It seems that the controversy swirling around Barack Obama's former pastor Reverend Jeremiah Wright just won't end.
In the May 12th issue of 'Newsweek' magazine, the focus has turned from the Democratic presidential candidate to talk show Queen Oprah Winfrey. It would appear that while Winfrey has parlayed her gift of gab into a lucrative empire, she didn't appreciate the inflammatory tone of Rev. Wright's speech while she attended his church.
Winfrey, a transplant to
But it only took Winfrey two years to pull up stakes, only attending services there infrequently until the mid 1990's.
So what cooled her warm and fuzzy feeling? According to the article, written by Allison Samuel, it was Wright and organized religion that made Winfrey weary.
And while Wright has gone on media blitz blasting his former high profile parishioner, Barack Obama, he remains oddly numb on Winfrey. She turned her back on the church too. She seems to have disagreed with his message, so why the silence when it comes to her?
Perhaps Wright realizes that he captures more of the spotlight by hurting the presidential aspirations of the only African American to come eerily close to the White House. Maybe, he suffers from the "crab in the barrel" syndrome, where it is easy for him to think nothing of trying to hold a black man down if it means getting his own day in the sun. Or, maybe he is enthralled by having his largest audience ever. Finally, it could simply be that Wright is glad that he gets to share his thoughts with the white media over issues that have haunted him for decades.
Whatever the reasons, it is clear that Winfrey determined that she was getting the wrong message from Wright and the church during her years there. She was smart enough to cut her ties before they could become the ties that bound her career. Unfortunately, it took Obama too long to see the difference. One can only hope he can shake the Wright shadow and take the right message with him to the White House.



1. Rev Wright is speaking the truth that Americans don't want to hear. The rub is that he is speaking out in a time when the spotlight should not be centered on him. He needs to let the election runs its course and understand the bigger picture, the election of the first black president. I understand that Wright wants to defend himself from the media that has spun his sermons in a negative light, however it is not about him. Wright needs to be quiet and allow Obama to run his campaign.
Concerned at 3:04PM on May 7th 2008