Today, for many of us, King has become less
a human being than a source of quotes and
a saint.
This will not do.
A pedestal is no place to put a great man’s
legacy.
So this tribute is intended to not be as sanctimonious
as most of those for King have become.
10.
King = Litigious
While the “I Have A Dream” Speech has
been quoted for some rather crass purposes
by a certain tech company, during its own
time it was exploited in even worse ways.
Twentieth Century Fox in 1963 released an
album of the speech without so much as notifying
the King estate.
King sued the album out of circulation.
Ever since, the King Estate has been very
litigious in this regard.
They have sued, among others, USA Today for
reprinting the speech in full, and CBS when
it attempted to rebroadcast the very footage
they had shoot in the first place.
They even filed suit against PBS for naming
a documentary series “Eye on the Prize.”
9.
Bayard Rustin
One of the people most often cited as an influence
King was Bayard Rustin to an extent that Rustin
was directly involved with organizing the
March on Washington and during the Montgomery
Bus Boycotts.
But in 1955, Bayard had been arrested In flagrante
delicto for having consensual sex with two
other men.
To King’s credit, he did not distance himself
from the activist in spite of his potentially
extremely damaging reputation.
8.
The Lesser Angels
During the 1950’s and 1960’s, the F.B.I.
targeted King for investigation to see if
he could be implicated for communist sympathies.
While under observation, they claimed to have
recorded numerous sound bytes from King of
an unsavory nature, including flippant jokes
about John F. Kennedy after his assassination.
By far the most prevalent have been claims
that King spoke extensively about his sexual
conquests, including reported sound bytes
such as “I’m f—— for God.”
One of the agents who had him under observation
reported that he was “beastial” about
it.
Biographers, by contrast, have claimed that
King felt extreme guilt over this and that
the content of his sermons would sometimes
reflect his anxieties.
King also had at least one extramarital partner
that he allegedly reached a point that he
was in touch with every day and who emotionally
supplanted his relationship with his wife
for him.
That’s not an excuse, but it was a more
complicated situation than the people who
just like to use this aspect of his character
to attack him or seem less worshipful of him
generally imply.
7.
Izola Ware Curry
Eleven years before his tragic incident with
James Earl Ray in Memphis in 1968, during
a book signing, King had his first encounter
with a named assassin.
Curry was a mentally disturbed black woman
that stabbed King in the chest and very nearly
killed him.
Imagine what a disaster that would have been
for the civil rights movement and you see
why this ugly incident is not more often mentioned.
6.
The Most Violent Protest
The event that King described as “the most
violent protest I have ever seen” didn’t
take place in the South like you would expect
but in Chicago.
During a 1966 demonstration, King was struck
in the head by a brick.
King continued the march he was partaking
in, but canceled other demonstrations for
safety reasons.
This is a man who had already had his house
bombed in Montgomery to give an idea of the
sort of people he encountered there.
5.
Delivered One of the Best Anti-Vietnam War
Speeches
In 1967, King alienated many by making his
anti-war sentiments known in a speech now
known as “Why I Oppose the War in Vietnam.”
Among those were President Lyndon Johnson
and such publications as Life Magazine and
the Washington Post, who accused King of such
things as having betrayed his relevance to
the nation with such sentiments.
An album of the speech released posthumously
won a grammy award.
but it still remains a really worthwhile speech
(take THAT, Grammys!)
You can experience its power here.
4.
King was Very Unpopular at The Time of His
Death
King pointing
In addition to his then-extremely unpopular
stance on the Vietnam War, King in the mid
to late sixties became more passionate about
class discrimination including a highly controversial
plan to provide the disadvantaged citizens
(of all races and creeds) fifty billion dollars
over a ten year period.
Conspiracy theorists often say that his death
was actually a government plot to stop his
planned Peace March on the capital, the sort
of thing that would make him seem less like
a crusader and more like a dangerous subversive.
In 1968, he had an approval rating of only
30%.
3.
The Descendants Have Had Difficulties with
the Legacy
King’s children have been heavily criticized
for how they have carried on the family name.
Because of the lack of proper will and testament
on King’s part, his children have been suing
each other and others for years.
This was first reported in the news after
the King family sold thousands of his documents
(mostly handwritten) to the Atlanta Morehouse
College for thirty-two million dollars.
2.
A Lot of Interesting Information is Coming
Out 2027
Remember all those attributed sound bytes
that we mentioned in #8?
Well, in 1986 a judge suppressed a large amount
of information that was recorded while he
was under observation.
Given that the file in question contains roughly
17,000 pages of information, there just has
to be something breathtaking that some very
diligent scholar is going to dig out of there.
We know one list that Toptenz is going to
run in 2027!
1.
Posthumous Singing Career
This article has kind of been a bit on the
negative side, so let’s finish it off with
something fun.
A collection of internet comedians with the
youtube channel Schmoyoho remixed/autotuned
King’s best known speeches into songs.
The King Estate being as litigious as stated
above, the best known ones by the musical
group Schmoyoho have been taken down but also
replaced by videos posted by fans.
Whatever your tolerance for the using the
autotune process for music, they are worth
a sampling, if only for how it helps to remember
particularly evocative passages of the speeches.
