How Black Media Impacted The Culture

How Black Media Impacted The Culture - We Are Jersey

Black media seems to be more influential today than it has ever been and continues to grow beyond measure in the role that it plays in our lives. The scope of media today comes in many different mediums, each categorized by type and product. There is a seemingly endless variety to select from: film, television, music, magazine, newspapers, video & photography, radio, blogs and podcasts; and now the ever-increasing dominant distribution method of Social Media has crossed the threshold into direct human access and action. Over the last century major advancements and breakthroughs have delivered polished high-definition productions faster and more accessible than previous generations, and is broadcast worldwide.


Media has the inherent power to affect people, only at different temperatures, as the prophetic Marshall McLuhan might say. As we see this unfold in front of our eyes we notice the corporate world is obsessed with analytics, the endless pursuit of views, plays, likes, and subscribers, let alone the old-fashioned television rating. The average African-American watches two hours of prime time T.V. and five more of daytime television daily. This demographic alone has the purchasing power of $1.1 trillion.

I honestly believe in the start of the development of black media & its outlets of course the intentions were pure & strictly about empowerment and creative expression, but like most things in life we took a turn for the worse somewhere along the journey and ignored self correction. We are in a new day one that is believed to be one of enlightenment, consciousness, and access where information, positive images/representation, and communication is all around us literally at our fingertips with google, social media, and other media outlets.

We, the millennial, have witnessed the change of visual media. We can easily look at film & television from 1985-2005 and say wow maybe you can see why things are the way they are now in our communities, neighborhoods, schools, and homes. We can start with The Cosby Show & A Different World, two of the most popular & watched sitcoms of the era & culture in the 80’s & 90’s which encouraged family, love, education, work ethic, and balance. Fast forward to today’s society and your most viewed & top selling shows are Love & Hip-Hop, Basketball Wives, P-Valley, and Power reality, drama filled, famous influential cast geared around sex, violence, infidelity, and street/hood culture.



Also the music aspect of media we’ve been witnesses to some of the most creative and talented minds, creatives, and composers but also the mass degradation of the culture. We went from inspiring love, creativity, being real artists & portraying the times to create negative images/responses. We have a genre of music Hip-Hop that now primarily promotes drug using, drug dealing, drug trafficking, sex, the envy of material things, violence, infidelity, and propaganda. We have to consciously sit down & think about what legacy we want to leave for ourselves, our families, and culture because the impact is not one of definite viewing positivity.


Black media has evolved over the last century. However, I can say that this evolution runs parallel to the education, growth, connection, crime, creativity, and violence of the culture as media industries are concerned as far as quality of material and demonstrating cultural values. No matter how strong we claim to be & the individual we want to be, the understanding and realization has to set in that we're what we see, hear, and surround ourselves with. So the work in fact seems to be switching to a whole new kind of perception/message for the culture more spotlighting drama, sexually enticing material, socially stripping freedom of speech/expression, and adding crippling standards to an already divisive social dating norm. So truly ask yourself what are we spending so much time viewing, listening to, and modeling our focus, minds, and goals after?


Leave a comment

Please note, comments must be approved before they are published

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.


You may also like

We are thrilled to have sponsored and attended the remarkable "I Am Art" event curated by Complex Vision Newark founded by Chris Williams and Rashon Vines, an esteemed youth mentoring organization dedicated to igniting creativity and healing through the power of art. Held at the prestigious Robert Treat Hotel in Newark, NJ, on March 23, 2024, this event was a beacon of inspiration, bringing together resources, food, giveaways, and electrifying performances by celebrity artists Honey Bxby whom recently performed at Soul Train Awards 2023. Also, she is managed by Newark's own legendary 3x Grammy Winner music veteran Karriem "K-Mack" Mack. Newark's own TheArti$t came home to show love whom performed with Tank at the 2023 Grammys.