Sometimes I wonder about what secrets #DickGregory told #KillerMike before he died.
December 1, 1966 - Comedian Dick Gregory was convicted in Olympia, Washington for his participation in a Nisqually Native American fishing rights protest.
#DickGregory
DG: 'it's over.'
RM: 'now when you say it's over, what does that mean?'
DG: 'it means decline. the romans, the greeks, the egyptians - all of them fell.'
here's the sagacious dick gregory speaking just after trump's first go round (& less than a year before he died). he predicted the trajectory for the united states.
#uspol #dickGregory #wisdom #empire #trump
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zutv0CMky34
https://inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=Zutv0CMky34
Dick Gregory Warns America About Potential Impact Of Trump’s Election

YouTube

Dick Gregory died eight years ago today

#dickgregory #blackmen #blackamerican #blackmastodon

December 1, 1966 - Comedian Dick Gregory was convicted in Olympia, Washington for his participation in a Nisqually Native American fishing rights protest.
#DickGregory
See our latest post on Dick Gregory. Gregory was a comedian and Civil Rights activist and close to MLK and Malcolm X. #DickGregory #MLK #MalcolmX #Comedy. https://historianspeaks.org/f/dick-gregory-comedian-and-activist
Dick Gregory, Comedian and Activist

On October 13th 1932, comedian and civil rights activist Dick Gregory was born in St. Louis.

HistorianSpeaks
See our latest blog on Dick Gregory. Gregory was a comedian and Civil Rights Activist. #DickGregory #Comedian #CivilRightsActivism

In 1970, the legendary comedian, satirist, activist, author, and actor #DickGregory delivered a powerful speech at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. He captivated the audience with his insights on racism, activism, and education.

This unforgettable address was featured in NET Journal’s program "Dick Gregory is Alive and Well," and has been preserved in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting: https://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip_512-qj77s7jv10

NET Journal; 260; Dick Gregory Is Alive and Well

1 hour piece produced in 1970 by NET. It was originally shot in black and white. The uncompromising satire of America's best-known black comedian comes to television when NET Journal presents "Dick Gregory is Alive and Well." The program is an hour-long view of Gregory, built around an ironic address on racism which he gave before a mixed audience last summer at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. While preparing for that performance Gregory recalls his early days as a comedian when he was "just up there to pay my rent," as well as the first years of the civil-rights movement when he began touring college campuses to employ "the strength of emerging youth" in a struggle against racism. He talks about the fear he felt before an appearance in the South: "I'd wake the kids and kiss them; I'd say goodbye like it could be the last time." And landing at an Alabama airport also brought reminiscences: "I used to get buster here as soon as I got off the plane ... 500 state police would be waiting." Much of the address Gregory gave in Tuscaloosa was subsequently recorded in an album titled "Dick Gregory: The Light Side, The Dark Side." His attack against racism and what he calls the moral pollution of the country included jibes at American history texts: "We're so numb we got nerve enough to teach the Indians that Columbus discovered America." And TV commercials, "I'm tired of hearing, Marge there's a white dove in your kitchen. How about hearing, Beulah, baby, there's a black crow on the biscuits." And to Northern liberal students he says: "Before you come down here and alienate your Southern racist brothers, take a black kid home with you and bug your mommy and daddy." Gregory hits constantly at a white society that shuts black people out and yet expects them to conform to its rules. In this vein he explains why the past year's "riot season" was so quite: "We got tired of stealing those bad products. This year we went underground to study the consumer reports. So this season when the riot season opens again we ain't gonna be stealing no Motorolas." On the subject of "Negro" versus "black" Gregory says: "Call us whatever you want, but it's safer for you to call us black." When other nationalities came to America they retained their identities, he says, but when Africans were brought here they became Negro or colored. "Don't play games with us, play games with yourself," he advises. "Call yourself clear folks." NET Journal -- "Dick Gregory is Alive and Well" is an NET production. (Description adapted from documents in the NET Microfiche) This record is part of the Comedy section of the Soul of Black Identity special collection.

American Archive of Public Broadcasting