Author Topic: Gabriel Good Buffalo of The Lone Ranger film  (Read 9763 times)

Offline educatedindian

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Gabriel Good Buffalo of The Lone Ranger film
« on: July 13, 2013, 09:37:32 pm »
He doesn't specifically claim to be Lakota on his own website, but does sell "Lakota" and Cheyenne" crafts he made. He's also listed as Lakota on these sites.
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.400073276716324.91386.159136630809991&type=3
http://browndigital.bpc.com/display_article.php?id=1124641
Native on these.
http://pinterest.com/pin/366480488397424402/
http://www.pricegrabber.com/clothing/misc++gabriel-good-buffalo-xl-hand-beaded-belt-leather-antique-cut-beads-native-wide/m-1213352858/

Add to that the name designed to make people think he's Native. I don't see his legal name.

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http://colorlines.com/archives/2013/07/the_lone_rangers_good_bad_and_ugly_marketing_schemes.html

by Aura Bogado
Wednesday, July 3 2013, 8:45 AM EST Tags: consumer protection, Film, Hollywood

....Tonto action figures are already being sold as “Native American warrior spirit” caricatures. The Lego Corporation is pushing its “Comanche Camp” toys. And Subway is hawking plastic soft drink containers with Tonto snapshots that guarantee the image, which is offensive to so many Natives and non-Natives alike, will live on in consumers’ kitchens for years to come. While “The Lone Ranger” film will come and go in theaters, and perhaps to be revived on DVD and in film awards, corporate promo deals will sustain the Tonto image for years to come—and will make millions off of retailing Native stereotypes while doing so.

But it’s not just corporations that stand to make serious profit from the film. Just last week, Jezebel touted a $2,000 Lone Ranger belt created by an “actual Native American designer.” Racked, meanwhile, reported on the same designer, stating that a “Native American chief” made the accessories. A project that features Native artisans would be a great thing (notwithstanding the problematic nature of dissolving all Natives into “chiefs”). Except the artist in question, called Gabriel Good Buffalo, is not a “chief,” as Racked wrote. He’s not “Lakota Sioux,” as Jezebel wrote, either. In fact, Gabriel Good Buffalo is not even Native. Rather, he’s a striking example of how the burgeoning market for Native appropriation and branding operates.

It might be easy to confuse Good Buffalo for a Native. The last name he uses is not uncommon among certain Natives. And his own website features “Cheyenne War Shield Yell” and “Sioux Turtle Clan” designs. In an email, Good Buffalo claimed that Will Leather Goods, the company that originally marketed him as a “Native American chief” did so without his knowledge. He said the company had informed him it would change that on its website (as of publication, it has not, and a phone call to the company store was answered by a clerk who explained that Good Buffalo is a “prestigious Native American craftsman.”).

Individuals and companies marketing themselves as “Native American craftsmen” often make up clans, tribes, and nations that don’t even exist—further fueling confusion. Journalist Simon Moya-Smith, who is Oglala Lakota, says he spoke with two elders; neither had heard of the “Sioux Turtle Clan” named in Good Buffalo’s marketing. One of them, Maka Black Elk, is the great grandson of Holy Man, Black Elk. Moya-Smith affirmed, “none of us have heard of a Sioux Turtle Clan, and if anyone would know, Maka would.”

What might surprise most readers is that Good Buffalo is in apparent violation of federal law....

Santa Fe Indian Market remains New Mexico’s biggest cultural event—showcasing more than 1,000 Native artists who represent more than 100 tribes and nations annually, drawing more than 100,000 visitors to the market for a week each summer*. As such, the city has become known as a Native arts place. But the city is also a magnet for non-Natives like Alvarez, who sell fraudulent Native goods; Gabriel Good Buffalo himself is listed as Lakota in galleries there. While Good Buffalo did admit he’s not Native when contacted directly, his claims about Cheyenne and Sioux belts remain suspect under the Indian Arts and Crafts Act. As an individual, he risks a five-year prison term, with fines up to $250,000. Businesses like Will Leather Goods can be fined $1,000,000 for continuing to sell $2,000 belts made by a “Native American chief.”

Adrienne Keene, a writer whose Native Appropriations site tackles the hijacking of Native culture by non-Natives, points out that what we’re seeing isn’t anything new—it’s just on a bigger scale, from corporate promotions to boutique accessories. “‘The Lone Ranger’ is a Disney blockbuster, with big names,” says Keene. “And that’s changing the way the products attached to it are marketed.”

For Keene, that’s a result of a consumer society, where people expect everything to be for sale—and ideally, at a low cost. Along with Dr. Jessica Metcalfe at Beyond Buckskin, Keene has advocated for buyers to be prepared to pay good money for an authentic Native craft. And that, says Keen, is part of what makes Good Buffalo’s marketing that much more insidious: well-meaning consumers will think they’re paying $2,000 for a Native artisan’s belt, when they’re instead spending thousands on being duped....

Epiphany

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Re: Gabriel Good Buffalo of The Lone Ranger film
« Reply #1 on: July 13, 2013, 11:20:55 pm »
http://goodbuffalo.com/goodbuffalo/Photos.html

 Registered through: GoDaddy.com, LLC (http://www.godaddy.com)
   Domain Name: GOODBUFFALO.COM
      Created on: 29-Sep-12
      Expires on: 29-Sep-17
      Last Updated on: 29-Sep-12

   Registrant:
   LouRae Woody
   P.O. Box 28565
   Santa Fe, New Mexico 87592
   United States

   Administrative Contact:
      Woody, LouRae  lourae.woody3@gmail.com
      P.O. Box 28565
      Santa Fe, New Mexico 87592
      United States
      5059824873

   Technical Contact:
      Woody, LouRae  lourae.woody3@gmail.com
      P.O. Box 28565
      Santa Fe, New Mexico 87592
      United States
      5059824873

The contact phone number listed here in whois info is the same as listed on the GoodBuffalo website.

There is a therapist in Santa Fe named LouRae Woody. http://www.stjohnscollege.edu/admin/SF/health.shtml

Lourae (spelling varies) is married to John D Becker.

Name:    John Daivd Becker
Spouse:    Lourae
Address:    S Of Santa Fe
City:    Santa Fe
State:    New Mexico
Zip Code:    87501

1996 US phone & address directory ancestry.com

These might just be friends of "Gabriel Goodbuffalo", don't know.

Gabriel Goodbuffalo is in public records in Santa Fe under that name, various addresses in 1991 & 1996.

New Mexico corporations can be looked up here https://portal.sos.state.nm.us/corps/Corplookup/Lookdn.aspx , haven't found anything there.

« Last Edit: July 14, 2013, 12:27:36 am by Piff »

Epiphany

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Re: Gabriel Good Buffalo of The Lone Ranger film
« Reply #2 on: July 13, 2013, 11:35:18 pm »
Quote
Gabriel Good Buffalo Has Opened His Doors At 320 Garfield With His Czechoslovakian Beads Beads from Around The World and Designer Garments Buffalo Gallery 320 Garfield St A 9869971

Santa Fe Reporter (Newspaper) - June 20, 1990, Santa Fe, New Mexico

Epiphany

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Re: Gabriel Good Buffalo of The Lone Ranger film
« Reply #3 on: July 13, 2013, 11:55:33 pm »
Uploaded a 1990 feature story on him.

He's said elsewhere that he was in the Merchant Marines at one time. (added that clip, from Santa Fe New Mexican 29 Nov 1990)

The wording on the "calling to make a two year commitment to visit inmates at Monroe State Penitentiary" and that afterwards he returned to his art - sorta sounds like he himself was an inmate.

Washington state has great digital archives http://www.digitalarchives.wa.gov/ with census, marriage records, land records etc., wonderful for research and genealogy. Only one Good Buffalo there, a woman, who is also the only Good Buffalo in voter records. I was hoping that maybe a name change record for him would be there, but no luck.
« Last Edit: July 17, 2013, 04:59:04 pm by Piff »

Offline Diana

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Re: Gabriel Good Buffalo of The Lone Ranger film
« Reply #4 on: July 14, 2013, 12:52:37 am »
Hey Piff, is that the only pic of this good buffalo person?? The one on the 1990 article? I have been trying to google his image and have come up with nothing. He looks familiar.


Diana

Epiphany

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Re: Gabriel Good Buffalo of The Lone Ranger film
« Reply #5 on: July 14, 2013, 01:00:36 am »
Hey Piff, is that the only pic of this good buffalo person?? The one on the 1990 article? I have been trying to google his image and have come up with nothing. He looks familiar.
Diana

All I can find so far

Epiphany

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Re: Gabriel Good Buffalo of The Lone Ranger film
« Reply #6 on: July 14, 2013, 01:10:18 am »
Here is an ad copy, unfortunately not finding anything yet with a clear photo of him. I'm finding these through my public library (Timberland Regional in Washington state) library site online, patrons can use the Access Newspaper Archive.

Epiphany

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Re: Gabriel Good Buffalo of The Lone Ranger film
« Reply #7 on: July 14, 2013, 01:46:54 am »
Little better copy of an ad
« Last Edit: July 14, 2013, 04:56:58 pm by Piff »