(ThyBlackMan.com) Some would say the recent altercation at the BET Hip-Hop Awards was just the latest embarrassment to befall hip-hop, an oft criticized slice of pop culture…and they would be correct. It’s the “latest” incident, not an aberration. It’s more behavior deserving of more criticism, only to fall on deaf ears. It is criticism earned and deserved every step of the way. Hip-hop has no intention of changing or improving, and its most respected members have no designs on raising the bar above ignorance. I’m clear on this reality and you should be too. Nothing is going to change, not at least until someone of real relevance within the genre begins to care, and not a moment before.
This isn’t the first brawl or violent foolishness connected to a hip-hop awards show, and it’s sad having to acknowledge such truths with each subsequent incident. There was the gunshot into the ceiling during the 1994 Source Awards and the murder of Notorious B.I.G. in 1997 shortly after the Soul Train Music Awards. We can’t forget the all-out melee at the 2000 Source Awards and Eminem’s tussle at the 2002 MTV Video Music Awards. Surely you remember when rapper Young Buck allegedly stabbed a “fan” at the 2004 Vibe Music Awards.
(Cue Barbra Streisand) “Memories…like the corners of my mind.”
Those are only the award show-related incidents. There is not enough space in this column (or my next 5 for that matter) to highlight the inordinate number of arrests for guns, drugs and random acts of misogyny commonly associated with hip-hop in the past five years alone. For example, I’m not going to spend my time today discussing how rapper Webbie was arrested last month for “allegedly” robbing and kicking a woman down a flight of stairs. I could…but not this time. Today, we’ll just stick with the general themes of lawlessness, misogyny and ignorance; not necessarily in that order.
Recently, civil rights leader and entertainer Harry Belafonte accused some artists, including Jay-Z and Beyonce of “turning their backs on social responsibility.” It’s in moments like these where Belafonte’s words ring loudly and undeniably true.
For the all the financial success attained by Rapper Jay-Z, there has been no effort on his part to elevate his music personally or hip-hop more broadly. Although “Jigga” is firmly ensconced in middle age, he still gleefully and carelessly advances his music career calling women Bs and Hs; and men Ns like his 20-something counterparts. Not only is Rapper Jay-Z completely indifferent to the idea of acting his age and showing young Black men a better way; he is perfectly content and comfortable promulgating the worst imagery imaginable for the sake of a dollar and continued hip-hop relevancy.
It’s a mid-life crisis with a hip-hop twist.
Instead of being a voice of guidance, a hip-hop elder statesman to the younger generation; Rapper Jay-Z still opts to spin yarns about N**** in Paris and sell them on iTunes. You’re 40-WHAT Jay-Z? No amount of wealth will ever validate or justify such a career trajectory. No number of “hits” justifies the Peter Pan mentality or the ignorance and indifference which subsequently thrive on it.
But if Gwyneth Paltrow dares tweet the name of the song or makes direct reference to it, all hell breaks loose. I guess only “we” are allowed to wallow in ignorance and we’re very territorial when it comes to it. Bully for us. Rapper Jay-Z can rap it and make money doing it, but the White actress shouldn’t even tweet a reference to the title of the song. Got it. That’s ignorance on top of ignorance. It’s not popular to say, but it’s not untrue either.
But I digress…
Hip-hop has abrogated any and all responsibility as it relates to decency and accountability time and time again. Brawls at award shows have all types of deleterious consequences for all Black men. If you think such public displays of foolishness don’t impact the treatment of Black men around the country, you are a fool. Racial profiling is real and there are laws against it to prove as much. Racial bias is real. And to think, hip-hop had plenty to say about the Trayvon Martin tragedy, but fails to make the connection between racial profiling and racial stereotype promulgation. Stop making these problems worse.
I know, I know, somebody will be quick to tell me about the singular and rare hip-hop artist “here” or “there” who doesn’t subscribe to the ignorance and foolishness; but let us deal with the overwhelming bulk of the art form. Let’s deal with 99 percent as they say in this political season; 99 percent which offer nothing of substance or intrinsic social value.
So imagine my (and probably Harry Belafonte’s) indifference to Rapper Jay-Z and Beyonce hosting a fundraiser for President Obama in recent weeks. The reality is that Jay-Z prefers rubbing elbows with the cultural elite and raising money for the president while ignoring the communities he could positively impact for free. But “promoting positive change” is so uncool and so unprofitable, I suppose. It is in moments like these that Jay-Z (and others) could provide real leadership and direction for a generation of young Black men who obviously have lost their way. This is the type of commitment and dedication to social responsibility that Belafonte is longing for yet is nonexistent in hip-hop. The ignorance of the BET Hip-Hop Awards altercation is covered in the media, highlighted on the blogs and cheered on within our culture.
And…and…most importantly used as further “proof” of the incivility and criminality of Black men.
We are all connected. If we can agree that the election of Barack Obama as president positively impacted the perception of African-American men, what do negative incidents such as these do for us?
I’ll tell you, not a damn thing, with all types of long-term consequences.
There are too many in our music communities perpetuating the myth that such behavior does not have repercussions or consequences on the rest of us. I’m here to disabuse you of that notion. It is why people like broadcaster Geraldo Rivera feel so comfortable conflating Blackness and hoodies with criminality. Granted, Rivera’s ignorance can’t be justified, but neither can the ignorance of the likes of award show brawls which inform and undergird such opinions. Lil Wayne acting a buffoon while wearing a hoodie for a courtroom deposition hurts all of us.
[youtube RImN4JXFAm8]
It wasn’t funny, it wasn’t cool, it was embarrassing and impacts all African-American males.
All of us.
Racism and ignorance are inextricably linked. Hip-hop does not get to complain about stereotypes while simultaneously promoting them.
The foolishness has to stop.
Someone within the hip-hop community has to be bold enough to step forward and condemn the ignorance within the genre with the exact same enthusiasm we tend to condemn racism outside of it. I don’t need Jay-Z and others “playing” political operative a five days out of the year and calling me “N****” all the rest.
I need him to effectively use his power and influence and step into the moment. It doesn’t require any money, it just requires him to care. It is the socially responsible thing to do. Unfortunately, judging by Rapper Jay-Z’s discography, it is clear he doesn’t care now and never will. He’s just not interested. Not even a little bit. Miss Social Responsibility, “he’s just not that into you.”
And neither is Russell Simmons for that matter.
The violence must stop. The misogyny must stop. The brawls at award shows must stop. The promotion of the drug culture must stop. If this message angers hip-hop enthusiasts out there… fine. Call me all the names you wish…but you won’t be calling me “wrong.” Of that I’m sure. Somebody out there has to care enough to say it, albeit unpopular in nature it may be. The right thing to say and do aren’t often popular in nature. But my compass of right and wrong is neither calibrated by purchasing patterns of adolescents nor impacted by the desire to remain relevant in “the streets.”
I answer to a higher power.
What saddens me the most is that Jay-Z, the former drug dealer with a mother, daughter, two sisters and most importantly the means in which to send hip-hop in an altogether different direction still celebrates the very worst of the African-American culture to make a buck. There is “doing nothing” and there is “perpetuating the problem.” I dislike the former and detest the latter.
We in the African-American community can no longer complain about stereotypes being used against us while simultaneously giving tacit approval to hip-hop’s promotion of them. There is no excuse, so stop offering them. It’s time to stop forwarding the lie that re-electing President Obama is of greater importance to our community than intelligently using the influence we already exert over our own communities. These issues pre-date President Obama and will exist long after he leaves office, be it in 2012 or 2016. The only way they can be addressed is when we decide to put an end to the ignorance once and for all.
Staff Writer; Morris O’Kelly
To read more of this brother stuff, head over to; The Mo’Kelly Report.
I was just saying TODAY that someone needs to create a panel with all of these highly influential rappers and ask some questions! One of my main issues is the lyrics…the messsages they send to our youth are horrendous. Kanye west had great lyrics, once upon a time…now all he wants for his birthday is a big boity guh…I’m so disgusted. Ice Cube’s song “Us” is as relevant now in 2012 as it was in. 1991.
There’s NOTHING wrong with Jay-Z’s success. His success is not the problem. His lack of growth and livid indifference to doing BETTER in the sphere he’s in is the issue.
Not hard to understand, it’s called having standards.
Mike, did you REALLY just say…
“Let the natural evolution of the word take place without interruption. The word went from Nigger to Nigga, ten or 20 years from now people will be saying “Yo Nigga” the same as “Yo Man” or “Yo Homie”. Nobody will care about the derogatory origins of the word.”
Mike, you are so far from reality I don’t know what to say. People didn’t die with the word ringing in their ears so it could “naturally evolve.”
We are the only people on this planet who would make such a silly argument. To not care about the derogatory origins of the word is not to care how we came to this continent.
Never complain of racism again if that is your goal, to normalize “Nigga.”
That argument right there takes the case as for worshiping ignorance. No other people would dare allow something so silly.
“Let the natural evolution of the word take place without interruption. The word went from Nigger to Nigga, ten or 20 years from now people will be saying “Yo Nigga” the same as “Yo Man” or “Yo Homie”. Nobody will care about the derogatory origins of the word.”
Mike, you are so far from reality I don’t know what to say. People didn’t die with the word ringing in their ears so it could “naturally evolve.”
We are the only people on this planet who would make such a silly argument. To not care about the derogatory origins of the word is not to care how we came to this continent.
Never complain of racism again if that is your goal, to normalize “Nigga.”
That argument right there takes the case as for worshiping ignorance. No other people would dare allow something so silly.
Wow!!! You holler Unity but in the same breath degrade Jayz and others accomplishments. Hahaha what a joke!!! Jay and others are helping the black community through their motivating words. You are totally blind if you cant see that. They motivate me to keep pushing hard in my business no matter how tired I get. WHY ARE YOU STUCK ON THE WORD NIGGA? Let the natural evolution of the word take place without interruption. The word went from Nigger to Nigga, ten or 20 years from now people will be saying “Yo Nigga” the same as “Yo Man” or “Yo Homie”. Nobody will care about the derogatory origins of the word. The word will have lost all its power. Global promoting of the word Nigga??? You sound real silly. You act like these guys are promoting to go out and say “Nigga” all day. The longer you protest using the word Nigga, the longer it will have its power and longer racist white people will feel they can use the word to hurt us. Cant you see that??? You are giving the word its power!!! Actually its clever way of reverse psychology on our part. If us black people hold the word taboo, white people will know ooohhh I can say that word to hurt black people. If we slowly turn the word into a non-derogatory everyday term, racist white people will say damn now I have to find something else to hurt them. Strong black people know how to turn anything into a positive. Make lemonade out of lemons with any situation including the word nigger. Proving once again how smart our race is. Then of course you have the few like you who just dont get it. What do you want Jay and others to do? Send you a check every month? Or give all their money away to black charities? These guys came from the inner city and are building empires for their families coming generations to enjoy as white men have done for generations. The only ones who are tearing down our community and unity are people like you!!! Keep harping on the origins of the word nigga and hold yourself back. The rest of us will move forward. Wow!!! I mean really!!! Its only a stupid word…quit letting it hold power over you!!! There are plenty videos on Youtube that have Jay and Diddy giving motivational words in plain and simple English to our race (Search on youtube motivational speech from Diddy and Jayz). They do give to charities and stress uplifting our race in their words. After you watch these videos, if you even watch these videos, if you still feel the same way about these guys, you are one lost black soul. My dad told me a long time ago black people are like crabs in a bucket. They see one black man going places, they immediately try to pull them back down. You are a perfect example of that!!
@ H. Lewis Smith
Wow!!! You holler Unity but at the same time degrade Jayz and others accomplishments. Hahaha what a joke!!! Jay and others are helping the black community through their motivating words. You are totally blind if you cant see that. They motivate me to keep pushing hard in my business no matter how tired I get. WHY ARE YOU STUCK ON THE WORD NIGGA? Let the natural evolution of the word take place without interruption. The word went from Nigger to Nigga, ten or 20 years from now people will be saying “Yo Nigga” the same as “Yo Man” or “Yo Homie”. Nobody will care about the derogatory origins of the word. The word will have lost all its power. Global promoting of the word Nigga??? You sound real silly. You act like these guys are promoting to go out and say “Nigga” all day. The longer you protest using the word Nigga, the longer it will have its power and longer racist white people will feel they can use the word to hurt us. Cant you see that??? You are giving the word its power!!! Actually its clever way of reverse psychology on our part. If us black people hold the word taboo, white people will know ooohhh I can say that word to hurt black people. If we slowly turn the word into a non-derogatory everyday term, racist white people will say damn now I have to find something else to hurt them. Strong black people know how to turn anything into a positive. Make lemonade out of lemons with any situation including the word nigger. Proving once again how smart our race is. Then of course you have the few like you who just dont get it. What do you want Jay and others to do? Send you a check every month? Or give all their money away to black charities? These guys came from the inner city and are building empires for their families coming generations to enjoy as white men have done for generations. Watch this video with Diddy (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OU8KksjGB8s), this is a video I watch every morning before I start my day. Another video with Jayz (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xk-DaCkgTzA) I watch all the time. WATCH THESE VIDEOS AND SEE HOW THEY GIVE BACK!!! The only ones who are tearing down our community and unity are people like you!!! Keep harping on the origins of the word nigga and hold yourself back. The rest of us will move forward. Wow!!! I mean really!!! Its only a stupid word…quit letting it hold power over you!!! After you watch these videos, if you even watch these videos, if you still feel the same way about these guys, you are one lost black soul.
Apologizes to all for the errors in my reply to Mike Williams but inadvertently submitted it before being able to proof-read.
* And “since”
Thanks “John,”
But you’re wrong. And sense you couldn’t articulate any specific reason or undergird your “disappointment” with any facts, or cogent arguments…I will just cling to what I have to say more than what you have to say.
The facts simply are not on your side “John.”
Ulo,
I concur with all you have said. Until Blacks wake up and understand the importance of UNITY and group success we are damnned to be mentally enslaved people…eternally. We fail to understand that no one wants to see Black people united and therefore fail to see the sophiscated methods being used to achieve that end.
Cont’d
YOU DEMONSTRATE THAT YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO MAKE THINGS HAPPEN AS A GROUP.
Mike Williams,
Bruh, you are snoring so loud people can hear you half-way around the world its time to WAKE UP. You talk about the successes of people such as Jay Z, Kanye West and others which is nothing but FOOLS GOLD. You and many others are allowing yourselves to be blinded by INDIVIDUAL successses. When you are able to come back to me and demonstrate how the Black race as a group is benefitting from all of this thats day when I know you are no longer sleep walking your way through life.
Until Jay Z, Kanye West, Russell Simmons and some others demonstrate the desire and willingness to reach back and unite Black America to forge ahead as a GROUP, their individual success means absolutely nothing to me.
Asians, Hispanics, Whites, Jews all think in terms of GROUP accomplishments. Only the Black race look at individuals and dupe themselves into believing they are raising hell while in terms of GROUP sucesss you are coming in dead last behind everyone else. The rest of the world has no respect for you and you don’t have sense enough to understand why?
You promote and market the n-word world-wide and think you are doing something great, now you have the entire world laughing at you while they take what they know is a degrading and demeaning term for black folks and use it against you with your permission while laughing at how silly and such fools you are behind closed doors.
You point out that whites and hispanics now refer to one another as the n-word, SO WHAT? Are you proud of that? No other group on the face of this earth is going to take a word that demeans and degrades them and make a fad out of it, NO ONE but the Black African American, and once again I repeat nobody respects a FOOL. Promoting and marketing the n-word globally, was one dumb azz to do, and personally I have no respect for all the fools responsible such nonesense.
Black Americans get no respect around the world and never will UNTIL YOU CAN DEMONSTRATE THAT YOUM HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO
you’re very sad for writing such a nonsense article.
H Lewis Smith
I do not see myself as a Nigga or Nigger. I see myself as a forward thinking black man who does not let a mere word hold me back from listening to another strong black man with great motivating words. I can do nothing about the history of the word but I can do something about the future of the word. I do not cry about slavery and MERE words like nigger or nigga. Get over it already, its a mere word. You will never get people to stop saying it. White kids are growing up saying it and are using it in a non-derogatory way towards other whites. You are keeping the derogatory meaning alive and keeping us shackled. You keep bringing up the subject of slavery over and over!!! Move forward with your thinking. Your mind is shackled. You are still talking about slavery and the old meaning of nigger, now nigga. Quit hollering slavery and the white man this and the white man that. Use that energy for positive. Jay and P diddy and many others has made huge accomplishments while still using the word Nigga. How can they still accomplish so much while using this word? Well, because its just a word. The word has no magical powers to hold our people back. Looks like the only people that let the word nigga hold them back is people like you. In slavery times light skin blacks hated dark skin blacks and vice versa. Sound familiar? A black man climbs out the inner city ghetto to do great things and you do your best to tear him down over one silly word. Now you break your bonds of 400 years!!
Great article! We kid ourselves thinking hip hop is all that. 99.9 percent of it is absolute foolishness and Nignorance all the highest order. Hate to say it but black folks Will be atcthe bottom collectively in technology – education – and economically for a few more 100years.
Mike Williams
Obviously, you and I do not share the same opinion, when you look in the mirror you see yourself, family, relative and friends as n**gahs just as you have been programmed, conditioned and trained for the past 400 years to do; being of a liberated mind I do not see myself as a so-called n**ga. Old habits are hard to break so I understand your refusal and relutance to let go of your 400 year old comfort zone. But at some point you and others of like minds are going to have eventually break the shackles linking you to that slave mentality of thinking like a so-called n**ga.
This is the 21st century and not the whip lashing 18th. You are no longer obligated to be a so-called n**ga. Stop making excuses as to why you are still too mentally weak to over-come 400 years of mind control. Understand one thing, you may can change the context of a word but you can never change the context of history. Like it or not by you keeping the n-word alive you also are keeping its history alive.
I implore you to gain both the mental strength and intestinal fortitude to break that link to mental enslavement…thinking of and seeing yourself as n**gah just as you were programmed to do. Some of you can’t go 24 hours without using the word that is how mentally beat down you are. Get that hump out of your back, straighten up, stand tall stop being a servant to the n-word.
@ H. Lewis Smith
I was waiting for you to start talking about the illuminati crap. I will never support a mind like yours. A mind such as yours only further supresses our creative mentality and our drive to push forward. If Jay’s words are motivating me to push harder in business, I will take his mind control anyday!!! It’s really a shame you guys let a word, and its Only a word blur your vision to all the good that Jay does. At the end of the day its only a word. It only has power when you the individual give it power. Jay keep motivating the ones of us who are ready to move forward. Let the others stay stuck in the sixties!!! Wow white folks dont even have to call you the “N” word anymore, you are going to hang on to the power of the word yourself. You mention mind control, white folks have complete mind control over you and you dont even realize it. Thats’s if you believe in that mind control stuff in the first place.
Congratulations for having the courage to stand up and tell it like it is. In reading the various comments its also clear to me anyway, that the root of the problems goes even deeper. Clearly, most people can’t handle the truth and when you address it there are those who are ready to crucify and persecute you. Since you do not think as they do something must be wrong with you. They all mean well but have no idea how they all have been victimized through mind control. Remain strong my brother and continue to tell it like it is, becuase whether you know it or not the silent majority is watching and listening,and given enough courage they too will someday stand up and support like minds such as your own.
Couldn’t even get through this article. As usual, the only thing some of us seem to draw from another of us being successful, is another person to blame or deflect responsibility towards. It’s the same old ignorance that would always fault a successful person for moving out of government housing, or the same ignorance that makes it a ghetto crime to “snitch” on the evil living in your midst. “Grow up?” How about “get a clue!”
@ Mo Kelly
HAHAHHA…You a funny dude. Jay concerts are filled with women. You sound like the Republicans. No matter all the good things Obama have done for economy, you just pick out all the negatives. You cant just say because he uses B’s and N’s he is not uplifting anyone. That is such a silly statement. We dont live in a cut and dry world like that. We live in a totally grey world. There are thousands of people he has uplifted everyday that will tell you different. I once saw on youtube in a interview where a black woman reporter for a major news media company was thanking Jay for inspiring her to connect with her long lost dad. Jay inspires on many different levels. You are right we are fans and we listen to ALL of his words. You dont listen to ALL of his words, you just pick out the negatives. So how can you make a fair analysis if you are so bias? Either you are that totally clueless, or grew up in a very sheltered home, or you just another writer who is riding Jays coat tails to get noticed by writing an article like this. Which one is it? Thanks Jay for helping remove the power of the “N” word. Thanks for making it an ordinary term. Mr. O’Kelly you want to keep the word taboo and thus the word keeps its power over us black people. Instead of pointing all the positives Jay has done, you help the white man point out all the negatives. The white man does not need your help doing that!
I couldn’t even get thru this article completely because all it sounded like to me was a long drawn out excuse as to why people are not taking responsibility for their own lives. Hip hop music is therapeutic for most of us it reminds us that someone else out there shares our story. For anyone to complain about one man not raising up a community (because he’s black and made money) is retarded. Why arent people like you attacking the real social problems in the streets, or the walmarts taking out the mom and pop businesses THAT RARELY GIVE JACK SHIT to communities they operate in. Why? I will tell you why. Its been said in many rap songs blacks attack blacks because its easy there a familiarity with the target. but when these other nationalities, corporations, government, and other such entities commit greater atrocities than saying nigga over a beat people like you tend to be real damn quiet. While you telling Jay Z to grow up you need to man up! I have two children and i will be damned if anyone but me and their mom are their role models to emulate because we are great parents so when as soon as everyone else takes responsibility for themselves and accountability for their role in community thins may get better Jay Z is one man of millions and he supposed to stop being him because he got money? Get real thats like saying its ok to be ignorant as long as your broke.
Steve…from the moment you said “I’m a fan” you disqualified your argument. You are fan, thus not capable of critical analysis of the issue. You celebrate his music, you’re not interested in a factual analysis of his work.
His lyrics are inarguable. You don’t get to call women Bs and men Ns and try to argue here he is uplifting anyone.
You might have noticed, NO women are here singing his praises. Yes, of course only the men have anything positive to say.
That’s like listening to only racists, and their “fans” as to the value of their racism. Care to hear from any women as to the value of misogyny?
Didn’t think so.
@ Jamar Smith
When is the last time you bought a Jayz album? He’s lyrics has a lot of positive motivation. What do you mean promote black business in his music? He promotes black business in many of his songs and in his real world accomplishments. He is speaking to people just like you who grew up in the shittiest neighborhoods in America. He relates to people like you and me in showing us he knows how it is to live in a shitty environment BUT we dont have to settle for that. Jay sitting with Warren Buffett blew my mind and was a big motivating moment for me. If you have listened to a Jayz album lately, I dont see how you can hear all the negatives (news from the struggle)and not hear all the positive motivating messages.
@Tammiel
What positives would want them to rap about??? Jay is relating with his lyrics to the youth and older who is still in the struggle. His accomplishments shows us real life examples how far we can get with hard work. If he starts rapping about all these so-called positives he would disconnect with the ones in the struggle and do more harm than good. You can preach positives all day but if you have disconnected, it will fall on deaf or no ears. As in his song “What We Talkin About” he tells us “You could come with me to the White House get your suit up, You stuck on being hardcore I chuck the duece up”. Thats one example where he is telling us who are still in the struggle to get off the bullshit and do better or continue struggling. I think he has a perfect balance of relating to us in the struggle but at the same teaching dont stay in that rut. Get off your butt. Showing “look at me, if I can do it, you can do it”. When is that last time you bought a Jayz album? Have you ever bought one? You are probably another person who just hears a few things in the media or watched Oprah and ran with the negativity. Jay is one of the strongest motivational speakers the black community has today through his music and accomplishments. Jay has grown up right past you!
Morris O’Kelly keep up the good writing because we need to be critical of the people in our society especially when they are an imagine in the media. Even Booker T Washington, Du Bois, and other black leaders received many critizism from many others.
I totally agree with this article. I am a huge fan of hip-hop even though I am not a fan of Jay-z. I am from Southern California so I was always influenced by the gangsta rap and by the CA gangs on my block. I blindly followed them too until I had to go to 15 funerals and just aked why? I have been a long journey to educate my self and started a journey of learn about African history and culture. As an Africana Studies major I have come to realize that rappers like Jay Z and others just perpetuates the status quo, established since the colonization of this land. I am at a university were African Americcans make only 3% of the campus population, out of 27,000 students, but make up almost 90% of the projects I grew up in. I wish I could see more here, but poverty, shitty education, murderous cops, and more prevent us from making it here, I feel lucky to be here and still don’t know how I got here. Rappers haven’t helpped to better the situation in our community. Imagine if they help started charter schools or promoted black business in there music.
Like the article said they don’t have to spend money, but they also don’t need to always satisfy white corpate board members either. There can be a conscious choice of lyric content as well and lets not forget that 85% of hip hop consumers are white so they get all the racial assumptions they need from these records to stereotype the whole community. Rappers should make music that benefits communities of color and not only become political when a national headline pops up, but consistly challenges the status quo. Its not something that is done over night, but it is something that rappers in the mainstream should be consciencious of.
All races have negative and positives. The people who are positive will see the positive and the negative people will see the negative. Obviously you are negative!!! Keep doing your thing Jay!!! Thanks for the fundraiser for Obama Jay, we need Obama another four more years in office to inspire more black kids to keep striving for bigger things! Some of us can see the big picture and some of us are stuck on the small picture or a Word! How many black people have you inspired?? Hell, it sounds like you work for the other side!!!!
You know I grow tired of dudes like you picking a topic and not really spending time on the entire subject. Being a fan of S.Carter and many other rap artist I find your views a little small and out of touch with reality. First off anyone who supports his music knows he’s more than the lyrics he writes. Example, Curtis Mayfield was a musician, activist, and had a drug problem….his music has words in it that still offend people…(see “Hell Below”) his music was and still is cherished by many in our community. Marvin Gaye spoke out on subject matter that many today struggle with. Rick James another legend, had his songs that were a bit out of order. And we could name a bevy of other artist and groups who sang songs and lived lives that were not acceptable examples of proper living.
To focus just on his music is not the proper way to touch on this subject. To be called upon by the President of the United States has never been done by any other artist of the genre. No other artist can claim to be a part of bringing to his hometown an NBA franchise that will bring opportunity and growth to those that he wrote about in song. He donates to causes that he feels are worthy, this is America so, to write a lop sided post about words in a song in a genre where I dear you to name a rapper out side of Jay, 5o, Em, T I, Wayne and NaS does not show very well. To touch a bit more on Jay Z’s use of the words you find offensive I will say this, the words and subject matter he uses in song are ones used everyday in black communities all over this country and were being used before there was a Shawn Carter. Some of the songs he performed are over 10 years old and were recorded with those words. Is he now supposed to be rated G since he has gotten to the top? Is he supposed to stop being who is is? It’s grown folk music. Sure he can take those words out and I have live records from Carniege Hall (another 1st) where he has performed those songs without using those same words. The context and the subject matter are very adult still. You can water it down only so much. His biggest hit Hard Knock Life is an example of a song that has balance without many of the words you spoke of but the subject matter is still adult. Learn the songs spend some time seeing some of the good without taking a man who sat with Warren Buffett (by the way have you done that…?) on Fortune Magazine..something his daughter can show to her kids one day…he also is not the father of numerous kids all over the place and is active in his child’s life. A married man who seems to keep moving the bar higher and higher for those who would seek his status. All of these things you could have pointed out but you focused on such a small part of the man. He cannot and should not change the genre the genre will self regulate. One man will never change the culture, it will take its own course just as it has for over 30 years. Hip Hop didn’t start with the swears and adult context it evolved..to only look at Jay…and not to a Lynor Cohen, or Russell Simmons or Snoop, or ICE T, or Tupac or any of those in his generation and before him is just wrong. If you want change find a artist you relate to or change genres.
You brought up the fight at the awards show, was he there…? Was he the one fighting..? You didn’t write about the ones involved and what the situation was you rolled it up into one giant ball and said Jay should grow up and fix it….by the way the men fighting are all grown. At least two are millionaires and businessmen themselves….people like you constantly attack the lyrics but you fail to recognize the contributions outside of it. Jay has shown that you can rap, own the company you rap at, own restaurants, hang with the Pres, own Basketball Teams, perform in venues where rap has never been performed, hang and learn from Billionaires, create jobs and opportunity. And marry one of the most powerful women in entertainment…Grow up..? He did a long time ago….I think folks like you should really spend sometime really looking deeper at a subject…he’s an extremely successful man who has made positive contributions.
Jayz has inspired me to keep pushing hard and stay on my grind. Every accomplishment Jay accomplish makes me go harder. Jay shake those haters off that you do so well!!! You relate to the ones who are still trying to come up and at the same time showing us what awaits us at the end of the tunnel if you never stop striving! Thanks for inspiring me and hundreds of thousands of others!! Too bad some people all they want to do is give you bad name. Another modern day black hero they are trying to tarnish. What a Shame!!!!
Who said look to a rapper to be a “savior”…you’re addressing comments and sentiments expressed nowhere in the piece.
Also you listed some FIVE rappers of a positive or conscious nature. Like I said in the piece, this is about addressing the 99%, not the one percent.
This is about hip-hop being accountable for what it does, not saving Black children. Taking responsibility for their part in this world. Enough with excusing all of the behavior. Because the minute someone like Bill O’Reilly wants to assail hip-hop, it gets sensitive. The moment something “racist” happens in the world, rappers want to get “conscious.”
Being conscious isn’t a 5-minute a year proposition. Hip-hop must take responsibility for itself. That’s what adults and responsible individuals do.
I don’t need Jay-Z to “save” me or anyone else. I need him to act like he’s 42…not 22.
That would be more than enough in the grand scheme of things. Otherwise, if/when you act like a child, don’t complain when you’re treated like one. Don’t complain about racial profiling. Don’t complain about police brutality. Don’t partake in any part of the serious aspects of life. And be content with the infantile offerings of hip-hop.
But hip-hop wants to have it both ways. They want “respect” and to be taken seriously, but want no parts of being responsible. Being responsible is the only path to respect.
there are different avenues of hip hop and many other artists who rap and speak on subjects that would be more fitting to represent the positive thinking of black men… while I am a fan of Jay-Z, I still expect him to be him. I expect him to do what he has done to get him to the point of the world knowing his name- which is speak on the subjects you’re complaining about.
Now if you want positive black men rappers listen to The Roots, Talib Kweli, Lupe Fiasco, or somebody else similar. Don’t go to a rapper who has made it known that he sold drugs and had many adventures with different women to be the savior you’re looking for. He’s not the one. If he decides to change his mind and become that, cool, but until then he’s just an older, richer version of what he was before – a former womanizing dope-man with flow for days. Stop looking for a Rapper to be the savior they obviously are not interested in being…
Pretty underwhelming comment Stevie G. Next time, unlock the caps and lock in to the subject matter. This conversation requires a bit more sophistication than what you’ve offered.
GET OFF J DICK. STOP DEPENDING ON OTHERS AND CONTINUE ON DOING WHAT YOU EXPECT OTHERS TO DO FOR YOU!!!!
Many of you seem to have missed the point. It is NOT about Jay-Z being a “role model.”
As I say in the piece…there is doing nothing and there is perpetuation of the problem. Neither has to do with being a “role model.” Acting one’s age isn’t about being a “role model” it’s about having good sense.
Also just because there is sex, violence and negativity in the world, that doesn’t mean that we should shirk our responsibility to do right by our own children. That’s a silly argument on its best day. This is a moral authority argument. This is about doing what’s right, not what’s convenient.
If Jay-Z wants to send a “message” by holding political fundraisers then everything he does given such influence is up for critique. If he wishes to be perceived as “just an entertainer” then he must stick to entertainment exploits and nothing else.
It’s laughable how we as a community will try to justify, excuse and perpetuate indefensible, abhorrent music. There is, never was and never will be an argument to rebut the moral authority call to stop the violence, ignorance, misogyny and self-hatred.
Moral authority wins every single time.
Everyone has a opinion… My thing is all types of music outside of spiritual music promotes sex, drugs and violence. Why is the negativity pointed at rappers/rap music… I hear y’all screaming about it being a cultural thing and how this music is tearing down society… So I guess life would be better if rap music was totally eliminated just like us niggers.. lol… I don’t like peas so I don’t eat peas… If you don’t like vulgar music don’t listen to it but all this ranting and raving about lyrics, videos and how a musicians have the responsibility of cultivating; it’s a bunch of bull… From Mr. Mansion to Mr. Cater; they are all entertainers and if we base our lives on the acts of the entertainers, then you tell me who the clowns are because, at this point I can’t tell.
Who cares what JZ does? He is not responible for mentoring youths. It is society’s fault for glamorizing rappers and their opinion of Pimps and hoes idolization. Youths should be educated enough to find better role models on their own like teachers and real heroes, like military or college educated strong black men and women. Why can’t people stop trying to throw blame on others as the problem and focus on finding a solution. Every black man doing well or in power is judged and scrutinized. JZ is acting his age. He has a wife and child and he is supporting them. His child will know who both of his parents are and he will probably never do with out. Just because he may say how he sees the world, look at what he does and not what he says. That is the only way to learn someones true intentions.
Why would anybody be looking for Jay-Z to elevate or move hip hop to something more socially conscious? Unrealistic expectation, his music has never done that or even spoke to that on any serious level.
Amazing how cheap the price of dignity can be brought, isn’t it? To say literally anything to promote an album, to make a white music exec money but at the same to belittling your own race. It’s not just jay-z it’s a majority of the music community, the black music community. It even shocked me when Barack Obama the POTUS, eluded to the fact that Beyonce is an idol to his daughters!!!! Obviously he must of needed the campaign donation badly. What would make any young girl ambitious with dreams with TWO Harvard educated parents want to inspire to be a professional booty shaker. Rather rappers acknowledge or not really after 21 your are an adult, and thus at accordingly. Fun is fun. But the officially passed the pair from having fun to just straight ridiculous.
Wonderful article you are on point. Of course this is not only directed to Jay but i get ur drift. That is why i do NOT listen to that ignorant, degrading, senseless garbage. I do not want to set a lousy example to my 5 year old daughter. Those ” rappers are hypocrites they want to one minute act like they care about people like little Trayvon Martin (RIP) but then next minute just making us black ppl look like “butt holes” in other words. All the other races are just laughing and singing the words to these ignorant rappers songs. I wish they really would stand up for what is right and rap about positive things but nope the “white man” pays them the big bucks to degrade their own race and make themselves and the black people look like asses and be doesdiscriminated upon i hope they understand that just because we have a black president now doesn’t mean that people
Scarface the movie did more than scarface the rapper to me, so that ain’t to blame for all the stuff that’s happen to me. He’s an easy target not to say that your wrong but come on the biggest name is the easy target. He has done more good than bad for our culture.
Excellent! I have shared several times over. Brother you are on point! NO ONE can present a cogent argument against this. 99% of hip-hop artists do not & will never see any of my money. As an “art form” it has devolved.
Is it possible for an article to give you the holy ghost? Cuz that’s how I feel. Well done.
u r a stupid racist.that’s why u will never gain ground. sure disgrace to our youth causing more damage than hip hop or rap.
@hiphop
I don’t agree with your comment “There is a difference between Rap Culture and Hip Hop Culture” to me it’s like say there’s a difference between a redneck cracker and a racist white bigot.
Well I really liked the article, and it makes perfect sense.
There is nothing wrong with holding African American’s with influence, power, and resources, accountable for what they say and do. Unfortunately, half of us will give Jay-z a pass, but expect President Obama to fix all of our problems. Sure, they have different levels/avenues of authority, but authority to provoke change none the less. What Harry B. said about Jay-Z rings true.
defending the bullshit stereotype Rap brings to my door on a daily basis is getting old. There needs to be a change. and that change starts with holding those African Americans with power accountable for what they say and do; because it effects us all.
I wish Jay can hear about this article, he can respond to you.
amen, loving this artical
We need less “N” in Paris and more Our School is Awesome: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgvaxPv6FaI
There is a difference between Rap Culture and Hip Hop Culture. What you are speaking of is Rap culture which is controlled primarily by 5 things, money, cars, jewels, a particular kind of view of women that is objectification more than respect, guns, and drugs.
Hip Hop on the other hand is a worldwide culture that is still, in 2012, in the mist of all these fights brawls, and rumors, teaching, sharing, and growing the culture. Remember, Hip Hop has four founding elements and it’s not all about Rap and Rap culture, and it never has been. It’s only in the mainstream American eye that one tends to have a narrow scope.
Just as Roots Reggae is different from Slack Dancehall, Rap is different that Hip Hop. MC’s were instrumental in the Arab Spring, and for the record Public Enemy just put out a new album yesterday, and were nominated for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Homeboy Sandman and Rapsody are other examples that Hip Hop culture exists and is still growing on a different trajectory that balances out the craziness, if you look for it. BET is not where you will find it.
And Graf writers and b boys and b girls are doing seminars all over the world, representing the same thing Afrika Bambaataa said in the early 80’s, meaning peace, love, unity, and having fun.
Just my 2 cents.
u r barking up tha wrong tree. fix broken homes hip hop is born of. o pandered to Jay,Bey,Russell & left these kids to fend for self. betcha tha kitchen sink critics of hip hop encourage them to vote 4 tha empty suit. STFU and fall in line.