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BLACK PRESS EXCLUSIVE – Part Two: Bill Cosby Beyond The Fight; The Legacy He Built Endures

Despite scandal and setbacks, Bill Cosby’s enduring influence spans groundbreaking TV roles, $200 million in HBCU donations, and a cultural legacy that continues to shape Black education and media.
#BillCosby #BlackPress #HBCU #CosbyShow #FatAlbert #BlackCulture #SidneyPoitier #ADifferentWorld #BlackHistory #MediaLegacy

(The Legacy He Built Endures – Part Two)
By Stacy M. Brown
Senior National Correspondent
Black Press USA

Six years ago, Bill Cosby was sentenced to prison. Cosby was about two years into his maximum 10-year sentence when on June 30, 2021, he was set free from State Correctional Institute-Phoenix in Collegeville, Pa.

 

Inside Prison Walls

Behind walls meant to break him, Cosby spoke to men the world had abandoned. At SCI–Phoenix, he joined Man Up, blind, in a wheelchair, addressing those whose bodies bore chains. After speaking of his heroes, one inmate told him, “I will be your hero, Mr. Cosby.”

He spoke to Men of Valor, too. “I noticed that in the Bible, the parts about Jesus, Jesus never smiled. And I want you, if you are going to do what you say you are going to do in your turnaround, make Jesus smile.”

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It was Camille who preserved him. “My wife, Camille, is not only a very intelligent woman, but she is a woman who saved my mother’s life, and she has saved my life by continuously saying, it’s what you put in your mouth,” he said. “She makes sure that we eat like that, and that’s why, at age 88, I’m cancer-free, and I don’t have any ailments of forgetting things.”

From prison, when he phoned, Camille silenced his weakness. “Whenever I called her, I just badly wanted to tell her how I felt,” Cosby said. “And she would say, ‘Just be quiet.’” He had called her strength “love and the strength of womanhood. And you could reverse it, the strength of womanhood and love.”

An Enduring Legacy

Cosby and Camille poured more than $200 million into higher education, including $20 million to Spelman College, at that time the largest gift ever given to an HBCU. Those gifts were not simply donations. They were lifelines – scholarships, endowments, futures carved from generosity.

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Cosby broke into I Spy, the first Black co-lead in a drama. He created Fat Albert, a mirror for Black children. He built The Cosby Show, which for five years reigned supreme, showing Cliff and Clair Huxtable as what America insisted could not exist: a Black family whole, professional, and loving. A Different World sent young people surging toward HBCUs. And with Sidney Poitier, he made Uptown Saturday Night, Let’s Do It Again, A Piece of the Action – comedies still treasured in Black homes, still testaments to resilience and wit when Hollywood offered little but caricature.

Cosby demanded truth on screen. When told to strip a poster from Theo’s wall – one that read “Abolish Apartheid” – he warned them: “If you do, you can take the show with it.”

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Unlike so many others who rose to fame, Cosby never turned his back on the Black Press. His only prison interview was with the Black Press. His first long interview after release was again with the Black Press. In 2014, he said, “I only expect the Black media to uphold the standards of excellence in journalism, and when you do that, you have to go in with a neutral mind.”

 

Deserving a Parade

Cosby’s path has been strewn with glory, grief, and betrayal. Yet what remains is a record that cannot be erased. He shattered television’s barriers, poured hundreds of millions into education, gave film and television back to his people, and stood on innocence when it would have been so easy to surrender.

Through it all, he was held by Camille, and he never abandoned the Black Press. We say, give flowers to the living. Bill Cosby has earned more than flowers. For what he has given Black culture, he deserves a parade. And somewhere, the ticker tape waits.

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