WEBVTT 00:00:00.794 --> 00:00:03.254 You don't really look at a toothbrush and say, 00:00:03.254 --> 00:00:05.764 I'm great, but we look at a afro pick, 00:00:05.764 --> 00:00:07.144 which is a grooming tool, 00:00:07.144 --> 00:00:09.554 it can remind you in your subconscious to, like, 00:00:09.554 --> 00:00:12.543 really be proud and, like, all right. 00:00:12.543 --> 00:00:15.126 (upbeat music) 00:00:18.194 --> 00:00:21.604 An afro pick is a utilitarian tool 00:00:21.604 --> 00:00:25.494 used to maintain the afro hairstyle. 00:00:25.494 --> 00:00:27.984 I think the afro pick was designed 00:00:27.984 --> 00:00:30.504 for the ergonomics of creating something 00:00:30.504 --> 00:00:33.014 that felt like you were running fingers through your hair. 00:00:33.014 --> 00:00:35.534 The shape, even the depth that it goes in, 00:00:35.534 --> 00:00:36.514 it's like a hand. 00:00:36.514 --> 00:00:39.974 You have plastic or nylon teeth, 00:00:39.974 --> 00:00:43.124 and then you have the stainless steel, the nickel teeth. 00:00:43.124 --> 00:00:45.324 I always prefer the metal tooth 00:00:45.324 --> 00:00:47.104 just 'cause I like the sound, 00:00:47.104 --> 00:00:49.504 and the ones I know have the black power fist 00:00:49.504 --> 00:00:50.684 on the handle. 00:00:50.684 --> 00:00:52.884 When I think of black hair in America, 00:00:52.884 --> 00:00:55.334 I think of something that's been policed. 00:00:55.334 --> 00:00:57.964 Back in the days, it was expected for black people 00:00:57.964 --> 00:00:59.554 to chemically treat their hair. 00:00:59.554 --> 00:01:02.064 Whether that's healthy for them is a secondary thing 00:01:02.064 --> 00:01:03.774 to blending in. 00:01:03.774 --> 00:01:07.284 In the 50s, dancer Ruth Beckford and a lot of jazz singers 00:01:07.284 --> 00:01:08.774 were tired of straightening their hair, 00:01:08.774 --> 00:01:09.944 so they said that, all right, 00:01:09.944 --> 00:01:11.544 we're gonna just let it grow naturally, 00:01:11.544 --> 00:01:15.234 and started rocking natural, close-cropped hair. 00:01:15.234 --> 00:01:18.354 And in the 60s, that style evolved 00:01:18.354 --> 00:01:20.104 with the formation of the afro, 00:01:20.104 --> 00:01:23.204 which was the cropped hair, natural, picked out 00:01:23.204 --> 00:01:26.014 into a more spherical shape. 00:01:26.014 --> 00:01:28.794 You had civil rights leaders, activists, 00:01:28.794 --> 00:01:32.444 that adopted the hairstyle as a means of rebellion 00:01:32.444 --> 00:01:33.484 and black pride, 00:01:33.484 --> 00:01:35.504 and then you had musicians like James Brown, 00:01:35.504 --> 00:01:36.954 who's infamously known 00:01:36.954 --> 00:01:38.884 for chemically straightening his hair 00:01:38.884 --> 00:01:40.514 reject that and go natural. 00:01:40.514 --> 00:01:42.054 It went hand-in-hand with his music, 00:01:42.054 --> 00:01:42.981 so he had songs like 00:01:42.981 --> 00:01:45.134 "Say it Loud, I'm Black and I'm Proud." 00:01:45.134 --> 00:01:46.824 The black is beautiful movement 00:01:46.824 --> 00:01:49.824 is just rejecting the notion now to be black 00:01:49.824 --> 00:01:53.404 or to have darker skin, to have a curlier grade of hair, 00:01:53.404 --> 00:01:55.684 was something to be ashamed of. 00:01:55.684 --> 00:01:58.114 I have one of my favorite pictures of my mother 00:01:58.114 --> 00:01:59.444 and my grandmother, 00:01:59.444 --> 00:02:01.234 and my grandmother had a small 'fro, 00:02:01.234 --> 00:02:03.584 and that was in the 60s. 00:02:03.584 --> 00:02:07.574 African hair combs date back to 3500 BCE. 00:02:07.574 --> 00:02:09.904 The oldest African combs are found 00:02:09.904 --> 00:02:12.344 in ancient Egypt and Sudan, 00:02:12.344 --> 00:02:15.034 so they were making pyramids and combs. 00:02:15.034 --> 00:02:18.114 The way the ancient African combs were embellished 00:02:18.114 --> 00:02:21.634 represented status or tribal affiliation. 00:02:21.634 --> 00:02:24.384 It's no coincidence that the fist 00:02:24.384 --> 00:02:26.084 on the modern afro pick 00:02:26.084 --> 00:02:28.634 also sets the tone for affiliation 00:02:28.634 --> 00:02:30.684 and what set you claim. 00:02:30.684 --> 00:02:32.954 And then there's the black power movement. 00:02:32.954 --> 00:02:35.054 Most movements need their icons, right? 00:02:35.054 --> 00:02:37.494 You have the fist, you have the 'fro. 00:02:37.494 --> 00:02:40.094 These things coincide with the Black Panther aesthetic, 00:02:40.094 --> 00:02:42.754 where you could kinda spot your tribe from afar. 00:02:42.754 --> 00:02:44.754 Because you're not just keeping a pick in, like, 00:02:44.754 --> 00:02:45.634 your beauty kit. 00:02:45.634 --> 00:02:47.364 It's, like, it's in your back pocket, 00:02:47.364 --> 00:02:49.854 purposely with the first outside of it alls, 00:02:49.854 --> 00:02:52.194 and your hair, you'll rock it in your 'fro. 00:02:52.194 --> 00:02:54.064 If I think about iconic afros, 00:02:54.064 --> 00:02:56.324 I definitely think about Angela Davis. 00:02:56.324 --> 00:02:59.434 Her 'fro personifies elegant style, 00:02:59.434 --> 00:03:01.334 freedom, rebellion. 00:03:01.334 --> 00:03:02.774 You feel all of these feelings at once 00:03:02.774 --> 00:03:05.204 when you see Angela Davis fighting for her life 00:03:05.204 --> 00:03:06.464 in federal court. 00:03:06.464 --> 00:03:10.004 By the 80s, the afro style became less radical. 00:03:10.004 --> 00:03:12.474 The afro picks are still produced to this day 00:03:12.474 --> 00:03:13.624 with the clenched fist, 00:03:13.624 --> 00:03:15.624 so it's the remnants of the movement 00:03:15.624 --> 00:03:17.854 in the everyday object. 00:03:17.854 --> 00:03:20.714 When I was young, it was just, like, another object. 00:03:20.714 --> 00:03:21.814 It was a comb. 00:03:21.814 --> 00:03:24.074 But as I became more enlightened 00:03:24.074 --> 00:03:26.484 to really understand, like, the roots and the origin 00:03:26.484 --> 00:03:29.204 and the intentionality of the design 00:03:29.204 --> 00:03:31.957 and why the fist and all of these things, 00:03:33.414 --> 00:03:34.948 I woke up. 00:03:34.948 --> 00:03:37.531 (upbeat music)