
By Gary Gerard Hamilton
The Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) โ Texas-bred hip-hop duo UGK glared confidently into the camera atop stallions in the music video for their fan-favorite song โWood Wheel.โ The visuals reflected the expertise of the legendary Houston-area music act: blending tales of big city hustling with charming Texas cowboy culture.
โThis is not Black people trying to assimilate with this country Western lifestyle. Black people across this country โ East Coast to West Coast โ have been prevalent in this space for years,โ said Bun B, who, with partner Pimp C, became pillars of southern hip-hop, creating hits to help it become todayโs current dominant rap genre.
Bun, an ambassador for the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo and the first and only Black male hip-hop headliner in its history, shares his experiences in โHigh Horse: The Black Cowboy,โ a new docuseries executive produced by Jordan Peele and his Monkeypaw Productions. The project highlights Black men, who it says were the first Americans referred to as cowboys, a term initially steeped in racism as it contrasted them with White โcowhands.โ The series attempts to refute the pop culture images of the men whose tall boots and Stetson hats are seared into American mythology.
One in four cowboys were Black, even though in the late 19th century they made up a much smaller segment of the U.S. population, according to research by historian Bruce Glasrud.
โBeing a Black performer at this 90-plus year concert series has been amazing for me, but itโs also given me a deeper perspective of understanding the Black cowboysโ place in American history,โ Bun told The Associated Press. โItโs really energized me to try to fill this void of confusion where people who are somewhat aware typically will have a distorted view.โ
โWho erased the Black cowboy?โ
Directed by Jason Perez and streaming on Peacock, the three-part docuseries is an extension of Peeleโs 2022 blockbuster film โNope.โ Starring Daniel Kaluuya and Keke Palmer, the movie follows siblings who operate the only Black-owned horse ranch in California, training horses for Hollywood productions.
The sci-fi horror film mentions Eadweard Muybridge, a pioneer of motion photography and his groundbreaking โThe Horse in Motionโ moving image, noting that while the horse, Sallie Gardner, has always been recognized, the Black jockey riding her remains largely unknown.
โWe just decided to go on this journey to really figure out, or to pose the question, what happened to the Black cowboy? Who erased the Black cowboy?โ said Keisha Senter, the companyโs senior vice president of culture and impact and an executive producer on the project. โAt Monkeypaw, we really think erasure is a horror story.โ
โHigh Horseโ is filled with archival footage and photos to provide context of the lives of early Black cowboys. In addition to creating a more complete composite of the Old West, it documents how Black cowboy communities remain vibrant in various pockets across the country, while following their struggles and triumphs.
Series spotlights African American country western history
The docuseries focuses on the history and erasure of the Black cowboy, systemic racism and the current battles Black citizens face with land ownership dating back to the post-slavery Reconstruction era, and the entertainment impact African Americans have made throughout country western history. It arrives amid the nationโs current political flashpoints. Critics of the Trump administration note its policies disproportionately and negatively affect Black Americans, including eliminating DEI programs, mass layoffs at federal agencies, and cuts to SNAP benefits, Medicare and Medicaid.
Peele, Glynn Turman, Pam Grier, Tina Knowles and Rick Ross, who all make appearances, speak to their own experiences with cowboy culture. R&B legend Raphael Saadiq provides the projectโs original score.
โThis is an important time in history, and I can see the writing on the wall,โ said Turman, a New York City-raised actor whoโs lived on a California ranch for decades. โThis is a survival tool that weโve been handed with this documentary.โ
Turman, the 78-year-old Emmy winner who received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in July, is no stranger to using entertainment to educate. He starred as retired Army colonel Bradford Taylor on the hit โ90s sitcom โA Different World,โ a spinoff from โThe Cosby Showโ set on the campus of a historically Black college.
โIโm from the generation where we made great strides โ strides at great costs. And to see us in a time where the institutions are trying to indeed negate those strides, itโs disheartening,โ Turman said of the current political divisiveness in the country.
Cowboy culture and gatekeeping reaches pop culture fever pitch
The docuseries also wades briefly into the conversation surrounding the ownership of cowboy culture and the gatekeeping surrounding it.
That topic reached a pop cultural fever pitch in recent years, thanks to inflection points such as Beyoncรฉโs โCowboy Carterโ album and her subsequent album of the year win at the Grammys in February. Thereโs also Lil Nas Xโs record-breaking 2019 smash โOld Town Road,โ the viral line dance for โBoots on the Groundโ by 803Fresh, western-themed Hollywood productions like โThe Harder They Fallโ and โLawmen: Bass Reeves,โ and Ivan McClellanโs book, โEight Seconds: Black Rodeo Culture.โ
Bun says the heart of โHigh Horseโ is examining this ignored โ or erased โ slice of history to gain greater insight about the country overall.
โItโs not a Black story โ this is an American story,โ said the past distinguished lecturer at Houstonโs Rice University. โThis will turn everything that you know about the American cowboy on its head in the right way, and put these things into proper historical context. And that benefits all Americans.โ
___
Follow Associated Press entertainment journalist Gary Gerard Hamilton at @GaryGHamilton on all his social media platforms.

