In Ellen Lee's YouTube / CNN Story, "the man" she referred to is me...
Zennie Abraham.
Phil, Ellen knows who I am. We met several times, first through mutual friends at a tech function, then again at Vloggercon where she knows my friend Dina Kaplan of Blip.tv (who reintroduced us) and, where she said she'd call to ask me about Sports Business Simulations and video-blogging.
She never did.
Now, I was one of six blacks out of 300 people in attendance, and live in Oakland.
Then I saw her again -- but said nothing -- at the Vloggies. Then I've been at Web 2.0 and other events. And I continue video-blogging and running my online simulation company.
After following Ellen's request to call her, and hearing nothing back, yet seeing person after white person being presented by her in the SF Chron, I felt there was a problem and did in express this concern to her, but no feedback. Hey, it's a hard subject to adress, but it's something that must be done.
Now, YouTube commissioned me to make a sample video to show the nation how a debate question is to be asked. It's at
http://www.youtube.com/debates
I'm featured promimently in the video -- I'm first and credited. She could have tried to contact me; she did not.
So Ellen writes this, and starts with "a man stands in front of a check cashing center..."
That man is me.
What's the deal Phil? Is Ellen's prejudice against me for whatever reason so great she can't even bring herself to get the real story, let alone explain it even if it involves a Bay Area resident, and particularly someone of color making a mark in Video-Blogging?
This is troubling to me. I hope you agree and investigate this.
Best,
Zennie