![]() Thu, Nov 20, 2008
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URBAN THOUGHT COLLECTIVE.COM: Michelle Obama: In The Spotlight(August 27, 2008)
Hello from Everyone at Urban Thought collective.com! *When it comes to sports I'm always on point when it comes to predicting winners. This year I picked the improbable Giants in the Super Bowl, the Celtics in the NBA Finals and I'll go with Venus Williams and Rafael Nadal in the U.S. Open. But when it comes to politics, I've not been so lucky. Mostly, it's because I tend to go with my heart instead of my gut. On Monday night when Michelle Obama strolled onto the Pepsi Center stage at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, I realized that this time my heart and gut were working in tandem. I'm booking my ticket to D.C. for the inauguration of President Obama. Michelle's speech should not only have an impact on the polls in the coming days-which currently have Barack Obama and John McCain running neck-and-neck-but her words were so profoundly personal and inclusive that I imagine some of my European friends will want to cast absentee votes in our November election. They're already wearing Obama T-shirts. I loved the way she began her speech, acknowledging her family-particularly her father who died in 1991. That proves she knows what really matters at the end of the day. That's something Michelle didn't learn at Princeton or Harvard. That's a byproduct of good home training. I loved that she's a daddy's girl-just like me-and understands that in the still of the night when the boogieman is in the closet, there's no greater feeling than a strong, fatherly embrace. I'm sure he gave her a big hug before and after her speech last night. I was humbled by her journey, going from Chicago's South Side to center stage at the DNC on a night that included a heartfelt tribute to a true American icon and Obama supporter, Sen. Ted Kennedy. The contrast between those two journeys is worth pondering-if only for a minute. I admired her grace as she acknowledged the achievements of Hillary Clinton, saying Sen. Clinton put those "18 million cracks in that glass ceiling so that our daughters and sons can dream a little bigger and aim a little higher." She didn't have to do that. I applauded her honesty as she talked about her "handsome" husband in such a loving way. I've never seen any other potential First Lady go there at a globally televised political convention. I guess she couldn't help it though. The man is fine. And as a black woman sitting around her flat in sweat pants and a T-shirt, I just dug the way she looked. The form-fitting green dress was tight and the hair was bouncing and behaving. Somebody, somewhere hooked her up. It was inspiring on many levels. Warmly introduced by her older brother Craig, Michelle remained poised throughout her 20-plus minute speech. Some folks think that the Harvard-trained attorney, who gave up the big bucks to work as an unpaid volunteer in a community program, is a better orator than her old man. This could be true. But the one thing that ties them together is that they know they are both standing on the shoulders of the folks who came before them and took all the hits. They have Ivy League degrees because Barack's single mother and Michelle's working-class parents paved a path so smooth that their kids would never ... TO FINISH THE THOUGHT, VISIT: http://urbanthoughtcollective.com/2008/08/25/michelle-obama-in-the-spotlight/#comment-9944 Urban Thought Collective is a new digital community exploring everything from pop culture to politics from an African-American perspective. Miki Turner is a poor little colored girl from the suburbs who has the courage of her convictions. Her writings have been featured in Essence, Ebony, Upscale and MSNBC.com. She can be reached at devodiva1@aol com. Her periodic dispatches from the world of entertainment, politics and society can be read here at www.urbanthoughtcollective.com.
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