Monday | August 23, 2010
  • Kingston
  •  
  •    
  •    
Jamaica Gleaner Company
  • Home
  • Lead Stories
  • News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Letters
  • Commentary
  • Flair
  • More »
    • International
    • Lifestyle
    • In focus
    • Auto
    • Outlook
    • Cooking
    • Caribbean
  • Classifieds
  • Jobs
  • Puzzles
  • Radio
  • Video

Letters

Subscribe to this feed
Follow us on twitter

In defence of Ragashanti

Published: Monday | August 23, 2010 Comments 0

The Editor, Sir:

If you appreciate our rich Jamaican culture and think the preservation of the most sensitive part of our heritage is of utmost importance for us all, then you will understand that Dr Kingsley Stewart (Ragashanti) is only doing his part as a patriotic Jamaican. He has used the most convenient medium of communication to translate common issues affecting everyday Jamaican people, and turn it into entertainment that we can't get enough of; remember Miss Lou said to "tek kin teet kibba heart bun".

However, Louis Marriott, whose letter was published in the Gleaner on August 20, is only one of few intellectual hypocrites advocating gross disregard for the grass roots of Jamaican life and think, selfishly, that the media landscape should cater to only those of his kind. Well, Mr Marriott, 'Perkins Online' and 'Hotline' have dominated daytime radio throughout the years and adequately serve an audience that prefers the current-affairs type programme you apparently like. yet, the average Jamaican, who is disgusted with all those mutterings relating to politics, etc, never protest and advocate the discontinuance of same.

To the media managers

As a consumer of the vast media products which currently exist in Jamaica, let me inform the media managers who do not yet know that the most successful programmes are those which appeal to the man on the street, or let me say 'those below the intellectual level', which are often classified as the uneducated.

Ragashanti is only next in line to the handful of people such as Louise Bennett Coverley and Oliver Samuels who were also criticised for 'chatting Patois' our beloved language. but yet, they were never intimidated and they prove to the upper-class intellectuals that nothing is wrong with talking in the local dialect.

'Ragashanti Live' is one of the most listened to radio programmes, especially by the local populace and those in upper society who continue listening in order to criticise. I am appealing to News talk 93 FM to keep the programme running, or else risk being narrowed to an audience limited to the walls of the university.

I am, etc.,

LEON PRYCE

pryce.leon@hotmail.com

Montego Bay

St James

Share |

blog comments powered by Disqus
  • More Letters
  • Print this Page
  • E-mail the Editor
smaller | larger

Ads by Google

More Stories

  • LETTER OF THE DAY - Make full use of DNA evidence
  • UK ruling should be no barrier
  • No need to set Garvey against Rasta
  • Crime's roots and solutions
  • Sustainable agriculture - a work in progress

In The Blogs

  • Latest
    • The Gleaner Your Way
    • Mobile: Get the Gleaner on your mobile
    • RSS Feeds: Get content updates daily
    • Newsletter: Get Headline News
    • The Gleaner Archives
    • Digital Archives: Gleaner online editions 2006-2010
    • Print Archives: Print Editions 1834 - Present
    • Library: Research & Assistance
  • Gleaner Company Websites
  • Jamaica Gleaner
  • The Star
  • Go Jamaica
  • Go Local
  • Sports Jamaica
  • Sports Caribe
  • Hospitality Jamaica
  • Youth Link
  • Voice UK
  • Gleaner Company Websites
  • Business Directory
  • Gleaner Classifieds
  • Kingston Restaurant Week
  • Financial Gleaner
  • Discover Jamaica
  • Discover Caribe
  • Returning Residents
  • Go Jamaica hosting
  • Gleaner Links
  • RSS Feed
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Suggestion
  • Subscription
  • Disclaimer
Gleaner Company Logo
Copyright © 2010 Gleaner Company Ltd. All Rights Reserved. A Gleaner Company Website. Designed by GoJamaica.