‘ìl’c IJn rtlan ò (lì)bscrncr March 15, 2006 Page B3 Focus BLACK) WHITE Families Swap Race in TV Reality Series / didn't realize, more than anything, how hard it was going to he for whites and blacks to see the world through each other ’v eyes. - Black.White.executive producer R J. Cutler A white family learns about stereotypes when they take on the character­ istics o f a black family in the TV reality show ‘Black. White.' FX Network show on Channel 53 (A P) — W hen w riter John Howard Griffin turned his skin from white to dark and traveled the South in 1959 for a firsthand look at the depths of racism, he relied on a simple medical treatment and his wits. In the 21st century, such a jour­ ney requires Hollywood makeup wizardry, the well-honed conven­ tions of both reality TV and docu­ mentary filmmaking, and two fami­ lies, one black, one white, acting as und ercover race detectives in Southern California. As superficially different as FX's “Black.White.,” Griffin’s landmark book "Black Like Me” appear to be, they are brothers under the skin. "Black. W hite.,"airing Wednes­ days at 10 p.m. on Cable Channel 53, proceeds with open-minded seriousness as it leads viewers to a conclusion both obvious and pow­ erful: race counts, for better and worse. Expressions of racism and racial identity change, but that bed­ rock truth remains. “I didn't realize, more than any­ thing, how hard it was going to be for whites and blacks to see the world through each other’s eyes," said executive producer R. J. Cutler. "I didn't realize how genuinely dif­ ferent an experience it is to be a white American and a black Ameri­ can.” Culler insisted the six-episode show , w hich began M arch 8, doesn't "aspire in any way to say definitive things about race." But the participants and their actions do. In a Los Angeles-area house, "Black.W hite." brings together a white family from Santa Monica and a black Atlanta family. Through artful makeup they swap races, if not perspectives. Cutler, whose documentary films and TV series include the acclaimed With special-effects makeup that joined a poetry group with young The housemates have revealing, "The War Room " and "American artfully used wigs, airbrushed skin blacks; Brian Sparks became a sometimes heated clashes over High,” was joined by Ice Cube, the paint and other elements, the fami­ bartender at a place drawing white their attitudes on race and the use rapper, actor and producer, on the lies were transformed to a new custom ers. The fam ilies also, in of volatile epithets. One unnfronta- project. ethnicity that could pass muster in the best tradition o f reality TV, tion pits the black father, adamantly “Don’t believe the hype, every­ varied settings. shared a house in 2005 for the six opposed to the “n-word," against thing in the world ain’t black and T een ag er Rose B loom field weeks of production. his unconcerned teenage son. white. Everybody ain’t a stereo­ type. Just because I look wrong I'm m a n stage series about to do right," Cube sings in McDonald the title song, which also includes d ir e c te d by ANDREA FRYE Financial Group his sharp rejection of an oft-cited in the phrase: "Did you get your race card .’ newmark Yo, what the hell is a race card?" Co produced willi >tin m T im in Cumtuny i Acton Thcaln of louisnHo His hope for the project-was to “expose the subtleties of racism, the layers of racism," the musician told The Associated Press. The series' timing is notable, wi th race brought into renewed focus by Katrina and the disproportion­ ate suffering it caused for blacks in New Orleans. The families in "Black.White." are middle-class, the adults all col­ lege-educated. They received a modest fee for their participation, an FX spokesman said. REGI NA TAYLOR Crowns “ B ecau se I know h o w to p la y ja z z a n d t h a t ’s w h e re m y h e a r t is , I n e e d to c o m e b a c k to s o m e t h i n g s im p le a g a in to s a tis fy m y in te g r ity . T h e a v erag e p e rso n m ay not u n d e r s ta n d .” B ria n M c K n ig h t ¡TO/5SIPPI Writers, Poets Share Thoughts The public is in vited to hear from three p ublished authors, Tim Barnes, Amanda Deutch and Paula Friedman, who will read from their works a, the Bold-Sky Cafe Read­ ing Series, Wednesday, March 29 at7:30p.m .at Bold-Sky Cafe, 3943 N. Mississippi Avenue at Shaver Street. Barnes is an English professoral Portland Community College. His poems and essays have appeared in Open Spaces, Nebraska Review, Willow Springs, Puerto del Sol, The MacGuffin, Willamette Week and Oregon English, among others. Deutch writes poetry. Her work has ap p eared in W atchw ord, Raven, Artsy Magazine, Hobart and Barrow Street. Friedman has published poetry and fiction in Out of Line, Jewish W omen’s Literary Annual, Earth's Daughters, and many other jour­ nals. She is a freelance editor, former museum publicist, and peace activ­ ist as well as a reunited birth mother and former welfare single mother. Bold-Sky’s monthly reading se­ rie s is an ex p re ssio n o f the restaurant's commitment to pair creative heroics with soul-satisfy­ ing food. Theatrical makeup turns a black family white in the FX reality series ‘Black. White.' 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