Prison changed Huey. They went into detail on the PBS Black Panther Party doc

good looks just found my friday night flick.

Prison changed Huey. They went into detail on the PBS Black Panther Party doc
I don't think so. Crips started off political and deteriorated into what they're legendarily known for now. The BGF went from a socio-political Marxist revolutionary organization to a typical prison gang with even a modern day street presence in Baltimore. BGF and Crip leaders have testified on behalf of La Eme and the AB and vice versa. The NOI fostered the environment that lead up to Malcolm's murder and the Hanafi massacre.
My overall point is we tend to romanticize Black leaders and organizations but forget they're imperfect just like any of us. Then when they fall from grace or come up short or get murdered over some fukk sh!t we start entertaining conspiracies. We forget a lot of Black leaders from years gone by aren't that far removed from the streets. It shouldn't be surprising when they go back to that rudimentary street element and it either bites or eats them.
Dropping great facts in the episode
Watch the whole things, great example of successful Black men on the panel![]()
I know breh I know, there's still time to change your ways thoughI'm a victim brehs![]()
#habitualvictim
damn I didnt know he a Ph. D![]()
Huey was on some gay shyt?
The bond between them was enormous -- and ultimately romantic and sexual, as well as fraternal and comradely. This was demonstrated finally by a small cache of hand-written letters never publicly revealed before that Newton sent his patron from prison as well as after his release from the Alameda county jail on an old illegal possession of a gun conviction, several years before he was murdered in 1989. In one letter, Newton glowingly expresses his "joy and sensual excitement" after spending his first night following his release from prison with Schneider. The producer had bailed him out, driven him in a white stretch limo by the prison so he could wave to his fellow prisoners, then taken him off to spend the night together "on top of the Hyatt." He then explains why he went with Schneider and not his wife Fredrika ("Freddy"): "I chose to spend the first night out of jail with you rather than Freddy because, as you stated to someone, the two of us were married first ... So satisfied," he adds with an almost audible sigh.
True Hollywood story: The producer and the Black Panther
I'm gonna need another source for that
Huey was on some gay shyt?
The bond between them was enormous -- and ultimately romantic and sexual, as well as fraternal and comradely. This was demonstrated finally by a small cache of hand-written letters never publicly revealed before that Newton sent his patron from prison as well as after his release from the Alameda county jail on an old illegal possession of a gun conviction, several years before he was murdered in 1989. In one letter, Newton glowingly expresses his "joy and sensual excitement" after spending his first night following his release from prison with Schneider. The producer had bailed him out, driven him in a white stretch limo by the prison so he could wave to his fellow prisoners, then taken him off to spend the night together "on top of the Hyatt." He then explains why he went with Schneider and not his wife Fredrika ("Freddy"): "I chose to spend the first night out of jail with you rather than Freddy because, as you stated to someone, the two of us were married first ... So satisfied," he adds with an almost audible sigh.
True Hollywood story: The producer and the Black Panther