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Black like Al?
Listen and be the judge: Does Al Gore change his tone when he talks to African-Americans?

Editors note: All audio and video segments in this article are presented in the Real Player. Download RealPlayer 8.

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By Salon staff

July 14, 2000 | He's no rapping Bulworth, but we notice a sort of, well, difference in Al Gore when he's talking in front of a black audience. Sometimes, like during his primary debate against Bill Bradley, he just seems more animated. Other times, frankly, he just sounds like a white man trying to sound like a black man -- and sounding even whiter than any man should be allowed to sound, for all his efforts.

Or are we just imagining this?




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Here are a few links to some Gore speeches in front of all-black audiences, with a few listening guides. After listening, feel free to drop a letter to gore@salon.com and let us know what you think.

Speeches

Watch Al Gore's July 12 speech to the annual convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (fast-forward about three-quarters into the recording, past the lengthy introduction).

Highlights: When, while shouting, he exults: "Watch the work of my hands when joined with yours," and later, "Allow yourself to believe we can do the right thing."

A clip of Gore during a Feb. 21, 2000 debate in Harlem with Bill Bradley, at the Apollo Theater, where he's his typical self until the very end, with his staccato pronunciation of "integration."

The corker! An excerpt, from National Public Radio's "All Things Considered," of Gore preaching on January 19, 1998, to the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Ga., as part of the commemoration of Martin Luther King Day.

Highlights: Gore's remarkable pronunciation of "resplendent," and his comparison of Crips and Bloods to the Hutus and Tutsis, Balkan divisions, Protestants and Catholics, and other conflicts, where "slight differences have served as an excuse to unleash the evil that lies coiled in the human soul."


salon.com | July 14, 2000

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Related stories
No ground swell in Harlem
Nobody expressed much enthusiasm along 125th Street Tuesday night across from the Apollo Theater where Gore and Bradley had tried to drum up votes two weeks ago.
By Daryl Lindsey
03/08/2000

Black like us
Gore talked in rhythmic cadences and Bradley denounced "white-skin privilege" in Monday's debate at the Apollo Theater in Harlem.
By Jesse Drucker
02/22/00

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