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Torn Between Colors

Paper Tiger Television

1990 00:22:57 United StatesEnglishColorMono4:3Video

Description

Using Paper Tiger's unique style of direct address and deconstruction, teenagers from the Bronx ask questions and try to understand the persistence of racial violence in the 1990s. Black and Latino students give a sharp and insightful comparative analysis of the newspaper coverage of two events that were especially traumatic for their community: the January 1990 murder of Yusuf Hawkins by a mob of 30 whites in Bensonhurst, and the Central Park "gang rape" of a white woman by a group of black youth. This analysis, along with expert interviews, illustrates why racism still exists, why it continues to be misunderstood, and how racial violence began in the United States. Street demonstrations and interviews with students show their angry about racial violence and media coverage of their peers—often portraying them as "animals" or "wolf-packs." Youth polls suggest some solutions to the violent cycle: education, understanding, increasing of adults' awareness, and jobs instead of jails. This frank and clear discussion of emotionally-charged topics provides another example of how access to information leads to increased understanding, and of youth who care enough to contribute to the fight for harmony.

Paper Tiger Television (PTTV) is an open, non-profit, volunteer video collective that began in 1981. Through the production and distribution of their public access series, media literacy/video production workshops, community screenings and grassroots advocacy, PTTV works to challenge and expose the corporate control of mainstream media. PTTV believes that increasing public awareness of the negative influence of mass media and involving people in the process of making media is mandatory for the long term goal of information equity.