NEWS TALK RADIO Our Hosts
Powered by: Townhall.com
Sign Up
Friday, April 25, 2008
Brent Bozell III :: Townhall.com Columnist
Obama And The Hip-Hop Problem
by Brent Bozell III
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
How did you find out about WGKA?





Young black activists roared their approval when Barack Obama recently greeted criticism on the trail by dusting off his shoulders, a reference to a rap song by Jay-Z called "Dirt Off Your Shoulder." The media covering the moment went crazy, too. Washington Post reporter Teresa Wiltz hailed Obama's moves and called it a "seminal moment in the campaign, the merging of politics and pop culture," and noted the lyrics suggest, "If you feelin' like a pimp ... go and brush your shoulders off."

So Barack Obama is feeling like a pimp?

Online at "The Root," a Washington Post website for African-Americans, Obama supporter and Princeton professor Melissa Harris-Lacewell was sky-high. "Like every other hip-hop generation voter in America I went crazy when he did it," she wrote. "I almost couldn't believe it. It was a perfect moment."

Harris-Lacewell read that moment as a sign of racial swagger and solidarity with "his base of young urban brown and black voters," and they loved it. "He displayed all the familiar self-assurance and bravado of the hip-hop emcee. The people who got it went nuts, while those who don't know hip-hop just thought he was being funny and confident."

The video went viral and became a YouTube sensation.

What is it about this music that drove Obama to emulate it, and drove the Princeton professor crazy in the process? This Jay-Z song boasts about a "middle finger to the law." Harris-Lacewell touted that Obama would like the song "99 Problems," which has an entire verse about being racially profiled by the "mother f---ing law" for "doing 55 in a 54." Jay-Z also tells critics to kiss his whole (rectum).

Sen. Obama claims to be a fan of Jay-Z and Kanye West, but he knows that he has to distance himself a little from the lyrical lows of this "art." He's been gently critical in interviews. "I love the art of hip hop. I don't always love the message of hip hop," he said. Even with the rappers he loves, "There's a message that is not only sometimes degrading to women; not only uses the N-word a little too frequently; but also something I'm really concerned about, it's always talking about material things."

"A little too frequently?" This is like saying a tsunami's a little too wet.

Obama should take a look at a new report from the Parents Television Council about three popular rap-music programs that air in the afternoon or early evening -- "Sucker Free" on MTV and "Rap City" and "106 & Park" on Black Entertainment Television for two weeks in December and a week in March.

In 41 and a half hours studied, analysts found 282 uses of the N-word. Is that "a little too frequently," too?

A little too much degrading of women? In those same hours, there were 143 uses of the B-word to describe women. Continued...

1 2
| Full Article & Comments | Next >
Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author
Founder and President of the Media Research Center, Brent Bozell runs the largest media watchdog organization in America.
 
TOWNHALL DAILY: Be the first to read Brent Bozell's column. Sign up today and receive Townhall.com daily lineup delivered each morning to your inbox.
 
©Creators Syndicate
Subject: good and bad at the same time
I like all music well maybe not classical,but everything else. I love folk. Woody Guthire and Pete Seeger I dont like the way the men think way to left for me after all it is the unions that made all jobs go over seas they complianed about greed and they were just as greedy as the companys they tried to screw.My point is you can like the music and hate the music makers, the same goes for rap,I like the music but hate some of the makers white or black or green.Whenever you use the music for a soapbox to blather from it just brings down the music.So I listen but I block out the words.Maybe Obama does what I do and skips the words,who knows.He's got a bunch of other problems that are realy bad for him. He's got a long haul for my vote!!

Dear Matty,
Most of the western world's teeanagers are sons and daughters of the curious 60's & 70's generation once named after Woodstock.

It isn't surprising most of them have a lot to learn, and not only about music. Half of them know nothing even about musical instruments. If you take away the electric guitar and drums' and microphones,

They couldn't tell you anything about music. NOTHING. Since they do most of the buying and downloading, just about any pretense of music-making would have to sell. (That buying public knows all there is to know about getting HIGH, I assure you.)

The other large market consists of that elder group who has sold their collective soul to Rock 'n Roll or country western. I myself like to shop for classical or instrumental music on eBay. I've found many fantastic bargains. Remember, my "musical horizon" has been expanding since the 1940's. By now, I can only pity those whose own horizon is boxed in by rap artists. Like good old Mr.T, "I pity the fool." (Fools, ?)
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname: