![]() |
Just by looking at the title of the thread, Oprah could "buy" hip-hop! LOL
Suggestion: How about Sean Carter, Chris Bridges, or O'shea Jackson come up with a talk show of their own? :confused: If you've been very derogatory towards females in your rap, why should a woman embrace you with open arms? Ummmmmmm, maybe it's because your stage names are just characters and you are really nothing like your character at all. Maybe, you should be who you IS! :D :p :rolleyes: |
Quote[ I don't blame Oprah for not having "hip-hop artists" on her show because as a whole, it does not reflect the audience that she serves and/or seeks to serve.
Trust me...all of those "beautiful white people" in her audience have children who listen to hip-hop. Those people in her audience are the parents of the kids that are shooting up our schools and murdering their friends. She might want to try to reach them too. I have been to the Oprah show on many occasions...being from Chicago...what you see on TV is very different from the way she acts to the audience when the camaras aren't rolling (speaking from a personal experience that I had). |
Anticipatience, what perceptions are going to be cleared up by Oprah having foul-mouthed, women-denigrating rappers on her show? I understand freedom of speech and all that (I'm an atty.) but really, Oprah's show seems to me to be more about upliftment so what can really be gained by featuring Ludacris and 50 Cent? What is the mainstream (or other AAs for that matter) going to suddenly understand about the lyrics of rappers such as Ludacris and 50 Cent that is going to show them in a positive light?
SC Quote:
|
Quote:
Right! Plus, Luda wasn't even that big of a character. I mean he was important, but there were other important characters (I believe Thandie Newton and Loretta Devine) that were not on the show that day. Luda is just feeling more important than he really is, and is mad that no one else feels the same way. As for her having rappers on...its her show...she can do whatever she wants with it. Oprah has been working on and developing her show for 20 years. She goes through phases and has different themes/goals that she wants to get across each year. If understanding hip hop, social responsibility, rap and its impact on the AA community is not one of those themes, then there is no reason that she should be ridiculed for that. Maybe shes just plain thinking about the outcome of a show like that. I realize that lots of young white kids are listening to rap, but are there parents really going to understand hip hop culture any better or think any better of Blacks by watching a bunch of rappers explain why using bitch, nigger, half-naked women, etc is alright? |
brief response
I was asked, "Anticipatience, what perceptions are going to be cleared up by Oprah having foul-mouthed, women-denigrating rappers on her show?"
If Oprah can have a white racist man from the deep south screaming the "n-word" all over her show and then have him back to say why he no longer uses it, she can stand to have a couple of rappers on. By the way, I highly doubt that they would disrespect her show with profanity. They might defend their use of it (and maybe illuminate their reasons for degrading women the way they do as well) but I doubt they would use it. Also, despite how they sound in songs and during some interviews, most mainstream rappers are highly articulate and can express themselves very well (50 Cent and Jay-Z, especially). I wouldn't put them all in the same category... |
sorry, another response
Quote:
|
^The same could have been said about minstrel shows. Or Birth of a Nation. The words and images put out there over and over and over again are never just entertainment. And I don't see how defending their use would change the image of Black people. On the show we're talking about, Ludacris did not say "I talk about women that way just for entertainment", he said "I talk about women that way because that's how they act." All that did was reinforce the minsconception.
|
well....
Quote:
|
I do not see why Oprah should have any hip hop artist on her show. There are plenty of genre's of music, "white" and "black" that she has never had on her show. Frankly, I think any show that she had on hip hop would make all these crtics even more mad. The only show on hip hop that would be at all interesting to me would be one about how it has gone so very wrong. How it was once a thoughtful and articulate expression about the struggle of a people and has disintergrated into nothing more than a battle about how many naked chicks I can get in my video, how many I can lie about sleeping with, how much weight I can allege to have slang and how many people I can allege to have killed or how many creative ways I can describe killing you. Any show she does will have them feeling attacked and on the defensive way more than Luda ever felt during the Crash interview. I have no desire to see any fool dare to DEFEN some of the things said about women in their songs. To me, their is no defense so that would be a waste of breath. All they will do is gurantee those white parents go out of their way to stop thier kids form buying thier music. Wait....that may not be such a bad idea.
Oprah is very aware of her audience. As a 50 year old woman, I do not expect her to do shows on certain topics. This is one of them. She had Kanye on and for her that really is plenty. They are all just looking for some media attention so now they have it. |
Quote:
|
um...
Quote:
|
WOW :eek: :eek: :eek:
|
Quote:
Black/African American isn't synonymous with hip hop and no black person is required to think highly of hip hop or hip hop artists. As I always say, I'm an ol skool hip hop head. I don't consider this new, mostly mysogynistic, crap to be hip hop. However, I can see why people have a poor perception of hip hop based on the rap music and images that the world has begun to identify with hip hop. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I think it's all a media stunt and it's quite shameful really. :( |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:25 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.