Hip Hop DJ finally admits he is gay, leaves radio
buzzz worthy. . .
Saying, "This is the hardest thing I have ever done in my life," popular New York DJ, Mr. Cee has finally opened up about his sexuality. After dodging gay rumors for years, the HOT 97 radio personality admitted he is bi-sexual in a PSA for the AHF following the release of incriminating audio from Internet personality Bimbo Winehouse, a gay cross
dresser who alleged the DJ paid him $100 for sex. (Bimbo Winehouse claims he did not perform a sex act and is not a prostitute.) The cell phone recorded audio was one of several attempts by different people to expose Cee's alleged sexual involvement with men.
Mr. Cee, who is credited with breaking the career of the late Notorius B.I.G., was in the hot seat in May of 2013. He took a self-imposed leave amid gay allegations the stemmed from an arrest for patronizing an undercover cop posing as a prostitute. Cee said the cop was female, but he was arrested three times in the past for soliciting male prostitutes of transvestites. It was hard to believe him after that.
Cleo Manago, founder and CEO of the Black Men's Xchange explores the signifigance of the exposure.
Saying, "This is the hardest thing I have ever done in my life," popular New York DJ, Mr. Cee has finally opened up about his sexuality. After dodging gay rumors for years, the HOT 97 radio personality admitted he is bi-sexual in a PSA for the AHF following the release of incriminating audio from Internet personality Bimbo Winehouse, a gay cross
dresser who alleged the DJ paid him $100 for sex. (Bimbo Winehouse claims he did not perform a sex act and is not a prostitute.) The cell phone recorded audio was one of several attempts by different people to expose Cee's alleged sexual involvement with men.
Mr. Cee, who is credited with breaking the career of the late Notorius B.I.G., was in the hot seat in May of 2013. He took a self-imposed leave amid gay allegations the stemmed from an arrest for patronizing an undercover cop posing as a prostitute. Cee said the cop was female, but he was arrested three times in the past for soliciting male prostitutes of transvestites. It was hard to believe him after that.
Cleo Manago, founder and CEO of the Black Men's Xchange explores the signifigance of the exposure.
Do you 'Cee' what I see?:
An Ahistorical Collision Between
Hip-Hop,"Manhood," Silence and Sexuality
By Cleo Manago, CEO and founder of the Black Men's Xchange (BMX)
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By now you may have heard about the recent scandal surrounding Mister Cee, a well-known hip-hop DJ in New York City. In case you don't know about the controvery, Mister Cee was "caught" on tape soliciting a cross-dressing male posing as a prostitute. Upon Mister Cee's recognition that the conversation was made public, he quickly resigned from his prized DJ post. Soon after, he rescinded his resignation, and tearfully confessed his essentially homosexual desires.
The entire incident causes me to ask, "Are we preventing or promoting the emergence of other "DJ Mister Cees" in society to "come in" to self-acceptance? And who is more detrimental? A hip hop homosexual on the down low or one that is out and openly vicious? And how does any of this improve issues concerning sexuality within our community?"
In short, as it stands, Mister Cee is a Black male who while attempting to discreetly fulfill his desires, was strategically ambushed and set-up by a self-appointed, backbiting homosexual. Was anybody victimized during this incident? No. DJ Mister Cee was minding his own business along with a consenting adult. Yet, there are social constructs and paradigms that transform what DJ Mister Cee likely assumed was a private matter, into prey for the consumption of ironically voracious reputation predators.
That this is a scandal at all, one created by a gay-identifying Black male, is a consequence of intra-community disdain and misdirected rage - driven by a [White gay] blueprint on how homosexuals/bisexuals should act and identify. Same-gender-loving (SGL) or bisexual Black males who do not buy into this identity paradigm and/or don an "I identify as gay" T-shirt (so to speak), can be subject to brutal treatment; especially by homosexual Black males who do take on "gay identity culture" as their own.
A now widely viewed YouTube video on Bimbo Winehouse TV provides a case-in-point. The video displays a Black male, clearly gay identified, who seems to relish in his disdain and ridicule of DJ Mister Cee. Seemingly, with gleeful satisfaction, Bimbo Winehouse sways and sings while he taunts with words that include "Shout out to all you 'down-low' men out there. Shout out to all you 'down-low' celebrities. You hiding in that closet of who you truly are. Honey! You running from who you are. You gay."
A reasonable question posed to Bimbo Winehouse might be, "And how will your antics and ridicule resolve the so-called "down-low" issue?" Yet, problem-solving rarely appears atop of the agenda. Instead, the mentality tends to be:Either you are with us as an ally or against us as an enemy.
Bimbo Winehouse demonstrates a cut-throat viciousness and peer-insensitivity rampant in Black gay identified sub-cultures. It is driven by oppression and pain resulting from a community having yet to find its way in culturally resonant healing or historically informed ways. These days, with homosexuality being so prominently displayed, one might think that homosexuality has lost its controversy.
Yet, this is not necessarily the case within the Black, desperate-to-be-seen as "masculine" and "hard" dominated sub-cultures like Hip Hop. While the White gay community tends to set the pace for perceptions of what homosexuality is and is not, Black culture, history, experience and context has not. The now 500-year story and reality behind Black male identity anxiety around self-concept, culture, and homosexual expression - remains clandestine.
The lack of understanding and engagement of this experience and journey leads to a perpetual state of confusion and disorientation about and among SGL Black males. This institutionalized invisibility also contributes to this population's unique and perpetual inability to manage and resolve its still disproportionate HIV incidence problem.
My advice to same-gender-loving (SGL), bisexual and experimenting Black males is to focus on healing and compassion for each other and organizing and building a more functional and constructive community. Concretely, there is very little space provided in America, even in Black communities, which compels Black males in particular, including DJ Mister Cee, to feel safe presenting all that they personally are to society.
My advice to society at-large, especially the Black community, is to affirm creation of breathing room for the diversity that has always existed among humanity. This must include room for the spectrum of gender expression that has always been with us, that is often contorted and abusively contained within desperately patriarchal social mind prisons.
We can do better than we have; and we must if we are ever to acquire a just and constructively free society that, among other things, discontinues the creation of DJ Mister Cee-like scandals. The real scandal is not Mister Cee's public outing, but the overall public perception of the diversity around Black male sexuality issues. Do you 'Cee' what I see? I'm hoping that one day we will see more compassion, understanding and decency from all parties involved.
Cleo Manago is founder and CEO of the Black Men's Xchange (BMX) (http://www.bmxnational.org/), the nation's oldest and largest community-based movement devoted to promoting healthy self-concept and behavior among diverse males of African-descent.
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