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Posted on October 28, 2011 - by Wayne Sutton
Home > Diversity > When I met Michael Arrington in Silicon Valley this summer we talked about this interview….CNN Black In America 4 Documentary

When I met Michael Arrington in Silicon Valley this summer we talked about this interview….CNN Black In America 4 Documentary

Diversity Entrepreneurship Featured NewME Accelerator


Ok, things are clearly getting out of control with this whole Michael Arrington, black Entrepreneurs, CNN, Black In America 4, Silicon Valley documentary. From someone who lived it and was in the middle of this whole thing let me tell you my view point and why I think a lot of the unnecessary attacks, blog post, tweets and all needs to slow down. You can call this a butt kissing post, make up or whatever but here’s my story/opinion.

When I met Arrington twice this summer in Silicon Valley.

While working on NewMe Accelerator this summer and going to Silicon Valley there were a hand full a people I wanted to meet who were not a mentor/speaker such as Sean Parker, Mark Zuckerberg, Ron Conway, Jack Dorsey, MG and Michael Arrington. I saw Ron Conway passing through 500Startups one day and waived hello, (almost counts). No luck on Sean Parker but I really didn’t try(sorry Pius) and both times when I visited Facebook HQ, Zuck wasn’t in the building (dang). I saw Jack when I had a meeting at Twitter HQ but he was busy talking and I didn’t want to look like a crazy fanboy so I kept it moving. As for MG I saw him at the TechCruch August Capital party after the Mobile First CrunchUp. We talked and he was like, Wayne…. we met at SXSW a few years ago…. Ok MG.

As for Michael Arrington, I first met him walking into the Mobile First CrunchUp with Angela Benton. I was caught off guard cause I wasn’t’ expecting to see him and I had a “geek shock” moment. I introduced myself and said by the way I was a friend of MC Hammer. Yes, I went the name drop route. Bad move, very, very bad move. A lot of people in the Valley do this (name dropping) and I guess it rubbed off on me but don’t name drop as a first introduction/impression ever. Either way Arrington was cool and said ok, we shook hands and he had to run off. I knew later that day he was being interviewed by CNN for Black in America 4 and was hoping to have a chance to talk with him again the same day but it didn’t happen.

Arrington does know Black Entrepreneurs:

Luckily I did see and talk with Arrington again a few days later at the Google Ventures BBQ. Ironically he was walking around with a “Black Entrepreneur” and we talked about the CNN Black In America 4 interview. This time I did a better job of introducing myself. One of his first statements was “how do you think I did”, “I don’t want to look like an asshole”. My response was, Mike, I haven’t seen your interview. He seemed generally concerned about how he was going to be portrayed in the documentary on CNN. He mentioned about being asked if he knew any “Black Entrepreneurs” at the time it kinda threw him through a loop but him and the “Black Entrepreneur” he was with at the time was starting talking “lightly” how they know each other.

From there Arrington and I talked about having TechCruch host a pre-screening for Black In America 4 when it comes out. Now Arrington is no longer at TechCrunch and with the way CNN is using his quotes, good luck with that happening now. Arrington and I talked a little more, I made a few introductions to him of other “Black Entrepreneurs” while at the Google Ventures BBQ and said keep in touch.

Arrington’s foot in the mouth moment?

I know for a fact that Arrington did know “Black Entrepreneurs” before the interview, before his CrunchFund and before he invested into a few Black Entrepreneurs with his CrunchFund. Some may not be considered the traditional Entrepreneurs but I know that Arrington knows Charles Hudson, Clarence Wooten, Tristan Walker, Adria Richards (who has attended and reported from TechCrunch Disrupt, the last two years) and artist turned entrepreneurs Chamillionaire and MC Hammer, all Black/brown. Speaking of Hammer, when I first met Arrington I texted Hammer and was like, hey I just met your boy Arrington and Hammer replied Arrington is the man.

So did Arrington stick his foot in his mouth when he said ‘I don’t know a single black entrepreneur’ or did he say it to stir up controversy as some have suggested, or was he caught off guard and said what he really meant or was he being to some would say, Arrington being Arrington. I don’t know and only Arrington can answer that but that doesn’t mean at all that he’s a racist. Trust me, there were times in Silicon Valley where I was thinking/feeling am I the only one here? Heck there’s times like that in Raleigh, NC. So for Arrington to say he doesn’t know any “Black Entrepreneurs” is somewhat surprising being I know how many Black Entrepreneurs would love to have been featured on TechCrunch or may have tried to reach out, myself included. That still doesn’t mean he’s a racist or all of Silicon Valley is.

UPDATE: See Michael Arrington’s blog post response to CNN: Oh Shit, I’m A Racist

Arrington is not Silicon Valley

Still, I’m not saying I agree with Arrington and/or a lot of his comments about Silicon Valley but what I can say is that living in Silicon Valley for the summer it’s an entire different world. You can say there are not a lot of blacks in Silicon Valley or tech and be part right just like you can say that Atlanta is the black capital of USA and be part right based off of opinion, demographics and culture.

Sadly for Silicon Valley, Arrington is a loud, public figure and CNN knows that. I know that. But his comments and/statements do not represent all of Silicon Valley or Silicon Valley VCs;it also doesn’t mean he’s right. Just Arrington perspective. Media is media and always be careful what you say to media on camera and off. Some of my comments will be used not the way I like and it’s life. Lesson learned.

What I would like to see are the interviews from Mitch Kapor, Ron Conway, Jay Jameson and others who talked more about the need for the NewMe Accelerator..

The Disappointment

Back to NewMe Accelerator, CNN and the documentary. I have yet to see a pre-screening. A few friends have seen it in NY, ATL and other cities. I’ve seen the tweets, had a few phone calls but I’m clearly disappointed that so far out of the pre-screenings most of the conversation is about Michael Arrington one sound byte! I mean there was hours and hours of footage being recorded about NewMe Accelerator and the eight of us living in one house. Note there were 11 startups in NewMe Accelerator but CNN only covered the eight of us in the house. But I mean Arrington was only interviewed for two or three hours out of the countless hours of footage and sadly this is all of what people are talking about so far? The closer it gets to the documentary being aired the more nervous I get.

There were so many great things that happen this summer. I met a lot of great entrepreneurs (Black, White, Asian, Hispanic) who wanted to see all of the entrepreneurs in NewMe Accelerator succeed. I hope this story is told in the Black In America 4 documentary too. Yes, we had challenges and situations… trust me. You’ll see but there was so more good things that happen versus what I’m currently reading about and seeing online.

Where are the Black Entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley?

Why the ratio of Black Entrepreneurs vs other races in Silicon Valley may be very low? There are a good number of Black Entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley. Groups such as Black Founders and more are doing a good job connecting Black Entrepreneurs in the community to support one another.

Where are the Blacks In Tech?

There are tons of blacks in tech! Another blog post on that and how to find them later but check out http://28daysofdiversity.com for starters.

Race, gender and relationships matter in technology, in business, in life!

This is a very sensitive subject but all I’m going to say and address at this time is that race matters. I’ve experienced it, seen it, doing it, living it and have stories to tell why and how it matters. You may or may not have seen or experienced anything “racist” yourself, well…lucky you! Sadly a lot of others across the world have. In the words of Kanye West “Racism still alive they just be concealing it”.

Regardless of what you build, how smart you are, a lot of factors go into play in terms of success no matter if you’re in Silicon Valley or Raleigh, NC. Be a good, smart business person and do the best you can.

The big picture!

Let’s talk about the big picture here and why Black In America 4 decided to cover NewMe Accelerator. The NewMe Accelerator after learning that only 1% internet start-ups founders are African-American and we wanted to do the following:

Increase exposure to talent,
Connect founders to access of early stage capital,
Provide mentorship from qualified individuals,
Collaborate and build successful companies in the heart of Silicon Valley,

And most importantly, we want to…

MAKE HISTORY

It’s not going to be easy (but nothing is) and the life-cycle starts here.

The negative attention, racist comments, and more is not what I wanted to see happen.

Also read:
Arrington, Race, and Silicon Valley by Hank Williams
Why Arrington is NOT a Racist & Don’t Believe the Hype by Angela Benton

My Challenge

Have an idea… do it and don’t talk about it.
Have a vision… complete it.
Have a problem.. solve it.


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Tags: Black Entrepreneursblack in america 4cnndocumentaryMichael Arringtonraceracismsilicon valley
This entry was posted on Friday, October 28th, 2011 at 7:18 pm and is filed under Diversity, Entrepreneurship, Featured, NewME Accelerator. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
  • http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen kidehen

    I wish there were more ex. NBA, NFL, MLB, Film and Music Industry entertainers setting up VC funds. Check out John Hummer, he was a bench warmer for the Sonics, but today, I wonder about how he compares to his fellow ex. NBA players. Just saying :-)

    Links:

    1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hummer — Wikipedia page
    2. http://dbpedia.org/describe/?uri=http://dbpedia.org/resource/John_Hummer — DBpedia view for more information
    3. http://dbpedia.org/describe/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fdbpedia.org%2Fclass%2Fyago%2FVentureCapitalists — All the main VCs, drill-down to see if you find others with backgrounds like John esp. brothers and sisters .

    We’ll get there, and yes a little help isn’t so bad, but we can do much more to help ourselves too. The tech industry is really the best place to launch anything. 

    • John

      It will not be venture capitalism, it will be philanthropy, right ? Please stop playing the race card, I know you really want to help out black people. But this will only backfire. When a black people gets funded, people will think ‘maybe because he/she is black?’ . And when they fail, people will think ‘see, that’s because he/she is black.He/she only get to this point because he/she is black’ . Do you want this to happen? 

      • http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen kidehen

        Please! I have no interest in “race cards” . My comment had nothing to do with you poor interpretation! Please re-read my comments. 

    • Anonymous

      Thank you for sharing. I’ve never heard of John Hummer. Interesting, his investment portfolio includes Napster 

  • http://www.nicefishfilms.com/ nicefishfilms

    First off, the documentary is well done and the focus should be on the whole of the content. Wayne, you come off very well in the film. Sorry that some are distracting from the big picture. Of course, a little controversy never hurts ratings though. All the best to you – have been a fan going way back to the friendfeed days. Appreciate what you do for all entrepreneurs. 

  • Anonymous

    Hey Wayne, I am glad you wrote this. When I saw a tweet recently about the ordeal I tweeted “Someone needs more friends, I know lots of black entrepreneurs” fact. Anyway the part that really bothered me and still does is how he implied that they would invest in companies based on their race (if they were black) without consideration for merit. This sends a really dumb and in a way divisive message. I hope I didn’t misread that part of it and that the facts were properly represented. In my opinion this is a far bigger issue than the mysterious overlooking black entrepreneurs (which you thankfully pointed out he did). To your point about racism existing, I know it does and I’ve observed it more times in my life than I care to think about. White guilt is real too, those of us that don’t have a racist bone in our body do feel apprehensive at times and awkward in others. I think people feel the need to compensate, to level the field so to speak, when you really break that down though it is insulting to the people they are trying to help (over guilt). In a way this perpetuates the situation, doesn’t it? I know you are semi defending Arrington here, and I really don’t have a desire to condemn him what I would love to see though is people learning to be a bit more colorblind. This goes both ways and all directions. I think Arrington did us a service in a way, because he brought something that is often not discussed to the forefront. I’d like to discuss this topic with you sometime. 

  • John

    Why aren’t there many over-weight entrepreneurs in the Vally? I mean just look at how many over weight americans in US and they are under-presented in tech. I’m pissed. I’m going to start a OverWeightMe incubator that helps fat people. And any news media or investor who is not paying attention is a a weight-ist. You all should all write about me and fund me because i’m fat and under-presented so I deserve it. Sarcasm aside, let me tell you why there are so few black tech entrepreneurs. Fact 1: Most successful tech founders in the Valley are themselves technical. Fact 2: Go to your favorite college, how many black people there studying math or computer science ? how many white or asians? If there are very small percentage of black studying math and computer science, of course, the number of the black tech entrepreneurs would be small. To all the black people out there, please don’t turn venture capitalism into philanthropy. You will destroy Silicon Vally. The whole sport (e.g basketball) industry is dominated by black people. Do you see asian people crying around shouting ‘racism’? If you are really good (like in sports), you gain success. If you are not good, you’re not (like making tech companies). It’s simple.

  • John

    Why aren’t there many over-weight entrepreneurs in the Vally? I mean just look at how many over weight americans in US and they are under-presented in tech. I’m pissed. I’m going to start a OverWeightMe incubator that helps fat people. And any news media or investor who is not paying attention is a a weight-ist. You all should all write about me and fund me because i’m fat and under-presented so I deserve it. 

    Sarcasm aside, let me tell you why there are so few black tech entrepreneurs. Fact 1: Most successful tech founders in the Valley are themselves technical. Fact 2: Go to your favorite college, how many black people there studying math or computer science ? how many white or asians? 

    If there are very small percentage of black studying math and computer science, of course, the number of the black tech entrepreneurs would be small. 

    To all the black people out there, please don’t turn venture capitalism into philanthropy. You will destroy Silicon Vally. 

    The whole sport (e.g basketball) industry is dominated by black people. Do you see asian people crying around shouting ‘racism’? If you are really good (like in sports), you gain success. If you are not good, you’re not (like making tech companies). It’s simple.
    (reposted for readability)

    • John

      I’m trying to offend people here. It’s what I honestly believe. If i’m wrong, please give me your reasons. You’re also feel free to delete the comment if it offend you.

      • John

        Correction: i’m NOT trying to offend people here(i need a coffee)

    • http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen kidehen

      How does the essence of your comment above differ from mine? For reasons I still can’t comprehend you decided to categorize my comments as “playing the race card”. 

      Venture Capital is a critical part of Silicon Valley’s success. A group of folks (whatever persuasion)  are ready to raise capital and make bets. 

      Africans (globally) can also band together to construct funds and make bets. There’s no special magic to Silicon Valley bar the fundamental ability to intersect capital with opportunity modulo “fear of failure”. 

      Before you make flippant comments, please do a modicum of background research. Google is quite cheap so no excuses for carelessness!

  • http://twitter.com/mrsalim Salim

    It is a problem that Arrington, who has been covering the Tech space for some time couldn’t name any Blacks in the Tech industry. I would at least expect him to be able to name some people who he was familiar with or provide an example of Black inventions such as Black Planet from the first internet bubble. #imjustsayin Albeit, CNN is a tactical arm of the media industry and most likely wanted to catch him off guard.

  • Anonymous

    Good article Wayne,

    I think Mr. arrington’s comments are sytemic, in that many times black contributions, be they in politics, engineering, or wherever, are trivialized so that they are marginalized in our society.  With that being said, there are plenty of black entrepeneurs in cyberspace.

    If you down play the significance of a contribution, what value does it have.  Is it done intentionally? Consciencely?  Who knows.  Bottom line, we must not allow others to place value on our worth or contributions.  We must use our own outlets to most effectively communicate our message.

    In the beginning, the internet was an anonomous place for us all.  When is the last time you registered a profile where they didn’t ask for a profile pic?  What is the purpose of the pic shall I ask?

    http://flytel.us/

  • http://about.me/austinlac Austin Clements

    I’m glad you wrote this post. I wrote a similar post that echos this sentiment. 

    As far as the Arrington “no black entrepreneurs” statement, I fall in the camp of that was just Arrington being Arrington. I’ve never met the man but have seen his interviews and read enough of his articles to not be caught off guard by his statement. Only on rare occasions does he go out of his way to distinguish facts from his ideas or opinions, which is why he would say “I don’t know any black entrepreneurs” where he should have said “I can’t think of any black entrepreneurs.”

    But Arrington aside, the fact remains that blacks are drastically underrepresented in the Valley. Not because anybody is out to get us, but because we as a culture have not embraced careers that relate to entrepreneurship outside of media and entertainment. Having programs like NewMe will turn that around. I wish you guys continued success. When I make it out that way I’d love to stop by and say hello.

  • http://www.applicist.com Robert Newkirk

    I have a slight issue with pigeon holing black folks by their skin color in regards to technology. In addition, there are many opportunities within the tech start-up community that are for the taking – not all of them are assigned to being the actual proprietor of the company. I think that BlackWeb 2.0 along with the NewMe Group have done a wonderful job at getting the topic of black involvement in technology rotation…but we all know the bottom line is money….same as in Hollywood…you ask why there are not a lot of black actors in leading roles and the bottom line is because we did not produce the movie. More black producers…more black screenplays….protagonist…antagonist…etc. Talent wise, I think we have a ways to go on how to speed track a good idea to market vs. hanging on to a mediocre one just because the person is black. Real talk: I rather fund 4 companies from ANY race that will be successful than 4 Black companies that are limited in their market share. Funding a black start up that is geared just for black folks just doesn’t make financial sense because we are only 13 percent of the population. Remember why conscious black hip hop died? Because white folks liked gangster music…the numbers influenced the market. Let’s talk a realistic strategy that is not topical…(as skin color tends to be) but is more systemic in the long run. Playing behind the scenes gets you in the back door…and usually there are no lines at the back door…

  • Pingback: From the Horses Mouth: gokit Founders Weigh in on Ongoing CNN “In America” Debate | gokit

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1812298687 Asif Ifteakhar Ridoy

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