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  1. Release date. July 13–17, 1959. Running time. Five half-hour installments. The Hate That Hate Produced is a television documentary about Black nationalism in the United States, focusing on the Nation of Islam and, to a lesser extent, the United African Nationalist Movement. It was produced in 1959 by Mike Wallace and Louis Lomax .

    • News Beat
    • July 13–17, 1959
  2. Jan 22, 2021 · In the words of journalist Mike Wallace, The Hate That Hate Produced was “a study of the rise of black racism, of a call for black supremacy among a small but growing segment of the American Negro population.”. Without directly engaging or reflecting upon Hedgeman's analysis, Wallace laments the current radical direction of black religious ...

    • Vaughn A. Booker
    • 2021
  3. Aug 29, 2021 · The Hate That Hate Produced: Directed by Joe Chappelle. With Forest Whitaker, Nigel Thatch, Ilfenesh Hadera, Lucy Fry. Bumpy Johnson must fend off rivals to receive the largest dope shipment in New York history, while Harlem explodes into riot; Malcolm X reluctantly agrees to protection from an unusual source.

    • (416)
    • Crime, Drama
    • Joe Chappelle
    • 2021-08-29
  4. Format: Quantity: $25.00. The Hate That Hate Produced began with a narration by Wallace: While city officials, state agencies, white liberals, and sober-minded Negroes stand idly by, a group of Negro dissenters is taking to street-corner step ladders, church pulpits, sports arenas, and ballroom platforms across the United States, to preach a ...

  5. May 11, 2022 · The Hate That Hate Produced is a television documentary about Black nationalism in the United States, focusing on the Nation of Islam and, to a lesser extent...

    • 95 min
    • 78
    • Bey's Bazaar
  6. Hate and Self-Defense "Stop sweet-talking [the white man]. ... Mike Wallace's 1959 documentary The Hate That Hate Produced was the first in a series of efforts to label the Nation of Islam a hate ...

  7. evision documentary, “The Hate That Hate Produced,” broadcast nationally in 1959. Malcolm impressed students with his fiery speeches, quick wit, striking analogies, glorification of black people and Africa in general, and down-to-earth yet scholarly presentations. But most students were not attracted to his religious