POZ - June #145 : Hipper Hop - by Kellee Terrell
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Table of Contents
 

Sergeant Ozzy Ramos Comes Home

A Tale of Two Cities




Bones: An Owner’s Guide

CD4 Recipe

Hey, Babies

Starting to Gel

Yes, yes, nano

The Truth About Cats

Gut Check

Hep to Weed

Slam Dunk

Prezista Press

Deep Breath

Lives on the Line

Spot Check

Separated at Birth




Hipper Hop

Flesh for Fantasy

Mixed Doubles

Hall Monitor

Moral Minority

From Roger With Love

Red Ribbons and Checkered Flags

Sunday School AIDS

Mayors Get Testy

POZ/NEG-June 2008

Oh, Brother

The Insiders




Editor's Letter-June 2008

Mailbox-June 2008



 
Most Talked About

Does Undetectable Equal Uninfectious? (21)

Just Found Out? A POZ.com Guide for HIV Rookies (11)

The Blood of Christ (a powerful one-man AIDS protest) (Blog) (9)

The State of AIDS in Puerto Rico (9)

Rethinking Criminalization of HIV (8)

Life Expectancy With HIV Increases Dramatically (6)

Most Popular Lessons

The HIV Life Cycle

Herpes Simplex Virus

Human Papilloma Virus (HPV)

Shingles

Syphilis & Neurosyphilis

Treatments for Opportunistic Infections (OIs)


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June 2008


Hipper Hop

by Kellee Terrell

How can the hip-hop industry fight HIV when its music seems to fuel it?

This past February, Grammy-winning rapper Common announced his “A Minute” contest, which invited young people ages 13 to 25 to create lyrics expressing the importance of getting an HIV test. Common told MTV, “I had an uncle who passed away from AIDS. We need to raise awareness and take control of our lives.”

Such initiatives are not uncommon for major players in the hip-hop game: Ludacris, Lil’ Wayne, Eve, Missy Elliot and even urban model Melyssa Ford have played spokesperson, raised money and joined panel discussions about the exploding epidemic among black youth. If bling can find its way into Webster’s dictionary, then imagine how effective hip-hop stars can be at promoting AIDS awareness. But to some prevention experts, the campaigns pose a troubling question: How can teens take these calls for condoms and self-empowerment seriously when so much of popular hip-hop peddles the opposite message?

Consider Fat Joe and Lil’ Wayne’s video “Make It Rain”: Hundred-dollar bills are thrown on half-naked women gyrating on cars while Lil’ Wayne says, “Got a handful of stacks, you better grab an umbrella…I make it rain on these hos.” With the exceptions of Common, Kanye West, Talib Kweli and Lupe Fiasco, among a few others, hip-hop artists tend to favor imagery flooded with scantily dressed video vixens and hypermasculine thugs or dope boys spitting rhymes about hustling, violence and sex.

Studies show that children who listen to degrading lyrics and see disparaging images are more likely to have riskier sex. But many hip-hop artists defend their art as mere entertainment. And they aren’t the only ones who push—or benefit financially from—the music. “If [networks] or the heads of these record labels really had a problem with the message, the records and the videos would never get made,” says Kwamé Holland, a producer and former rap artist who has worked with Will Smith and Mary J. Blige. Holland adds, “Back in the day, hip-hop wasn’t like this. You could have a record that wasn’t full of curse words. Once people saw that money could be made from the negative, standards changed.”

So if hip-hop, like the rest of the media industry, is truly about the “Benjamins,” is using it for HIV prevention a useless contradiction? Many working in public health and advocacy think it may be the only way to tap into the teen psyche. “Older people just see the negative,” says University of Chicago professor Bakari Kitwana, author of The Hip Hop Generation: Young Blacks and the Crisis in African-American Culture. “Hip-hop is not just what you see on television; it is a generational and global phenomenon that was born out of a climate where young black people were treated like outcasts from certain factors such as welfare and a rise in incarceration. The music is just an expression of that thrust. To not use it would mean we were missing out on the big picture,” Kitwana says.

HipHop4Life, founded by Tamekia Flowers in 2003, uses the culture and its celebrities to address issues teens face. “They are dealing with so much from poverty, sexual abuse, low self-esteem, drugs, you name it,” Flowers says. “We want to use hip-hop to help them and to let them know that what they see on television is not real.”

Carla Stokes, PhD, agrees. In 2001, she created HOTGIRLS, an organization that uses workshop discussions to analyze media images, fight street harassment and promote comprehensive sex ed. Teens in the program rewrite popular songs with more positive lyrics. “Too many programs are designed by adults who are not engaged with young people on a regular basis,” Stokes says.

But hip-hop isn’t the only cultural force influencing black youth. And even without the music, racism, poverty, homophobia and sexism would continue to fuel AIDS in black America. But that doesn’t give the industry a pass. “A lot of artists out there preach positivity, but they’re not well known or are on an independent label,” Holland says. “Young people are getting tired of the ‘shuckin’ and jiving’ artists. Maybe this is why hip-hop sales are down. Hopefully, there will be a shift.” Word.    

Search: hip-hop, Lil' Wayne, Common, Kwame Holland, Kakari Kitwana, HipHop4Life, HOTGIRLS


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  comments 1 - 2 (of 2 total)    

mom living da life, bronx, 2008-06-09 21:55:09
i just found out im hiv+ my ex gave it 2 me someone i trusted my son recently got a scare (16yrs) fortunately it was something treatable. He doesnt know my stats.he said 2 me mom i was really scared i thought i had da monster. i feel hip hop is a very strong influence in my son's life. i feel speaking about it through da music is not only an excellent idea it's a necessity trust a mom da children will listen 2 da lyrics

Ernest Donelson, , 2008-06-03 12:01:28
Now this is a topic that was recently discussed on our podcast...what is the role that hip hop music play in the continuing HIV epidemic? A number of people felt that the overall influence of rap music on the behavior of people was significant, especially in the sense that a lot of young people do not beleive that HIV is something that should concern them. When that message is more prevalent than the prevention message, then we will continue to have the war against HIV/AIDS.

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