PostBourgie explained

PostBourgie
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Creator:Gene Demby
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Current Status:Online

PostBourgie was a blog on race, culture, politics and media founded in January 2008 by Gene Demby. Demby also hosted an accompanying podcast by the same name.

Founding

Demby founded PostBourgie in early 2008. He had begun blogging a few years earlier, prompted by frustration with the state of media conversations about race. Speaking to ColorLines in 2012, Demby recalled in particular an occasion when a CNN reporter approached him on a basketball court to ask for comment on Bill Cosby's Pound Cake speech at the 2004 NAACP Image Awards. Demby said, "I pushed back on him pretty hard...There are people who think black people's condition in the world would be better if we just looked better. 'Pull up your pants.' It seemed so petty that we were having these conversations." In search of an alternative, Demby founded PostBougie as a group blog, inviting collaborators who shared his desire "to have conversations that assumed that black people were human beings who were complicated and imperfect, a space that wasn't super didactic."[1]

Writing in The New Republic, Jamil Smith situates the origins of PostBourgie in a decade of outlets founded "[a]s the number of black journalists in newsrooms inched up in the 1990s, the number of formal race beats declined. Racial coverage began to migrate to media organizations and websites that covered it full time," including ColorLines, Racialicious and This Week in Blackness in addition to PostBourgie. Smith: "These sites don’t bring in corporate dollars like Vox or FiveThirtyEight, but they have survived and even thrived by concentrating their coverage on issues affecting people of color, and by providing opportunities for writers to write on these subjects with a frankness rarely seen in mainstream publications."[2]

Format and content

The PostBourgie blog operates as a "volunteer effort."

PostBourgie has drawn notice for its commentary on topics including television,[3] film,[4] [5] music and language,[6] gentrification,[7] hair politics,[8] and race and violence.[9]

Speaking to New York Magazine, Jamil Smith cited PostBourgie as one of the blogs that "really set the bar for...spaces that were made available to [African-Americans and other people of color]. Even if you were working for traditional media, you didn’t have the opportunity to offer your perspective, to tell the unvarnished version of the truth that you see every day...it really hearkens back to the tradition of the black press."[10]

In an interview with the Boston Review, novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie mentioned her admiration for the "irreverence and un-safe-ness" of PostBourgie's commentary.[11]

Influence and alumni

In The Washington Post, Alyssa Rosenberg noted PostBourgie's accomplishments in "building a ladder for all its participants. The blog gave the people who wrote there a chance to workshop their voices and refine their ideas for a smart audience, even when they didn’t have paying assignments for an idea. When one PostBourgie writer got a new job, he or she encouraged others to freelance for that new outlet and to apply for fellowships and jobs there."[12] In The New Republic, Smith agreed that PostBourgie "served as a launching pad for celebrated black journalists." Alums have included Shani O. Hilton, now executive editor of news for BuzzFeed, and BuzzFeed writers Joel Anderson and Tracy Clayton. Demby is now lead blogger for NPR's Code Switch project on race and culture,[13] as well as co-host of the Code Switch podcast.[14]

Podcast

Demby hosts an accompanying podcast, also called PostBourgie, that's been widely praised. Mashable named it to a list of "11 diverse podcasts to give you a fresh perspective on life," saying "PostBourgie's topics run the gamut, but always include intelligent conversation between Demby and various media personalities he invites to chat."[15] Blavity named it one of "23 Black Podcasts You Should Add to Your Playlist,"[16] and Buzzfeed to its list of "13 Awesome Podcasts Bringing Black Voices To The Mic," saying "You should listen if: You’re looking for a gabfest that’s rooted in real-world reporting. There’s riffing and jokes, sure, but the voices you hear are sharing from a place of knowledge and journalistic rigor."[17] The American Sociological Association's magazine Contexts recommended PostBourgie to "the sociologically inclined" listener,[18] and the Atlanta Black Star called it "great for fans of The Daily Show and The Nightly Show looking for a Black voice in the news."[19]

Awards

In 2009, Demby's PostBourgie won a Black Weblog Award for Best News/Politics Site.[20]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: King. Jamilah. Sepia Mutiny's Closure Is a Reminder: Blogging While Brown Ain't Easy. 19 August 2016. ColorLines. 12 April 2012.
  2. Smith. Jamil. Working on the Race Beat. 18 August 2016. New Republic. 2 March 2015.
  3. News: Rosenberg. Alyssa. 'Scandal's President Fitzgerald Grant Is The Absolute Worst — And That's Precisely The Point — ThinkProgress. 18 August 2016. ThinkProgress. 7 October 2013.
  4. News: Emerson. Jim. The Worst Movie of the Decade Relay Scanners Roger Ebert. 19 August 2016. www.rogerebert.com. December 30, 2009.
  5. News: Coates. Ta-Nehisi. Worst Movie Of The Decade. 19 August 2016. The Atlantic. December 30, 2009.
  6. News: Pulliam-Moore. Charles. What Does 'Stay Woke' Mean And Why Is Everyone Saying It All Of A Sudden?. 18 August 2016. Fusion. January 8, 2016.
  7. News: Coates. Ta-Nehisi. Because There Is No Black Middle Class. 18 August 2016. The Atlantic. March 24, 2011.
  8. News: Rao. Tejal. Blogger Wore Afro Wig to Fried-Chicken Tasting. 19 August 2016. Village Voice. 16 October 2012.
  9. News: Ofori-Atta. Akoto. Instagram Deletes Philadelphia 'Rats' Account. 18 August 2016. The Root. 11 November 2013.
  10. News: MTV News' Jamil Smith on What's Wrong (and Right) With the Media. Tabor. Nick. July 24, 2016. New York Magazine. July 30, 2016.
  11. News: Bady. Aaron. The Varieties of Blackness. 18 August 2016. Boston Review. 10 July 2013.
  12. News: PostBourgie, Andrew Sullivan and why blogging still matters. Rosenberg. Alyssa. February 3, 2015. The Washington Post. July 30, 2016.
  13. News: Kennedy. Channing. Gene Demby at NPR's 'Code Switch': As Our Demographics Change, Will Our Stories Follow?. 19 August 2016. ColorLines. 16 April 2013.
  14. Web site: What does the intersection of race and culture sound like? NPR's Code Switch is looking for the right mix. NeimanLab. Wang. Shan.
  15. News: Desta. Yohana. 11 diverse podcasts to give you a fresh perspective on life. 18 August 2016. Mashable. April 14, 2015.
  16. News: S. Eileen. 23 Black Podcasts You Should Add to Your Playlist -. 18 August 2016. Blavity. 9 June 2015.
  17. News: Furlan. Julia. 13 Awesome Podcasts Bringing Black Voices To The Mic. 18 August 2016. February 11, 2015.
  18. News: Weingartner. Rose Malinowski. Clarady. Carrie. Podcasts for the sociologically inclined - Contexts. 18 August 2016. Contexts. March 18, 2016.
  19. News: Riley. Ricky. 6 Cool Podcasts You Should Consider Listening To. 18 August 2016. Atlanta Black Star. 13 April 2015.
  20. Web site: Black Weblog Awards - Past Winners. www.blackweblogawards.com.