Dick Gregory on Don Imus
Yeah Don Imus, the dude has come back sharper than ever and you can listen on WABC's website from 6-10 weekday mornings. Dick Gregory a man I have always admired is interviewed and you can listen to it at his site. He says meaningful things with humor and that way we all might listen and act. From his site I saw this:
Dick Gregory was on
the frontline in the sixties during the Civil Rights Era; today he
continues to be a "drum major for justice and equality."
Gregory, Richard Claxton 'Dick' (Born, October 12, 1932, St. Louis,
Mo.), African American comedian and civil rights activist whose social
satire changed the way white Americans perceived African American
comedians since he first performed in public. Dick Gregory entered the
national comedy scene in 1961 when Chicago’s Playboy Club (as a direct
request from publisher Hugh Hefner) booked him as a replacement for
white comedian, ?Professor? Irwin Corey.
Gregory's activism continued into the 1990s. In response to published
allegations that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had supplied
cocaine to predominantly African American areas in Los Angeles, thus
spurring the crack epidemic, Gregory protested at CIA headquarters and
was arrested. In 1992 he began a program called "Campaign for Human
Dignity" to fight crime in St. Louis neighborhoods.
In 1973, the year he released his comedy album Caught in the Act,
Gregory moved with his family to Plymouth, Massachusetts, where he
developed an interest in vegetarianism and became a nutritional
consultant. In 1984 he founded Health Enterprises, Inc., a company that
distributed weight loss products. In 1987 Gregory introduced the
Slim-Safe Bahamian Diet, a powdered diet mix, which was immensely
profitable. You can read more on Dick Gregory. Enter site