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Radar Investigates

The Ethnicist

Radar's resident race expert answers the questions you're too afraid to ask. First up, blacks and menthols

  

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RACE BAIT Menthols, the green monster of the black community

Every time I bum a cigarette off a black person, I get a Kool or a Newport. Why do African Americans smoke menthols? Is it a cultural thing, like Chaka Khan?—Anonymous

Welcome to the first ever installment of The Ethnicist. Once a month we'll answer the impolitic questions you've been wondering about but have been too busy with important projects and inter-office hookups—okay, felt too totally embarrassed—to ask. Questions like: Why do certain black guys like big butts and why can't they lie about it? Are Jews truly good with money? Do Koreans really eat dogs? (And if so, who brings them their slippers and newspapers?)

First up, a question that has become like a modern-day koan—often asked but never actually answered: Why do so many black people smoke menthols? In an effort to track down the answer, we checked in with all black people—it was exhausting—and it turns out, actually, that not all of them smoke menthols or even cigarettes. Some of them just smoke blunts. Kidding! But really, three out of four black Americans who smoke cigarettes smoke menthols, compared to only one out of four white Americans. Your Ethnicist found a few reasons why.

Three out of four black Americans who smoke cigarettes smoke menthols, compared to only one out of four white AmericansBack in the 1920s, when mentholated cigarettes were first introduced, their cool, refreshing taste made them popular with folks white and black alike. But Sarah S. Lochlann Jain, an assistant professor of cultural anthropology at Stanford University, suggested that the sensation you get from a menthol cigarette—a rush of cold, a feeling like your lungs are clearing—might have appealed particularly to black people because of its similarity to eucalyptus- or menthol-laced over-the-counter cold medications. Such meds were popular with blacks who, perhaps not surprisingly, had limited access to health care. For a time, in fact, people thought menthols did have medicinal benefits and that they were healthier than regular cigarettes.

Once Big Tobacco saw their product catching fire with this demographic, they began a long-term marketing campaign targeting black consumers. By the 1960s, magazines like Ebony and Jet were packed with cigarette advertisements that featured African-American models and referenced black culture, like Lorillard's "Newport is a whole new bag of menthol smoking" (after James Brown's "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag") and R.J. Reynold's "Different Smokes for Different Folks" (a nod to a Sly Stone hit) campaign for Salem Extra. Some of the ads seemed almost progressive, encouraging the era's burgeoning black middle class to "Come Up to the Kool Taste," and promising them that smoking a Kool was "Like riding a Rolls Royce."

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BLACK LUNG Don't get bamboozled

To make further inroads, the tobacco companies loudly supported the Civil Rights Movement and later made regular and significant contributions to organizations like the NAACP, the United Negro College Fund, and the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights. By the early '80s, when a young Kool G Rap (neé Nathaniel Wilson) was growing up in Queens, mentholated cigarettes had become so ingrained in the black community they were widely considered the Official Cigarettes of Black Folks. (Kool G, you may recall, came to prominence in the late '80s as a member of Marley Marl's Juice Crew.) "When you're first introduced to smoking it's more likely to be from one of your own, and certain brands are already the brand of choice in certain areas, aaiight?" says the rapper, whose MySpace profile features a photo of him sucking on a 100. "In my case it was mainly Newports and Kools. If I was white, I might have ended up smoking Marlboros 'cause that's what most of the white kids in my school smoked." Kool G says that he didn't intend for his name to be derivative of the cigarette brand. But then, he muses, "Whatever you're subjected to has the greatest influence on you, aaiight?"

Tobacco companies made regular and significant contributions to organizations like the NAACP, the United Negro College Fund, and the Leadership Conference on Civil RightsAaiight. That tobacco companies creepily court smokers is not exactly a shocker—we all know that the industry is made up of immoral fat dudes who would hand out cigarettes in the playground if they thought they could get away with it. But the black people-menthols metric has had some particularly nasty results: According to the CDC, African Americans are at least 50 percent more likely to develop lung cancer than white smokers, which is partly because African Americans metabolize nicotine more slowly. Recent research from Harvard also suggests that this has something to do with the mint sticks—the cooling, anesthetic effect once seen as medicinally benecifial may actually just be numbing the throat enough to facilitate deeper inhalation. Which, when you think about it, is totally uncool.

Illustrations: Alex Eben Meyer

Got a question for The Ethnicist? Send it to: Features@radaronline.com

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Comments

I'd also like to know why black people tend to prefer Sprite-like soft drinks over colas. For some reason this is a stereotype and I would like to know how it came to be. Is it because of the fruity flavor of such un-colas?

Posted by: Clarence on January 17, 2007 5:33 AM

That's an interesting observation, Clarence, as I've noticed quite the opposite amongst the Black people I grew up around, work with and just know in general. Actually, I think Pepsi might be the cola of choice by MOST Blacks, but again, that's just the folks I know. Interesting article all around for me. As a Black woman raised in the South, you're always told from childhood that you stay away from coffee, cigarettes, sodas and the sun because they all make your skin become ashen and dry and we all know that the ashy Black look is not cute! Just my opinion/observation!

Posted by: VelvetStaccato on January 17, 2007 4:22 PM

Why do white people love mayonnaise?

Posted by: jmg4j on January 18, 2007 9:11 PM

VelvetStaccato,
NPR aired a fascinating story last week confirming your observations - "In 1940, Pepsi chief executive Walter Mack had the unprecedented idea of putting together a "negro-markets" department."
Story and link to the audio here: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6828902

Posted by: HunterST on January 18, 2007 9:50 PM

Regarding soda, I've noticed it to be Bubble-Up and grape soda up here in the midwest. Why is that?

A few others that need answering:

How do black women get those GIGANTIC butts while maintaining small waists?

Why don't black people buy curtains instead of hanging sheets in their windows?

Why do white people live in trailer parks when they know the stereotypes associated with it?

Why do white people have mullets?

Why do black guys date so many obese, bleach blond, white women?

Posted by: peeptophe on January 18, 2007 10:25 PM

Many of these generalizations are the product of evolving social enviornmental situational factors.

One question I would like to have awnsered is, why Jew's are labled as stingy? Or why many people believe that they are financially gifted. Did they all go to business school?

I do know in Korea, dog is considered a delicacy, just as how in portugal baked rabbit is considered to be a meal. Whereby in North America, we would keep them as pets...

I also wonder why it seems that many African Americans excel at sports, like running, basketball, football & tennis. This is a positive stereotype, I would just like to know how it came about.

Posted by: Molly on February 8, 2007 9:45 AM