Monday, February 17, 2014

About, About Last Night...

  Their description of the movie: (Comedy/Romance) "Follows two couples as they journey from the bar to the bedroom and are eventually put to the test in the real world."

My description:  (Funny?/Porn) Follow a group of Black folks who meet at a bar and ultimately, end up in the bedroom  where they stay until they "catch" feelings for one another.

So, I recently had the displeasure of viewing About Last Night. The new movie with Michael Ealy, Kevin Hart, Regina Hall, and Joy Bryant. (Sidenote: I like Kevin Hart but, I'm slick tired of seeing him in movies, but I guess that's neither here nor there.)  Now, for the most part I attempt to support all Black movies because, let's face it, good ones are so hard to come by and the rest go straight to DVD.  I try to support because most black actors/actresses are not offered many of the big money roles. When they are offered the opportunity to be the "main" character in most movies they have to play some unsavory character.  Anywho, about this movie, it was terrible, in my opinion. I spent most of my time wondering why I even bothered. The rest of the time I wanted my money back. For real, it got so bad that my husband fell asleep in there. You could see the Zzzzz's coming out of his hat.

  I spent most of the time feeling like I was watching "not so soft" porn. It was just full of sex scenes and bad language. I mean every time I looked up somebody was in the bed. I know the whole sex sells spill, but my word, is that all we are these days? I thought it was suppose to be a love story. Maybe I'm confused about what love is, but from what I saw love is just "hooking up/messing off" for a long time until one or the other catches feelings. Now where I come from we call that something else. We call those FB's and I ain't talking about Facebook. It was just pitiful, but I guess this is what love looks like. I guess it really was about "Sexual Perversity in Chicago".

 In the future, if I am to continue to support these movies, then they have to do better. It is very necessary. How do we proclaim to want to be taken seriously when we take part in crap like this. I just know there are some folks, outside of the Black community, who are like "Well this must be in the likeness of Black people", "This must truly be what THEY are like." You know we get generalized all the time. If I go into a store and some of US are in there being, for lack of a better word, ratchet you know the White folks in the room expect the same behavior from all of US. I know some people won't agree and that's fine. Some may be like I read too much into it, but I think if we all read a little more we would be doing better anyway, I'm just saying.

P.S. This movie was directed by a fellow by the name of Steve Pink. Oh Steve, you disappoint me, but not as much as the people who agreed to be a part of this foolishness.

P.S.S. This should not have been remade, things look different in color. Sigh. This movie really got under my skin.



Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Can she do it ALL?

So last night it was brought to my attention, through a text convo with my stylist, that I want to do a lot! I mean there are so many things I intend to do in my life that don't really blend. I can't make one plan or kill a bunch of birds with one stone or could I? The list is as follows:

1. Complete my Master's Degree (Maybe even a Doctorate)
2. Teach a few years
3. Write a book or two or three
4. Bake cookies/Cakes/Pies (For fun)
5. Learn to sew (for fun)
6. Blog
7. Have children
8. Start a meaningful business
9. Drop an album
10. Be LEGEN-DARY

Note: The sequential order of this list in no way constitutes the order in which these things will happen. I have no clue.

The question is, can I do it all? Have it all? BE it all? I don't really know, but I plan to try. Some times women get ridiculed for "doing too much". It's seems as though if we try to do more than be a wife or mother then we are asking too much. We can't have it all. If we choose more than the basic for our lives then something will be lacking. Obviously, to some, the area that will lack is that of family, but why does that have to be? Why is that common thought? I would say that this train of thought comes solely from men, but I can't. There are women who believe that they can only manage to be a wife/mother and in doing so they put off all of their hopes and dreams. In honor of Black History month I'll pose this question, what happens to a dream deferred? Really though.

Well, I have never been a woman with a one track mind. I have always wanted more than what was in front of me. For me it's not about proving something to others, it's about setting an example. It's about being great. I don't prescribe to societies ideal of what a woman should be. How she should act or look or speak.  Clearly I missed that boat and I think other women should lose their boarding passes as well. Life is meant to be lived and I want to do just that.