Who Gets to Tell a Black Story?
December 17, 2007 10:02 PM Subscribe
Prior to his critically acclaimed program The Wire, creator Edward Burns wrote the HBO miniseries The Corner, which also focused on the drug trade in Baltimore. Charles S. Dutton, an African-American Baltimore native and former convict probably best known to most as TV's "Roc," was chosen to direct the miniseries. Who Gets To Tell a Black Story?, part of a Pulitzer-prize winning NYT series on race in America, examines Dutton's take on how to make a TV program which portrays a mostly African-American cast of characters, the struggles and differing perspectives of Dutton and Burns, and how race is portrayed in Hollywood.
The Wire junkies looking for a pre-season five re-up may be able to stomp some life out of the following package of previous MeFi links, which everybody already posted while I was trying to craft an awesome, meticulous post about The Wire:
HBO prequel videos, an outstanding
profile of Burns from the New Yorker,
the marriage of the real-life people who formed the basis of The Wire's Omar and The Corner's Fran (this article itself is mentioned towards the end of the Burns profile), an
examination of the legal principles in Burns's book Homicide, an
interview with the actress who plays Snoop.
posted by whir (24 comments total)
20 users marked this as a favorite
True Story: I grew up in Baltimore and Ed Burns drove me to school about 3 times a week when I was a kid. Very incredibly bizarre that he is now one of the creators of my favorite show.
posted by dhammond at 10:11 PM on December 17, 2007 [1 favorite]