Monday, 22 October 2012
Chris Rock's Good Hair
Posted on 10:10 by Unknown
I genuinely like Chris Rock. He is incredibly funny and usually on the ball with things which are important. Okay, he frequently misses the whole issue of sexism with his tendency to reinforce it in the same breath as claiming to want a better future for his daughters. He is, however, not on my list of Dudes: the hypocrites who think that voting for Obama and claiming to be pro-choice cancels out any violence against women that they perpetrate. [I'm speaking to you here Zack Braff]. Chris Rock is one of those men who should be too intelligent to be debasing themselves with misogynistic jokes but do it anyways. Every time he opens his mouth, I twitch waiting for the inevitable Kim Kardashian joke. Now, I've never actually see the Kardashian show[s?] because I don't do reality TV. I think it's vile, nasty bullying of vulnerable people. Anyway, apparently, Chris has joined in with the Kim Kardashian bashing which disappoints me. And, pisses me off. I have no idea what Kim Kardashian has done to deserve such nasty bullying off everyone but unless she's a serial killer or personally paying the entire costs of the War on Women, I'm going to guess she doesn't deserve it. So, Chris, you need to stop hangin' with misogynists. They are stupid and you, supposedly, are not.
Good Hair is classic Chris Rock. He is equally snarky and lovely. Plus, it has Maya Angelou and who doesn't love Maya Angelou? I only have two real criticisms. The first is that Rock doesn't ever really delve into the issue of men's hair. It is referenced by Reverend Al Sharpton but many of the other men in the documentary had shaved heads which left me wondering about how much pressure men feel under to have "real" hair. But, that's not a very fair criticism since the documentary was about African-American women's hair and constructions of beauty. This is where I had a problem because I think Rock pulled his punches.
Rock should have been using the terms racism and misogyny but he didn't. He talked about the construction of beauty being about white women with beautiful hair and how damaging it was to the self-esteem of young African-American women. He also talked a lot about how expensive it was for African-American women to buy weaves but, at $1000 minimum each, how many can actually afford to buy weaves for their hair? Or, can afford to buy the "relaxing" cream [which is effectively poison]? Again, I felt Rock skirted around the issue of poverty. He just didn't make the clear correlation between race, poverty and the construction of beauty. Maybe I'm asking too much of Rock and expecting a feminist critique but I just felt he didn't push hard enough. I don't mean he should have questioned the women he interviewed harder. One of the nice things about Rock is that he genuinely seems to enjoy chatting to pretty much anyone and actually listens to what they say [rather than what he thinks they should be saying]. I just wanted Rock to go farther with his own political analysis. I wanted him to be bell hooks and Audre Lorde.
I wanted Rock to talk about more than his daughters.
I wanted to hear a male celebrity talk about misogyny, racism and poverty.
I didn't want him to subtle; I wanted to hear him say those words.
I wanted him to call out the billion dollar industry which profits from racism and misogyny.
Most of all, I wanted to hear Chris Rock yelling "Fuck the Patriarchy" so I could mail it back to him and politely request that he stop being so rude about Kim Kardashian. Instead, he ended the documentary with a quote from Ice-T, a man who is not noted for his respect for women.
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