Friday, January 24, 2025
Culture

Lately, we have been seeing an influx of robots and virtual reality figures filling up our timelines on social media. These engineered creations are all the craze, whether they’re being built in order to replace all of our jobs in ten years, for sexual purposes, or just to make our lives easier – humans seem to have a fascination with the virtual world. Now, the fashion world is going crazy over the newest high fashion supermodel; she’s black, she’s beautiful, and she’s the world’s first 3D Digital Supermodel. Some people are loving her, but some black women aren’t really feeling her.

Her name is Shudu and she already has over 90 thousand Instagram followers. No lie, at first glance I thought she was an actual person. The artist/photographer, Cameron James Wilson, did an amazing job creating this piece of art; and each digital image he creates of her takes approximately three days; and weeks of planning. But, here are a few reasons why some people believe we don’t need a virtual black model.

Shudu has already been in a Fenty Beauty Campaign.

That’s right, the digital image is now taking work from real women. Well actually, the money would be going into the hands of her creator. With the launch of this 3D model, will actual models have to start worrying about 3D graphics taking their jobs?

Cameron James Wilson is a white man that created this black virtual woman

Shudu Gram Instagram

Wilson, a photographer and an artist is a white man. No one can deny his talent and skill, however, people are tripping that a white man will be making revenue from the features and looks of black women. The thought of this work going to a 3D drawing and her owner, instead of a real person has many upset. Seems like a slap-in-the-face that an industry that already lacks in providing jobs to women of color, especially darker skinned women, will now accept a 3D image of a woman, but a white man will be paid for the imagery. Is this digital slavery?

Shudu’s look is inspired by actress Lupita Nyongo and super-model Alek Wek, along with a South African Barbie doll.

Don’t you hate when someone says their work was “inspired by”….just say you stole their look and now you’re making money off of it!

Shudu also has a male counterpart, Nfon.

Shudu Gram Instagram

Nfon is fine yall – i know, i know he’s a 3D image, but i’m just saying. While some are worried that these digital images will begin to take jobs from actual models – others see it as an opportunity to open some doors. Fashion designers will see the true beauty in these images and hire more black models – but, only time will tell.

Cameron Wilson is a photographer. Why not just hire dark-skinned female models and assist them in elevating their careers?

Shudu Gram Instagram

That’s the question many are asking, especially in an industry where women who look like Shudu are more disenfranchised than other models. High-fashion modeling is a mostly white industry. Many are wondering why Wilson just doesn’t hire actual black models.

However, some are saying Wilson is not just a photographer, he is an artist; no one has the right to tell him how to creatively express himself.

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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Today marks only 50 years since the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. at the Lorraine hotel in Memphis, Tennessee. In her first network television interview, A then-college junior, Clara Ester was standing on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee and rushed to Martin Luther King Junior’s side when he was shot. She is shown as merely a one of the figures appearing on the balcony that day, but the memory of MLK is etched in her soul forever; as she was one of the last people to see him alive.

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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“Its decision is not just wrong on the law; it also sends an alarming signal to law enforcement officers and the public. It tells officers that they can shoot first and think later, and it tells the public that palpably unreasonable conduct will go unpunished.”

– Justice Sonia Sotomayor

On Monday, the Supreme Court ruled on the side of an Arizona police officer that shot a woman outside of her home.

The Scenario:

In 2010, three officers responded to a call that a woman was acting erratically hacking at a tree with a knife. Sharon Chadwick was standing in the driveway of a house and Amy Hughes came out of the house holding a kitchen knife. She stopped approximately 6 feet from Chadwick. These two women were roommates, which officers did not know at this time. Hughes was calm, had the knife at her side and made no moves. Chadwick, in a statement said she did not feel threatened and that Hughes was calm and composed.

Police drew their guns, told Hughes to drop the knife. Whether she heard them or not is unclear, but one of the officers, Andrew Kisela, shot Amy Hughes four times. As she was screaming and bleeding, she yelled, “Why’d you shoot me?” Amy Hughes survived the shooting and sued the Kisela for using excessive force. The US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in San Francisco allowed the case to proceed; however the Supreme Court reversed the ruling.

The Supreme Court ruled that Officer Kisela, “was entitled to qualified immunity, a doctrine that shields officials from suits over violations of constitutional rights that were not clearly established at the time os the conduct in question.” Basically, the court stated that there wasn’t any clarity in a precedent that would have made it clear that if he had opened fire to protect Chadwick, this would have amounted to unconstitutional excessive force.

Justice Sotomayor:

Hughes was nowhere near the officers, had committed no illegal act, was suspected of no crime, and id not raise the knife in the direction of Chadwick or anyone else. Kisela, alone resorted in deadly force in this case. Confronted with the same circumstances as Kisela, neither of his fellow officers took that drastic measure.

Because Kisela plainly lacked any legitimate interest justifying the use of deadly force against a woman who posed no objective threat of harm to officers or others, had committed no crime, and appeared calm and collected during the police encounter, he was not entitled to qualified immunity.

…the court’s decision in the case, Kisela v. Hughes, No. 17-467, was part of a disturbing trend of “unflinching willingness” to protect police officers accused of using excessive force.

The court’s decisions concerning qualified immunity, she wrote, “transforms the doctrine into an absolute shield for law enforcement officers.”

“Because there is nothing right or just under the law about this,” she wrote, “I respectfully dissent.”

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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The black students from Marjorie Stoneman Douglas, a Florida high-school where 17 kids were massacred last month, held a press conference to further discuss the impact of gun violence within America’s schools and communities. However, these students made it clear that their message may be somewhat different from the messages we’ve been hearing from mostly white students at Marjorie Douglas who’ve made international headlines.

The black students, like 17-year-old Kai Koerber, in an impassioned speech told the mostly local press, that communities may want to have more police officers patrolling their schools, however these black students are not completely comfortable with the idea of increasing police presence. Kai explained how it’s intimidating and that black students will face most of the consequences of an overmilitarized predominantly white school. Kai stated, “It’s bad enough we have to return with clear backpacks, should we also return with our hands up?” Another student emphasized that there is more that needs to be discussed when having talks about #MarchForOurLives“Conversations about gun violence have to include police violence. Will the Same people who showed up for #MarchForOurLives show up for Stephon Clark,” asked Tyah-Amoy.

According to the Miami Herald, eleven percent of the 3,000 students at Marjorie Douglas are black, but we have barely seen them represented within the past few weeks as these students made headlines across the world.

For black students in schools across America, the solution to gun violence certainly is not more police presence, and that part of the equation needs to be a part of the national conversation when discussing #MarchForOurLives

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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This story has many people scratching their heads this week. Of course, it’s the same old story that we’ve seen over and over again, across the country. This rerun is so old, its tiring for many of us. It doesn’t matter if you’re driving while black, standing while black, walking while black, minding your f***** business while black – if you are doing any of these things and you are unarmed – you still run the risk of being harmed.

Florence Mayor – Stephen Wukela and Council Members. Florence Morning News – Press Conference

However, the story coming out of Florence, South Carolina has another strange twist, and here are 10 things we need to know about how a STATE CONSTABLE was able to fire shots at an unarmed black motorist.

  1. On Saturday a State Constable was on a ride-along with a police officer in Florence, South Carolina. This is a common practice in South Carolina, for these volunteer law enforcement officers to.
  2. If you are not familiar with the role of a Constable, they are basically what citizens call Peace Officers. They have a very limited amount of authority and you will typically find them in small towns.
  3. During this ride-along with the Officer and the volunteer law enforcement official, the officer stopped a driver in a residential neighborhood. Police are not releasing any details, but how much money are you willing to bet that the driver was black and the Constable was white? How much??
  4. Police have not released specific details as to what occurred, but somehow, a VOLUNTEER Patrol person (Constable), fired his weapon, shooting and injuring the driver.
  5. As of Monday, investigators didn’t answer questions as to why this motorist was pulled over or why the Constable shot him; they also would not identify the parties involved. The only details Florence police would give is that it was the Constable and not their officer that fired shots. Why is the Volunteer even involved in a situation that was already being handled by the officer?
  6. Another important fact we need to know about Constables is that they do not have any formal law enforcement training. However, in S.C. , they are allowed to carry guns and make arrests. Constables are however, state certified based on training that is offered at technical colleges around the state. (If you have an image of George Zimmerman in your head right now, you are not alone)
  7. According to State Rep. Terry Alexander, “The city officer wasn’t in harm’s way, so why did the constable shoot?” – #QTNA
  8. Currently, the State Law Enforcement Department (SLED) is investigating whether the shooting was justified – i.e. (the police are currently investigating themselves).
  9. The injured driver is “expected” to survive.
  10. As for the officer, he still has his job and after the police investigated themselves, decided the officer is not the focus of the ongoing SLED investigations. They are still “investigating” the Constable; which probably means he is walking around Florence, SC living a normal life after almost taking the life of an unarmed motorist.

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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