Tavis Smiley - The “Been in the Storm Too Long” Interview 
Tavis Smiley Interviewed by Kam Williams
   From his celebrated conversations with world figures, to    his work to inspire the next generation of leaders, as a broadcaster,    author, advocate and philanthropist, Tavis Smiley continues to be an    outstanding voice for change. He is currently the host of the late night    television talk show Tavis Smiley on PBS and The Tavis Smiley Show on Public    Radio International (PRI). 
   
   Time Magazine honored Mr. Smiley in 2009 as one of "The World's 100 Most    Influential People." The Smiley Group, Inc. (TSG) is a communications    corporation established in support of human rights and related empowerment    issues. TSG serves as the holding company for various enterprises    encompassing broadcast and print media, lectures, symposiums and the    Internet. 
   
   Here, Tavis talks about Been in the Storm Too Long, a special report on the    City of New Orleans airing on PBS on July 21st ET/PT. He also speaks about    the On Your Side Tour with Tavis Smiley, a series of free financial    empowerment workshops he's staging in various cities around the country    between now and the end of 2010.
Tavis Smiley - The "Been in the Storm Too Long" Interview 
   with Kam Williams
Kam Williams: Hey, what's happening, Tavis? How're you doing?
   
   Tavis Smiley: I'm doing the best I can, brother. How about you? 
   
   KW: Things are hectic, as usual, but all is well.  
   
   TS: Oh, man, we're both just trying to make our own contribution, brother.   
   
   KW: Thanks for the time, again.  
   
   TS: Oh, it's my pleasure. It's a blessing to talk to you again. 
   
   KW: Since you were born in Gulfport, Mississippi, I have to first ask you    what you think about the Gulf oil spill?  
   
   TS: I was just down there for about a week. We're working on the third    installment of Tavis Smiley Reports. 
   
   KW: 'Been in the Storm Too Long.'  
   
   TS: Yeah, exactly. In addition to my late night show, we're doing four    primetime specials this year, one every quarter. And it seemed obvious that    in the third quarter it needed to be about the fifth anniversary of Katrina.    I'm doing this one in conjunction with Academy Award-winner Jonathan Demme    who is actually directing it. 
   
   KW: So, how're things down there?
   
   TS: It's hard to find the language to describe what it's like when you see    it in person. It is horrific, and there are a lot of questions we're going    to have to address once we get on the other side of this crisis. I recently    had the former President of Shell Oil, John Hofmeister, as a guest on my TV    show. He has a powerful, new book out called,    'Why We Hate the Oil    Companies.'
   
   We had a really, really serious dialogue navigating through the politics of    what happened, what President Obama ought to be doing, what BP ought to be    doing, and how we can insure that this never happens again. It was a    fascinating conversation. Still, when you see it in person, it's horrific,    for lack of a better term. It's a major, major crisis, and I'm just sorry    that the White House was a little slow moving on this, initially. But now,    it seems like they're fully engaged. So, I hope we can turn the corner on    this disaster. We'll see. 
   
   KW: There are some people who are secretly happy about the President's    delayed response to the Gulf oil spill, given Bush's failure in the wake of    Katrina. Let me read you part of an email I received recently from a brother    from the South: 'I say a pox on the racist whites of South Louisiana,    Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida' Let the Gulf be a cesspool, a dead zone.    Let the crackers and the rednecks be dispersed to find other places and    other jobs.' He goes on to point out that after Hurricane Katrina, 'a    quarter million blacks were dispersed across the country and not allowed to    return to New Orleans and their homes, even though public housing was    unaffected by the flooding. The white middle class racial oppression of the    blacks was exposed, and the racial conspiracy was a foot with no substantial    sympathy from them.' So, he obviously feels that blacks were abandoned,    uprooted and disenfranchised after Katrina, so whites deserve the same    treatment now.
      
   TS: I hear what he's saying. My response to that would be that two wrongs    don't make a right. We ought to live in a country where we will not abide    the contestation of anyone's humanity. That's what's wrong with America. Too    many people's humanity is being contested. The humanity of black folk was    contested during Hurricane Katrina. The humanity of these fishermen and    others who live or make their living off the Gulf coast is being contested    now. In Arizona, the humanity of our Hispanic brothers and sisters is being    contested. Whether it's racism, ageism, sexism, homophobia or some other    form of intolerance, I call all of these slights the contestation of    humanity. The way forward is not playing tit for tat, and saying, 'You    killed my dog, so I'm gonna kill your cat.' It's about celebrating, reveling    in, and protecting the humanity of every American. I don't think any group    should be allowed to suffer because another one did. We have to rise to the    occasion by recognizing everyone's humanity. So, I hope that his opinion is    rare. 
   
   KW: I see that you're going around the country conducting these free    financial literacy workshops. But with the real black unemployment numbers    way over 20%, of what value is financial literacy to people if they can't    even get a job?  
   
   TS: That's a challenge, and one of the things I'm going to be talking about.    I'm not na've about this. I recognize that unemployment is triple and, in    some cities, quadruple the national average. We have to find jobs, and we    have to pressure the powers that be. One thing's for certain: jobs won't    become available to the unemployed unless people start screaming, jumping up    and down, and demanding that the powers that be do more to get the economy    jumpstarted. Politics is not a spectator sport. Election season tends to be    a good time to get the attention of leaders. So, I think that makes this a    good time, Kam, to be having this conversation because people have    questions, they have concerns, they have fears, they have anxieties and they    want information about how to navigate through this, including those persons    who might still be employed but are just holding on. Some folks have a job,    but their retirement is exhausted, or maybe the cash saved for their kids'    college education has been shot or they've lost their home and had to    downsize. So, there's a lot to address, even though I can't just show up and    start handing out jobs. It's really about getting people the type of    information that will help them navigate their way through this crisis so    they can come out of these challenging times prepared to put themselves on    sure financial footing. 
   
   KW: Illness and lack of health insurance is hurting a lot of people, too.      
   
   TS: Healthcare is the number one reason for bankruptcy in this country.    People will spend everything they have trying to hold onto their lives. In    that regard, President Obama deserves credit for getting the healthcare bill    passed, even though it was watered way down, and isn't nearly what I think    it should have been. 
   
   KW: You mentioned elections. What do you think of that unknown candidate    Alvin Greene winning the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate in South    Carolina when he had no budget and never campaigned? That's a real    head-scratcher. 
      
   TS: I can't figure it out, either. That's the most bizarre story I've ever    seen. There's something going on down there. What, I do not know. I get the    sense that the Democrats were asleep at the wheel. Who this guy is and how    he got on the ballot, they're only raising all these questions now, when    they should've been raised before the primary, if the Democrats had done    their due diligence. 
   
   KW: I wonder why nobody's talking about the possibility that there was vote    fraud, since South Carolina uses paperless electronic voting.
   
   TS: They ARE looking into the question of whether or not it might have had    to do with the machines. If it turns out that he's a Republican plant, it's    so unheard of and so very, very bizarre, that it deserves to have a book    written about it. But I don't think either party is that well organized to    pull something like that off. We'll get to the bottom of it eventually.
   
   KW: Larry Greenberg says, 'I've seen you bring together forces that I could    never imagine at the same table. Is it the power of love or diplomacy that    you have harnessed?' I think he might be referring to the Black Agenda    Summit you convened in Chicago this Spring.  
   
   TS: Yeah, I hope it's both. I love people, and I believe that diplomacy is a    valuable tool in one's arsenal. But beyond me, it's about the people I    invite. The people who are interested in engaging in discourse about making    America better. In that regard, it's not like I did something magical, you    ask the right people, and they tend to show up. So, it's about outreach. I    can honestly say that while those forums are monumental and take a lot of    work and energy to organize and pull off, I'd be lying if I said I had to    twist anybody's arm to be there. 
   
   KW: Children's book author Irene Smalls says, 'Your career has taken many    turns. What are your future goals?'
   
   TS: That's a good question. For me, the answer has always been the same.    It's about trying to love and serve people. I operate off of a very simple,    but I think poignant definition of leadership. It's this: you can't lead    people unless you love people. And you can't save people, if you don't serve    people. Love to me means that everybody is worthy, just because all life has    equal value, and everybody is worthy of a quality education, worthy of a    good job, and worthy of living in a crime and pollution-free environment.    Serving to me means trying to give people information that can help them    live better lives. That's always been my goal. It's never changed, although    it's taken on a variety of forms, whether TV, radio, print, philanthropy or    any of the other things that I do. But the real substance is trying to love    people, trying to serve people.    
          ![]() Colorblind: The Rise of Post-Racial Politics and the Retreat from Racial Equality Click to order via Amazon by Tim Wise Paperback: 160 pages Publisher: City Lights Publishers (June 1, 2010) In this powerful follow-up to Between Barack and a Hard Place, Tim Wise argues against 'colorblindness' and for a deeper color-consciousness in both public and private practice. We can only begin to move toward authentic social and economic equity through what Wise calls "illuminated individualism"'acknowledging the diverse identities that have shaped our perceptions, and the role that race continues to play in the maintenance of disparities between whites and people of color in the United States today. This is the first book to discuss the pitfalls of 'colorblindness' in the Obama era.  |     
TS: A book by Tim Wise called Colorblind: The Rise of Post-Racial Politics    and the Retreat from Racial Equality. It's a great book.
   
   KW: When you look in the mirror, what do you see?
   
   TS: That's a powerful question, Kam. To be honest with you, I see someone    who's struggling every day to get it right. What I mean by that is sometimes    you work really hard, and you look at everything you're up against in the    culture, in the society, in the economy, and in the body politic, and    sometimes it feels like you're just spinning your wheels. So, I wake up    every day, not depressed, but burdened by something, yet excited about    making a contribution. It's a struggle. 
   I'm a very introspective person, but usually not this public about my    introspection. 
   
   KW: If you could have one wish instantly granted, what would that be for?      
   
   TS: The end of poverty, because with that there are so many issues that we    struggle with that would immediately disappear. If we could eradicate    poverty, the world would be a whole lot better place to live. 
   
   KW: The Ling-Ju Yen question: What is your earliest childhood memory?     
   
   TS: That's another good question. Fortunately, for me, it was being loved by    two parents. I was the eldest of nine. I can recall being nurtured and    supported and paid a whole lot of attention by two very loving parents    before the others kids showed up. I believe we are who we are because    somebody loved us. 
   
   KW: What is your favorite dish to cook?
   
   TS: I'm not one to cook. I'm an eater not a cooker. And I love to eat    anything my mother makes, except liver and onions. I can't stand liver. But    anything else Joyce Smiley prepares, I will happily eat. She's the best cook    in the world. 
   
   KW: My son's at Princeton, and told me he got to meet you when you made a    surprise appearance in Cornel West's class last year. 
      
   TS: Oh, cool. Give him my regards. How's he doing? 
   
   KW: Will do. Very well, thanks.  
   
   TS: I was in town doing something with Dr. West, and I stayed over to attend    his class. I love sitting in on his classes, especially his graduate    seminars. 
   
   KW: One last question. As the consummate interviewer, are you willing to    share with me a couple of questions I can ask everybody I interview?
   
   TS: That's a very, very good question. Yeah, let me think of questions that    might work universally for a lot of different people' [Pauses] Because life    is so short, I'm always fascinated by what people want their legacy to be    and how they are doing in relation to creating that legacy. Some questions    that could come out of that are: 'What do you want your legacy to be?' and    'As we sit for this conversation, where do you think you are in the process    of creating that legacy?' That leads to these other questions that I love    asking in some shape or form: 'How introspective are you?' and 'How do you    engage in that introspection?' The point I'm making is that, typically, the    questions we ask are about external things, because nobody wants to talk    about the internal. However, Socrates said, 'The unexamined life is not    worth living.' I've discovered that, however you phrase it, if you can get    people to be introspective, you're in for a very deep conversation.    Introspection enables you to get to the heart of the matter. For me, the    sweet spot is getting them to open up about their introspective process, how    they see their lives, how they see their contribution. Once they start    opening up, 'Whew!' you're off and running. 
   
   KW: Those are some great questions, Tavis. You sure you don't mind if I    start using them?
      
   TS: No, take whatever you want, Kam. 
   
   KW: Much appreciated. I promise to call them the Tavis Smiley questions.    Thanks for another great interview.  
   
   TS: It's always great speaking with you. Take care of yourself, brother   
Related Links
- Tavis Smiley AALBC.com Author Profile
 - Tavis Smiley The Death of a King Interview (December 2014)
 - Tavis Smiley - The “FAIL UP” Interview
 - Tavis Smiley: The State of the Black Union Interview
 - Tavis Smiley and Al Sharpton fight about Barack Obama
 - State of the Black Union 2009 Coverage
 - State of the Black Union 2008 Coverage
 
   
   


