Why white girl rapping has become in vogue
OPINION - Andre 3000 once said, 'all the fresh styles start off as a good, little hood thing.' He also pointed out a few bars later by the time they reach Hollywood, they're over...
Andre 3000 once said, âall the fresh styles start off as a good, little hood thing.â He also pointed out a few bars later by the time they reach Hollywood, theyâre over.
Hip-hop has weathered storms of over saturation, mainstream misunderstanding and every now and then outright mockery, but the culture has maintained better than most. Nearly 40 years since itâs birth, the culture still fighting battles against those who may admire it but donât grasp it.
Itâs safe to say itâs easier to be a rapper now than ever. Software is readily available nixing the crate digging required in the past. Gaudy jewelry still has its purveyors but the overall look is affordable for even the most modest income but thereâs something about the actual execution of hip-hop that remains this mainstream fascination. Only a few can do it well but everybody has tried it, at least once.
The most recent to step up to the mic was actress Anne Hathaway of all people. Most famous for her lighthearted roles in The Devil Wears Prada and The Princess Diaries, Hathaway decided to spit her verse on paparazzi stress recently on Conan.
WATCH ANNE HATHAWAYâS âRAPâ ON âCONANâ HERE:
If imitation truly is the highest form of flattery, then hip-hop should be blushing but for some, Hathaway just having a good time came off as someone who doesnât respect the craft of hip-hop. Itâs not late 80s commercials with rapping and breaking grandmas, or Fred Flintstone going all Sugar Hill gang bad but itâs easily in the ballpark.
But why shouldnât it be?
As niche and tight-knit as we like to portray the community, hip-hop is popular music. Over the last 20 years weâve seen the the disconnect between the hip-hop world and the rest of the entertainment community disappear. It isnât the same fight Run DMC had, now hip-hop is so readily available â from the fantastically crafted to the fantastically awful that fans arenât nearly as shrewd about whoâs giving it to them.
Itâs evolution from âa good, little hood thingâ to mainstream juggernaut made perfect sense. Itâs all about the packaging. The same things that sold it closer to its inception power it now, although some of the rawness has been substituted for the rock star flair it began rubbing shoulders with.
More so than Jay-Z and BeyoncĂ© paling around with Coldplayâs Chris Martin and Gwyneth Paltrow, the clearest example of how hip-hop has become one in the same with popular culture is the irrelevance of hip hop based awards. You donât need The Source, Soul Train or BET Hip Hop Awards to shine a light on artists anymore but hip is consumed on such a massive scale that the Grammys, MTV awards and other have been forced to recognize itâs sheer scope.
I bet Will Smith never saw that coming.
Chances are Kool Herc didnât think an MC would hobnob with two of the worldâs richest men the way Jay-Z does with Warren Buffett and Bill Gates but itâs standard practice at this point. No oneâs surprised when Kanye West decides to name drop Russell Crowe because theyâre celebrity is on par with each other.
Like any scenario where cultures meld together, some people get entirely too comfortable and carelessly offend because they feel theyâve earned the right. Rapper Kreayshawn blew up virally with her catchy track, âGucci Gucci,â but caught immense scrutiny for her liberal use of the n-word. Crowds didnât seem to mind the rapper and her sidekick V-Nasty dropping the word, once word got back to the blogosphere, ire soon turned their way.
But that just goes to show you how much they feel they are a part of the community. Though extremely naive and offensive, the music they decided to make may be an interpretation of the life they live and the things they enjoy but it certainly proves that no matter how household hip-hop becomes, some areas will never merge.
WATCH NATALIE PORTMANâS âRAPâ ON âSATURDAY NIGHT LIVEâ
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As encompassing has hip hop as become, its roots in the black culture will always leave a gray area that outside entities, no matter how famous will be able to infiltrate but that shouldnât stop the growth of hip-hop and its acceptability into homes, hearts and minds.
Itâs inevitable.
Who among us hasnât tried to rhyme a couple bars? It usually fizzles out after those first two things you managed to rhyme donât lead to a third. But itâs something thatâs fun. It makes you appreciate the craft and itâs most skilled technicians for how they manage to put it all together. Maybe we all could step aside and let the pros handle hip-hop and just be the best fans we can be.
As far as parodying the genre, hip hop has to stop being so sensitive. What Natalie Portman or the Lonely Island guys have done on SNL arenât offensive and were absolutely entertaining and the sooner hip hop can laugh at itself, the sooner we can all stop being so caught up in whoâs rapping now. Hollywood hasnât killed hip hop yet and I donât see it coming anytime soon.
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