


Chris Rock gets to the root of the problem early on in his fascinating and often hilarious documentary, Good Hair.It's all about relaxing, he and his interviewees observe: relaxing African-American hair into hanging loose and free - and, in the process, relaxing the white people around them into feeling less threatened by natural black hair.Rock offers, is the basis for a multi-billion-dollar industry that gets black people to apply caustic chemicals to their heads and spend thousands of dollars on hair weaves that they can't afford.The latter is a tricky bit of business. The people he interviews - everyone from actress Nia Long to rapper Eve to the Rev. Al Sharpton - seldom come right out and say, "I want my hair to look like a white person's hair." But that seems to be the thinking - that straight, flowing hair is more attractive and acceptable than naturally kinky or nappy hair. And that's obviously not a message Rock wants to convey to his daughters.