Clemson Doctoral Student Creates Rap Album On Blackness For Dissertation

A Clemson University Ph.D. candidate decided to forgo a traditional dissertation for a more creative platform: a 34-track rap album. 

A.D. Carson wanted to use hip-hop and spoken word to explore the areas of identity, justice economics, citizenship and language for his rhetorics, communication and information design program. So he wrote and produced “Owning My Masters: The Rhetorics of Rhymes and Revolutions” He’s the first Clemson student to opt out of the traditional, written form.

"https://soundcloud.com/sets/term-1-mixtape"

A post shared by A.D. Carson (@aydeethegreat) on Dec 16, 2013 at 6:30pm PST

In an article for the campus outlet, Carson said the project isn’t meant as a gimmick, but his way of discussing the role race and identity plays in society today.

“The central thesis of my dissertation is: Are certain voices treated differently?” Carson said. “I’m trying to examine how an authentically identifiable black voice might be used or accepted as authentic, or ignored, or could answer academic questions and be considered rightly academic. So I have to present a voice rather than writing about a voice.”

In his lyrics, Carson explores the different ways racism manifests itself on campus and beyond. He also pays homage to black figures like Martin Luther King, Jr. and Nelson Mandela as well as victims of police brutality.

He also features snippets of Malcolm X speeches and samples from artists like Aretha Franklin. He considers these like the sources one would usually quote in written dissertation, he told the campus outlet.

Carson recorded the album in his studio in his apartment, with production help from two childhood friends, Blake E. Wallace and Marcus Fitzgerald. The doctoral candidate began uploading his music videos and songs to YouTube and Soundcloud in 2013 when he stated the program. Since then, his music has been played thousands of times.

"Because the @cyphercircuit #MurderTheBeat track was this one, I figure why not?"

A post shared by A.D. Carson (@aydeethegreat) on May 26, 2016 at 1:47pm PDT

Carson, who also founded the See The Stripes campaign to bring attention to black students issues on campus, said that he paid attention to every detail on the album. Like his trap song “Familiar,” which follows the format of one of Langston Hughes’ poems. 

 “The form of the song is imitating Langston Hughes’ ‘Dream Variations,’ a poem that has two stanzas that are very close to one another, and the content is informed by James Baldwin’s idea that Americans are trapped in history and history is trapped in us,” he said. “So think about using this rap form called trap that originates in the South in a song where you don’t know if the verses are the present or the past. It’s subtle but it works on a lot of different levels.”

In a YouTube video, Carson, who’s already helped expand a few professors’ view of hip-hop, said he wants to show that the genre can be a vehicle for larger discussions. 

“All of these different elements of hip-hop have existed over here for so long as ways that we can look at other things,” he said. “I want to add something to the conversation from being a participant in the hip-hop world as well as a participant in the in the academic world in this particular mold.”

Carson will defend his dissertation on Friday. Listen to “Owning My Masters: The Rhetorics of Rhymes and Revolutions” here

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Build Lasting Progressive Change. Elect Keith Ellison Chair Of The DNC.

In this perilous and challenging new era, Democratic Party officials are scrambling to catch up with the progressive grassroots resistance and demands for real change. Activists, organizers, and engaged citizens across the country have been channeling major dam-bursting energy and creativity into opposing the Republicans’ cruel agenda, and have already racked up some initial successes.

That’s what makes Saturday’s election for the chair of the Democratic National Committee so critical. There’s only one candidate who’s been ahead of the political curve and is best positioned to turn this unprecedented, people-powered momentum into electoral victories for Democrats across the country: Keith Ellison.

New Hampshire State Party Chair Ray Buckley, a leading contender for DNC chair, added new vitality to Ellison’s bid when he recently dropped out of the race to endorse him. Buckley highlighted “Keith’s commitment to the states and a transparent and accountable DNC,” and his ability to “successfully unite and grow our party.” But he concluded his endorsement of Keith with the most crucial point of all: “we need an organizer who has won elections.”

Given the day-to-day organizing, coordinating and outreach needed to be a successful DNC chair, Keith’s record in Minnesota is instructive. Within his congressional district, Keith’s team has led massive door-knocking campaigns—not during election seasons but during off years—to generate thousands of face-to-face conversations with constituents that show, in Keith’s words, that “we don’t just care about you when we want your vote. We care about you and want to have an ongoing, durable relationship with you.”

Building the nuts and bolts of small-d democracy—through pizza parties, coffee klatches, and Labor Day picnics—“isn’t just about winning elections,” he adds. “It’s about building community. It’s a way for neighbors to talk about stuff, when neighbors don’t usually talk.” Keith is that rare policymaker who’s just as comfortable developing bottom-up political culture at a picket line, a public school, or a VFW hall as he is advancing legislation.

Why does this matter for the Democratic Party’s progressive future? Ellison’s grassroots organizing brings his constituents together, and the ideas and concerns that they co-develop through that process rise to the top of his own policy agenda. That’s the foundation of the political force he has built, which has amassed stunning electoral victories. By raising the number of people who voted for him from 150,000 to 250,000, Keith helped create a Democratic political firewall that has prevented any statewide Republican from taking office in Minnesota in recent years. 

This commitment to the interplay between grassroots organizing, good policy, and electoral victories—Ellison believes “you need all three” for real political change—gives him the foresight and public service commitment that so many of his peers in the Beltway have lacked. Famously, while most pundits were laughing off Trump’s candidacy, Keith was trying to warn people to take the threat seriously, astutely recognizing Trump’s momentum.

And while Keith was a strong, early backer of President Obama in 2008 and 2012, he took a principled stance against the Trans Pacific Partnership, a pro-corporate trade deal that may have inadvertently cost Hillary Clinton the presidency. As Bernie Sanders’s appointee to the DNC’s platform drafting committee, Keith fought valiantly but unsuccessfully to enshrine opposition to the TPP in the party’s agenda, knowing how important the issue was to working people’s concerns and the turnout that Democrats needed.

As it turned out, Trump’s margin of victory in the election-deciding states of Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania was far less than the number of workers in each state whom the U.S. government had certified as having lost their jobs due to trade.

The reasons behind Ellison’s political success and prescience is simple: “I don’t care about odds,” he said. “I care about what’s right and what’s wrong.” Anyone who was involved in the struggle against South African apartheid—as Keith and I were—can attest to the power of this course of action. At a moment when so many voters have expressed their disapproval with a political establishment that they don’t trust, it is time to allow Keith’s refreshing principles help rejuvenate the entire party.

For decades, I have been fighting for workers internationally, and over the past four years, alongside the United Auto Workers in America’s Deep South. We’re standing with ordinary people who want good wages, workplace safety and the right to organize the local Nissan auto plant in the majority-black town of Canton, Mississippi. It’s these folks, in the crosshairs of the Republican agenda, who are on Keith’s mind and policy agenda every day. Keith’s diverse background as a Black Muslim Midwesterner, combined with a lifelong commitment to dignified livelihoods for all, will contribute to a DNC that can empower Canton’s multiracial rank-and-file workers.

Ellison’s vision for a Democratic Party is the only tried-and-true approach to building lasting progressive change—there are no shortcuts. Only a genuine dedication to building a fair economy will galvanize the Democratic Party’s grassroots and bring together millennials, blue-collar workers, and people of color, drawing many millions more into the political process.

Keith “was born to organize,” explained civil rights legend Rep. John Lewis. “We need his leadership. We need his vision. We need his commitment and his dedication now more than ever before.”

In order for Democrats to succeed in taking on Republicans and their destructive agenda at the local, state and national levels, we need fresh and energetic leadership with a deep connection to the grassroots. In short, the DNC needs Keith Ellison.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices

This Is What The Oscars Looked Like In 1987

function onPlayerReadyVidible(e){‘undefined’!=typeof HPTrack&&HPTrack.Vid.Vidible_track(e)}!function(e,i){if(e.vdb_Player){if(‘object’==typeof commercial_video){var a=”,o=’m.fwsitesection=’+commercial_video.site_and_category;if(a+=o,commercial_video[‘package’]){var c=’&m.fwkeyvalues=sponsorship%3D’+commercial_video[‘package’];a+=c}e.setAttribute(‘vdb_params’,a)}i(e.vdb_Player)}else{var t=arguments.callee;setTimeout(function(){t(e,i)},0)}}(document.getElementById(‘vidible_1’),onPlayerReadyVidible);

The 89th annual Academy Awards are fast approaching, and as we love to do, HuffPost is taking a look back at a past Oscar ceremony.

The year was 1987. “Platoon” took home the award for Best Picture, while Paul Newman and Marlee Matlin won the night’s top acting honors for their work in the films “The Color of Money” and “Children of a Lesser God,” respectively. 

The red carpet was as star-studded as you’d imagine. Everyone from Bette Davis to Tom Hanks to then-couple Matthew Broderick and Jennifer Grey was in attendance, leaving us with some pretty great photographic memories.

Check out our favorites below: 

The 89th annual Academy Awards air Feb. 26 on ABC. 

And remember to Hit Backspace for a regular dose of pop culture nostalgia.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Jay Z Becomes The First Rapper Ever To Be Inducted Into The Songwriters Hall Of Fame

Jay Z is having a pretty great year. The rapper, who’s expecting twins with wife Beyoncé, has gone from “bricks to Billboard, from grams to Grammys,” and now he’s a Hall of Famer. 

On Wednesday, it was announced that the rapper will be inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame this summer, making him the first rapper ever to earn the honor. Songwriters are eligible for induction when they’ve written hit tracks for two decades, according to the BBC. (It begs the question, though, why it took until 2017 for a rapper to receive the honor.)

”It’s massive. He has changed the way that we listen to music. He’s changed the way that we have fun,” said Chic guitarist Nile Rodgers, who announced the inductees on CBS, according to Billboard.

Other songwriters to be inducted this year include Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds, Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, Robert Lamm, James Pankow & Peter Cetera (of Chicago) and the man who gave us the Britney Spears masterpiece “… Baby One More Time,” Max Martin. 

“The songwriters we honor cross genre, regional and even national boundaries — R & B, Rap, Pop and Rock & Roll from both coasts, the American heartland and Sweden,” SHOF co-chairs Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff and president Linda Moran said in a statement. “We are thrilled to once more have the opportunity to preside over an event that recognizes the convergence of song craft and musical performance at the very highest level.”

The inductees will be honored at the 48th annual Induction and Awards Dinner, to be held this June. 

We’ll be over here, patiently waiting for all the post-event photos of Jay with Blue Ivy, being the cutest father-daughter duo around. Maybe we’ll even get to see the new twins! 

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Trevor Noah Went On A 3-Minute Rant About The Power Of The Vagina

Trevor Noah recently released a hilarious stand-up special for Netflix ― and during it he made sure to praise pussies. 

Noah dedicated an entire segment of “Afraid of the Dark,” which was filmed during the 2016 New York Comedy Festival, to the power of the pussy. He laments the use of the word “pussy” as an insult that implies weakness:

Have you ever come across a pussy? You realize vaginas can start revolutions and end wars. You realize, even on a physical level, the vagina is one of the strongest things that have ever existed. Virtually indestructible…The vagina is frighteningly powerful. You realize that human beings come out of a vagina.

Human beings come out and still it continues to work as intended. Do you understand how impressive that is? A human being comes out of the vagina. And still, it continues to operate, it continues to work, after a human has just come out. You’re saying it’s weak? You just sit on a penis wrong and it breaks. “Don’t be a penis,” that should be the phrase. I wish I was a pussy. 

This is also not the first time Noah has given a shoutout to “strong, powerful” vaginas ― in December of 2015, he performed a similar segment on “The Daily Show” after a Fox News pundit called then-President Barack Obama a “total pussy.”

“I’ve never understood this because vaginas are such strong, powerful things,” he said. 

Hear, hear! 

Check out “Afraid of the Dark” on Netflix now. 

h/t Cosmopolitan

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Here’s How That Pier Scene In ‘La La Land’ Should Have Played Out

La La Land” is poised to be the favorite at this year’s Oscars, going into Sunday with 14 nominations and grossing about $340 million worldwide.

So given the popularity of this film, how is it possible that no one is talking about this particular scene?

You know the one: Ryan Gosling’s character approaches an older black couple on the pier, hands his hat to the man, and then dances with the woman.

Well, we’ll let Jed Feiman and Nehemiah Markos of the comedy sketch duo Never Sad take it from there.

(OK, it’s not a real scene, but we kind of wish it were.)

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices

The Most Politically Influential Film Of The Oscars Will End Up Being 'Zootopia'

Beware, some animal-friendly spoilers live below. 

Last March, Donald J. Trump, then just one of many candidates vying to become the Republican presidential nominee, sat down with CBS’ “Face the Nation” to advocate for the use of torture.

Discussing his plan to defeat the self-described Islamic State, Trump said, “We are playing by rules, but they have no rules. It’s very hard to win when that’s the case.” 

To that, host John Dickerson responded, “Isn’t that what separates us from the savages?”

“No, we have to beat the savages,” Trump replied.

Two days earlier, Disney released its own animated movie about “savages.” The film, “Zootopia,” followed a bunny named Judy Hopps while she tried to establish a career as a police officer in an animal-run metropolis, where predators and prey co-exist peacefully, if awkwardly at times. 

At its core, however, “Zootopia” was something else: a political condemnation of the very forces that Trump was exploiting at that moment to take over the Republican party. 

In the film, prey, which constitute the vast majority of the city’s population, come to fear the dangers of predators, who are, for unknown reasons, “going savage” or returning to their prior tendency to attack those around them.

Fear sends the city into a panic, causing distrust between animals who have long lived together. Some protest against the rapidly growing fear of predators ― “It is irresponsible to label all predators as savages. We cannot let fear divide us,” says the Shakira-inspired pop star Gazelle ― but even Judy’s own prejudices eventually become clear to her friend Nick Wilde, a fox who experienced anti-predator discrimination throughout his life. 

Ultimately, the reason so many predators are going savage becomes apparent: Dawn Bellwether, an innocent-looking sheep-turned-city mayor, has been injecting a serum made out of the flowers “Night howlers” into predators to transform them into dangerous creatures. Near the end of the movie, when Dawn discovers Judy knows of her plot, she tries to convince her that Judy, too, could benefit. 

“Think of it,” she says. “Ninety percent of the population, united against a common enemy. We’ll be unstoppable.”

Dawn explains how she has exploited fear to her political advantage.

When Judy stands with Nick despite Dawn’s plea, a police officer pushes the two of them into a hole. Standing above them, Dawn shoots Nick with the dangerous serum, hoping he goes savage and kills Judy.

“Gosh, think of the headline: ‘Hero cop killed by savage fox!’” Dawn says.

“So that’s it. Prey fears predator and you stay in power?” Judy asks.

“Yeah. Pretty much,” Dawn replies.

“It won’t work!,” Judy insists.

“Fear always works,” Dawn says. 

The decision to make a movie about how people’s prejudices, when mixed with fear, can be exploited for political gain was made well before President Trump’s xenophobic rise to power, directors Byron Howard and Rich Moore have said. But whether it was luck or not, the film’s release last year could not have been timed better. 

“Zootopia” ended the year as the most positively reviewed movie released in 2016, according to an adjusted score calculated by the film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. At the box office, it became the year’s seventh-highest grossing domestic film, pulling in $341 million. Worldwide, it earned more than $1 billion, making it one of the most-watched animated films of all time.

And on Sunday, at the 89th annual Academy Awards, it will be the front-runner for Best Animated Feature

At a time when American adults’ movie-viewing habits are becoming increasingly segmented, those of their children have not. Expensive animated kids films like “Zootopia,” so carefully crafted and optimized by their creators, are released less frequently, but have shown a more consistent ability to capture their audiences. In the last two years alone, six animated children’s films ― “Zootopia,” “Finding Dory,” “The Secret Life of Pets,” “Sing,” “Inside Out” and “Minions” ― have been among the top 10 domestic box-office performers. 

These films can be discounted at the Oscars ― siloed into their own categories ― but their influence should not be. Children, generally speaking, watch the same movies as one another much more than their parents do, and the power of these films to shape children’s world views is vast. Those two factors together make them arguably more influential than even the most affecting of adult films. 

The American Academy of Pediatrics has said that children “learn by observing [media], imitating [it], and making behaviors their own.” Seeta Pai, vice president of research at Common Sense Media, which reviews children’s media, has said that while the ability to “articulate a [movie’s] moral theme” develops “fairly slowly,” children are generally able to do so by the age of nine or 10. 

This gives movies like “Zootopia” a tremendous ability to help shape the views of a generation, a responsibility that isn’t lost on the film’s creators. “These movies, especially for young people, they are fairy tales that have the purpose of preparing young people for the world ahead of them,” director Rich Moore recently told Business Insider. 

Moore knows how closely the film mirrors the country’s current political reality ― “The real move towards governing by fear … is what our entire third act is about,” he said in an interview with Variety ― but he’s also not so naive to believe “Zootopia” could change the opinions of the voters who saw it. 

Kids, however, might be another story. Moore and Byron talked excitedly to Variety about an experience they had earlier this year at the Santa Barbara Film Festival, where thousands of fifth- and sixth-graders talked through the film’s lessons with one another while doing craft projects about it.

Then, earlier this month, Barry Jenkins, director of the Best Picture nominee “Moonlight,” told them at the BAFTAs that children at his house were recently discussing the state of the world, “using ‘Zootopia’ as a prism.” The film was doing what Moore and Byron had hoped.

Certainly, it would be faulty to argue that one movie alone could pull a child out of a world of discrimination. Such a shift takes a village, filled with parents, teachers and role models, ready to work with children from birth until adulthood. 

But that also shouldn’t discount the fact that in 2016, as the future president of the United States was dividing the world between savages and everyone else for his own personal gain, a children’s film about an animal-run metropolis was doing what it could to make sure such an ascent never happens again.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices

ACLU Sues Milwaukee Over Stop-And-Frisk, Widening Challenge To Police Practice

function onPlayerReadyVidible(e){‘undefined’!=typeof HPTrack&&HPTrack.Vid.Vidible_track(e)}!function(e,i){if(e.vdb_Player){if(‘object’==typeof commercial_video){var a=”,o=’m.fwsitesection=’+commercial_video.site_and_category;if(a+=o,commercial_video[‘package’]){var c=’&m.fwkeyvalues=sponsorship%3D’+commercial_video[‘package’];a+=c}e.setAttribute(‘vdb_params’,a)}i(e.vdb_Player)}else{var t=arguments.callee;setTimeout(function(){t(e,i)},0)}}(document.getElementById(‘vidible_1’),onPlayerReadyVidible);

By Julia Harte | WASHINGTON

The American Civil Liberties Union sued on Wednesday to halt Milwaukee’s stop-and-frisk policy, a nationally controversial policing practice that critics say unfairly targets people of color and has been endorsed by President Donald Trump.

Police defend the practice as an effective way to deter crime, despite scant evidence that it lowers crime rates, and say innocent people should not fear being stopped and searched by officers in the interest of public safety.

In its lawsuit, the ACLU charged that Milwaukee’s stop-and-frisk program discriminates against black and Latino people and unconstitutionally lets police stop people without reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.

Milwaukee police did not return calls for comment and the city attorney declined to comment.

The ACLU has successfully challenged stop-and-frisk programs in two other cities, reaching court-enforced reform agreements with Philadelphia in 2011 and with Chicago in 2015. Stop-and-frisk by New York City police was halted after a federal court ruled it was unconstitutional in 2013.

In Milwaukee, the ACLU is seeking a court order to end the practice there, citing studies and officer testimony that said police conduct overly aggressive stop-and-frisk patrols in largely black and Latino neighborhoods, encouraged by quota systems that require a certain number of stops per day.

Trump, a Republican, repeatedly endorsed stop-and-frisk during his 2016 election campaign and civil rights advocates are concerned that his administration will dismantle policing reforms pursued by Democratic President Barack Obama.

“This work is even more important now when it doesn’t appear that similar reforms will come from the Justice Department,” said ACLU attorney Nusrat Choudhury.

Darius Charney, a Center for Constitutional Rights attorney who brought the case in New York, said he expects civil society groups to start intervening in Obama-era police reform agreements if Trump’s Justice Department stops aggressively enforcing them.

Trump’s main anti-crime action has been an executive order directing the U.S. Attorney General to establish a task force on crime reduction and public safety.

In Milwaukee, violent crime per capita was higher in 2015 than in 2007, according to FBI data, even though the Milwaukee police made nearly three times more traffic and pedestrian stops in 2015.

Tracy Grant, a plaintiff in the Milwaukee suit, said her 17-year-old son has been stopped and searched by police officers for no clear reason several times while walking through his neighborhood, beginning when he was 11.

When the ACLU called, Grant said, her son asked her to join the case on his behalf: “He said we can’t just sit back and wait for other people to do something.” 

(Reporting by Julia Harte; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Grant McCool)

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Viral Photos Show Black Women Simply Unbothered By Police Intimidation

Twitter user Matthew Cherry compiled a series of photos of badass black women protesters refusing to succumb to police intimidation.

Cherry made the collage of photos on Sunday as a homage to Black History Month. His tweet includes the famous 2016 photo of Iesha Evans ― whose peaceful demeanor during a Black Lives Matter march served as a symbolic contrast between the tones of law enforcement and BLM protesters during the summer of 2016 ― as well as photos from women of the civil rights era who had no time for police coercion.

Cherry’s followers even chimed in with other photos illustrating that black women aren’t easily intimidated. Check out the pics below:

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Chris Brown's Ex Claims He Threatened To Kill Her

Eight years after he brutally assaulted Rihanna in a widely publicized incident, Chris Brown has been accused of physically abusing another woman: His ex-girlfriend Karrueche Tran.

On Feb.17, Tran filed a temporary domestic violence restraining order against the Grammy-winning R&B singer, alleging that he pushed her down the stairs, punched her in the stomach and threatened to shoot her.

In the court documents, obtained by RadarOnline, Tran stated that as recently as this month, Brown was texting her death threats, and told other people that he was going to kill her. The couple split in 2015.

“He said if no one else can have me then he’s going to ‘take me out,’” she wrote, adding that Brown had also been harassing and threatening her friends. “This is why I’ve decided to finally go through with the restraining order because he is starting to take action on his words.”

The restraining order instructs Brown to stay 100 yards away from Tran, refrain from contacting her directly or indirectly, and to surrender any firearms he possesses. Tran’s mother and brother are also protected under the order.

“They are my family and I don’t want them at risk,” Tran wrote.

Brown’s lawyer, Mark Geragos, did not return a request for comment. A court date on the restraining order is scheduled for March 9.

Also in the court documents, Tran accused Brown of physically abusing her a few years prior, but offered few details. She said that Brown punched her in the stomach twice, and pushed her down the stairs. She indicated that police were not called and no one else was present.

It’s possible that Brown was still on probation stemming from his assault on Rihanna at the time of the alleged violent incidents.

In 2009, Brown, who was 19, assaulted his then-girlfriend Rihanna inside a car after leaving a pre-Grammy party. According to the police statement, Brown punched Rihanna in the face repeatedly, smashed her head into the window, put her in a headlock, and constricted her breathing until she began to lose consciousness. He also bit her ear and her fingers, the statement said, and threatened to kill her.

“He had no soul in his eyes, just blank. He was clearly blacked out,” Rihanna said of the assault in an interview with Diane Sawyer later that year. “There was no person when I looked to him.”

Brown pleaded guilty to felony assault and was sentenced to five years probation and 180 days of community service. A judge officially ended his probation in March 2015.

In interviews conducted early on in his career, Brown talked about seeing his mom abused by his stepfather, and the effect of domestic violence on his childhood.

“He made me terrified all the time, terrified like I had to pee on myself. I remember one night he made her nose bleed. I was crying and thinking, ‘I’m just gonna go crazy on him one day,’” he told Giant magazine in 2007.

That same year, he told Tyra Banks that he treats women differently because of what he experienced.

“I don’t want to go through the same thing or put a woman through the same thing that that person put my mom through,” he said.

______

Melissa Jeltsen covers domestic violence and other issues related to women’s health, safety and security. Tips? Feedback? Send an email or follow her on Twitter.

______

Related stories:

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices