Tag Archives: images-depicted

Cry Me A River: Montana Fishburne Says The D.A.’s Office Won’t Let Her Be Great

Back in September, when Lawrence Fishburne’s spotty-booty daughter went to rehab, we thought she was genuinely trying to get her life together. It turns out her rehab was part of a plea deal which the L.A. Attorney is now trying to renege on, TMZ reports . TMZ has learned Montana’s lawyer, Shawn Chapman Holley, filed blistering legal papers in L.A. Wednesday, claiming last June, prosecutors who filed the assault case agreed to allow Montana to enter a rehab program for 90 days, and in return she’d get no jail time. Holley says Montana, relying on the L.A. City Attorney’s offer, entered a rehab facility, where she’s been since September. According to Holley, prosecutors did an about-face in November and told her they wanted Montana to serve 120 days in jail. Now Holley has gone to the judge, asking her to enforce the deal her client relied on. TMZ has learned … Montana has now decided to spend 180 days in the rehab facility. She better be in there getting some guidance and healing and not just trying to duck a sentence! You know… so her dad doesn’t have to suffer through any more Black Men’s spreads. SMH.

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Cry Me A River: Montana Fishburne Says The D.A.’s Office Won’t Let Her Be Great

25 Reasons We Love Blaxploitation Films

Was there a better decade for black films than the 1970’s, when the Blaxploitation era was in full effect? Though it was a controversial era for African-Americans, Blaxploitation cinema was a creatively rich period that broke down racial barriers for many black actors and filmmakers. Names like Richard Roundtree, Pam Grier, and Melvin Van Peebles became household names and showed an empowered side to African-American lives. Though the NAACP would strongly oppose the images depicted in many Blaxploitation films, if it wasn’t for them, the idea of a black superhero might not have ever existed. WHY WE LOVE THEM… 1. The films showed Hollywood the power of the Black dollar at the box office and paved the way for a generation of black filmmakers and films with all black casts. 2. Classic slang words and phrases like, “Mack”, “cold blooded”, and “solid”. 3. The Man was always white. 4. The best soundtracks. 5. “Across 110th Street” by Bobby Womack 6. “Super Fly” by Curtis Mayfield 7. Unapologetic use of white ethnic slurs like the word “honky” 8. Athletes turned actors, and good ones, e.g. Jim Brown, Fred Williamson, Bernie Casey 9. Gordon Parks, director of Shaft and the sequels, Shaft’s Big Score and Shaft In Africa 10. Films set in black cities like Oakland (Hit Man); Detroit (Detroit 9000); Houston (Sugar Hill) Head to HelloBeautiful.com for reasons 11-25

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25 Reasons We Love Blaxploitation Films