♫ intense African drums ♫
The idea of children from sea to shining sea
running around the playground - if recess
even still exists - climbing on top of the
jungle gym just so they can scream at their
classmate below that
(using Nigerian accent) they have watched from the mountains with disgust as their technological advancements--
Somewhere there's a child reciting the entire
monologue, complete with the accent and that
brings a smile to my heart, it puts a shoki
in my step, you feel what I'm saying?
Ryan Coogler.
You did that.
Hey YouTube World.
It’s me, Evelyn.
I have no idea how to organize this video
in a succinct, palatable way.
(using Kenyan accent) 
I am overwhelmed.
This movie overwhelms me.
So ima just hit you with some thoughts.
Number one.
If I could just be the light that reflects
off Lupita’s shoulders.
Not even the shoulder.
What's that thing between the shoulder and
the neck?
It's this thing right here.
What is this?
What is this - trapezius?
Trapezoid.
I'm not gon' google it.
Some days I feel like Killmonger’s neck
vein, you know what I'm saying?
There’s a lot of Black rage in that neck
vein.
A lot of pain in that jaw, you know what I'm
saying?
I know how it feels!
I got TMJ.
They say it’s caused by "stress".
Huh.
(using Kenyan accent) 
I wonder why.
I have been using the term colonizer in my
every day language documented here on the
internet for years!
And it pleases me that it will be used more
widely now.
In Wakanda you clearly don’t need lotion.
The air itself has emollient properties.
In Wakanda, your plantain is always at optimal
ripeness, and in Wakanda your locs retwist
themselves.
The beginning sequence looked like that--
do y'all remember that 3D magnetic pin toy?
That thing that you would like, press your
hand into, and your hand would like have the
imprint in the metal magnet thing?
Do y'all remember that?
Am I the only one that remembers that?
The entire intro reminded me of that.
It was the visual representation of what I
think ASMR probably makes people feel like.
It made my body tingle.
Baba?
Tell me about home.
(wheeze cries)
Okay, so the first time I watched Black Panther,
I purely taking in the visuals, you know?
The hustle and bustle of the packed city center.
Just the sleekness and (using Nigerian
accent) modernity -- the modernity of Shuri’s
underground tech lab with the music bumping
bumping.
You know what I'm saying, the waterfalls,
the mountains, just the landscape, the emollient
skin -- everybody skin emollient.
The baldhead baddies.
Everybody in this film is fine.
Alright?
Everybody is a smooth 22 out of 10.
I did not know that I needed to see Michael B. Jordan with gold in his mouth, but yet here we
are - thirsty.
And it kinda sucked cause he has a dimple.
So when Killmonger is like, trying to challenge
T'Challa and he's screaming, he's like,
"Is this your king?!"
"He trash!
He weak! He probably underweight!" you know what I'm
saying?
He has a dimple the whole time, and I'm like
awww, you look like an angry rubber ducky!
There is a scene where T’Challa-- I don't
know if it's after he just becomes king -- and
he's walking down the hallway and he's just
walking with a dip.
That dip.
And I'm just like (fans self).
Alright, okay, that's that dip!
Whew!
Um!
That’s that dip that got Obama into office.
I don't care what nobody says about making
change.
It was that dip!
I loved that nobody was ever a villain in a vacuum.
Those of y'all who said Killmonger was the
villain.
Pewww!
Here goes the point -- peww! (using Nigerian
accent) It just completely eluded you.
There was really no such thing as pure good
and pure bad.
It was only decisions to be made, and it
was paths that people took.
And I really enjoyed the complexity of that.
Because that's what real life is like.
I especially liked the conversation and conflict between Okoye and Nakia.
And Nakia is like "yo - I cant.
Killmonger is king.
This cannot-- that's not gon' work for me.
Let's ride!"
And Okoye is like (using accent) "Please!
Though my heart is with you.
I cannot go."
And she's like “I'm not a spy -- I'm not
a spy that just can come and go as she pleases.
My loyalty is to that throne!”
That's probably my favorite monologue because
it shows this dichotomy of tradition versus
modernity.
Responsibility and duty.
And kinfolk versus skinfolk.
The second time I watched Black Panther, I
was in Nigeria.
And when M’Baku (using Nigerian accent)
opened his mouth to speak,
the audience was like eh heh! (laughs) Eh heh!
And in the movie I loved how they used this
brolic, traditional, um you know probably
the other tribes thought the Jabari tribe
was backward, you know, a backward tribe stuck
in their ways.
I loved how they used this brolic man as comedic relief.
I never saw that coming and when he was funny?
I was like, oh this is great! 
 
(using Nigerian accent)
Are you done?!!?!
Ok so these accents.
Zuri aka Forest Whitaker was giving me South
Africa, Malawi.
I really enjoyed Shuri’s accent.
It was kind of familiar.
It was "pewwn", you know?
The Jabari tribe was like West African, so
it was very "are you done?!"
It was just very hard, and Shuri was very
like,
(in East African accent) 
"My brother. Congrats to my brother."
Don't scare me like that colonizer."
That's how we talk over on our side, you know
what I'm saying?
T’Challa, there was a certain way he would
say vibranium that sounded Jamaican.
Everything else was fine.
But when he was like (using Jamaican accent)
"Vibranium!", I was like whoa whoa whoa whoa!
I was just happy that everybody wasn’t Nigerian.
And you can quote me out of context (laughs).
I do not identify with T’Challa or Killmonger.
Killmonger always sounded like he was just
reciting woke tweets.
Like, his monologues never really hit me.
I mean, when you think about it, he had been
working up to this point his entire life,
so there really wasn't that raw pain in his
voice.
It was just like, robotic anger.
It was just like (makes gun sound effects)
rahh! rahh! rahh! rahh!
You know what I'm saying?
And I wanted more emotion, but I understand
it's Killmonger, he doesn't have any left.
He was just a man with a plan.
Bing, bang, boom, hey Auntie.
You know what I'm saying?
And...eh.
I identify more with Killmonger’s father.
N'Jobu.
And yes, he's technically a prince.
But can you imagine being called a traitor
and saying you betrayed your country because
you're doing what you believe is helping your
people, you know what I'm saying, your skinfolk.
And your kinfolk say, "Ah-ah, ah-ah we
not about all that!"
Can you imagine being called a traitor?
I'm not collecting kills -- peww peww peww - that's not what I'm about.
You know, I do stay with that thing on me
though.
But really what I'm trying to do is steal
a little vibranium, you know what I'm saying,
disperse it to my people so that we can rise
(using Kenyan accent) -- together.
Let me ruin y'alls lives real quick.
When I watched Black Panther the second time,
and I realized that that intro - you know
the origin story of Wakanda - was not Baby
T'Challa asking King T'Chaka,
it was Baby Killmonger.
It was Erik asking his father N'Jobu to tell
him about home.
(cries "Oh my God")
Which reminds me.
A lot of y'all were just loud and wrong in
the comments section of my last Black Panther video.
The point of that video was to urge my fellow
Africans, specifically first generation people,
to realize that the teasing you endured was
nothing but the colonizer.
(Using accent) working - not walking - working
through your cousins from across the pond.
They think bad about us.
We think bad about them.
The colonizer wins because we think we're
different from each other.
The point was hurt people hurt people, and
some of y’all missed the point so spectacularly.
It was embarrassing.
I wish all of us, all Black people, had their
sense of home, like, original home.
I don’t want anybody to make it to Wakanda
then choose to die.
And me myself personally -- this is a hot
take, it's spicy -- I think that the movie
kind of sent the message that ultimately we
have irreconcilable differences and the concept
of a unified Global Black Population is an
impossibility y'all should just be happy with
a fancy YMCA in the hood.
But what do I know - I’m paranoid.
I honestly don’t know what I would have
done in the end as Killmonger.
Part of me watching the movie was like "oh
my gosh, you are so stubborn."
But that's rude, right?
That's not a very complex assessment of his
life and the history of his people.
Most of the time I felt like "yeah!"
You know, that neck vein.
"Yeah!
What y’all know about the Atlantic.
Y'all know nothing about what happened in
the Atlantic.
Y'all was just chilling here with y’alls
emollient atmosphere!!"
Speaking of atmosphere, when T'Challa gets
up into the ancestors realm, I audibly gasped.
It was so beautiful.
You know?
Chadwick is beautiful, the colors are beautiful,
the concept, like, the scene that's unfolding
is beautiful.
And for someone like me, who never really
knew their grandparents, let alone the concept
of just having access to your ancestors, just
having your ancestors on standby?
I'm not gonna lie, that scene had me in my
entire feelings.
Almost cried.
(wheeze cries)
You know, I wish you could just bury me and
I then I wake up and talk to my people.
I thoroughly enjoyed the movie.
I think it’ll open people up to the idea
of cosplay for the first time, which I think
is dope.
It gives children access to another universe.
When I think of little girls running around
on the playground with sticks.
"Ahhh!!"
When I think about that -- oooh!
When I think about little kids using blankets
as shields.
As vibranium forcefields -- (yelps).
I think Black Panther has the ability to shift
people's frame of reference for the continent.
I truly believe that there's gonna be some
kid like me in class during show and tell
talking about "This is my fabric.
Um, my parents are from Kenya.
It's a country in Africa."
And kids are gonna be like "Oh! Like Wakanda?"
And you might think that sounds ignorant, but to me, that's cool!
Ima get it on DVD.
I don’t have a device that can play the DVD, but ima get it.
It’s gonna be a family heirloom.
(using South African accent)
Black-- (laughs)
Black Panther.
(giggles)
♫ African house music plays ♫ 
Thank y'all so much for watching.
This video is sponsored by Audible.
Audible has a vast selection of audiobooks,
news, shows.
I use Audible to better myself, to be a better
me, to be a better educated me, so you already
know this video's book recommendation is the
autobiography of Assata Shakur.
Technically, she was a Black Panther for only
like a year or two, you know what I'm saying,
'cause she didn't like the machismo, the brolic-ness,
the Killmonger-ness, if you will,
of the Black Panther party.
I think you should give the book a listen
regardless.
They have a free audiobook download just for you, my Internet Cousins, with a 30-day trial membership.
Just visit audible.com/evelyn or text “evelyn” to 500-500 to download my recommendation or
to download whichever audiobook you want.
Audible.com/evelyn or text "Evelyn" to 500-500.
And if you don't even feel like keeping your
membership past the 30 days, the book is still
yours to keep and listen to whenever you want.
Shout out to everyone who wore their Magical
Black Girl merchandise to go watch this movie,
to go support Black Panther.
I appreciate it.
Magical Black Girl merchandise is still available.
Link will be wherever links are located usually!
In the comments below, let me know who you are in the Black Panther universe.
Look forward to your comments, and I will
see you on the internet somewhere.
Bye!
Wakanda forever!
