I Am - Somebody

I Am - Somebody is a poem by Reverend Jesse Jackson, which he recited on Sesame Street in 1971. This inspirational free verse poem was unparalleled with anything ever attempted on children's television in content and delivery, and to an extent still is. The poem fulfilled Sesame Street 's initial curriculum for serving the under-privileged city youth, as well as offering cultural understanding.

According to The Reader's Companion to American History, the poem was written as part of push-Excel, a program designed to motivate black students. 

The following is this poem, in the original structure as written by Reverend Jackson. Lines of "I am/Somebody" or "But I am/Somebody" were recited in a call and response fashion by Jackson and the children. During the skit children of all races were scattered all over the Sesame Street set, on the street, benches, fire escapes, led by Jackson in the poem.


 * I am
 * Somebody!
 * I am
 * Somebody!
 * I may be poor,
 * But I am
 * Somebody.
 * I may be young,
 * But I am
 * Somebody.
 * I may be on welfare,
 * But I am
 * Somebody.
 * I may be small,
 * But I am
 * Somebody.
 * I may have made mistakes,
 * But I am
 * Somebody.
 * My clothes are different,
 * My face is different,
 * My hair is different,
 * But I am
 * Somebody.
 * I am black,
 * Brown,or white.
 * I speak a different language
 * But I must be respected,
 * Protected,
 * Never rejected.
 * I am
 * God's child!

"I Am - Somebody" was also recited by Jackson, with the assembled crowd at Los Angeles Coliseum for the Wattstax concert in 1972.

The poem was published as part of a 1998 book called I Am Somebody! (ISBN 0-516-26133-9), which included biographies of notable figures, for kids aged 9-12.

It also appears in When We Were Kings, a 1996 documentary examining the historic Rumble in the Jungle boxing match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (which was still known as Zaire at that time). It was performed with band as part of a concert preceding the bout that was said to be the finest collection of African American entertainers ever assembled at that time (1974).

The poem was recited in a somewhat different form in what sounds like a speech by Jackson sampled on the 1973 funk single Same Beat by The J.B.'s:
 * I am
 * Somebody
 * I am
 * Somebody
 * I may be unemployed
 * But I am
 * Somebody
 * I may be unskilled
 * But I am
 * Somebody
 * I may be uneducated
 * But I am
 * Somebody
 * I may be in jail
 * But I am
 * Somebody
 * I am
 * Somebody

The J.B.'s titled an album and track Damn Right I Am Somebody the following year.

Cultural references
In 1991, when Dr. Seuss died, Saturday Night Live parodied the poem by having Jackson recite "Green Eggs and Ham" in the same oratative fashion he performs his own poem.

The phrase has become so much of a calling card for Jackson that he yells it in a cameo in the movie Undercover Brother.

"I Am - Somebody" also inspired a similarly titled song on Carlos Santana's 2005 album, "All That I Am", which featured the American rapper will.i.am of the Black Eyed Peas.