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Review: “Love Is___,” Love Ain’t

OWN’s Love Is ___ is the true story of Black Hollywood Powerhouse couple Mara Brock Akil and Salim Akil. The format takes place like a present-day interview of the married couple as they recall the details of how they met. The episodes then flashes back to a younger Nuri and Yasir, recent Los Angeles transplants trying […]

Review: W. Kamau Bell’s Private School Negro

In his first Netflix special, comedian and host of CNN’s United Shades of America W. Kamau Bell uses his experiences as a black man and a parent to highlight the problematic and absurd state of our so-called democracy.  Titling his performance Private School Negro, Bell presents his own positionality to assert that blackness is not a […]

Review: “The Equalizer” is Every Black Parent Ever

Denzel Washington stars in “The Equalizer 2”   Denzel Washington returns to his role as Robert McCall, former militiaman turned Lyft driver by day and vigilante by night, The Equalizer.  He teams up with director Antoine Fuqua (Training Day) for a third time, the result, a strangely heartwarming, yet flinchingly violent pseudo-parable of reaping and […]

Review: Orange is The New Black

  Netflix’s flagship original show, Orange is the New Black, returned for its sixth season – this time withthe women of Litchfield now in maximum security prison facing the prospect of additional time due to last season’s riot.  Bonds that were formed in MCC’s minimum security prison are broken as “families” are divided into warring […]

TCM & AAFCA Bring “The Black Experience”

  A partnership has forged between The African American Film Critics Association and Turner Classic movies that will bring much needed programming into the homes of many.  The Black Experience is a month-long endeavor that uses key films to trace the history of African American cinema.  The channel will begin airing classic films from September […]