Jill Scott On Motherhood: ‘I’m Raising A Little Brown Boy In America’

Published: Monday 30th Sep 2013 by David

As one of the many stars in David E. Talbert‘s ‘Baggage Claim‘, Jill Scott arrived on the recently revived ‘Arsenio‘ show to promote the comedy, which also boasts roles from Trey Songz and ‘Sister Sister’s star Tia Mowry.

While there, the ‘Jilltro’ performer took the time to dish on the joys of motherhood, and the importance of tough love when raising black boys who grow to become black men in today’s America.

An honest word below…

Your thoughts?

Posted under:

Comments 13

Please Post Your Comments & Reviews

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. gee September 30, 2013

    smh are white people gonna start calling themselves beige now??

    • ROSEGOLD September 30, 2013

      And if they did, that would be their prerogative.

      • VisionOfMimi September 30, 2013

        Thank you Rosegold. Our tone is brown, not black so what she said was actually accurate.

      • gee September 30, 2013

        dont mexicans call themselves brown though??

  2. S****** Blonde September 30, 2013

    Brown, that’s new.

    • Walking on air September 30, 2013

      It’s really not 🙄

      • S****** Blonde September 30, 2013

        It is, to me.

    • Mark111 September 30, 2013

      Because you’re a f****** racist @S******.

  3. FlawlessFenty September 30, 2013

    Real talk. Black boys have to be raised to careful and responsible because society is already out to paint them out to be bad, so it is NOT about living up to that expectation like Chris Brown does.

  4. YES September 30, 2013

    if this b**** dont like it she can always move to Africa….no she wont like that either. mufhuckas!

  5. FAF September 30, 2013

    ok, but y’all stop playing dumb. its not BROWN its BLACK. native americans are red & asians are yellow. brown = latinos

  6. Mark111 September 30, 2013

    We need more mothers like THIS! My mom was a single parent as well and she didn’t play! In our community, we need strong parents and grandparents.

    And, she can say brown if she wants. I’m brown, I may be Black/ African American, but my skin is brown, not black.

  7. #TeamTinashe Stan October 1, 2014

    Nice!

Recommended Posts
..**