PROUD TO BE BLACK
Welcome To That’s So Culture!
Where we express our blackness and creativity. Growing up Black, you learn about the fashion, the culture, and, most importantly, the love for one another. We celebrate our culture every single day. Our attitude is so unique. Our music and movies can describe the way we live. The way we dress inspired so many other cultures. There's something about Black people that's just overly captivating. We love everyone, but we love us the most.
Growing Up Black
Growing up Black often means learning strength early. It can mean carrying pride in your culture, your family, and your history while also navigating challenges that others may never fully understand. For many Black children, home becomes a place filled with resilience, music, laughter, traditions, and lessons about perseverance. At the same time, growing up Black can involve facing stereotypes, unfair treatment, or feeling the need to work twice as hard to be recognized equally.
Despite those obstacles, the experience also builds identity, community, and a deep connection to generations of people who turned struggle into creativity, leadership, and progress. Growing up Black is not one single story. It is a collection of different experiences shaped by family, neighborhood, culture, and personal dreams, all tied together by resilience and pride.
Black Entertainment
Black television shows and movies have played a powerful role in entertainment by telling stories that reflect culture, history, family, struggle, joy, and creativity within the Black community. From classic sitcoms like Living Single, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, and Martin to groundbreaking films such as Boyz n the Hood and Black Panther, Black-centered media has created representation that inspires audiences around the world.
These shows and films often explore important themes like identity, family, racism, ambition, love, and resilience while also highlighting Black excellence in music, fashion, comedy, and storytelling. Over time, Black creators, actors, and directors have continued to shape Hollywood and television by bringing authentic voices and diverse perspectives to the screen, helping audiences connect with stories that are both culturally specific and universally relatable.