Last updated: February 21, 2008 - 6:53am
DON'T BLAME HIP-HOP
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Kelefa]
Hip-hop has been making enemies for as long as it has been winning fans. It has been dismissed as noise, blamed for concert riots, accused of glorifying crime and sexism and greed and Ebonics. From Run-D.M.C. to Sister Souljah to Tupac Shakur to Young Jeezy, the story of hip-hop is partly the story of those who have been irritated, even horrified, by it. Even so, the anti-hip-hop fervor of the last few weeks has been extraordinary, if not quite unprecedented. Somehow Don Imus’s ill-considered characterization of the Rutgers women’s basketball team — “some nappy-headed hos†— led not only to his firing but also to a discussion of the crude language some rappers use. Mr. Imus and the Rev. Al Sharpton traded words on Mr. Sharpton’s radio show and on “Today,†and soon the hip-hop industry had been pulled into the fray. Unlike previous hip-hop controversies, this one doesn’t have a villain, or even a villainous song. The current state of hip-hop seems almost irrelevant to the current discussion. The genre has already acquired (and it’s fair to say earned) a reputation for bad language and bad behavior.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/25/arts/music/25hiph.html
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* The Imus Test: Rap Lyrics Undergo Examination
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/24/AR2007042402496.html
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