By Dana Rubinstein - The Brooklyn Paper
Behemoth record label Universal Music Group must change the name of
rapper Nas’s new album, “Nigger,” or risk losing $84 million in state
investments, a Fort Greene assemblyman said this week.“[They are] profiting from a racial slur that has been
used to dehumanize people of color for centuries,” said Assemblyman
Hakeem Jeffries (D–Fort Greene), a former entertainment industry
big-wig. “It is time for Nas and other hip-hop artists to clean up
their act and stop flooding the airwaves with the N-word.”
Jeffries called on Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli to withdraw the $84
million that the state pension fund has invested in Universal and its
parent company, Vivendi. “It’s a staggering amount of money, which at
least justifies a review of the appropriateness of the content that is
flooding the public,” said Jeffries. Clinton Miller, of Brown Memorial
Baptist Church, and Jill Merritt, a founder of the Abolish the N-Word
Project, joined Jeffries in his condemnation of the word.
A recent report by state Sen. Antoine Thompson (D–Buffalo) revealed
that the New York State Pension Fund has $2.8 billion invested in 16
major entertainment companies, including Time Warner and Disney. That
number did not include the state’s investment in Vivendi.
Universal did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesman for
DiNapoli, who manages the pension fund, said that the comptroller “is
concerned about this issue and is intending to contact the company and
urge them not to release the album.”The fight to quell the use of the
controversial term has been gaining ground lately. In February, the
Council passed legislation urging people not to use the repugnant
racial slur.
Jeffries, who was an assistant general counsel at CBS and a lawyer at
Viacom before he was elected last year, is intent on hitting the
industry where it hurts. “The [Council made] an important symbolic
step, but I’m more interested in the substantive approach of reviewing
the multi-billion-dollar investment that the New York State pension
fund makes in the entertainment industry.”
Source: The Brooklyn Paper