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He made disparaging remarks about blacks, the ruling said, including telling a bailiff that two defendants who were late were on "colored people's time."
Colored People's Time
Colored People's Time, US expression for lateness
2012-Present: Colored People's Time Machine and CopperWire
In January 2012, Teodros released Colored People's Time Machine, his first full-length solo album since Lovework.
For example, Judge Duckman once told a Bronx prosecutor she should wear shorter skirts, and said one defendant arriving late at court was on "colored people's time," the News reported.
Colored People's Time Machine (Fresh Chopped Beats/MADK Productions, January 19, 2012)
Other significant plays include his history play Colored People's Time in which Angela Bassett and Samuel L. Jackson performed, and Hannah Davis.
Colored People's Time Machine was recorded in Seattle and Brooklyn and is a multi-lingual, multi-genre album that featured vocal, instrumental, and production collaborations with 20 different artists.
He also performed in the Negro Ensemble Company's productions of Manhattan Made Me, Sons & Fathers of Sons, A Soldier's Play and Colored People's Time.
41 For further discussion of cultural differences in attitudes toward time, see "White People's Time, Colored People's Time" by Jules Henry in Trans-action, March-April, 1965, pp. 31-34.
"She has also appeared off Broadway in About Heaven & Earth, Colored People's Time, Old Phantoms, A Season to Unravel, The Imprisonment of Obatala" and Going to St. Ives.
Colored People's Time, or CPT, or CP Time (also referred to as Black People Time) is an American expression referring to a stereotype of African Americans as frequently being late.
Mr. Lee, whose other plays include "The First Breeze of Summer" and "Colored People's Time," a historical pageant that shares some of this work's impersonal tone, wrote "Black Eagles" on commission from its director, Ricardo Khan.
Among its other major productions were "Ceremonies in Dark Old Men," "The River Niger," "Colored People's Time," "The Great MacDaddy," "From the Mississippi Delta," and Mr. Fuller's four-play, 20-actor epic on black Americans during the 19th century.
There was also a 1960s public interest program produced by Detroit Public Television with the name Colored People's Time, as well as a 1980s play written by Leslie Lee which consisted of 13 vignettes of African American history from the Civil War through the Montgomery bus riots.