4 Years In The Tank Now It's Time To Get $Bank$
***Radio Free Dixie For The 21st Century***
W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Needs Your Support...Give To Grow The Movement!
March 2011 Theme: Master Teachers & Master Griots
Air Date: Weds. March 2, 2011
E-mail: r2c2h2@gmail.com
Time: 9 PM C/10 PM E/7 PM P
Call-in Number: 646-652-4593
Show:
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"Black By Popular Demand...Dick Gregory LIVE Again!"
Video Promo: W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio: Black By Popular Demand...Dick Gregory LIVE Again! (3/2/2011)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iItp8hNyIvk
When not in Washington, where he has an apartment, or at his home in
Plymouth, Mass., where he lives with Lily, his wife of 50 years, he is
on the road doing around 200 shows a year. -- Bruce Headlam (New York Times)
Check Out Bro. Dick Gregory's W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio debut:
"Black By Popular Demand...Dick Gregory LIVE Again!"
Video Promo: W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio: Black By Popular Demand...Dick Gregory LIVE Again! (3/2/2011)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iItp8hNyIvk
About Bro. Dick Gregory
During the golden era of skinny-tie comedians, Dick Gregory was one
of the biggest: a $12,000-a-week headliner on par with with Mort Sahl, Lenny Bruce and Woody Allen. Mr. Gregory influenced Bill Cosby, who inherited his stage presence, as well as Richard Pryor, who expressed biting racial candor.
Mr. Gregory was a headliner in Las Vegas, played all the hot clubs in New York and San
Francisco, published a best-selling 1964 autobiography, titled "Nigger,"
and became the first black guest invited to the sofa on Jack Paar's show, where he startled audiences by mixing obligatory family jokes with sharp political humor.
Mr. Gregory was, in his words, "the first flatfooter" -- no dancing,
no shuffling -- to play white clubs, a break with the singing and
dancing routines of his black predecessors. Wearing a white shirt and
three-button Brooks Brothers suit, he balanced himself on a stool and
talked in rolling sentences, punctuating his routine with long pauses as
he slowly dragged on his cigarette.
But while he talked politics, Mr. Gregory wasn't a political comic.
If anything, he had an antipolitical genius for personalizing, and then
disarming, relations between races:
"Down South they don't care how close I am as long as I don't get
too big, and up North they don't care how big I am as long as I don't
get too close."
"Don't just sit there and heckle me. Pay your check, burn your cross, and leave."
During the civil rights era, Mr. Gregory was friends with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Medgar Evers and Malcolm X, delivered food to N.A.A.C.P.
offices in the South, marched in Selma, Ala., and was threatened many
times and arrested more than once. In 1968, Mr. Gregory ran for
president, after an unsuccessful bid to be mayor of Chicago. His
candidacy was a stunt, but it was not a joke: on Election Day he
received about 47,000 votes.
In the years after, he hit the health-food speaking circuit, pushing a
raw food diet and something he called the Bahamian Diet Nutritional
Drink; wrote alternative-history books; tried to intervene in the
Iranian hostage crisis; and enjoyed an odd revival with his public
campaign to help Walter Hudson, a 1,200-pound man, lose weight.
Check Out Bro. Dick Gregory's W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio debut:
"Dick Gregory: Makin It Plain & LIVE!!!"
Contact An American Civil Rights Veteran Today:
More Civil Rights Movement On W.E. A.L.L. B.E. :
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W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Needs Your Support...Give To Grow The Movement!
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