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In reply to the discussion: Is there one African-American woman on American cable or TV [View all]Nye Bevan
(25,406 posts)29. I have friends of several races,
but I don't tend to ask them about the extent to which their hairstyle is "natural" (let alone ask to feel anyone's hair). And I have to say I don't really care. My guess is that the majority have some kind of hair styling regimen, but I'm not sure to what extent this violates the OP's definition of "natural hair".
The good thing about threads like this is that they are a sign that the bigger and more important problems are being solved. If you had told a black woman in the 1950s or 1960s that one of the top issues being discussed by progressives 50 years later would be the question of out of the many black women who appear on TV, what proportion have "natural hair", I think she would have been..... surprised.
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Depends how you define "Natural". OP has said that MHP adding braids doesnt count.
stevenleser
Jan 2015
#35
It's more complicated than that here. What's being implied is what white culture is or isn't doing
stevenleser
Jan 2015
#79
Here is an interesting set of comments from the article Kelliekat posted downthread:
stevenleser
Jan 2015
#83
to assume all Black persons are from Africa is also a bit institutional in the USA :P
Sunlei
Jan 2015
#4
And the very notion that your concern is about their hair might be considered sexism...
brooklynite
Jan 2015
#11
Do you remember Melba Tolliver? She was asked to cover her fro for Trisha Nixon's wedding and
bettyellen
Jan 2015
#20
The subject always came up while watching commercials for hair products.
LiberalAndProud
Jan 2015
#46
Funny you should bring this up, I just was at the store and stood in line behind a young black woman
dissentient
Jan 2015
#47
Interesting. I have no idea how it works to get it looking like most black women on tv or in the
dissentient
Jan 2015
#52
Heh, like I said, I can only imagine. I know about as much about women's hair and those processes
dissentient
Jan 2015
#56