| Activists launch national campaign to ban blackface minstrel show |
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| by Jasmyne Cannick | |
| Tuesday, 04 March 2008 | |
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Los Angeles - Today, in honor of Women's History Month and African-American women, activists launched BanShirleyQLiquor.com in an attempt to call attention to Charles Knipp, a self-described 45-year-old fat gay white man who performs nationwide as his alter ego character Shirley Q. Liquor. Knipp describes Liquor as being "an illiterate welfare mother with 19 kids who guzzles malt liquor and drives a Caddy." The character is a favorite of his core audience, whom Knipp described in Rolling Stone Magazine as being "gay men, their moms and rednecks." While in blackface as Liquor, Knipp speaks in Ebonics and makes comments like "axe your mamma how she durrin" and misuses words like "ignunt." Knipp is also known for mocking the Black American holiday Kwanzaa and uses Black faces to make fun of stereotypical sounding Black names in a music video entitled, "Who Is My Baby's Daddy?" (www.sendthisnow.com/html/babydaddy.html), where his character Shirley Q. Liquor tries to recollect the names of her "chirrun," "... Cheeto, Orangello, Chlamydia and Kmartina." "Imus may have called Black women ‘nappy-headed ho's,' but it's Knipp who routinely tries to bring that image to life onstage as Shirley Q. Liquor," commented journalist Jasmyne Cannick. "The hypocrisy is sickening. Isaiah Washington was unable to escape the wrath of gay America, but Charles Knipp, a white gay man, can perform as a blackface minstrel and be rewarded by gay Americans to the tune of $90k annually. Someone has some explaining to do. This has gone on for far too long under the radar." National Black talk radio's The Bev Smith Show on American Urban Radio Networks (AURN) dedicated its entire broadcast on Monday, March 3, 7-10 p.m. ET, to the campaign to ban Shirley Q. Liquor and spread the word about his upcoming performances. The Bev Smith Show can be heard in Sacramento, Atlanta, Pittsburgh, Augusta, Chicago and more. AURN is the only African-American owned network radio company in the United States. It is the largest network reaching urban America. With more than 200 weekly shows, AURN reaches an estimated 20 million listeners. "We believe that if Mr. Knipp is a true talent, he can find plenty of folks who look just like him to present in three-dimensional caricature," read a statement from Smith's camp. "If he really is funny, then he can find more than enough insulting and stereotypical elements of his own group, their background and their culture to mock. He does not need ours. As it is said, we have enough problems. "As if injury could further be added to this insult, a recent posting to his website allegedly included the headshot of well-respected journalist-activist Jasmyne Cannick - a woman who daily responds to and fights for the rights and dignity of persons of color and the LGBT communities - edited atop the body of a naked and hefty-breasted woman. "Understand this, please: One of our journalists has been insulted. Would Charles Knipp have done this to an AP journalist? Would the head of Mike Wallace or Cokie Roberts or Jorge Ramos be used this way without response from their respective communities? We think not." Knipp is scheduled to perform in Miami Beach at EXXXOTICA Miami Beach April 17 and 18, San Jose Gay Pride Week June 14 and 15, Memphis, Tennessee, at gay nightclub Backstreet Memphis and in New Orleans Labor Day Weekend, just blocks from where displaced African-Americans are still living in trailers. With the exception of the Miami Beach show, all are gay venues.
For more information, please visit www.banshirleyqliquor.com. Jasmyne Cannick can be reached at
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