Afro Pop Remix

1988: New Jack Swingers - Spcl Gst Ashley and Terrence


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Topics: Gangs, Keith Sweat, Al. B. Sure!, Bobby Brown, Coming to America, A Different World (Bonus Artist: hidingtobefound)

 

Snapshots   1.    Ronald Reagan President (Last Year!)   2.    Jan - Doug Williams super bowl [Two weeks earlier, CBS commentator Jimmy the Greek had been fired for remarking that blacks were better at sports because of slave plantation breeding techniques: “During the slave period, the slave owner would breed his big black with his big woman so that he would have a big black kid — that’s where it all started.”]   3.    Feb – Winter Olympics: Jamaican Bobsled team! Debi Thomas 1988 winter Olympics Bronze medal - The best African American figure skater in history   4.    Jul - Jessie Jackson keep hope alive speech at the DNC   5.    Jul - The first ever edition of "Shark Week" airs on Discovery Channel.   6.    Aug - Yo! MTV Raps   7.    Sep - James Brown, while high on PCP, was involved in a high-speed chase with the police. He was eventually convicted of assaulting an officer and possession of an unlicensed firearm, among other charges. He spent three years in prison   8.    Sep – Summer Olympics: Florence Joyner She is considered the fastest woman of all time, based on the world records she set in 1988 for both the 100 m and 200 m still stand. Jackie Joyner-Kersee long jump and heptathlon, Carl Lewis, Steve Lewis, and roger kingdom   9.    Oct - Sega's two-year head start on Nintendo in the 16-bit gaming wars began on October 29, 1988, when the Sega Genesis launched   10.    Nov - George Bush elected President   11.    Dec - Mad Max Robinson dies   12.    Dec - Roots: The Gift, the third installment of the Roots series is broadcast on ABC.   13.    Open Comments:   14.    Top Pop Songs   15.    #1 - "Faith" - George Michael   16.    #2 - Need You Tonight" - INXS   17.    #3 - "Got My Mind Set on You" - George Harrison   18.    Grammy Awards   19.    Record of the Year: Bobby McFerrin for "Don't Worry, Be Happy"   20.    Album of the Year: George Michael (producer & artist) for Faith   21.    Song of the Year: Bobby McFerrin for "Don't Worry, Be Happy"   22.    Best New Artist: Tracy Chapman   23.    Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female: Anita Baker for "Giving You the Best That I Got"   24.    Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male: Terence Trent D'Arby for Introducing the Hardline According to Terence Trent D'arby   25.    Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal: Gladys Knight & the Pips for "Love Overboard"   26.    Best Rhythm & Blues Song: Anita Baker for "Giving You the Best That I Got" performed by Anita Baker   27.    Best Rap Performance: "Parents Just Don't Understand" – DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince. [The first award for Best Rap Performance was presented to DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince for "Parents Just Don't Understand". Jeff and Smith led a boycott in protest of the awards presentation not being televised, and some members of the rap community felt that more qualified artists were overlooked.   28.    Top 3 Movies   29.    #1 - Rain Man   30.    #2 - Who Framed Roger Rabbit   31.    #3 - Coming to America   32.    Other Notables: Big, Twins, Crocodile Dundee II, Die Hard, The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!, Cocktail, Beetlejuice, Above the Law, Colors, A Fish Called Wanda, Young Guns, Tougher Than Leather, Child's Play, The Land Before Time, Tequila Sunrise, I'm Gonna Git You Sucka, and School Daze.   33.    Top 3 TV Shows   34.    #1 - The Cosby Show   35.    #2 - Roseanne   36.    #3 - A Different World   37.    Economic Snapshots   38.    New Home: 91,777   39.    Avg Rent: 420   40.    Avg. Income: 24,457   41.    New Car: 10,432   42.    Harvard: 12,015   43.    Movie Ticket: 3.50   44.    Gas: .91   45.    Stamp: .25   46.    Social Scene: Gangs and the movie Colors   47.    Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WZvatzKVM2g   48.    “Bulls”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJQAKDbq0hI   49.    Stevin Levitt, Freakonomics: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5UGC2nLnaes 50.    @9:35 - Summary: McDonalds vs Gang   51.    Factors: Socio-political-economical, hyper masculinity and criminal justice/policing   52.    Other ethnicities “evolved” out of their “street-gang” phases, but black- brown people are dealt with differently.   53.    Open Comments:   54.    Question: would more representation in the criminal justice system help – how to counter our internal factor?   55.    Music Scene:   56.    Top Black Singles   57.    #6 - "So Emotional", Whitney Houston   58.    #11 - "One More Try", George Michael   59.    #12 - "Wishing Well", Terence Trent D'Arby   60.    #15 - "Get Outta My Dreams, Get into My Car", Billy Ocean   61.    #21, "Man in the Mirror", Michael Jackson   62.    #27, "Father Figure", George Michael   63.    #33 - "Where Do Broken Hearts Go", Whitney Houston   64.    #36 - "The Way You Make Me Feel", Michael Jackson   65.    #37 - "Don't Worry, Be Happy", Bobby McFerrin   66.    Top Black Albums   67.    Jan – Bad, Michael Jackson   68.    Jan - Characters, Stevie Wonder   69.    Feb - All Our Love, Gladys Knight & the Pips   70.    Mar - Make It Last Forever, Keith Sweat   71.    Apr - Introducing the Hardline According to Terence Trent D'Arby, Terence Trent D'Arby   72.    May - Faith, George Michael   73.    Jul - In Effect Mode, Al B. Sure!   74.    Aug - Strictly Business, EPMD   75.    Sep - Don't Be Cruel, Bobby Brown   76.    Sep - It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, Public Enemy   77.    Oct - Don't Let Love Slip Away, Freddie Jackson   78.    Nov - Giving You the Best That I Got, Anita Baker   79.    Nov - Any Love, Luther Vandross   80.    Vote:   81.    Featured Artists: New jack swingers   82.    Keith Sweat (@ 27 yrs. old): Known for his distinctive ‘whining’ vocal style, Sweat has established himself as one of the most successful male R&B/soul singers not only in America but also in other parts of the world. Born Keith Douglas Sweat, he was raised in Harlem and by the time he was 14 he had performed at various nightclubs in and around New York City. He graduated from the City College of New York with a BS degree in ‘communications’, after which he worked for a brief period as a successful brokerage assistant in a Wall Street firm. Despite a prosperous career at the Wall Street, he chose to pursue his passion for music and began writing songs and tried selling them to various record labels. In 1975, he began his career in music as a member of the Harlem based band called the ‘Jamilah’. In 1984, he left ‘Jamilah’ in order to begin a solo career and subsequently sang at various nightclubs in New York. He was quickly noticed and given an opportunity to record an independent album for ‘Stadium Records’. He recorded ‘My Mind Is Made Up’ for the ‘Stadium Records’ and he was also credited as the co-writer and co-producer of ‘You Are the One for Me’. On November 25, 1987 his debut solo album ‘Make It Last Forever’ was released, which sold three million copies. The biggest hit from this album was the song that inaugurated the new jack swing era "I Want Her"   83.    Bobby Brown (@ 19 yrs. old): Brown changed producers for this album and worked extensively with hit-making songwriting and production duo Babyface and L.A. Reid. Alex Henderson of AllMusic wrote: “Don't Be Cruel was to Bobby Brown what Control was to Janet Jackson – a tougher, more aggressive project that shed his "bubblegum" image altogether and brought him to a new artistic and commercial plateau. With "My Prerogative" and the title song, Brown became a leader of new jack swing”   84.    Al B. Sure!(@ 20 yrs. old): During the late '80s, Al B. Sure! enjoyed a brief run as one of new jack swing's most popular romantic singers. Born Al Brown in Boston, he grew up in Mount Vernon, NY, listening to smooth crooners like Marvin Gaye and Johnny Mathis; he later became interested in rap and added that skill to his vocal repertoire. At age ten, he and a friend performed on a song written by Ellie Greenwich for the soundtrack of Sesame Street, and later he began writing songs with his cousin Kyle West. While in high school (where he quarterbacked the football team), he became friends with Edward Ferrell, aka DJ Eddie F, who was working with rapper Heavy D at the time. Eddie F introduced the still-teenaged Al B. Sure! to Heavy D's manager/Uptown label head Andre Harrell, who had him sing backing vocals on several Heavy D tracks and helped him get a deal with Warner Brothers. In 1987, Al was selected by Quincy Jones as the first winner of the Sony Innovators Talent Search. He collaborated with Jones on various projects, most notably the platinum single “The Secret Garden (Sweet Seduction Suite)” from Jones’ double-platinum-certified album Back on the Block. On this hit, he was one of a quartet with El DeBarge, Barry White, and James Ingram. His debut album of 1988 In Effect Mode topped the Billboard R&B chart for seven consecutive weeks, selling more than two million copies.   85.    Open Comments:   86.    Question: Al B. Said “There’s a generation of women starving to be told I love you again” What happened?! Who is bringing it back?   87.    Movie Scene: Coming to America   88.    Trailer:   89.    The Hollywood Reporter's original review: “Eddie Murphy's latest Coming to America is likely to leave the wreath-bearers, the frantic faithful, the crowd herders and the legions of line-waiters in numbed, disbelieving disappointment…Distressingly, the film flops into the blandest of sitcom formats, never realizing its regal potential...Coming to America is the filmic equivalent of using a Maserati to go to the corner grocery store…Yes, there are some crazy pieces crammed into America — Murphy and Hall in their multi-roles do a running black barbershop bit that is good and nuts — but this comedy is generally tame and sappy…The plot itself is pathetic…No getting around it, while the script completely misses as a social satire, the writers have botched the romance part of America as well…Rivaling the inept screenplay is John Landis' cornball direction, which includes a TV season's worth of reactive cutaways to an ugly poodle…On a production level, at least, Coming to America gets top marks. — Duane Byrge originally published on June 24, 1988.   90.    Open Comments:   91.    Question: Is this Eddie’s best movie? Was Arsenio better than Eddie? Sequel or a remake?   92.    Television Scene: A Different World   93.    Theme song differences   94.    Debbie Allen’s influence   95.    Why didn’t any of them go onto stardom? -   96.    Vote: Best/most important/favorite pop culture item from 1988?
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