I never thought I would see the day when NPR ran a story complimenting a misogynist rapper for opening a charter school. This rapper, who calls himself Pitbull, writes lyrics that are too filthy to repeat on NPR or on this blog.
But there is Claudio Sanchez, reporting on the charming phenomenon that celebrities who are not educators and who apparently have no education themselves are opening charter schools! Isn’t that wonderful! Shouldn’t we all be impresssed!
Well, no, it is not that Mr. Pitbull has a heart overflowing with love of children or love of learning. He is making a lot of money. Fortunately for the readers of this blog, we have read Jersey Jazzman and Mother Crusader, both of whom did the sort of research that NPR did not do. Mr. Pitbull has another name: Armando Perez. In Jersey Jazzman’s article, you will see Mr. Pitbull-Perez has hired Academica, a for-profit charter chain with revenues of $158 million, to run his new charter school. Academica is owned by Mr. Fernando Zulueta, who controls some $115 million in real estate in Miami, all exempt from property taxes because his for-profit schools are “public.”
The story–and the money trail–gets way more complicated, but NPR did not see fit to discover any of the backers of Mr. Pitbull’s school.
The story gets entangled in Florida Republican politics, as Mother Crusader shows.
As always, it is a good thing to follow the money. Who is putting up the money, who is getting the money, who is making out like bandits?
But there is a lingering question: Why does anyone think it is a good idea for celebrities to open their own schools and to get public dollars for their profitable vanity project? How are we supposed to “outcompete” the globe by turning our children over to uneducated sports stars and rappers?

I can’t stand that baldheaded twit. He is a misogynous but so is most of gangsta…
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Diane,
I will tell you this. Private schools in Kuwait are established for making money. I know because I moved here to teach, and now understand that Kuwaiti parents spend $$$$ to send their children to American-named private schools. The schools do business with local realitors to house teachers. My apartment is located in the seedy part of Kuwait. Education is nothing but a business at home and abroad. Somebody is making money hand over fist.
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NPR needs the Gates money.
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I just made a comment on the NPR website for this story and posted a link to your piece here. The other comments were poisonous. A lotta people getting hip to the corruption in the “education reform” movement. Thank you for all you do!
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No one should be surprised that NPR is a loudspeaker for so-called education reform, given “…additional funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.”
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According to the October 21 Time issue, Andre Agassi also has a charter in Las Vegas.
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Marilyn, read my book for a detailed description of Andre Agassi’s charter in Las Vegas. Not much of a model.
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This is the second time that I’m aware of where Claudio Sanchez has been the water boy of the deformers. I don’t recall the issue/story of the previous incident, just that it was such an obvious cut and paste job for the deformers that I got in line and slammed him on it like all those who got there before me. Based on the massively better coverage of education reporters like Linda Lutton and Becky Vevea at NPR, Sanchez can be seen as an outlier. NPR has no business having someone like him on staff.
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His music sucks too.
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