Fanon Che Wilkins profile picture

Fanon Che Wilkins

Be Present, Be Fearless, and Always Stay Sucka Free

About Me

I edited my profile with Thomas' Myspace Editor V4.4He joined the planet when the 6 met 9 and the 7 saw its reflection in a pool of water wedged between concrete and opportunity in the City of Angels. When the screams dissipated and the boy was put on a scale, Pops, a 1965 Watts Rebellion alumnus, told the nurse that this one would be named Fanon Che-fah'show. Ms. Nurse asked Pha-who? and Pops reminded her that these were revolutionaries from Martinique and Argentina who grew restless in the face of imperialist domination and colonial exploitation.Six months after lil' man hit the sand, Moms broke out to Cuba (VENCEREMOS!) to cut cane and increase her revolutionary resolve. Pops held it down, but when the smoke cleared, Pops and Moms agreed to split and lil' man went South way before the ATL was full of Outkasts and the Good Died Mostly Over [email protected] the Durdy had a lot going for it. Mom's got her full Lenin on working at a shirt factory with the idea of organizing workers at the point of production. She even did a stint at the phone company climbing them tall ass poles and Standard Oil where she assisted in the mining and management of black gold. Meanwhile, bruh-man attended a liberation school where all of us lil' freedom fighters chanted before each meal: (Fist Raised) "I WILL EAT ALL MY FOOD, TO GROW BIG AND STRONG, TO WORK IN THE STRUGGLE FOR AFRICAN PEOPLE"--Shonuff'. By second grade it was back to South Central, but by 8 the boy found himself up north in the East Bay riding dirt bikes and eating Lemonheads and Nowalaytas' on the same streets that Huey, Bobby, and Elaine screamed All Power To The People. By 10 lil' man was back with Moms in the Durdy and Pops moved to the Big Apple to help aspiring revolutionaries relocate to Tanzania to help build Ujamaa Socialism.When the time came to join Pops in Gotham, ya boy was more than a little scared of the city that never slept because Richard Pryor had told him that if a space ship landed in New York, a ni**&a would take his ship. But undeterred, ya boy found Kurtis Blow to be more inviting than menacing and Sugarhill Gang just brought a smile to his face. So back to South Central he went, telling tall tales about battles he had won and Emcees he had met while he and the fellaz pause-mixed Funkadelic basslines and imitated thier favorite New York Emcees.Now if there was ever a rolling stone, Pops was a restless boulder who thought that greener pastures could be found back in the Durdy. But thangs didn't work as planned, so it was back to the 213 and somehow, with a little luck, wit, and parental direction (with the help of Moma Joyce), bruh-man managed to survive the infamous Los Angeles Police Department, the Bloods, the Crips, all of the Latino sets, the Los Angeles Unified School District, the Rapid Transit District (The Rough, Tough, and Dangerous) and the Crack scourge. So when Boogie Down Productions dropped Criminal Minded and Ray Charles told anti-apartheid activists to go to hell, ya boy entered the House only fit for a King and made it to the other side while Ice Cube poured out a lil' something for his dead homies.Now we could end it here, but that would not be fair because somewhere along the way bruh-man actually began believing that he could obtain a Pee-H-Dee. Silly right, well the fool went for it and made a lot of bookies money. And guess what? When the 9 met the 7 and that same 9 saw its reflection in the dew drop that rolled to the tip of the lilly, bruh-man helped two babies into this world and named the girl child after the Brass Saint who wailed "A Love Supreme," and took the boy's name from the creolized lips of those who called the yard a "yaad" and said "Irie" when everythang was alright. So where is bruh-man you ask? Still on the move-- living, writing and teaching at Doshisha University in Kyoto, Japan. Who knew? The Universe-fah'show:)

My Interests

Exploring HipHop's Creative Intelligence through my Podcast Cybershow: "Beyond The Rhyme." We do for Hiphop, what Charlie Rose and James Lipton do for talk television and film respectively.

I'd like to meet:

Egoless artists, scholars, Hiphoppas and visionaries with an eye, ear, and feel for transforming themsleves and the planet. I am here to connect with those who have an affinity for the power of the present and work day in and day out to decrease the degrees of seperation between themselves and the rest of humanity.

Music:

The Jackson Five, KRS-ONE, Prince, J-Dilla, Curtis Mayfield, LL Cool J, Bessie Smith, 9th Wonder, Jimi Hendrix, Jean Grae, Ma Rainey, Cymande, Mighty Sparrow, Memphis Minnie, John Coltrane, Del the Funky Homosapien, Black Stalin, Thelonious Monk, Digable Planets, Miles Davis, Aretha Franklin, Talib Kweli, Max Roach, Clifford Brown, Abbie Lincoln, Oscar Brown Jr., Dexter Gordon, The Spinners, Afro Man, Nina Simone, Mos Def, Fela Kuti, Madlib, Yusef Lateef, Redman, Parliament Funkadelic, Run-DMC, Betty Davis, Erykah Badu, OutKast, Roy Ayers, Lee Scratch Perry, Willie Nelson, The Fugees, The Stylisitics, The Poor Righteous Teachers, Earth Wind and Fire, X-Clan, Horace Tapscott, DJ Mitsu, B-Boy Connections, Orlando Julius, Lupe Fiasco, War, The Roots, Marvin Gaye, A Tribe Called Quest, J-Rawls, Bob Marley, Jill Scott, Robin Thicke, Kev Brown, Slave, Cameo, Lakeside, The Brothers Johnson, Jerry Butler, The Impressions, Teena Marie, dead prez, Zion I, Gil-Scot Heron, The Treacherous Three, Stevie "Maf*ckin" Wonder, JT The Bigga Figga, Busy B, New Edition, The Deal, Toddy Tee, Ready For The World, Alexander O'Neal, Bootsy Collins, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Bobby Jimmy and the Critters (for all my 1580 KDAY Alumni), EPMD, T.I., Young Dro, Julie Dexter, the whole Wu-Tang family, N.W.A., Salif Keita, King Tee, Minnie Riperton, Nas, U-Roy, The Alkaholics, Oludara, Aceyalone, Peter Tosh, Medusa, Kim Hill, Tre Hardson, The Pharcyde, The whole Good Life Family, Sly and the Family Stone, Isaac Hayes, Abstract Rude, Gilberto Gil, Blackalicious, E-40, Mano Dibango, Frank and Dank, Ghostface Killah, Martin Luther, Kanye West, Bobbito the Barber, DJ Spinna, Kid Sublime, Rich Medina, Gilles Peterson, Eric Roberson, Lone Catalyst, Phat Kat, Black Milk, J-Dilla again, Pep Love, Master P, Common, U.G.K., anything from the following labels: Strata East, Souljazz, Black Jazz, Kindred Spirits, Stones Throw, Impulse, BBE, Stax Records, Shaman Works, Dopeness Galore, early Jive Records, early Tommy Boy, Enjoy Records, Hiero Imperium and the list goes on and on and on and on and on and on and it DON'T STOP.........................

Movies:

Every Clint Eastwood Spaghetti Western including the Outlaw Josie Wales, Cooley High, The Warriors, The Spook Who Sat By The Door, The Battle of Algiers, The Departed, El Postino, Star Wars, Sparkle, Love Jones, Favela Rising, City of God, Anything with Deniro, The Wood, Boyz N' The Hood, Lords of Dogtown and anything related to (snow, surf, skate) board culture.....even though I can only really snowboard:)

Television:

Can't really say because I have never been that sucked into the tube, but I ain't one of those people who doesn't own a T.V. and thinks that somehow not owning a T.V. makes me more intelligent than the next person. I just always preferred to play outside than watch television:) Oh, but I love sports and can watch damn ner' anything that involves human beings and a ball-Go Lakers-Keep Kobe Free and away from the greatest taboo in the United States:) Oh and that Wild Kingdom show sponsored by Mutual of Omaha and hosted by that old, but amazingly pleasant white dude. And finally, Kung-fu Theatre (KCOP Channel 13-LA-Holla!) where we could see all of the ill Shaw Brother joints. Ok and I loved watching Perry Mason and Bonanza-that's it:) BYE

Books:

This one is impossible, but I am always down to read anything by Robin D.G. Kelley, Che Guevara, Frank Miller, Betty Crocker, Emeril, Angela Davis, Horace Campbell, Donald Goines, Monster Cody, Derek Walcott, Toni Morrison, Frantz Fanon, Eckhart Tolle, Octavia Butler, Edwidge Danticat, Vandana Shiva, Krishnamurti, Fritjof Capra, Deepak Chopra, Mike Marquesse, Walter Rodney, Pablo Neruda, Jamaica Kincaid, Ngugi Wa Thiongo, Arundhati Roy, Ishamel Reed, Amiri Baraka, Gloria Wade Gayles, Michael Eric Dyson, KRS-ONE, Imani Perry and all of my other academic and non-academic peeps who have published books.

Heroes:

My Parents (all three of them for their example), Ordinary People with good common sense and purpose, Walter Rodney (for being a shining example of committment), Makandal (for giving the French hell in Haiti), Ella Baker (nobody compares), Tupac Shakur (for his innocence and vulnerability), Lorraine Hansberry (for being way ahead of her time), Paul Robeson (for showing us that we can be whatever we want to be), W.E.B. Du Bois (for basically being the baddest intellectual mind that the United States has ever seen-period), Afrika Bambaataa (for seeing further than most), Scot La Rock (for being a peacemaker), Robert Nesta Marley (for his discipline and vision), Queen Nzingha (for outlawing slavery and kicking the Portuguese's ass:), Gwendolyn Brooks (a model example of humility and grace), Pablo Neruda (the dopest poet to ever put a pen to the page), Kool Herc (for bringing the Dancehall to the Bronx), Cochise from Cooley High (for being so damn flyyy), my uncles Dexter and Billie (who have made hustlin' an art), Melle Mel (for changing my life in 82' with "The Message") and my cool ass aunt Rita (who let me listen to Richard Pryor when I was a kid and gave me the best birthday party of my life:)

My Blog

A radically different view

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=264...Fanon Che Wilkins learned about of the significance of his first names from a very early age. But while being named after revolutionaries Franz Fan...
Posted by Fanon Che Wilkins on Mon, 16 Jun 2008 02:25:00 PST