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The Devil & Dave Chappelle 
Published Tuesday, September 25, 2007 9:35 AM
Facebook ADD TO DEL.ICIO.US ADD TO DIGG ADD TO GOOGLE ADD TO TECHNORATI FAVORITES
By Sidik Fofana
If such thing as black urban politics exists, the bracket has surely found its most loyal correspondent. William Jelani Cobb's The Devil & Dave Chappelle & Other Essays (Thunder Mouth Press)compiles his writings on Hip Hop, the Million Man March, the Cosby Show, the Tuskegee airmen, and any other topic that perplexes the thinking black person in America. As assistant professor of history at Spellman and contributor to Essence magazine, Cobb has shaped a career out of breaking down the issues that haunt Black America. His style boils with witticisms and deft wordplay that gives the book an engaging read.

The Devil & Dave Chappelle
serves as a rare written account from a young black man's perspective. Cobb breaks down the Saturday afternoon barbershop topics with a meticulous intellectual lense. He has a whole essay on why brothers vacation in Brazil, where he digs deep to understand the sex capital's psychological allure to black men. He writes a humorous snippet about an anonymous black man touring Brazil. “He cuts short the conversation because he has a date for a menage a trois set for 10:00 pm. As he leaves, you're thinking this dude wouldn't score a menage a anything back home. But this is Rio.”

Cobb makes black beautiful all over again in this enlightening book. He archives essays on Talib Kweli, Three 6 Mafia, and Notorious B.I.G. and then puts a tie on for pieces on Octavia Butler, Colin Powell, and Barack Obama. The book's title essay attempts to justify Dave Chappelle's post Comedy Central demons. No stone goes unturned in Cobb's montage of editorials. On top of that, the essays run about three to five pages on average which should ease some readers' anxiety.

The Devil & Dave Chappelle solidifies Cobb's reputation as a Hip-Hop desperado. If any particular issue festers within the black community, this young PhD will place it under the microscope. His “Past Imperfect” column runs on AOL Black Voices and he frequently contributes to seeingblack.com. Now that this book has generated a significant buzz, he might even secure that Hip-Hop documentary token interviewee position. 

Comments

 

MAK™ said:

The title alone had me rollin' lol

http://myspace.com/crackproductions

-mak-
September 25, 2007 10:00 AM
 

PHILTHMOOR said:

cant wait 2 get it.....
September 25, 2007 1:12 PM
 

tha clear said:

Did Dave cosign this???
September 25, 2007 1:58 PM
 

KillaRell said:

nice, I'm going to pick this one up
September 25, 2007 4:17 PM
 

D.T. said:

"No time to surf the web? On Sept. 26, let Global Grind bring the web to you all on one page. Put your favorite blogs, social network, news sites, video feeds, photos and any RSS feed on one customizable page. Your comments, ratings and usage patterns guide the editorial focus each time you visit the site. The more you use the site the better it becomes at recommending content to you. Global Grind is Your Web Filtered Fresh.
http://www.globalgrind.com
Launching Sept 26 "
September 25, 2007 5:28 PM
 

draenonymous? said:

Will mos def be coppin this one.
September 25, 2007 5:30 PM
 

cantfademe1 said:

www.cantfademe.com " the hood version of myspace "

i will check the shit out..


http://www.cantfademe.com
Hook your damn page up...
October 23, 2007 11:50 AM
 

LadyKay said:

oh this sounds good, def gonna check it out!
October 23, 2007 1:35 PM
 

Crippled Seedz said:

Crippled Seedz
Straight Jack It! Volume 1: Raw & Unmixed
Permanent Ink Entertainment
http://www.MySpace.com/CrippledSeed
October 23, 2007 3:57 PM
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