December 26th wasn’t just Boxing Day; it also marked the first day of the pan-African holiday celebrating African culture known as Kwanzaa. Founded in the mid-1960s by Maulana Karenga, a black studies professor at Cal State Long Beach, this holiday lasts from the day after Christmas through January 2nd. Each of the 7 days is assigned a principle to be honored: unity, self-determination, collective work and responsibility, cooperative economics, purpose, creativity and faith.
Just as Kwanzaa is a relatively new holiday, American TV is relatively new to trying to capitalize on it. We’ve managed to dig up 7 television attempts to incorporate Kwanzaa into holiday programming.
In Season 34, Sesame Street produced a segment in which a child explained the traditions of Kwanzaa and how his family celebrates:
Later in that same season, Elmo showed off a traditional Kwanzaa dance:
In their 7th season, Nickelodeon’s gang of ageless toddlers the Rugrats branched out from the Christmas holiday episode with “A Rugrats Kwanzaa.” Tommy Pickles’ neighbor Susie Carmichael gets a visit from her Great Aunt T., who came to teach the whole Carmichael family about Kwanzaa. Airing in 2001, this particular episode was one of the first on mainstream television to feature Kwanzaa. It also inspired the aptly titled book The Rugrats’ First Kwanzaa.
Futurama never dedicated an entire episode to the holiday, but in “A Tale of Two Santas,” they introduced an entirely new Kwanzaa character. Kwanzaabot, as voiced by 90s rapper Coolio, shows up at the Conrads’ Kwanzaa party to drop some traditional knowledge on their guests.
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Based on the youth of Chris Rock, the show Everybody Hates Chris used Kwanzaa to heighten the notorious thriftiness of young Chris’s father. The patriarch Julius announces that the family will celebrate Kwanzaa instead of Christmas that year – once he discovers Kwanzaa is a much more cost-effective holiday.
Along with the Rugrats, animated Disney show The Proud Family was one of the first mainstream TV shows to dedicate an entire episode to Kwanzaa. When the Prouds take in a homeless family on Christmas, the family comes back the next day to return the favor – by teaching the Prouds about Kwanzaa.
On Saturday Night Live, Tim Meadows dropped by Weekend Update as “Kwanzaa Timmy” to explain the traditions of Kwanzaa – in song. You’ll laugh, you’ll learn and you’ll feel slightly taken advantage of.
Celebrity chef Sandra Lee caused an uproar with her Kwanzaa cake recipe a few years ago. Pretty much the only thing “Kwanzaa” about it was her use of Kwanzaa-colored candles. Some critics cried racism based on her ingredients, but almost everyone agreed the recipe was just terrible, and terribly stupid.
Since then, Food Network aired a much less maligned episode about Kwanzaa Traditions:
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How could you leave out the PBS Arthur holiday special? I had no idea the Brain was supposed to be African-American until his family celebrated Kwanzaa!
posted by Ed Kolis on 12-29-2011 at 10:45 pm
You forgot the Boondocks celebrate Kwanzaa with the traditional Harambee Salute
posted by Colin on 12-30-2011 at 12:04 am
I wish I could forget all of them.
posted by They Call Me Bruce on 12-30-2011 at 10:19 am
Hey, the Sesame Street kid is also Everybody Hates Chris!
posted by endofmonth on 12-30-2011 at 10:24 am
Not sure how a racist secular celebration manages to get so much press.
posted by sigh on 12-30-2011 at 3:47 pm
I am not sure how you can call it a celebration when no one actually celebrates it. Kwanzaa is being kept alive by the media. I am yet to meet a person who actually celebrates it.
posted by They Call Me Bruce on 12-30-2011 at 8:50 pm
Kwanzaa has absolutely NOTHING to do with Africa or African culture. It is a made up “event” by a convicted felon (convicted of torturing 2 women to death) as a contrast to Christmas because Christmas is a “white” man’s religion. It was given the name Kwanzaa to sound African in order to lure followers who wanted an African connection. This truth should be publicized too.
posted by barbara reinier on 12-30-2011 at 9:31 pm
Did anyone notice the little boy featured in the sesame street video about Kwanza is the same actor who plays the title character on “everybody loves chris” which was also featured in this article as having an episode about Kwanza?
posted by Mike K on 12-31-2011 at 4:34 am
While I have actually never known anybody that celebrates Kwanzaa, I enjoy sending a few of my friends Kwanzaa cards in place of Christmas cards.
posted by Chelebelle on 12-31-2011 at 10:52 am
Kwanzaa is a phoney holiday incented by Ron Karenga (just one of the aliases he used), a convicted felon, self proclaimed Communist, and all around loon. For kicks, he and an accomplice once tortured 2 women for several days. One object they used for the torure was a soldering iron. He also used Swahili words while inventing his holiday rather than words from Yoruba (look that up) or something more geographically appropriate. The most fitting way to celebrate Kwanzaa would b to use Karenga’s grave as a toilet.
posted by A little research... on 12-31-2011 at 10:36 pm