Welcome to SportsJournalists.com, a friendly forum for discussing all things sports and journalism.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register for a free account to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
We're about halfway through. I've enjoyed it because it was a nice reminder of how the Family Stone was a trailblazer in a time of racial divide and stereotypes, the 1st multi-racial, multi-gender act to become a superstar band topping the charts. Sly, sure he did drugs, but the accounts seemed to be that he genuinely cared about others and was not self-absorbed (as other superstars have been.)Watched the Questlove Sly Stone doc on Hulu. Way too busy and tried to overcontextualize a guy who basically just torpedoed his career with addiction.
We're about halfway through. I've enjoyed it because it was a nice reminder of how the Family Stone was a trailblazer in a time of racial divide and stereotypes, the 1st multi-racial, multi-gender act to become a superstar band topping the charts. Sly, sure he did drugs, but the accounts seemed to be that he genuinely cared about others and was not self-absorbed (as other superstars have been.)
And the music was so good IMHO.
I don't disagree at all.The music was fantastic but I really didn't like the framing device with all of the talking heads that the cause of Sly's downfall was the fact that white society couldn't accept black genius. The man was on Ed Sullivan and appeared at Woodstock. He was a true crossover artist and his artistry was well recognized. Whether he was afraid of success or otherwise, he just couldn't stay clean.
Interesting podcast today between Pablo Torre and Ezra Edelman about his Prince documentary getting spiked by the new lawyers representing Prince's estate and Netflix. Basically was done to protect the Prince "brand" and have feel good content like a less icky Purple Rain Broadway show and a sanitized documentary which is all positive.