t have health care, sh*t, and my relatives get sick, they’re going to call my rich ass. I want them to have healthcare. I want them to be able to take care of themselves. This is how I feel. And I count to one 100 some days before I hit ‘send,’ because I know how that sh*t is.”

Dave Chappelle Refuses To Apologize After Calling Singer Daniel Caesar Gay (Video)

As far as Sam’s retirement plans? He’s acting until he can’t do it any longer. “Michael Caine’s still acting, right?,” he tells Esquire. “It’s acting. It’s not like I’m digging a ditch. I go on set, do some sh*t. I go back and sit in my trailer for two hours watching TV, eat a sandwich, read. And I go back and do 10 more minutes and go sit down some more.”

Elsewhere in the Esquire feature, Sam Jackson explains why he refuses to do more than three takes of a scene. He discusses some of the impactful films of his youth, and why he feels greater anger with today’s Conservatism than the segregation he experienced as a child of the South.

On screen, Samuel L. Jackson often plays characters that speak their minds with little compromise. Away from the film, set, the Chattanooga, Tennessee native is no a stranger to voicing his opinions with a similar approach. The unfiltered, often uncensored actor is now 70 years old and is still working within the same industry he broke into during the 1980s.

Jackson has dozens of critically acclaimed roles under his belt and shows no signs of stopping anytime soon. While he’s currently enjoying his praise for playing a young (by way of C.G.I.) Nick Fury in Captain Marvel, Jackson was shadowed and interviewed by Esquire‘s Carvell Wallace. Sam spoke at length about his upbringing, his views on Donald Trump, working with Quentin Tarantino, and overcoming addiction at the exact point his career soared.

Samuel Jackson Joins KRS-One, Talib Kweli & More In The Fight Against Police Violence (Audio)

The versatile actor recalls a diverse set of influences and experiences in his coming of age and collegiate period. “My class, ’66, was famously the first class of sort of street ni**as that they let in. It had to do with folks like Stokely Carmichael, who was in and out of there speaking. And I was radicalized from both ends. From the Black end with Stokely, [H. Rap Brown], and those guys, and the Vietnam vets, and I had an English professor who was driven to Morehouse on the magic bus with [One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest writer] Ken Kesey. And then that was when I started dropping acid, and hanging out with him, and finding out what was happening in Berkeley, and then the white parts of the world,” recalls Jackson. “My whole existence had been Black. I didn’t have a white teacher ’til I got to Morehouse.”

Notably, he pulled from his experience in Atlanta, Georgia for Spike Lee’s School Daze. Of the character “Leeds,” he says he witnessed real-life inspiration during his advanced education. “Those were the dudes that I hung out with when I got to Morehouse,” he recalls. “My mom dropped me off, and I saw a basketball court up the street. So I stopped in the beer store, bought a quart of beer, walked across, asked who was up next. And I balled with them, hung out with them that night, to the point that they didn’t know I went to Morehouse until they saw me at a dance.”

The Academy Awards Finally Do The Right Thing. Spike Lee Wins His 1st Oscar.

The actor admits that the first film where he was clean from drugs was Spike’s Jungle Fever. Released in 1991, the film marked a turning point for Jackson. “All those motherf*ckers at rehab were like, ‘You don’t need to do this movie, because you’re going to have triggers.’ . . . I was like, “Well, sh*t, if for no other reasons, first of all, where the f*ck are you going to get $40,000 in the next six weeks? And second of all, I will never pick up another drug, because I don’t want to see any one of you motherf*ckers ever again.’ I hated them. But that was their job. And I made it through that. So significantly, when ‘Gator’ gets killed at the end of that movie, I always look at it as the death of my…active addiction.”

Jackson’s filmography includes films and casts that have taken home Oscar gold (he was nominated for “Best Supporting Actor” in Pulp Fiction). That same resume includes films that in the eyes of some are not so decorated. When Jackson is told about actors who are picky about taking specific roles for “quality movies,” the actor snaps back, asking, “What’s a quality movie? What the f*ck is that?” He continues, “Quality movies are movies that make me happy, a movie I would’ve gone to see. I’m not trying to make people cry. I’m not trying to do the profound-storytelling thing. I was entertaining. I used to go to movies to forget my f*cking troubles. I used to go to movies to enjoy myself, to get out of my segregated f*cking life, to see what the world was like, to travel. I want people to come, smile, laugh, leave that movie going, ‘Man, that was awesome.’”

Donald Glover Reveals How He’s Hacked The Real Life Matrix

Throughout his career, Jackson has worked closely with Quentin Tarantino. That writer/director, who is white, has received criticism for the dialogue he has written and its use of the n-word. One of Tarantino’s critics has been Spike Lee, another director who Jackson has worked with closely. After defending Tarantino’s use of the n-word in the feature story, elaborating on his roles in banking commercials as of late, and commenting on Donald Trump, Sam Jackson ultimately airs out his entire character. When asked about his opinions alienating or antagonizing fans, Jackson enacts full-transparency.

“I know how many motherf*ckers hate me,” he says to the publication. “‘I’m never going to see a Sam Jackson movie again.’ F*ck I care? If you never went to another movie I did in my life, I’m not going to lose any money. I already cashed that check. F*ck you. Burn up my videotapes. I don’t give a f*ck. ‘You’re an actor. Stick to acting.’ ‘No, motherf*cker. I’m a human being that feels a certain way.’ And some of this sh*t does affect me, because if we don’t have health care, sh*t, and my relatives get sick, they’re going to call my rich ass. I want them to have healthcare. I want them to be able to take care of themselves. This is how I feel. And I count to one 100 some days before I hit ‘send,’ because I know how that sh*t is.”

Dave Chappelle Refuses To Apologize After Calling Singer Daniel Caesar Gay (Video)

As far as Sam’s retirement plans? He’s acting until he can’t do it any longer. “Michael Caine’s still acting, right?,” he tells Esquire. “It’s acting. It’s not like I’m digging a ditch. I go on set, do some sh*t. I go back and sit in my trailer for two hours watching TV, eat a sandwich, read. And I go back and do 10 more minutes and go sit down some more.”

Elsewhere in the Esquire feature, Sam Jackson explains why he refuses to do more than three takes of a scene. He discusses some of the impactful films of his youth, and why he feels greater anger with today’s Conservatism than the segregation he experienced as a child of the South.

Source: AmbrosiaForHeads.com

Click Here to Discuss in the Forums

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Spike Lee’s School Daze 30th Anniversary On Digital HD & Blu-ray/DVD

School Daze 30th Anniversary

With the holidays officially here, SOHH and lifestyle affiliate getFRUSH have once again teamed up for the annual holiday gift guide of the hottest and coolest gifts! From Cyber Monday (November 26) through December 31, we’re highlighting must-own gadgets, movies, music and awesome present ideas with giveaways and reviews!

Today, check out the top five reasons you should buy Hollywood icon Spike Lee‘s classic School Daze 30th Anniversary edition on Digital HD and Blu-ray/DVD right now! [Check out each reason and enter to win your own copy!]

Check out the top five reasons you should buy Spike Lee's School Daze 30th Anniversary on Digital HD and Blu-ray/D… in Entertainment on LockerDome

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