She wasn't as nice to look at. :)

On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 11:23 AM, Keith Johnson
<keithbjohn...@comcast.net>wrote:

>
>
> Good point!
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Kelwyn" <ravena...@yahoo.com>
> To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Wednesday, March 31, 2010 1:55:41 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
> Subject: [scifinoir2] Re: OT: Singer Erykah Badu Strips Naked at JFK
> Assassination Site
>
>
>
> Alanis Morissette says "Thank you."
>
> ~rave!
>
> --- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com <scifinoir2%40yahoogroups.com>, Keith
> Johnson <keithbjohn...@...> wrote:
> >
> > Okay, I guess this is what you call really committing to your art? I do
> think it's...questionable....having the shot fired at the same spot
> basically where JFK was killed.
> >
> > video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jF-AKFAtQQ8
> >
> > ******************************************************
> >
> http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jackson-williams/singer-erykah-badu-strips_b_517862.html
> >
> > Singer Erykah Badu Strips Naked at JFK Assassination Site
> >
> >
> >
> > Erykah Badu has posted a provocative new video on her website to
> accompany the song "Window Seat." Currently #28 on Billboard's R&B/hip-hop
> chart, the song appears on the album New Amerykah Part Two: Return of the
> Ankh .
> >
> > In the video, Badu walks around Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas, her
> hometown and site of the November, 1963 shooting of President John F.
> Kennedy. Apparently filmed on St. Patrick's Day, onlookers watch as she
> slowly removes articles of clothing until a single shot rings out. Badu then
> falls down naked in the street, near the approximate spot where the
> presidential motorcade was passing by on that fateful day.
> >
> > It's an interesting piece of performance art. Gutsy, to say the least,
> and lucky, too, in that no cops showed up.
> >
> > UPDATE: The Dallas Morning News reports that city officials say Badu
> broke the law by not securing a permit for the filming. The paper quotes
> from her Twitter account, where she feeds that she was making a statement
> against "groupthink," the "unwritten rule" that "i will not express my true
> opinion if it opposes those i love and fear." She adds: "i was petrified
> while shooting this video ... but liberation began to set in. i conquered
> many fears in that few moments." She said she was "too busy lookin for cops"
> to be embarrassed by her nudity. "i been naked all along in my words actions
> and deeds. thats the real vulnerable place."
> >
> > She said she knew there were children nearby as she was stripping, and
> added, "i prayed they wouldnt b traumatized."
> >
> > She also said that adults nearby were yelling at her, "THIS IS A PUBLIC
> PLACE : YOU OUGHTA BE ASHAMED : PUT YOUR CLOTHES ON : DAMN GIRL! etc."
> >
> > UPDATE #2: Badu has now given an interview to her local daily.
> Highlights:
> >
> > Q: To start, what can you tell me about the thought process behind the
> video for "Window Seat"?
> >
> > EB: The song "Window Seat" is about liberating yourself from layers and
> layers of skin or demons that are a hindrance to your growth or freedom, or
> evolution. I wanted to do something that said just that, so I started to
> think about shedding, nudity, taking things off in a very artful way. I am
> from the theater, and this is just a part of expression to us, a part of
> art. And I saw a video by a group called Matt and Kim, and it was filmed in
> Times Square. And I thought it was the bravest, most liberating thing I've
> ever seen two people do. And I wanted to dedicate this contagious act of
> liberation and freedom to them. I hoped it would become something contagious
> that people would want to do in some way or another.
> >
> > Q: And what was the thinking on the location and the Kennedy element to
> it?
> >
> > A: Times Square is the most monumental place in New York, and when I was
> thinking of monumental places, the grassy knoll was the most monumental
> place in Dallas I could think of. I tied it in a way that compared that
> assassination to the character assassination one would go through after
> showing his or her self completely. That's exactly the action that I wanted
> to display.
> >
> > Q: And I take it you knew that there would be a similar real-life
> reaction when the video was released?
> >
> > A: Yeah. I knew that would happen, so as soon as the thought came to my
> mind, I decided to assassinate myself as a gesture. Because it was going to
> happen anyway. The video is a prediction of what is happening now.
> >
>
>
>
> 
>



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