Viewing Posts Tagged "don imus"
I ask the same question of the Civil Rights generation that I pose to mainstream news outlets:
Where the hell have you all been?!?!?
I swear this is the final
Imus related blog; I really needed to get this one out.
Folks are running around here acting like we, the good citizens of Planet Hip Hop have no soul (no pun intended), or lack any moral foundation. Obviously, that couldn’t be further from the truth. Beyond the surface of the entire self righteous chest thumping that’s been done since the infamous “nappy headed hoe” comment, everybody calling for the great
“Hip Hop clean up” is guilty of one of two things:False reporting and shitty observations.
Hip Hop has been self critical for YEARS.
In music, television, the web and print, journalists, emcees, anchors and activists have taken folks to task. We did it before Imus and we damn sure will be doing it after he fades away into obscurity. Anybody that faithfully reads
DX knows that we constantly hold the industry accountable. From the music to the executives, we call “bullshit” when we see it. As do our competitors and Hip Hop historian,
Davey D.
Before
Little Brother was “too intelligent” for BET,
The Roots dropped
What They Do,
Jeru the Damaja had
Ya Playin Yaself and other emcees assailed
“the studio gangster”, pointed out how fake the game was and took issue with misogyny (
U-N-I-T-Y anyone?).
On a scholarly level,
Dr. Michael Eric Dyson and others have a number of pieces objectively looking at Hip Hop and how it affects the masses.For all things negative that can be said about
The Source and XXL, they’ve done the same. Even
Black Exploitation Television occasionally questions what’s going on in the game.
Let’s keep it 100: the claim that Hip Hop is not capable of policing itself is false. The only folks buying into that are those outside the culture, including mainstream media outlets and washed up Civil Rights leaders (yes, I’m talking about
Sharpton and Jackson) and the people that follow them like the second coming of
Moses.Everybody wants to ride the moral bandwagon on our culture now because it’s convenient.
While I don’t disagree that some of this music is harmful and degrading, I take great offense at the folks acting like they’re bringing something new and fresh to a discussion that we’ve been having within the culture for quite some time.
I’ll be tipping the wagon over when it rolls through, is anybody with me?
The views and opinions expressed in this blog are those of the writer and not necessarily those of HipHopDX.com or Cheri Media Group.
I promise, this is the last
Don Imus related piece (maybe).
I wrote
Callin Out Names: Don Imus, Hip Hop and Nappy Headed Hoes not to detract from the original issue, but to check Hip Hop and how we in the culture treat each other. No more, no less.
Since a lot of folks are trying to put Hip Hop on the hot seat, let’s be real about a couple of things. The old white people are saying the same shit that we’ve been saying for months (Don’t believe me, go back through some of the
DX editorials). All Hip Hop doesn’t need, nor deserve a defense.
I’ll defend
dead prez,
Immortal Technique, Talib Kweli, Common, etc. to the end.
Snap music… is out in the cold.
Bitches ain’t shit but hoes and tricks… sorry for ya.
I never knew a love like this… I got your back.
With all this talk of a blanket defense of Hip Hop, we need to remember that everything in the name of Hip Hop (or rap) doesn’t, or shouldn’t represent who we are as a culture. To be fair to the game, Every woman isn’t a queen, but every woman isn’t a bitch or a hoe either. The problem is that I see more bitches and hoes on TV than queens. Everything that wants to be lumped under the banner (or better yet, the guise) of Hip Hop isn’t always worth the CD or vinyl it’s pressed on, nor doesn’t warrant an intelligent defense by anyone with half a brain.
The biggest problem here is balance, or the lack of on main stream airwaves. But I’ll be damned if I put the same energy (or ANY energy at all) into defending the profanity in the bullshit as I will the profanity in the substance.
The views and opinions expressed in this blog are those of the writer and not necessarily those of HipHopDX.com or Cheri Media Group.