August 09, 2006 @ 2:02 pm

MTV Slammed For Racial Insensitivity

Email this article Print this article Send us a tip

The half-hour program, which airs on Saturdays at 12:30 pm, drew stimulus from a 2003 MTV Video Music Award appearance by the west coast rapper donning the red carpet with two black women tethered to animal restraints. Recently, critics chided the music station for airing the episode, “Woofie Loves Snoop,” in a network time slot frequented by younger children. Yet prominent black voices like New York Daily News columnist Stanley Crouch are labeling the animated lampoon as a racial and misogynistic play on dehumanization. right In a column published this week, Crouch fired at the MTV airing, calling it an extension of sexist images portrayed in gangsta rap videos, promoted by the music network and broadcasted “around the world as 'real' black culture.” The series, which recently completed an eight-episode trial run on the network's sister channel MTV2, animates celebrity and pop culture from the perspective of two stray dogs, Woofie and Buddy, voiced by Tracy Morgan and Jeffrey Ross, respectively. In the episode, two bikinied women on leashes are walked uprightly into a pet shop before bowing into the dog's position and scratching themselves. The segment ends with a member of Snoop's entourage picking up excrements left by one of the women with a rubber glove. In response to the public rebuke, MTV's president, Christina Norman - who is black - issued a statement this week defending the episode, which originally aired on July 1st. "We certainly do not condone Snoop's actions and the goal was to take aim at that incident for its insensitivity and outrageousness," Norman said. Have a news tip? Email us.

Read more vibe.com news headlines.

Article tags: MtvSnoopSnoop DoggWhere My Dogs At? 

Page printed from:
http://www.vibe.com/news/news_headlines/2006/08/mtv_slammed_for_racial_insensitivity/

Return to previous page

Add a Comment

You must log in or register to post comments.

Comments

1.

HugeUglyGirl says:

Member Name

African Americans have to stop living the double standard. The "I can do it cuz I'm black, but you better not do it or I'll sue." is totally unfair. If you want other cultures to respect your culture, you have to respect your own culture first! and Yes I am an African American so don't even try the race card on me!

2.

Erika says:

Member Name

wtf????

Related Video