5 reasons to watch Maame-Yaa Aforo’s short film ‘Brown Paper Pageant’

(Photo: Maame-Yaa Aforo/YouTube)

(Photo: Maame-Yaa Aforo/YouTube)

In the upcoming short film Brown Paper Pageant, filmmaker Maame-Yaa Aforo highlights the continuous need and importance of Black female storytellers and directors.

The film project also highlights the HBCU, Morehouse College, and its prestigious “Miss Maroon & White” pageant that takes place during Homecoming week activities. Touching on the socio and campus politics that run rampant, and how white supremacy manifests in the Black community, the film sheds light on how it unequivocally affects Black women.

Maame-Yaa Aforo is Ghanian-American and Spelman alumni raised in Minnesota. She created this film in hopes to share her experience with entering a pageant and all the complexities associated with a pageant entrenched in deep southern tradition. Although Brown Paper Pageant has its hilarious moments, it still speaks to the seriousness of colorism happening in the days of yesteryear and today.

Read More: Crowning of first non-black Miss HU divides campus

If that isn’t reason enough to look forward to watching this film, here are five more. The film:

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Check it out:

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https://open.spotify.com/episode/51fhvJHAl0eAcgkg4wBbYf

https://open.spotify.com/episode/6kzjPmeakob2uRdrGhGFaJ

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