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There have been many 70s cartoons, 80s cartoons, 90s cartoons and present day cartoons with African American cartoon characters. But very few have had the main character(s) be African American. Here are the best Black cartoons from the 70s,80s, and 90s and today.
This cartoon brought the energy of the “House Party” movies and Kid And Play music for a short lived TV show.
Besides being flamboyant trick-heavy basketball players, the Globetrotters also saved the world from evil villains too. Who knew?
Besides being a wrestler and an actor Mr. T was also a gymnastics coach who used his students to stop villains and their evil plots.
Eddie Murphy made this cartoon (claymation really) one of the funniest and most underrated Black cartoons despite the stereotypes.
Blokhedz is a dope cartoon by the Madtwinz. Originally a comic book, the show never aired on TV but garnered a large following online and through its comic books and action figures. The show combined hip hop, science fiction, and comic books to create a dope cartoon.
Static was a young brother with electric powers and the same social issues that most of us dealt with going to high school.
The Proud Family had excellent voice acting and was funny for all ages.
Great music, funny likeable cartoons made for a great Saturday morning cartoon show.
Not exactly a kids’ cartoon, but had excellent animation, voice work and satire making it one of the best Black cartoons ever.
With Bill Cosby’s great voices, funny characters and good, positive storylines, Fat Albert is the best Black cartoon of all time.
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David Pilgrim Ferris State University
 
“All these millions, and I mean literally millions, of objects were integral to maintaining Jim Crow.”
“Nigger Milk,” a 1916 magazine advertisement that Pilgrim bought in 1988 Courtesy of David Pilgrim/PM Press
An early 1900s game that depicted an African American as a target Courtesy of David Pilgrim/PM Press
“President Obama has been an industry for racist objects.”
A 1940s creamer or pitcher from Pilgrim’s collection Courtesy of David Pilgrim/PM Press
 
1950s fishing lure Courtesy of David Pilgrim/PM Press
A ceramic figure from the 1950s Courtesy of David Pilgrim/PM Press
Pilgrim writes that historian Henry Louis Gates Jr. found this the most disturbing image in the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia. It is from an unknown book. Courtesy of David Pilgrim/PM Press
Early 1900s postcard Courtesy of David Pilgrim/PM Press
“Be-Bop the Jivin Jigger” toy Courtesy of David Pilgrim/PM Press
1950s bar set Courtesy of David Pilgrim/PM Press
DAVID PILGRIM bought his first piece of racist memorabilia in the early 1970s, when he was a youngster in Mobile, Alabama. It was a set of salt and pepper shakers meant to caricature African Americans. “I purchased it and broke it” on purpose, recalls Pilgrim, who is black. Yet over the next few decades, he amassed a sizable collection of what he calls “contemptible collectibles”—once-common household objects and products that mock and stereotype black people.
In 1996, Pilgrim transformed his 3,200-item collection into the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia at Michigan’s Ferris State University, where he teaches sociology. He presents a selection of these appalling objects and images in his new book, Understanding Jim Crow: Using Racist Memorabilia to Teach Tolerance and Promote Social Justice . As the title implies, the book isn’t merely an exercise in shock value. It lays out the philosophy behind Pilgrim’s work as a scholar and an activist: that only by acknowledging these artifacts and their persistence in American culture can we honestly confront our not-so-distant past.
Mother Jones: What made you decide to turn your collection into a museum?
David Pilgrim: When I got to Michigan, someone mentioned that they knew this elderly black woman who was an antiques dealer. After many months, she agreed to let me see her personal collection. It was just objects floor to ceiling in a barnlike structure. I was overwhelmed by the sheer volume. It shook me! I thought I’d seen everything. What she had was a testimony to—this is going to sound weird—not just the creativity of racism, but the diversity in it. I remember that day thinking that I wanted to do what she’d done, but in a different way.
MJ: How popular were these collectibles?
DP: They were everyday objects in a lot of people’s homes, including African Americans’. [The antiques collector] had postcards, posters. She had records, 78s. She had ashtrays. She had a racist bell. I think she had the game called Chopped Up Niggers —it’s a puzzle. She told me that she hadn’t paid very much for many of those pieces because at the time people were throwing stuff away. Some people were ashamed.
MJ: Why own them in the first place?
DP: These toys, games, sheet music about “coons” and “darkies”—all these millions, and I mean literally millions, of objects—were integral to maintaining Jim Crow. Jim Crow could not work without violence, real violence, but also the threat of violence and the depiction of violence. There are a number of games in the museum where you throw things at black people : “hit the nigger” or “hit the Negro” games. If you had such a game, you were actually creating safe spaces to do that.
MJ: Do you also keep track of racist images and memorabilia online?
DP: Absolutely. With the power of the internet and social media, one person can do the damage that in the old days it took many to do. When you have a race-based incident—and I make it my business to look—within one week there are material objects that reflect that incident in a racist way: lunch boxes, posters, puzzles, T-shirts, pillows. President Obama has been an industry for racist objects . He has been portrayed as a witch doctor, a Rastus character from Cream of Wheat, as a Sambo, as an Uncle Tom—and also as gay, as transgender, as communist, as socialist, as a terrorist, as a Muslim. [Many of the] images that appear online are old. The images from the old “coon” songs from the late 1800s and early 1900s show up in memes, and people don’t realize they’re older images.
MJ: What sort of people collect this stuff?
DP: There are some who want to educate. I’ve met collectors who collect to destroy the pieces. But by far the biggest segment are speculators who know that a McCoy cookie jar was $3 and you can get several hundred dollars for it now.
MJ: Do you see a role for your collection in today’s movement for racial equality?
DP: One of the questions I get often is why we’re still having these conversations. And my answer is: The objects are still being made, they’re still being sold and distributed. There’s not an image in the museum that’s not being reproduced in some way. Secondly, the reason we still have these discussions is because race still matters. But Americans don’t often talk about it in places where their ideas are challenged. We want our museum to be safe but uncomfortable.
MJ: I found myself hiding your book from my kids. At what age do you think it’s okay to expose children to this stuff?
DP: I believe that young people—8, 9, 10—should have discussions appropriate to their age about race. But no one under 12 can come into the museum by themselves, and we discourage parents from bringing them. Right in the center of the room is a lynching tree. Even though it’s contextualized, it can be a house of horrors.
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142 Of The Funniest New Yorker Cartoons Ever
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When it comes to great cartoons, few publications can match The New Yorker. The famous American magazine, now in its 92nd year, is well-known for showcasing the funniest, the cleverest, the most satirical, and the most poignant illustrations about life, death, and everything in-between. Take a look below for a collection of some of our favorites. The list includes some of the funniest cartoons about everything from work, pets, and politics, to love, loss, and relationships. The list is diverse but they all have one thing in common: they're guaranteed to make you laugh. Don't forget to vote for your favorite!
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Melt in your mouth... not in your hands!
I'd be happy if my dog would just learn to rub my belly instead of the other way around! lol
and close the door before he can pass through
If you can’t say something good about someone, sit here by me. :)
or he do like Jim Carrey and he aggred them all
Yes, if you don't mind having no arms....
Sometimes you feel like a nut . . .
It happens all the time. May just want to see how are you today.
either that, or "she" went too far with the plastic surgery
Not nothing, you probably lived at least a thirty seconds longer.
@ Carly Botting such a muggle thing to say (i’m kidding please don’t downvote me into the depths of hell
You CAN think outside the box...Just don't SH!T outside the box.
It's definitely a LazyBoy recliner. IKEA chairs only take half the effort.
This was amazing... animals are the best therapy...
Thank gawd for ppl who are JUST animal persons! Be it dog, cat or ferret!
I always say it like this. "My online avatar is a cartoon. Therefore it can look anyway I choose it to be." :P cartoons can do anything!
so Freaking true its ironic.. we came all this way for being mire trapped than free
Well at least she's honest about it :D
[ppl who just want to go home, to their cat and jammies]
Well...you can learn a lot from your kids. I know I have.
or get it in Chinese and join the club
why are all the brilliant ones so down in the list?
It's getting so boring here now that email has replaced the mail man.
And 57% of statistics are made up on the spot! :D
Why don't we do that anymore? Sounds better to sacrifice them instead of listening to them ...
After you drink that arsenic coffee, it won't much matter...
how your vacation feels over as soon as it starts....
hehehehe... some ol timey letters of famous people had some kinky requests
Sometimes big Pharma doesn't care how harmful a medication can be as long as it tastes good so people will buy it. It's all about money.
:'( this must have been last month when Kenny baker died
LOL Every guy needs to do this! Also for fries....
So the other guy doesn't need them?
Is this Ted Mosby? (How i met your mother) he sound just like him
This is me after having gone 5 days without shaving and still not being able to find time to
As in the guys who did the friends theme?
Job's taken: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Canuck
Not me. It works. Got stuck in fight or flight mode (look it up, it can happen) for a couple weeks from messing up meds. Kept doing the Paleo diet to convince brain I was okay. It eventually worked.
Step on it, Sammy - we're missing the fight!
Can't be fast enough for the human race.
Something tells me his wife hung the picture over the bed
All having to do with Russian collusion.
Slow day at the drawing board yet still perfect!
NO...No it isn't possible. Ha Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ......
Hah. That'll be the day. How about the new improved human. Cats are fine just as they are. They hold their own and don't take more than they need. And they know how to appreciate.
seriously though its getting a little ridiculous
Stayin' Alive: the eternal punishment of Sisyphus
Lol I like to add funny things to the shopping list with my dad's Alexa lol my dirty freakin mind
Your nose hair? Morning breath that lasts all day? Penchant for ladie's undergarments?
Press all these buttons and figure it out for yourself. Customer service is here to serve you.
That's me. Boomer here. I can't keep up with it all.
They are helping me clench my fist tighter. Want to see?
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Thanks for the giggles. I believe the New Yorker will be around another 90 years as long as people keep reading.
Thanks for the giggles. I believe the New Yorker will be around another 90 years as long as people keep reading.
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