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Voodoo in the house: what do you get when you mix a voodoo priestess who happens to be gay with a passel of mismatched housemates? Mad, mad TV.


Hollywood voodoo isn't real," says Ta'Shia Asanti. "The whole sticking pins in dolls thing--I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 any voodoo priest or priestess who would do harm to anyone."

Asanti knows what she's talking about. She's an iya, or priestess, in the Vodun tradition, the African religion that most people know as voodoo. She's also something of a history maker, the first real voodoo priestess to star on primetime television. Mad Mad House, a 10-week series slated to premiere March 4 on the Sci Fi Channel Sci Fi Channel may refer to:
  • Sci Fi Channel (United States), a United States television channel launched in 1992
  • Sci Fi Channel (United Kingdom), a United Kingdom television channel launched in 1995
, shows what happens when 10 everyday people move into a house with Asanti as well as a vampire vampire, in folklore, animated corpse that sucks the blood of humans. Belief in vampires has existed from the earliest times and has given rise to an amalgam of legends and superstitions. , a Wiccan, a Modern Primitive Modern primitives are people in developed nations who engage in body modification rituals and practices while making reference or homage to the rite of passage practices in "primitive cultures".  (someone who practices body adornment as a path to spiritual awareness), and a naturist ("We've got more nudity than the Playboy Channel," jokes Asanti).

And here's the catch. The "Alts," as the show's unconventional residents are known, rule the roost. The "Guests" have to play nice with people they might otherwise consider to be punch lines punch line
n.
The climactic phrase or statement of a joke, producing a sudden humorous effect.


punch line
Noun

the last line of a joke or funny story that gives it its point

Noun 1.
 or risk having the door hit them on their way out. It's the perfect revenge show for anyone who's ever been made to feel like a freak. Yet Asanti, whose calm, peaceful manner radiates warmth and goodness, doesn't think of it that way at all. "Yes, this show has more drama than The Young and the Restless. It was drama-queen heaven. Arguments occurred, but so did love and healing. The emotions fly. It wasn't contrived. It's what naturally happened, and I believe it's what has to happen in the world for us to grow as a people."

Raised as a Christian in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  by her minister father, Asanti says she yearned for something more. "When I found the African traditional religions

Main article: Religion in Africa
The category of African indigenous religion refers to cultural, religious or spiritual manifestations indigeneous to the continent of Africa. There are arguably several religions in this category.
, it felt like home to me. I spent most of my life looking at this picture of the Son of God on the church walls. This guy had blond hair and blue eyes Blue eyes are eyes that have blue irises (see eye color), and may also refer to:
  • IBM have a project named "BlueEyes" to develop computational devices that mimic perception.
  • Old blue eyes is also a common reference to Frank Sinatra and Sven-Göran Eriksson.
, and I remember thinking, If this is the God of all people, why does he only look like one people?" After an intense period of study she became a priestess. Today the "30-something, same-gender-loving" journalist and author of The Sacred Door--a book on personal healing--conducts annual seminars on African spiritual traditions and lives in Denver with Pepper Massey, her partner of five years.

And she has high hopes for Mad Mad House in spite of how often reality shows are edited for maximum mockery and humiliation. "I was concerned," Asanti explains. "But everything was conducted with authenticity. Some of it's supposed to be funny, because that's how life is. But I hope people will get the sincerity and sacredness of what went on there. I know [the Guests] had every human reaction you could possibly have to a group of very different people. [They] were not prepared for what happened inside of them. Their lives are never going to be the same. I like to think that this show could be a model for social change. Maybe we can begin to think about our differences in a very real way."

White writes about film for E! Online.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Liberation Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
Dana
Dana Lane (Member): where can I find a voodoo priest. 9/25/2007 7:22 PM
I was a victim of voodoo becuase of someone's jealousy and envy and I would like to find out what happened to me and what they did to me.

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Title Annotation:television
Author:White, Dave
Publication:The Advocate (The national gay & lesbian newsmagazine)
Date:Mar 16, 2004
Words:515
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