Back in 2011, the once universally beloved African in America actor, Will Smith, had a birthday present for his Afro-centric wife, Jada Pinkett Smith. It was her 40th birthday, so he told GQ in an otherwise insipid 2021 article (he passed on Django Unchained because he didn’t want to make a black man gets vengeance for slavery film), we learn Smith made a documentary about his wife’s family being descended from slaves and how he tracked down the White family who owned her ancestors:
Things reached a breaking point by Jada’s 40th birthday, in 2011. Will had spent three years planning a private family-and-friends dinner in Santa Fe, where he screened a documentary he’d commissioned that chronicled her life and traced her family’s lineage back to slavery (and in which he tracked down a descendant of the white family who once owned Jada’s ancestors.)
When they got back to the hotel suite that night, Jada was nearly silent. “That was the most disgusting display of ego I have ever seen in my life,” Smith recalls his wife telling him. The two began fighting so loudly that a 10-year-old Willow, with whom they were sharing the suite, emerged crying with her hands over her ears, begging them to stop.
Weird, to say the least. that Will Smith would think reminding his black wife of their ancestors past in bondage, when the only type of bondage Jada seems to enjoy is with her numerous extra-marital flings as part of her non-monogamous understanding with the star of Wild Wild West.
But this raises an interesting question: how many Africans in America have decided to look into their past and then see if the descendants of people who owned their ancestor can be found in the USA in present-day? Which brings us to black actor Roy Woods and an interview he just did with Shannon Sharpe
[Roy Wood Jr. says he used Zillow to stalk the white family who bought his ancestors as slaves in Charleston, NotTheBee.com, November 6, 2025]:
Roy Woods Jr., of Daily Show fame, and Shannon Sharpe seem a little insane in this clip.
[Warning: Language]
Wood: I found the white family that purchased the first black Wood of my bloodline off the slave ships in Charleston … if I wanted to today I could find the white Wood descendants in southern Georgia and pull up on they f—ing house.
One day I will.
They ain’t got no money, though.
[Shannon bursts out laughing]
I Zillowed they crib, they broke … how you broke and you had slaves?
What do you bet he’d still accept reparations from them, even though he’s a rich Hollywood celebrity and they’re broke southerners in the Georgia swamps?
“…pull up on they f—ing house.”
And do what, pal?
It’s stories like this, and Will Smith’s exceedingly odd gift to his bisexual wife on her 40th birthday (most people might remember Will Smith more at this point for slapping Chris Rock for a hilarious joke about her alopecia) that help make clear the anti-White resentment the architects of the American Colonization Society long ago hoped to free their posterity from ever encountering.
It’s not too late to reexamine the goals and aims of the American Colonization Society at this late hour to free Whites of the cynicism, derision, and racial resentment of those Africans in America who owe their residency in the United States (and not an African nation) because one of their ancestors sold them into slavery centuries ago. Perhaps they’ll be able to track down the descendants of those who sold their ancestors into slavery! As David Greene wrote on X:
There is a consistent pattern that. As whites become weaker, the call to blame them for all societies problems actually becomes louder. As the distance from historic crimes grows, the desire for revenge becomes more ubiquitous. This isn’t justice. It’s opportunism.
The real opportunity is for Roy Wood to find the Africans who participated in the enslavement of his ancestors by selling them to slavers to begin with, right? That journey won’t come to a conclusion in the USA.
The post Black Actor Used Zillow to Track Down White Family Whose Ancestors Bought His as Slaves appeared first on American Renaissance.
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