Arts & Culture

‘Little Known Black History Facts’ Talks Outside the Family. So What?

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'Little Known Black History Facts' Talks Outside the Family. So What?

If you don’t know what a lacefront is, says Tracy Clayton, get familiar, “if for no other reason than to increase your daily laugh quotient by roughly 22 percent. If something ridiculous is happening, chances are that there’s a lacefront not far away.”

Clayton, a writer and humorist from Louisville, Kentucky, is the woman behind Little Known Black History Facts, a hashtag-among-friends turned Tumblr that’s sprung to life every February since 2008. And while Clayton produces both razor-sharp social commentary and straight-up absurdism at various portals across the internet, LKBHF gets the most clicks — and hate mail — by far. 

It makes sense. After all, it’s the only site on the Internet celebrating such milestones as the first person to use the phrase “I will cut you” in an argument, and the first man to dance on stage after being declared “not the father” on the Maury show, and the first person to refer to a flavor of Kool-Aid as “red.

“Lots of them come from my own life and childhood,” says Clayton. “I’ve absolutely put batteries in the freezer to make them last longer… My grandmother will tell you in a heartbeat that she don’t have to do shit but stay black and die. I can name for you, right now, 10 different women who won’t go swimming because they don’t want to get their hair wet.

“The problem is that when we laugh about these things in the public eye, we fear that we’re giving everyone watching permission to laugh at them, too.”

Clayton honed her voice at the small private college she attended, a school she says had “three percent diversity, counting redheads and left-handed people.” 

An English major with a minor in Women’s Studies, Clayton also had a semi-regular gig at the school paper, which she mostly used when something pissed her off. And while she values that experience today, she’s selective about what gets her energy: “It’s easier to attack things like [the n-word] because they’re more accessible. It’s easier to say, ‘hey, stop using this word’ than it is to comb back through history and look at why the word exists. It’s a lot easier to treat the symptoms than the disease.”

“As far as teaching the history of marginalized groups, I’d opt for integrating those histories (black history, gay history, women’s history, etc.) into the alabaster world of American history. Normalize them so that they don’t need special months anymore. … The intent [of LKBHF] wasn’t to lampoon Black History Month, but when I think about it, I feel like these goofy facts serve the plight of black folk just as well as the watered-down black history menu we get served every year does — refried ‘I Have A Dream’ speech topped with pureed ‘slavery is bad’ with a side of ‘Rosa Parks was really tired one day.’

“If I heard someone else say that, my response would be, ‘but if you’re displeased with Black History Month, why not do something to make it better?’ My answer to that question: I don’t want to, and I don’t have to. One of the most important freedoms we (should) have is autonomy, and it’s not in my job description as a black woman to never laugh about my history.”

The usual defense of ‘edgy’ humor is to volley it back: if you laugh, you’ve got perspective, but anyone protesting too much at a joke must be fighting some secret shameful thoughts. 

Bigotry, however, isn’t objectively absurd just yet. And the same qualities that make comedy an effective social justice tool have also made it a great way to plant stereotypes, to dehumanize, and to indoctrinate. And while the heyday of Al Jolson is behind us, there’s still a demand for catchy one-dimensional portrayals of black society — especially if they’re being said by black people. 

Chris Rock’s career-defining 1996 “I love black people, but I hate n—-rs” routine has long been treasured by white people who also hate ‘n—-rs,’ seeking legitimacy and hipness. Bill Cosby’s criticisms of slang and single-parent households can’t even keep up with white populist demand; he’s had to denounce multiple racist chain emails written in his name. And in 2004, Dave Chappelle walked away from his own show, citing among his reasons a fear that his racially charged satirical sketches had become “socially irresponsible.”

“Marginalized comics lose even more control over who is allowed, who has permission to laugh at potentially inflammatory material,” says Clayton. “It’s common to feel pressure to represent the whole of your group or groups — darn that double-triple-quadruple consciousness — and that’s a heavy weight to have to lug around while trying to be creative.

“Today, I think the effort that we put into behaving in front of white people would be far better served elsewhere. … Anyone who’d use this site as ammunition or confirmation of their bigoted beliefs will think that whether this site exists or not. Being able to be myself and laugh when and where I want to is worth running that risk.”

As the medium has changed, so has the dynamic between audience and entertainer. While the Internet has lowered the barriers of access — Clayton’s able to be funny without a studio exec’s signoff, and has fans all across the world — it’s also complicated issues of anonymity and identity. Clayton, a private person by nature, only recently attached a photo of herself to the site, and only then because “nearly every complaining email I got regarding Little Known Black History Facts referred to me as male, and many of them also assumed that I was white. That really annoys me, because the implication, as I read it, is that women aren’t funny, so a funny faceless person just has to be male.

“You can’t control who will respond or how they will do it. Expect that backlash from your own people is a definite possibility, throw it out there and hope it lands in a safe place. And be equipped, ready, and willing to step in and fiercely defend yourself and your art when someone steps out of line, whoever they may be.”

Not that Clayton’s never stepped out of line herself. She becomes serious when I ask her about how she feels now about her jokes from a few years ago about 50 Tyson, a teenage rapper whose home videos went viral on YouTube. Clayton stopped making jokes when she discovered in an interview that he has autism — the rest of the Internet hasn’t been as gracious — and then became a fully vested fan upon reading about his advocacy work to change public perceptions of people with autism.

“I’m human,” says Clayton. “I was talking to my best friend about the interview the other day, and we were talking about 50 Tyson and the evolution of our response to him. Both he and I reacted the same way; first humor, then admiration. And I told him, ‘you know, as awesome as you and I are, we’re still products of the same machine that everyone else is. Realizing and then unpacking our own privileges is hard for everybody, and we’re not an exception. But it is possible.’”

Reading through LKBHF and the rest of Clayton’s comedy, I’ve found myself, a white dude, reacting to each joke in one of a few ways. Half the time I spent giggling, or seeing something that my own family does (I thought the freezer-battery thing was legit!). And the other half of the time, I’d have to look up a word or a reference to get a joke, or I’d get the joke and wouldn’t feel comfortable laughing at it. The latter two reactions intrigued me. Part of white male privilege is being the intended audience for just about everything; it’s rare that we have to be invited anywhere, since we’re assumed to have been there already. So, if someone puts a joke on the Internet that I don’t get or don’t think I have the right to laugh at, it means someone’s doing good work to upset the status quo.

“That’s kind of what the Little Known Black History Facts blog is founded on,” says Clayton. “The material there comes from the collective history and consciousness of a people who, generally speaking, have shared the same highs and lows, people who have had to laugh to keep from crying, people who have had to learn to look back on tough times and bitter pills and smile. After so many centuries of trying to prove to white people that we can be what they thought we can’t, it feels great, to me, to try and shake loose that skin and let my own get some sun.”

Today’s Love: Children With Swag Tumblr Might Make Your Eyes Water

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Today's Love: Children With Swag Tumblr Might Make Your Eyes Water

Style blogs are wildly popular these days. There’s the “Sartorialist,” Bill Cunningham’s “On the Street” and now there’s “Children with Swag.”

Check out some of the miniature street style below and visit Childrenwithswag.tumblr.com for more.


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We’re ending the day as often as possible by celebrating love. We welcome your ideas for posts. Send suggestions to submissions@colorlines.com, and be sure to put Celebrate Love in the subject line. You can send links to videos, graphics, photos, quotes, whatever. Or just chime in to the comments below and we’ll find you. Be sure to let us know you’ve got the rights to share any media you send.

To see other Love posts visit our Celebrate Love page.

Victor Cruz, NFL’s New Great Latino Hope, Sports Sombrero at Media Day [Photo]

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Victor Cruz, NFL's New Great Latino Hope, Sports Sombrero at Media Day [Photo]

New York Giants wide receiver Victor Cruz wore a sombrero during Media Day ahead of Super Bowl XLVI.

“If he wins the Super Bowl, he’s going to have the best of two worlds: the English-speaking culture and a Spanish-speaking culture,” Daniel Vinas, an associate producer with Univision in Miami, told Yahoo! Sports. “It’s going to be unbelievable. We’ve had some Hispanic players who have done great things in the NFL … but the whole crossover appeal that Victor will have? It’s going to be unreal.”

I don’t know if it was Cruz that decided to put that sombrero on but who
ever came up with that brilliant idea to show his ‘crossover appeal’ should Wikipedia ‘sombreros
because they come from Mexico. Cruz is of African-American and Puerto Rican descent

Pay Attention! Ethnic Studies #WishiLearnedinHS Curriculum Hits Twitter

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Pay Attention! Ethnic Studies #WishiLearnedinHS Curriculum Hits Twitter

FAAN Mail, a media literacy/media activism project formed by women of color, have created the hashtag #WishiLearnedinHS to call attention to the Ethnic Studies ban in Arizona.

FAAN Mail explains why they started the hashtag:

This hash-tag has been created in response to the Ethnic Studies ban in Arizona. It is designed to bring attention to the cultural gaps in our education; the gaps that widen as governments and school districts privilege some histories, while silencing other cultures and points of view. Over the next 5 days, beginning February 1, we ask that you Tweet, Facebook, or blog what you wished you learned in high school, in response to the below question: What do you wish you learned in high school as it relates to various cultural identities, histories, and perspectives?

Sometimes Even The President Needs a Hug [Slideshow]

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Sometimes Even The President Needs a Hug [Slideshow]

Only 46% of Americans approve of the job Obama is doing as President but chances are a lot more people approve of the image above.

The photo above of President Obama holding three-year-old Arianna Holmes was released by the White House yesterday. Her mom works as a Special Assistant in the
International Economic Affairs office of the National Security Staff.

The image inspired the slideshow below. Captions come from the White House.

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July 5, 2011 – President Barack Obama gets a hug from a little girl as he greets Wounded Warriors and their families in the State Dining Room of the White House. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

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Sept. 5, 2011 – President Barack Obama hugs a woman in the crowd after addressing the Labor Day celebration in Detroit, Mich. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

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May 23, 2011 – President Barack Obama embraces Liz Sherwood-Randall, Senior Director for European Affairs, at College Green in Dublin, Ireland. Sherwood-Randall was blown over by strong winds earlier in the day and injured her wrist. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

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This one isn’t exactly a hug photo but just read the caption… it might as well just be a hug.

May 8, 2009 – President Barack Obama bends over so the son of a White House staff member can pat his head during a family visit to the Oval Office. The youngster wanted to see if the President’s haircut felt like his own. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

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Jan. 25, 2010 – President Barack Obama hugs retiring White House butler James Ramsey, as First Lady Michelle Obama looks on, in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

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June 15, 2011 – “Call him the baby soother. At the Congressional picnic on the South Lawn, the First Lady held a young baby who began crying (top photo). The President then came over to hold the same baby and was able to quiet her down as the First Lady reacted in astonishment in the background of the bottom photo.”
(Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

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May 19, 2009 – “The President was leaving the State Floor after an event and found Sasha in the elevator ready to head upstairs to the private residence. He decided to ride upstairs with her before returning to the Oval Office.”
(Official White House photo by Pete Souza)

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Sept. 9, 2009 – President Barack Obama hugs Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as he enters the House Chamber at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

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May 13, 2010 – A patron hugs President Barack Obama during a lunch stop at Duff’s Famous Wings in Cheektowaga, N.Y. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

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April 27, 2009 – President Barack Obama hugs First Lady Michelle Obama in the Red Room of the White House while Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett smiles prior to the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) reception, March 20, 2009. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

This last one isn’t the President but it’s included in here because it does include a hug attack!

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May 4, 2009 – First Lady Michelle Obama is hugged by students during a visit to the LAMB bilingual school May 4, 2009, as a lead-up to the Mexican Cinco de Mayo holiday. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)

Spoof Site Pokes Fun at The Economist’s Almost All White Staff

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Spoof Site Pokes Fun at The Economist's Almost All White Staff

On January 29, 2012, “The Economist” published a piece entitled “Korean Golfers: The Magic Formula,” that tried to answer how four of the top 10 female golfers in the world ended up coming out of South Korea. 

In the article, the author suggest Koreans are good at playing golf because:

  1. “South Korea is a small, crowded country” and that “lack of space means that golfers start off hitting balls at a driving
    range instead of playing a proper course. This means they hit a heck of a
    lot of balls.”
  2. Korean culture stresses constant repetition in pursuit of perfection.
  3. Korean fathers push their daughters harder than dads elsewhere.
  4. Korean society is so competitive–think of the effort Korean kids put into passing exams–that it breeds champions.

The author never mentions anything based on skill or talent or smarts.

“Unfortunately, the analysis is less than impressive, and rather
offensive. The author ignores the individual talents of the golfers
mentioned, and instead resorts to age-old Asian stereotypes, including ‘strict fathers’ and a propensity to ‘breed champions,’” Adriel Luis, a Colorlines.com contributor and artist based in Brooklyn, NY wrote on a site he created called economist-staff.com.

“If the statistic – that 38 out of 100 top golfers are Korean – is newsworthy, then how about other, more stark statistics? How about the fact that, 94 of the 96 people listed in The Economist’s staff directory are White?”

Check out economist-staff.com for a illustrated view (beautiful infographics) of who’s behind the pages of ‘The Economist.’


We’re ending the day as often as possible by celebrating love. We welcome your ideas for posts. Send suggestions to submissions@colorlines.com, and be sure to put Celebrate Love in the subject line. You can send links to videos, graphics, photos, quotes, whatever. Or just chime in to the comments below and we’ll find you. Be sure to let us know you’ve got the rights to share any media you send.

To see other Love posts visit our Celebrate Love page.

Why Black Union Workers Matter In This Year’s Super Bowl Showdown

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Why Black Union Workers Matter In This Year's Super Bowl Showdown

Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels was not supposed to be among this year’s Super Bowl story lines. This year’s contenders, the New England Patriots and the New York Giants, should instead be taking center stage. Yet less than a week before America’s biggest sporting event of the year kicks off in Indianapolis, Gov. Daniels’  fight with the state’s unionized workers over legislation that could curtail the power of their collective bargaining rights has given a new national platform to the right wing’s bitter, decades-old war against unions.

Yet the NFL’s Player’s Association, which is the union that represents the league’s athletes, has also jumped onto the national stage and come out in opposition to the proposed Right to Work legislation. In doing so, the league’s union is taking an important, albeit symbolic, step to publicly bridge the gap that exists between the NFL’s multibillion dollar teams and its increasingly marginalized fan base. And it’s proof that sports is a powerful cultural art form that can help elevate some of today’s most controversial political issues.

On January 6, 2012, the NFLPA released a damning letter in opposition to the Indiana’s bill, which has since moved quickly through the state’s legislature.

“‘Right-to-work’ is a political ploy designed to destroy basic workers’ rights. It’s not about jobs or rights, and it’s the wrong priority for Indiana,” the statement read. “It is important to keep in mind the plight of the average Indiana worker and not let them get lost in the ceremony and spectacle” of the Super Bowl.

The statement was hugely important, considering what’s at stake for Indiana’s workers, particularly black ones. Black workers are disproportionately union members. They’re more likely than whites, Asians, and Latinos to be in public-unions, and make up 15 percent of total membership, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Historically, unions have been crucial gateways for black workers to earn higher wages and break into the middle class.

While supporters of Right to Work argue that the laws are needed to foster a “pro-business” atmosphere that helps generate desperately needed jobs, research has shown that the laws can have disastrous effects on workers. The Economic Policy Institute released a report in January showing that workers employed in Right to Work states makes less money and are less likely to be offered health care.

DeMaurice F. Smith, executive director of the player’s union, pressed the point even further in an op-ed published a week later in one of Indiana’s most widely read newspapers. ” An indisputable lesson of our American history is that none of those workplace protections came as a gift from corporations,” wrote Smith, who’d previously made a name for him self as a hard-nosed litigator. “Rather, all of them resulted from the ability of workers to stand united and demand change when it would have been easy to fire or silence the voice of a single worker.”

There are currently 22 states in the country that have the law, mostly in the South and in western states like Wyoming and Utah. Indiana’s bill, which the state Senate passed this week and Gov. Daniels has already vowed to sign into law, is unique because it will be the first the law that’s been put into action in an industrialized area with a large, unionized workforce.

“I don’t think it was surprising, but I think it’s important,” said Washington State University professor David Leonard about the NFLPA’s statement.

And for some observers, the reason why it’s important is because there’s been an growing divide between the league and its average fans, many of whom are people of color.

Professional football in America gained popularity as a uniquely working class sport in which teams (think the Green Bay Packers and Pittsburgh Steelers) were named after regional manufacturing economies. These days, as ticket prices have risen to the tune of hundreds of dollars for a single game, the game has become an exaggerated expression of wealth in America when many fans are struggling financially.

Larry Solomon is a longtime professor at San Francisco State University. He’s also a lifelong football fan, and has noticed that biggest enclaves of football fans are often in the most historically disenfranchised communities.

“They’re not cheering for the owners,” Salomon says of most fans. “They’re cheering for their cities, they’re cheering their friends and for people like them who identify around that team.”

For Salomon, that sort of ferver carries with it the potential for raising people’s political awareness. “When I go home and watch the Super Bowl with my family this weekend, I hope the NFLPA and the Indiana stuff comes up, but last year we talked about abortion during the Super Bowl because of Tim Tebow and his ad.

“You have these moments where sports intersects with politics, intersects with race, and you can have conversations with people who might not normally have those conversations.”

And this year is certainly one of those moments. 

“The Super Bowl is a staging ground for American Exceptionalism,” said Leonard, the professor at Washington State, noting that the Navy spends millions of dollars to do fly-overs before the game. “It’s a celebration and festival for the wealthy that’s done because of the labor of disproportionately men of color.”

That, Leonard suggests, is a macrocosm for how other industries work.

“Yes, the money is different and the stage is different, but that doesn’t mean that the lessons that we can learn aren’t there.”

Indeed, the 2011 NFL season was mired in political discussions from the start. It began with a protracted labor dispute between owners and players which lead to a lockout that lasted well into training camp. The NFLPA repeatedly emphasized how damaging a prolonged lockout could be not just to players and coaches, but also for the concession stand workers and ticket agents who work at the league’s stadiums and whose livelihoods often depend on fans showing up and spending money at games.

Another key issue that was brought up by players during the lockout is one with which many workers in other industries can relate: occupational safety.

While professional football is an admittedly physical sport and the allure of big hits has drawn in many fans over the years, the eventual price of that brutality has recently become apparent. New research has shown that players who suffer multiple concussions stand at far greater risk of developing severe depression and early onset dementia.

“I’m not sure players overall have really ‘gotten it’ with respect to the extent to which the money they make can be fleeting, but I think they’re beginning to get the idea that their health, their vibrancy can be fleeting,” said N. Jeremi Duru, a professor at Temple University and author of the forthcoming book “Advancing the Ball: Race, Reformation, and the Quest for Equal Coaching Opportunity in the NFL.” He maintains that players’ increased awareness has made them more willing to protect their physically interests, and thus has created a climate in which their union’s support of other worker’s struggles isn’t all that surprising.

“The unanswered question is whether any of the players participating in the Super Bowl will say anything,” says Dave Zirin, a columnist at The Nation and author of “Bad Sports: How Owners are Ruining the Games We Love.” Though Zirin cautions that it’s not something fans should expect, he also thinks that if players do participate, the issue of worker’s rights in Indiana would get attention that’s “out of this stratosphere.” 

Rinku Sen Appears on ‘Nightline’ to Talk Families Separated By Deportations

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Rinku Sen Appears on 'Nightline' to Talk Families Separated By Deportations

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Nightline’s “Stolen Babies? Controversy in Missouri” segment that aired Wednesday.

On Wednesday night Colorlines.com’s publisher Rinku Sen appeared on ABC’s “Nightline” to provide context on a story about a young child who was put up for adoption because his biological mother is undocumented. Sen cited our “Shattered Families” investigation, which found an estimated 5,000 U.S citizen lingering in children in foster care due to the detainment or deportation of their parents. 

In 2008, Circuit Court Judge David C. Dally decided Encarnacion Romero of Guatemala had abandoned her child when she was caught in an immigration raid and had little to offer to her son.

“Illegally smuggling herself into the country is not a lifestyle that can provide any stability for the child,” Judge Dally said.

“We’re creating a collateral consequence in which thousands of children
are ripped away from their families with no real process for being
reunited,” Sen said on “Nightline.”

An estimated 15,000 children will face the threat of permanent separation from their families in the next five years, Colorlines.com investigative reporter Seth Freed Wessler found, in a story we published in November.

President Obama acknowledge the findings in a subsequent briefing with reporters and said it was a real problem.

Parts of Sen’s interview also aired on World News Tonight.

If you were moved by this story here’s three things you can do:

SHARE – Share this story on Facebook, Twitter and anywhere else you can. You can hit the social sharing buttons at the top of this article.

LEARN MORE
– Visit the “Shattered Families” page on our publisher’s website to download the  full report and other resources that are also available in Spanish too.

DONATE
– And lastly, please consider supporting more Colorlines.com investigations like “Shattered Families” by making a donation today.

‘Precious’ Director Lee Daniels Gets Into Race Argument on Set of New Movie [Video]

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Director Lee Daniels is currently working on “The Paper Boy” starring Zac Efron and Nicole Kidman. TMZ has obtained footage of Lee getting in to some sort of verbal disagreement with producer Avi Lerner in which they both accuse each other of being racist.

Whatever the argument is about it looks like Daniels maintains his composure while Lerner points at him with a wagging finger, yelling at him and demanding an apology.

Representatives for both Daniels and Lerner tell TMZ both parties laughed it off.

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Mel Gibson’s ‘Get The Gringo’ (aka My Summer in a Mexican Jail) Gets a Trailer [Video]

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The bad news: Mel Gibson stars in a new movie about him escaping to Mexico with a car full of money.

The good news: It’s going straight to video. (Video on demand, that is. DVD sales will follow.)

The movie, formerly titled “How I Spent My Summer Vacation,” is about a career criminal who crashes his car into the border wall while trying to escape the U.S. Border Patrol, according to Reuters. Gibson’s character survives the crash, but ends up in a “tough Mexican prison” where a 10-year-old boy shows him the ropes.

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