
Thirty years ago, with $15,000 in seed money and another $500,000 in bank loans, Sheila Crump Johnson and her ex-husband, Bob Johnson, founded Black Entertainment Television. Since that time, the couple has earned more than $1 billion from their tiny investment, and BET is a household name. They sold the company to Viacom in 2000 for $1.3 billion, making them richer than Oprah Winfrey at the time.
Now, the 60-year-old woman who founded the company with her ex-husband says that she is ashamed of the channel:
"Don't even get me started," says Johnson. "I don't watch it. I suggest to my kids that they don't watch it... I'm ashamed of it, if you want to know the truth."
Johnson goes on to admit that BET may be contributing to the spread of AIDS in the black community by promoting raunchy, unprotected sex in rap music videos.
"When we started BET, it was going to be the Ebony magazine on television," Johnson told The Daily Beast. "We had public affairs programming. We had news... I had a show called Teen Summit, we had a large variety of programming, but the problem is that then the video revolution started up... And then something started happening, and I didn't like it at all. And I remember during those days we would sit up and watch these videos and decide which ones were going on and which ones were not. We got a lot of backlash from recording artists... and we had to start showing them. I didn't like the way women were being portrayed in these videos."
I'm not happy with Sheila Johnson's sudden change of heart, and to be honest, I don't believe her. I honestly believe that if Sheila were to go back in time and re-earn her billion-dollar empire, she wouldn't change much of anything. The truth is that money makes us do things that cause us to be ashamed, but we keep doing those things because we feel that our financial success can be a source of validation.
One of the great concerns I have with the Johnson family is that they earned a billion dollars in personal revenue, while costing black America at least $15 billion in lost productivity by creating an entire generation of booty-shaking zombies who don't give a damn about education. One of our challenges as a people is that we praise those who have wealth without taking a second to think about how that wealth was obtained. A person could earn a billion dollars by selling newborn babies, and we'd still praise the person for being rich. The truth is that some methods of wealth building are not worthy of praise, only criticism.
We all have to sell something in today's marketplace, whether it is our time, our labor or even our love. But there is a huge difference between selling something and selling out completely. The Johnson family could have allowed BET to be a productive yet entertaining entity without turning it into one of the most disappointing and humiliating forms of television known to man. The Johnsons would have still been wealthy if BET were healthy. Sure, healthy television is not the most profitable, but they still would have been rich. Instead of allowing their integrity to stop their hunger for profit maximization, the Johnsons traded in the collective conscience of our children in exchange for a billion-dollar personal war chest. They got rich, and the black community ended up in the depths of social bankruptcy.
Sorry, Sheila. In order to fully convince me that you are seriously remorseful of your work with BET, you'd have to give back the fortune you earned by trading in the futures of our children. Yes, you are right that the promotion of promiscuous sex has probably led to the spread of HIV among our youth, so the proliferation of toxic behavior has led to quite a few early deaths. BET has been as shameful for the rest of us, and it breaks my heart because the network could have been so much more.
Money should not be our reason for being.
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and the author of the new book, -'Black American Money.' To have Dr. Boyce's commentary delivered to your e-mail, please click here. 
Comments: (142)
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By: Joanne on 4/30/2010 1:02AM
I have to agree with you on this one, Dr. Watkins. I found myself getting a bit angry when I read your headline. It's easy for Sheila Johnson to make that statement when she can disassociate herself from the current operation, but she and her then-husband set the tone for what BET is today and she should be ashamed of herself for suggesting otherwise. Besides that, I recall some other remarks she made recently which suggest that she has surely forgotten from whence she came. It must be nice to have that kind of coin, but she really needs to check herself!
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By: sandra on 5/01/2010 9:42PM
Yes, Joanne I totally agree with you!
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By: Will on 5/03/2010 6:06PM
That ugly heffa can say whatever she wants to now that her pockets have been greased. Fugg her and her bullshit. The shit was going on when they owned BET
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By: gail on 3/26/2011 3:50PM
I TOTALLY DISAGREE.BET HAS COME ALONG WAY SINCE DONNIE SIMPSON WOULD LOVE TO SEE HIM BACK BUT DEBRA HAS DONE A GREAT JOB WITH IT THAT IS JUST LIKE US TO CONTINUE TO INSULT ONE ANOTHER SO WHY DID YOU SALE IF IT WAS SO SO GRAET WHEN YOU OWNED IT.GIVE ME ABREAK IF IT MEANT THAT MUCH YOU SHOULD HAVE STAYED AND MADE THE DIFFERENCE.RIGHT
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By: Jane on 4/30/2010 1:11AM
I don't agree with you Dr.Watkins, BET, MTV, and VH-1 have all contributing to the spread of AIDS in today's youth. How dare you up hold this and make it about money.
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By: dejohn4170 on 4/30/2010 2:32AM
You are so right on point with this article. I have no respect for the entire Johnson family. And at what expense did they acquire their wealth. I have not watched BET for years. Don't even know what channel thay are on.
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By: SteveLC on 5/05/2010 9:24PM
Is there any point in a person's life that was wrong, and they decide to change and that is also wrong. It is about time that someone spoke up about the crap on BET, that some news media will print. How many of you have written the BET office about the crap that was being shown on its TV station, and the lack of Black pertinent information, educational, historical, and positive news. Maybe all of you who have written the many negative comments will take the time to send an e-mail to the station about its crappy programming. I salute Shelia Johnson for finally speaking out against the station programing. I can't say nothing nice about Bob Johnson, so I will not say anything.
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By: Emani on 4/30/2010 5:08AM
I agree that this network advertise too much promiscuous behavior. I have the pleasure of working with children, many of them know too many rap songs,but do not know how to read, write, or add/subtract. It's really sad. I think that rappers are giving a false advertisement for the young generation that's growing up today. They see rappers and think hey he didn't have to go to school to be rich. Why should I pay attention in school? Most of the rappers fan base are children. (Rap videos should be another article)
I'm in my early twenties and I stopped watching BET about 2 years ago. I was tired of the same video theme for every song. (Drugs,Sex,Alcohol, Rims,expensive clothing & money)
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By: Black Barbie on 4/30/2010 6:49PM
It's no different that any other type of pimping or pushing. You make your money on the backs of those less fortunate, less powerful, and more easily influenced.
And to twist the knife further, you step back from your originally corrupt enterprise and become "respectable."
Now, you're looking down on the very people that you exploited and wondering why they haven't made their way successful in the world.
I have no respect for the Johnsons or Bob's fling, Debra Lee, either.
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By: Leaplady on 5/05/2010 2:48PM
I grew up with Debra Lee in Greensboro, North Carolina and I must admit I am a little disappointed at some of the programing she allows on BET. I even had an opportunity to meet Bob Johnson years ago when he first got BET started and I was also disappointed in the way he approached me as a working journalist (at the time); he seemed more interested in me sexually than professionally. I found him to be quite shallow.
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