字幕列表 影片播放
-
It's February, which is officially Black History Month.
-
-(whooping) -And we're celebrating all month
-
with Roy Wood Jr. honoring the unsung heroes of black history
-
in another episode of CP Time.
-
(mellow jazz playing)
-
♪ ♪
-
Ah. Welcome to CP Time,
-
the only show that's for the culture.
-
Today we'll be discussing black explorers.
-
Now, I know when a lot of people think of explorers,
-
they only think of white people.
-
Like Christopher Columbus,
-
Lewis and Clark,
-
or that twitchy lady that drives the Magic School Bus.
-
But what many people don't know is that black people
-
have also been instrumental in discovering new lands.
-
We just don't get any of the credit.
-
Like how I discovered the Dougie,
-
and no one gave me credit.
-
I was covered in spiders,
-
and I was just trying to get them off me.
-
-(hip-hip playing) -And on my head.
-
(music stops)
-
Our first black explorer
-
is a man by the name of Matthew Henson--
-
the first man to reach the North Pole, in 1908.
-
It was an incredible feat,
-
not just because he discovered the North Pole,
-
but also because he was a black man
-
who wasn't afraid of going head-to-head against winter.
-
The only place I would want to discover
-
is Miami.
-
♪ Party in the city where the heat is on. ♪
-
Another black explorer
-
who doesn't nearly get the credit he deserves
-
was an enslaved man named York.
-
In 1804, he joined Lewis and Clark
-
on their famous expedition across North America,
-
making him the first black man
-
to travel across the U.S. continent.
-
York was a vital part of the expedition.
-
In fact, he was so trusted,
-
he was even given his own gun.
-
Which was a risky move on Lewis and Clark's part:
-
giving a slave a gun.
-
You know what you call a slave with a gun?
-
Master.
-
Interesting fact: after the expedition,
-
York requested his freedom from Clark,
-
but Clark denied him,
-
because he realized that without York,
-
he would just be another white dude lost in the forest...
-
(whispers): like a bitch.
-
And finally,
-
black people weren't just tagging along with white people
-
on these expeditions,
-
they were also making history themselves.
-
Like Abubakri II,
-
the ruler of the Mali empire.
-
In 1311, Abubakri set off on an expedition westward.
-
Eventually, he landed in Brazil.
-
Abubakri met the native tribes there
-
and made peace with them,
-
and even ended up marrying a chief's daughter,
-
a quest that many men know all too well.
-
Traveling to distant lands
-
for new booty.
-
'Cause them local girls are too familiar.
-
So the next time you think about explorers,
-
remember not to just give credit
-
to white men who discovered places people already lived--
-
Columbus.
-
But also give credit to those of the more melanin persuasion
-
who have explored the world.
-
Like my Uncle Bebo,
-
who, in 1990, traveled across the country
-
searching for the Dairy Queen with the best Oreo Blizzard.
-
And we haven't seen him since.
-
That's why every day I honor my Uncle Bebo
-
my eating one of these.
-
We're gonna miss you, Bebo.
-
(grunts)
-
(grunts)
-
-And I'm back. -(cheering)
-
Well, that's all the time we have for today,
-
I'm Roy Wood Jr., and this has been CP Time.
-
And remember, we're for the culture!
-
Somebody get me some hot tea to balance out this cold.
-
-♪ ♪ -(cheering, applause)