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FAMU Students Cause Real Embarassment

Our View: These students should be ashamed of themselves.

Published: Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Updated: Wednesday, March 10, 2010 09:03

Our View: These students should be ashamed of themselves.

The trending topic on Twitter said it all. Last week, one of the oldest and largest historically black universities in the nation, Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University (FAMU), was rocked with a disturbing rumor.

A group of students had allegedly been paid to film a pornographic video in a dorm room. The explicit and unsettling proof was all over the internet, as thousands clicked the link in an effort to make their own judgments. Was it really filmed in a FAMU dorm room? Were the "stars" real students?

Although many opted to wave the amateur video off as a hoax and a distasteful attempt at grabbing the attention of a gullible audience, the overwhelming consensus from viewers was that the tape was indeed filmed in a FAMU dorm room, and indeed featured FAMU students, participating in a contest for a Web site geared toward college dorm room encounters.
In the face of other recent scandals, including employees collecting over one million dollars worth of checks for time they hadn't worked, and even a student grade changing scheme resulting in a substantial loss of funds and the conviction of multiple students, FAMU is already suffering from somewhat of a negative reputation crisis. What these students did only added to the university's troubles.

It's amazing that these young black people, supposedly in pursuit of a higher education, would voluntarily involve themselves in a situation that would have such negative effects on not only their personal reputations, but more importantly, the reputation of their university and to totally disrespect their alma mater and its rich history.

It's one thing to disrespect yourself at your own discretion. If these students were interested in being "film stars," it's their prerogative to do so, but their personal indiscretions become a bigger problem when it's filmed on campus grounds and affects the rest of the university. 

There's no definite word on if or how the students will be punished for their part in the mess they've created. Regardless of how the situation is handled, it's embarrassing that it ever happened, and hopefully no other students at any other universities decide to follow suit.
 

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6 comments

Anonymous
Thu Oct 7 2010 00:30
First off..Howard needs to stop living off their legacy..that's the only reason it keeps getting ranked so high.Your older than FAMU, but still havent expanded yourselves..You have about a 480 million endowment compared to FAMU's 80 million..what are you doing with your money? Your campus is small, your athletics suck..a shame. FAMU has turn 80 million into expanding its campus and making sure it's the biggest HBCU..Your newspaper also doesnt compete against thefamuan because your news is inaccurarate. I have love for your university, but stop disrespecting FAMU and if this newspaper is a representation of your campus then your school needs more approvement than what I thought!
Anonymous
Sat Sep 4 2010 21:51
FAMU Alumna, you must be confused! "Howard needs to try to learm from FAMU and get on FAMU's level" aahaha, the funniest thing I have heard in a long time. Howard is the ONLY HBCU ranked in the Top 100 universities in the United States. We produce more African American PHD candidates than any school in the nation. Howard gets more POSITIVE mentions in the media and so-called "endorsements" from celebrities than FAMU could ever dream of!
Bison C011
Mon Aug 16 2010 15:53
Everyone who commented on this perspective lacks some common sense. At the time it was posted - and it was posted as a perspective, not as an article - it presented the facts that were in the public. Therefore, whatever happened a month later is NOT considered in this perspective and rightfully so. So we know that the students were not from FAMU now. On March 10, when this perspective was published, it was only suspected that the "actors" may not have been FAMU students, as is addressed in the article. And believe me, anyone who is a student at Howard University is not in any way jealous or biased towards students at FAMU - especially not members of The Hilltop. A perspective was simply written addressing what was known by the public. If you have a problem with that, you should not read the news at all. It happens every day, so don't be judgmental based on The Hilltop being a college newspaper talking about another HBCU.
FAMU alumna
Wed Aug 4 2010 01:56
I think Howard University have always had a bias feeling towards FAMU. I think that FAMU being the largest HBCU, graduating the most African Americans has something to do with it. Howard University needs to focus on building their school istead of making inaccurate assumptions about FAMU because as much negative publicity Howard says FAMU gets, they keep enrolling thousands of students as well as FAMU gains alot of good publicity on television. Our Marching 100 plays at every big event, Superbowl, Espys, Grammys..you name it. We have also graced ourselevs on television shows and we have endorsements by many celebrities as well. Howard needs to try to learn from FAMU and get on FAMU's level
HU...you know!
Mon Apr 19 2010 10:34
My view: The Hilltop is a media source, whether it is student-based or not does not matter. Do not post articles like this with 'your view' attached to it, if you have not researched all the details that the article entails.

Thank You,
-from a Bison, not a Rattler

Caryn Wilson
Wed Apr 7 2010 20:56
FAMU settled with RK Netmedia, the production company that hired actors to portray FAMU students performing pornographic acts in a so-called "dorm dare."

Verdict: it was NOT FAMU, nor were any of the participants RATTLERS.







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