Al Sharpton

I’m projected as an ambulance chaser, but I’m more the ambulance. People call me because they know I will come. Reverend Alfred Charles "Al" Sharpton, Jr. is an African-American activist, political commentator and Baptist preacher from New York City. He first became famous in the 1980s with his protests against racial injustice, his involvement in fanning the flames of the and the  He is also an entrepreneur, founder of the National Youth Movement, National Action Network and was manager for soul singer James Brown.

Sharpton is a fiery orator and is often criticized by right-wingers for trying to grab the spotlight in prominent racial issues; basically, he calls them out on their racist crap and they hate him for it.

Some claim he expressed anger at "the [Jewish] diamond merchants right here in Crown Heights" vis-a-vis dealing with apartheid South Africa, and that this constituted antisemitism. As a result, he's sometimes been compared to various ideologues like Pat Buchanan. However, Sharpton denied having made some of the remarks attributed to him, and many Jewish leaders do not think Sharpton is anti-semitic.

Mistakes
Al Sharpton and his CORE coalition more or less managed to crush the premiere of the movie, and a theatre that was planning to show it had smokebombs thrown in. All this in spite of no one in CORE having even seen the film. Coonskin was a mixture of Song of the South, The Godfather, and The Boondocks directed by and used some of the most crass imagery possible, so anyone seeing just a clip or still frame might think it was the worst of Blaxploitation. However, the movie was about being Black in 1970s Harlem and was a vicious takedown of racism, much like Blazing Saddles which came out a year prior. Anyone thinking Bahkshi was a racist had obviously never even heard a thing about the guy. But that didn't matter, Sharpton wanted to make a name for himself, so he went after the director of Fritz the Cat.

In the 1980s Sharpton worked as an informant for the FBI and the DEA and has long been associated with organized crime including the New York mafia families.

After not having learned his lesson from the Brawley case, in 2006 he was among those screaming bloody murder about racism in the which turned out to be the fabrication of a deeply disturbed individual and gross prosecutorial misconduct that ultimately resulted in the disbarment of North Carolina District Attorney  After Whoopi Goldberg demanded that he apologize for contributing to the toxicity surrounding the case, he refused and instead claimed that he "wasn't involved" in any way.

Sharpton ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination for president in 2004.

Sharpton has a show at MSNBC called PoliticsNation, and has also made frequent guest appearances on Fox News.

Since losing a large amount of weight, Sharpton has reportedly engaged in fat-shaming of his own supporters.

Scapegoat
Despite his decline in relevance (at least compared to the 1980s and 1990s), conservatives love using him and Jesse Jackson as scapegoats in discussions about race relations in the United States, especially with the rise of #BlackLivesMatter in 2015. Just like "social justice warrior", Al Sharpton's name has become a handy means of ending conversations. If someone expresses the belief that African Americans aren't getting a fair shake from society, Al Sharpton will be invoked by those who disagree, with the implication that Sharpton's existence somehow proves that reverse racism is a bigger problem. However, an increasing amount of critics of BLM use Jackson and Sharpton the same way conservatives have been using Martin Luther King for decades, as examples of "real" civil rights leaders who believe in equality, fighting against "real" racism, in order to appeal to a more moderate audience.