Fry that Chicken: Ms. Peaches and Her Ghetto Fried Chicken Song

kwame hawkins

Ok, I am black, no I don't use the "n-word" like it is going out of style. I don't believe that Spike Lee is right every time that he decides to rant about something, I do believe that he is a brilliant director. I don't believe that all white people are racist and secretly want to hold my people down. I do believe that there is a "man" or a Mr. Big and when I find him, I will ask him politely for him to get his foot off of my neck. I do listen to hip-hop music, and I am over thirty also I am still trying to hold on to my last strings of the vestiges of my youth.

I am the son of woman that once was a militant and taught me to be very proud of my African roots in her own way. However there is storm rising and there are a dark days ahead. I am sorry to say that black people have just been held back another thirty years. I have to get on my podium and preach with my self-righteous afro-centric indignation and warn my brothers, sisters and white folks about a new menace. This menace is worst than Jim Crow, a burning cross and Soul Plane wrap-up together.

What is this menace you say? Well it's Ms Peaches and her Ghetto Fried Chicken song. I have never been so offended in my life. Now this includes the racist propaganda that has placed on my parent's doorstep. This also includes watching Birth of a Nation and Homeboys in Outer Space. Her video hasn't incensed me since the Rodney King verdict, and OJ, well that's a conversation for another time (is he still looking for the real killer). Ms Peaches is a 29-year-old rapper from Georgia who has crafted a song about frying chicken, "Oh mammy watch me dance". The video features a sign with the word ghetto misspelled residing in the front of a scrap yard.

She wears a blue wig and stands in front of a cast iron skillet singing the praises of frying chicken. Little children dance around the table in glee, as they eagerly wait with bated breath for her finish frying the chicken. Now as a child I never danced around the table as I waited for my grandmother to finish frying chicken. As a teenager and young adult I worked at KFC (Kentucky Fried Chicken). I worked as a cashier and shift supervisor.

During that time I had learned how to do everything needed to run a store. I opened and closed the store and sometimes I had to run the store and cook at the same time because we were short on help. I never danced while standing in front of a vat of boiling hot grease nor did I rap about it. Ms Peaches video reminds of the days of Stepping Fletcher, Amos and Andy, and the times when the only roles for black women in Hollywood were the roles of being a Mammy.

I thought black people; my people were beyond the title of looking like Jigga Boos wearing black face. Economically and socially black people have made great strides. Leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X fought for justice and civil liberties not only for black people, but all people. However crap like Ghetto Fried Chicken doesn't tell the story of a hard life, nor does this song provides a divergent viewpoint on an issue. It serves to make my people look like fools and thus add fuel to fire of stereotypes.

I do not feel that she or anybody should be censored. As an American free speech is a birthright, however with free speech, the exercise of that right should be used with due diligence and vigilance. Songs like Ghetto Fired Chicken plays on that edge of that double-edged sword called free speech. When someone says or does something that one may not like using the banner of free speech, whether it's music, or performance art, or running around the front yard painting stick people with whatever is available, that person has that right to exercise free speech.

Unfortunately this applies to Skin Heads, the weird guy on local talk radio, and Ms Peaches. Now, I have one last quip to make because I am tired of thinking and writing about a song that has the musical quality of a reject from the American Idol auditions. Musically the song sucks my twelve-year-old nephew has more talent, at least he can play an instrument.

Published by kwame hawkins

Graduate of North Carolina State University Graduate of Savannah of College of Art and Design Has worked professionally in the television industry Published work on the Animation Pipeline Specialty: 3D c...   View profile

31 Comments

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  • Megan 7/6/2010

    You are ridiculous for getting offended. It's in good humor and it's hilarious. The person singing is black obviously he's not trying to be racist. He's just poking fun at his own culture. People joke around with me because I'm a ginger and they tell me I'm a mutant and I have no soul. I just go with it because it actually is pretty funny. Take a deep breath and just relax and try to laugh for once in your life.

  • Cherise Jefferson 5/7/2010

    I love this song! Live life,laugh and love it. Stop being so uptight.I'm black and i know white people that eat more chickin then I do.

  • calvin king 1/5/2010

    let us know you are not "that black" so your opinion matters THAT SETS US BACK 30 YEARS!

    This was a fun video, made in fun, by some fairly funny people. How in the world were you offended? Did they have a picture of you up there? Do you have a Gramma Peaches? What was there to take offence? Were it white Rednecks singing "Fry them Dumplins'" would it have been funny then?

    Fact is, as funny as the video is, it is not too far from real Country Georgia life. They don't seem to be offended by the video so why are you being offended for them.

    These were black people makeing fun of thier "Southern Roots." Is the true offence the fact they don't believe like you do?

  • Calvin king 1/5/2010

    You wrote that the song dos not tell the story of a hard life. (paraphrased) Thing is, i don't think it was supposed to. I think the video did exactly what its authors meant, made people laugh. If a video on "YouTube" aout fried chicken sets our people back 30 yars we have much bigger problems.

    I don't understand why we are so selective with what outrages us. NWA is critally acclaimed but Fry That Chicken sets us back 30 yars?

    It is my opinion the biggest problem we have as black people is we don't know how to define ourselves. Honestly, you qualified how black you were NOT in the first few sentences of your post really making anything you had to say afterward moot

    -Ok, I am black, no I don't use the "n-word" like it is going out of style. I don't believe that Spike Lee is right every time that he decides to rant about something, I do believe that he is a brilliant director-

    So you let us know you are black (as if to say its okay for you to have your opinion) then you

  • jenna 12/18/2009

    you guys are haters and racist i am black and proud as hell

  • Ashtrey the gangsta 5/26/2009

    YO YO YO what up with people not liking some OL chicken, it be good aww we need now is a couple 40's and we be good yo

  • Chubbz the delinquent petty officer 5/12/2009

    that video is offensive -- it's kind of the same thing as all my "paesans" that act in/write/produce and watch mafia flicks. propagation of a negative stereotype.

  • bdog 4/30/2009

    I am white, from the south, and grew up around both white and black people. I love the country, fried chicken, and this ms peachez video. I seriously doubt the person who wrote this article has ever lived in the south. They are probably from some sheltered white suburban area in NY and have never experienced the south, the country, or the ghetto. Please don't write articles about things you do not understand.

  • Jen 3/28/2009

    You know that's a dude, right?

  • Tim Brown 3/18/2009

    You're sorry blacks have been held back thirty years? Tell your fellow african americans to stop using the "n" word as a sign of endearment towards each other.

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