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You don't really look
at a toothbrush and say,
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"I'm great!"
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But when you look at an Afro pick,
which is a grooming tool,
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it can remind you in your
subconscious to, like,
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really be proud and, like, "All right."
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[Small thing.]
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[Big idea.]
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An Afro pick is a utilitarian tool
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used to maintain the Afro hairstyle.
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I think the Afro pick was designed
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for the ergonomics of creating something
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that felt like you were running
fingers through your hair.
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The shape, even the depth
that it goes in -- it's like a hand.
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You have plastic or nylon teeth,
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and then you have the stainless
steel or the nickel teeth.
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I always prefer the metal tooth
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just 'cause I like the sound
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and the ones I know have
the black power fist on the handle.
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When I think of black hair in America,
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I think of something that's been policed.
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Back in the days, it was
expected for black people
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to chemically treat their hair.
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Whether that's healthy for them
is a secondary thing to blending in.
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In the 50s, dancer Ruth Beckford
and a lot of jazz singers
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were tired of straightening their hair,
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so they said, all right,
we're going to just let it grow naturally
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and started rocking natural,
close-cropped hair.
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And in the 60s, that style evolved
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with the formation of the Afro,
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which was the cropped hair,
natural, picked out
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into a more spherical shape.
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You had civil rights leaders, activists,
that adopted the hairstyle
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as a means of rebellion and black pride.
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And then you had musicians
like James Brown,
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who was infamously known
for chemically straightening his hair,
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reject that and go natural.
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It went hand-in-hand with his music,
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so he had songs like
"Say it Loud, I'm Black and I'm Proud."
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The black is beautiful movement
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is just rejecting the notion
that to be black
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or to have darker skin,
to have a curlier grade of hair,
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was something to be ashamed of.
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I have one of my favorite
pictures of my mother
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and my grandmother,
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and my grandmother had a small 'fro,
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and that was in the 60s.
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African hair combs date back to 3500 BCE.
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The oldest African combs are found
in ancient Egypt and Sudan,
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so they were making pyramids and combs.
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The way the ancient African
combs were embellished
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represented status or tribal affiliation.
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It's no coincidence that the fist
on the modern Afro pick
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also sets the tone for affiliation
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and what set you claim.
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And then there's the black power movement.
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Most movements need their icons, right?
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You have the fist, you have the 'fro.
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These things coincide with
the Black Panther aesthetic,
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where you could kind of
spot your tribe from afar,
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because you're not just keeping
a pick in, like, your beauty kit.
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It's in your back pocket,
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purposely with the first
outside of it,
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and in your hair,
you'll rock it in your 'fro.
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If I think about iconic Afros,
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I definitely think about Angela Davis.
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Her 'fro personifies elegant style,
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freedom, rebellion.
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You feel all of these feelings at once
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when you see Angela Davis
fighting for her life in federal court.
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By the 80s, the Afro style
became less radical.
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The Afro picks are still
produced to this day
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with the clenched fist,
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so it's the remnants of the movement
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in the everyday object.
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When I was young, it was
just, like, another object.
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It was a comb.
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But as I became more enlightened
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to really understand
the roots and the origin
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and the intentionality of the design
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and why the fist
and all of these things ...
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I woke up.