Chelsea and Daily Show writer Christiana Mbakwe-Medina join Roy to discuss the resulting piece and their personal experiences, from being called “too professional” to going from “pet to threat.” #DailyShow #BeyondTheScenes
Chelsea and Daily Show writer Christiana Mbakwe-Medina join Roy to discuss the resulting piece and their personal experiences, from being called “too professional” to going from “pet to threat.” #DailyShow #BeyondTheScenes
© Late Night TV website by Super Blog Me
What I’ve learned is get your own business and not work for the white man and don’t fight in the white man’s Army
ReplySo true
ReplyI wonder what it’s like to be light brown in Corporate America. Or the lesser-known issue of being average height. We need to bring the issue to the Forefront. More representation for people of average height
ReplyBlack men are more rare in corporate America than Black women…by design
ReplyBlack Brit will be viewed differently from black Americans simply because of their accent.
ReplyJust disgraceful journalism.
ReplyLooove this series! Keep them coming guys! This is the highlight of my week.
ReplyNow I see why the narrative in your show is what it is at times, and by that I mean that the position is not that of an African American, but an immigrant.
ReplyWhen corporations make statements about discrimination, it’s marketing. They don’t care.
ReplyI believe everyone in the work place black or white has a long way to go in how to interact with each other. It’s just sad that people have to adjust to natural hair.
ReplyWe always pretend it never existed!
ReplyThe gaslight we face when we try to expose these things. The gaslight. That’s why I don’t talk to white people about race anymore.
Reply