- Arizona Watch |
- Arts & Entertainment |
- Economy |
- Education |
- Elders |
- Environment |
- Ethnic Media Headlines |
- Ethnic Media Network |
- Ethnic Media in the News |
- Eye on Egypt |
- Gender & Sexuality |
- Health |
- Immigration |
- International Affairs |
- Latin America |
- Law & Justice |
- Media |
- NAM en Español |
- New America Now |
- Original NAM Content |
- Politics & Governance |
- Race |
- Race Relations |
- Religion |
- Science & Technology |
- Sports |
- Stimulus Watch |
- Veterans |
- War & Conflict |
- Youth Culture |
- Audio |
- Photo Galleries |
- Video |
- All Stories
Aiyana Stanley-Jones’ Death Sparks Conflict over Detroit 1-8-7
Controversy about the show has swirled in the wake of the May 16 killing of 7-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones by Detroit police. They shot her in the head after throwing an incendiary grenade into her home, as TV cameras from A&E’s The First 48 were rolling.
Mayor Dave Bing afterwards barred reality shows from trailing police, but his chief communications officer Karen Dumas says he is working with Detroit 1-8-7 producers.
“We met with the production staff of Detroit 1-8-7, who expressed their interest and willingness to work cooperatively,” Dumas said. “They removed their initial trailer, which some saw as negative. [While] any film production requires permitting (granted by the city) for access to city locations, street closures and any resources required for those things, them doing the show in general does not require our approval. They were committed to doing the show anyway, and we thought it best to work with them to insure a mutually beneficial outcome.”
The revised trailer on the show’s website says, “Welcome to Detroit, home of the auto industry, Motown Records and the finest homicide detectives in the country. These are detectives that are protecting this city any way they can. Every victim deserves justice, every cop has their methods, every crime has a story, but here in this city it takes more than just a badge; it takes being a champion.”
It features actors’ lines including, “I love this city; I’ve been a cop in this city so long, when I started, half the suspects was white,” and “Since the homicide rate went up, we’ve had to add columns, we’ve sort of hit capacity.”
Edward Greene, 24, of Detroit, is an actor and producer with his own Detroit-based company, New Life Entertainment. He said he has been acting for five years, after African-American actors Morris Chestnut and Blair Underwood selected him for training in a special project.
He was interviewed after he testified at a City Council discussion on the show July 27.
“My company is taking a negative and turning it into a positive, like a baby being born,” Greene said. “We want to put the right things in our children’s lives. We need shows that put Detroit in a more positive light, and also lead to the establishment of in-house production companies. Detroit 1-8-7 is painting a negative picture of our city.”
Although invited, the show’s producers did not come to the council discussion. Instead, a team from the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA), led by the union’s Los Angeles-based national representative Joe Barnes, addressed the council. They introduced Detroit-born DeVaughn Lucas, who has a part on the show, but did not respond to a question by Detroiter Sandra Hines regarding whether any Detroit natives have leading roles.
Barnes said the show The Wire brought substantial revenue to the city of Baltimore, and that the show has committed to 1,055 hotel room nights worth $48,300 in Detroit.
“This will be a great opportunity for Detroit, where there is a lot of talent,” Barnes said.
Council member Andre Spivey countered, “Baltimore is still reeling from the negative effects of The Wire.” In interviews published in The Detroit Free Press, the show’s stars Michael Imperioli, who plays a detective, and Erin Cummins, who plays a medical examiner who is also a roller derby star at night, said they are staying in hotels and frequenting restaurants in Birmingham and Royal Oak. The show’s film studio is in Highland Park.
The Free Press also reported the show has been filming in Detroit since July 20.
Kenyatta asked, “When did we approve this? We didn’t approve anything. What streets are being closed? What police officers are being used?”
Kenyatta requested the Council’s Research and Analysis Division to compose a resolution opposing the filming of the show in Detroit. Council members Kenneth Cockrel Jr. and Saunteel Jenkins were averse to the idea. Cockrel Jr. said he will wait to pass judgment until the show airs.
Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano, who welcomed Cummins to the county medical examiner’s office July 22 for hands-on “training,” said in published remarks, “Landing a television series here is another big step as we diversify our economy.” He said the show will create “dozens” of jobs and work for extras in the county.
Michigan provides the most lucrative tax breaks for film and TV producers of any state in the country, according to a report from the California-based Milken Institute.
Detroit-based journalist Diane Bukowski wrote regularly for the Michigan Citizen for the past decade. She can be reached at diane_bukowski@hotmail.com.
Posted Aug 27 2010
The police statement said Chief Warren Evans is out of town and could not be present "to personally address this tragedy," but "his thoughts and prayers are with the family and loved ones of Aiyana Jones."
Aiyana Jones
Buried in a history of bones
Murdered by the cops the protectors of our souls
Aha!
I suppose
These criminals killed a innocent little girl in her own home!
But it's cool because all they had to do was apologize
Why are they the ones who get away with telling us lies?
But when we lie we get felonies
I feel like an enemy in my own country
They say that they threw in tear gas and flash bangs
Well that baby was sleep
did it look like she had fangs?
And all they do is say that this man
This chief
Is on vacation chilling with grief
But he probably hasn't lost much sleep
And if he did
let us see the bags underneath
his eyes
Let us see those dried tears because this girls family is still crying
Can you imagine what it feels like to watch your child dying?
A child
Aiyana Jones
Buried in a history of thrones
Ancient kingdoms
as glorious as ancient Rome
Missing the gold domes
but filled with wisdom and pride
the time before raw hide
ripped off the sides
of the daughters of miles and miles
of fertile lands where the golden sun hangs high
Where her butter soft chocolate skin
shined
felt the breeze of the soft and gentle winds
Where her ears perked up and listened to
the calls of the wild
In a place she was considered an innocent child.
Aiyana Jones
Murdered in her own home
Born into a ghetto
As Detroit is commonly known
It ain't shit quite like
Being home grown
because you get cultivated and cultured
In this field of poverty
And the field she was born in is also a part of me
A part of us, because trust
If it was your little brother or sister
your daughter or your son
there would be no difference
The outcome would still be a white one
And i chose white because light is always associated with what's right
And dark is always associated with what's plight and vice
Associated with black people, criminals, and witches
Forgotten about
Because ebony wood once brought riches
Aiyana Jones
A little girl unknown
Forgotten about by the killers of her soul
Inexistant until her life came up missing
So now the feds wanna stop dissing
People are you listening?
Hear me out
This is serious
It's about the death of a young girl
The death of a people
The reincarnation of deceitful
ness
But in these lies her spirit still lives
In our lives her worth still thrives
And we gotta fight for her
so other little black girls won't fall down by the wayside
Aiyana Jones
A victim of her own
A victim of events irrelevant to her
Encompassed by events that didn't even circulate around her
But now the world revolves around her
And it's looking like a downward spiral
Because if actions like these continue it will really be viral
She was the victim of decades and decades
Of violent cascades
Of her people being murdered by their own brothers
And to make it even worse getting killed by others
She was just a standby
In the middle of an imaginary gunfight
Between the police and her people
Both victims of this evil
Because now they kill each other for reasons unreasonable
If only we were peaceable then this death could have been avoided
If the murderer in her house had not committed murder
If the police would have not committed murder
Then there would probably be another
murder
Somewhere else
And this could all be avoided if these guns were left on their belts
Violence is not the way
It declines everybody's health.
Aiyana Jones
A victim of the lack of wealth
A victim of her society
A poor little black child who's dreams melted
In the heat/furnace of reality
Murdered by her protectors
And all any one has to say is
“The city has really had a bad breath of air blowing on us lately, and I’m just hoping we can get over this.”
Tre'von Lyle
http://www.facebook.com/notes.php?id=1104626748#!/trevon.jamar
Disclaimer: Comments do not necessarily reflect the views of New America Media. NAM reserves the right to edit or delete comments. Once published, comments are visible to search engines and will remain in their archives. If you do not want your identity connected to comments on this site, please refrain from commenting or use a handle or alias instead of your real name.
Related Articles
Activists Take Wait-and-See Attitude About New Orleans Police Report
Justice advocates in New Orleans are welcoming the pledge to clean up that city’s police…
What Wisconsin Means for America's Unions
In the last few weeks, Wisconsin has started to resemble the Middle East and the…
The Law of The Gun: Vigilante in Mexico
The video of an execution of two carjackers by Juarez police has many citizens cheering.…
Egyptian Protesters Say Tunisia Is the Solution
Thousands of Egyptians defied their government to join protests Tuesday. Police fired teargas and attacked…
King's Southern Christian Leadership Group Back on Track After Scandal
ATLANTA—As the nation commemorates the birth of civil rights icon Rev. Martin Luther King, the…
Loughner: Where Does Sanity End and Madness Begin?
After Jared Lee Loughner’s horrid attack on a U.S. Congresswoman, a judge, and several bystanders,…
Most Popular
- Letter from Fukushima: A Vietnamese-Japanese Police Officer’s Account
- SB 1070 Casts Shadow on Arizona’s New Anti-Immigrant Bills
- Eye On Arab Media: Pundits Critical of Military Intervention in Libya
- Two Trials and an Anniversary—Bonds, Bailey and Mixon
- The Revolution of My Egyptian Homeland and San Jose Family
- Al Jazeera Chief Lauds New Media
Most Viewed
- Letter from Fukushima: A Vietnamese-Japanese Police Officer’s Account
- One Year Later: The Health Effects of the BP Oil Spill
- More Korean Kids Ending Up in Foster Care
- California DREAM Act Passes First Hurdle in State Legislature
- UCLA Student Says Sorry for “Asians in the Library” YouTube Rant
- Abused and Deported: Immigrant Women Face Double Disgrace

Comments