Showing posts with label hip hop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hip hop. Show all posts

Friday, January 6, 2012

Magic Johnson Teams Up With Rappers to Address Homophobia in Hip Hop

via GLAAD Blog, by Kimberley McLeod

NBA legend and HIV/AIDS advocate Magic Johnson plans to continue educating the African American community about HIV and hopes to also address anti-gay attitudes in hip hop.

Johnson recently spoke with The Huffington Post about a new project he's developing with rappers to rally against homophobia:

As a hip-hop fan, you realize that homophobia is still an issue everywhere, but especially in the black community. When people are scared to talk about it, that's how the disease spreads. So what have you been doing to get that risk reduced?

What we're trying to do is reach out to the hip-hop community because they have power — power with their voice, power with that mic in their hand and power with the lyrics that they sing. I have a lot of friends in that industry and so what we're trying to do is rally them to get behind the cause, deliver the message to these young people that HIV and AIDS is big and it's not going anywhere. They can make a difference right away by speaking out, because they have a big fan base.

So we're finding out that a lot of them want to be involved; they're just looking for a group like ours to latch onto and be a part of it. We haven't really had any push-back from the hip-hop community.
He is currently in talks with various performers and plans on announcing their names at a press conference this year.

“It's so important that we rally — not just them, either,” he adds. “I need the hip-hop community but I also need the basketball players and football players. We need a little bit of everybody…”

GLAAD commends Magic Johnson for leading this important initiative and will post updates as details about the project become public.


Read the rest

Friday, May 20, 2011

Lil B's 'I'm Gay' Album Title Results In Death Threats

via the Huffington Post, posted by Keith R. Green

The album title isn't new news, but the issue of death threats is! It's clear that hip-hop culture has a long way to go towards ending its homophobic ways. I am grateful, however, for rappers like Lil B and Kanye West for taking a stance!

*****

Rapper Lil B is coming out as a straight, gay man, and it's costing him many of his hard-earned fans. Not that it bothers him.

The rising hip-hop MC and former member of The Pack announced earlier in April that he planned to name his upcoming album "I'm Gay," despite not being a homosexual. For him, it's a re-appropriation of the word, as well as a statement in support of the gay community.

"I'm very gay, but I love women. I'm not attracted to men in any way. I've never been attracted to a man in my life. But yes I am gay, I'm so happy. I'm a gay, heterosexual male," he told MTV. "I got major love for the gay and lesbian community, and I just want to push less separation and that's why I'm doing it."

Even so, the album title has spawned a nasty backlash against him, as he said he's "many of my supporters have turned on me," and he gets messages from some saying "I'm gonna bash your head in," "you fa**ot," and 'I'm gonna kill you."

The Berkeley-based rapper said that he's trying to break barriers in the hip-hop world; former MTV producer and hip-hop expert Terrence Dean recently wrote a book, titled "Hiding In Hip Hop: On The Down Low in the Entertainment Industry From Music to Hollywood," about being a gay member of the rap community and the hurdles that those involved still need to overcome in a column for HelloBeautiful.com.

"Hip Hop is a culture and environment which does not provide a safe place for an artist to come forward or to come out," he wrote. "If you listen to many rap lyrics they promote hate and gay-bashing. It is an environment where the thug and gangster mentality is prevalent. Artists boast of a hyper-masculine bravado, with their crotch-grabbing, degradation of women, and their braggadocios lyrical slaying about the number of women they've slept with and children they’ve produced."

It's those type of examples that Lil B said he's trying to fight against.

Read more...

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

50 Cent's New Pocketbook Values: Anti-Gay Won't Pay, Even for Hip Hop

by Kenyon Farrow
(Originally posted on www.kenyonfarrow.com)

The arrest last week of Hot 97 DJ and hip-hop legend Mister Cee for allegedly having commercial sex with a 20-year-old transgender woman has sparked another hip-hop “war,” this time between Cee’s Hot 97 colleague Funkmaster Flex and rival DJ Charlamagne tha God. Since Cee’s arrest, Flex and Charlamange, a former Wendy Williams sidekick, have been going at one another over the role of queer people within hip-hop, spurring a debate that’s sprawled from Twitter to the blogosphere and that’s been filled with a good bit of the expected homophobia and transphobia.

But a surprising voice has stepped into the forefront to defend Mister Cee: 50 Cent, one hip-hop’s favorite homophobes (and a friend to Mister Cee). Fifty could care less about queer folks, of course. But he does care about the Benjamins, and to him hip-hop’s pro-gay era needs to begin for one simple reason: Homophobia isn’t good for business anymore.

Mister Cee’s case has stirred such soul searching because he’s not some fringe persona or an artist, who come a dime a dozen; he’s a major figure important not only to fans of the music, but to the actual business of producing and promoting the artists and the industry. Hot 97 is arguably the most influential radio station in hip-hop—getting a record played there, or having an interview with one of its many DJs can make or break careers. Cee himself has been a DJ for hip-hop legend Big Daddy Kane, and is credited with discovering another hip-hop icon, the Notorious B.I.G. And 50 Cent told another Hot 97 personality, Miss Info, that he never releases a record without Mister Cee hearing it first, and giving him feedback. His sexuality notwithstanding, hip-hop needs Mister Cee.

So on Wednesday, Miss Info posted a short interview on her blog with 50 Cent in which he talked about why he intends to continue supporting (and consulting) the renowned DJ. 50 Cent explained to Miss Info that the “LGBT” market (and people who see themselves as our allies) may make or break you as an artist more than how masculine and straight you appear to be:

50 Cent: They can say what they want about it, but…how about if you say I don’t care? Who is to judge you when there’s an audience that’s probably one of the strongest audiences—if you look at Lady Gaga’s career—that says that that’s fine?

Miss Info: And you will look crazy if you say that it’s not fine.

50 Cent: No, if you say that it’s not fine you’re gonna get attacked. You’re gonna write apology notices.

He’d certainly know. 50-Cent, who once bragged about being damn near un-killable, has shuffled back from multiple hateful statements and tweets he’s made about queer people, after being challenged by LGBT activists and bloggers.

Black queer activists have for years organized against homophobic lyrics in hip-hop and in Jamaican dancehall music, causing artists to lose concert dates and endorsements. (Of course, Eminem hasn’t paid the same price as black artists; he dared to share a stage with Elton John a decade ago as “proof” he loves the gays and all was forgiven.) Even Funkmaster Flex and Charlamagne tha God, while trading on-air jibes, have been careful to insist that they don’t discriminate against anyone’s sexual preferences (set aside the fact that a beef over Cee’s sexuality is in and of itself homo- and transphobic). No one can afford to have already dwindling corporate sponsors pulled. These days, pissing off any audience that seems to be buying music, like them or not, does not make good business sense.

According to Billboard.com, while hip-hop album sales increased in 2010 by 3 percent from the previous year (mostly due to Eminem’s highly anticipated comeback, which was the highest selling album of any genre in 2010), sales of rap records have been in substantial decline for five years. To be sure, all genres of music have experienced a drop in sales, but hip-hop’s decline over the last decade is far more substantial.

Meanwhile, hip-hop artists have learned that there is money to be made in a gay market—and not just by Lady Gaga. Younger hip-hop artists are not using homophobia to sell records in the way their elders often have. Nicki Minaj has written songs about having having sex with other femmes and regularly autographs the breast of female fans. She’s also been outspoken in support of queer youth. And many gay clubs—and not just the black or Latino ones—are incorporating more R&B and hip-hop into their set lists.

Last year, hip hop artist Wale initially signed up to perform at D.C. Black Pride, then backed out. But after taking bad press for backing out, he reversed himself again and performed. According to HipHopDX.com, Wale told the crowd during the performance, ”One thing I stand for is hip hop music. And hip hop music knows no race, no color, no age, no gender, no sexual orientation—none of that. So, the most important thing about it is the music, and if it makes the people feel happy, that’s what we hear.”

What’s all this mean? Maybe in an industry that’s always been dominated by young artists, the older set that rode in on a wave of thuggery and “keepin’ it real” gangsterism is becoming irrelevant. Maybe younger artists embracing skinny jeans, cardigans and skateboards will make sagging jeans and macho posing the bell bottoms of their era—the punchline of a joke. And maybe the trumped up, often misogynist masculinity that went with the old gangsta mentality will become equally absurd.

Politically, young fans of hip-hop seem to be shifting on LGBT issues. Studies show youth are much more likely to support LGBT civil rights causes, regardless of their political affiliation. If young people are the largest buying audience for hip hop, might they be growing turned off by the incessant queer bashing?

Black Entertainment Television has also, for the first time, begun to tackle the issue of homophobia. Its flagship show, “106th & Park,” this year featured Marsha Ambrosius’ video “Far Away,” about homophobic violence, and had Ambrosius on to talk about her real life experience of having a gay friend commit suicide. And this year, BET even honored me as a Modern Black History Hero for my activism as a black gay man. I’m not bragging. Rather, it marks a major shift in the network’s willingness to feature black LGBT people in prominent places in its programming. Maybe the execs at the channel are beginning to get the word that selling homophobia may cost you more than it earns in the long run.

So I hate to admit it, but 50 Cent is on to something. Mister Cee has thus far kept silent about both the arrest and his sexuality. But he might just want to shout it out, as Wendy Williams would say, because despite persistent homophobia and transphobia in the world at large, market forces may just keep the haters at bay. Say what you will about 50 Cent—who’s preparing for the release of “Things Fall Apart,” in which he plays the sympathetic role of a man fighting cancer—the reliable provocateur also clearly knows exactly when to change his persona in order to stay relevant. Mainstream hip-hop is not getting soft on gays, it’s mostly getting hard up for money, and as one commenter on Miss Info’s blog noted: You don’t bite the hand that feeds you.

Kenyon Farrow is a black gay writer, noted public speaker and activist based in Brooklyn and blogging atwww.kenyonfarrow.com.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Who's that Queer?

Brought to you by Pistol Pete

Luke Caswell, known as Cazwell, is an American rapper and songwriter. He is best known for his explicit lyrics and collaborations with Amanda Lepore. His work focuses on gay and bisexual urban themes and content and his music and videos are heavily played on LOGO. Cazwell himself is openly gay.


A leading figure in the renaissance of New York City nightlife that has taken place over the last five years, Cazwell’s music—a ridiculously fun mix of electrified dance music and old school hip hop—is the perfect example of the new spirit of pop music. Says Caz, "When people ask me how to describe my style sometimes I say 'Just imagine if Biggie Smalls ate Donna Summer for breakfast.'"

Having collaborated over the years with a who’s who of downtown New York and abroad— including Amanda Lepore, Larry Tee, Boy George, David Lachapelle, The Ones, Chris Joss, Peppermint, GoodandEvil, Karl Giant and Lost Daze—"Watch My Mouth" is the natural next step for a performer schooled in clubland, pulling together some of Cazwell’s most effortlessly catchy singles and pushing things forward with new tracks perfectly-suited to bring the party. Club bangers like “All Over Your Face” (which first tore up the Top 40 dance charts in '06) and the recent viral video sensation “I Seen Beyonce At Burger King." "All I wanna do is party and have a good time! I think everyone can relate to that right about now," explains Cazwell.

Sources: cazwell.com, wikipedia.org

Friday, July 20, 2007

Hip hop, gays, and homophobia


by Lee Carson, of the Black Gay Men's Leadership Council in Philadelphia (an SHX member)


Since the birth of rap in the late 70’s to it’s larger presence in the early 80’s to present day, rap/hip hop has been a major phenomenon in pop culture. However, this very same phenomenon that has taken over the music scene worldwide has also fueled much of the homophobia and sexism we see in urban black culture. I don’t think this is new news to anyone reading this post. We all know how prolific homophobia is in rap, but we don’t always acknowledge how much of an impact it has had on our communities of gay men and how we have internalized some of these messages being sent to us through our iPod’s, radio stations and music videos where these hyper-masculine rappers floss and flaunt.


Many Black gay men have internalized this hyper-masculine, homophobic, sexist pose, which has fueled internalized homophobia and Effemiphobia in Black gay communities. When you look at Adam4adam or Black Gay Chat and MySpace pages, you will find hundreds if not thousands of Black gay men who have such terms as, “no faggots or fems hit me up. Masculine kats only!” somewhere in their profiles. And if you’ve noticed, just about everyone on these websites is masculine, even if they like to wear tight designer jeans, a little bit of makeup to cover blemishes and like to go out in drag on occasion. We have allowed mainstream homophobia to infiltrate us and at some point we need to realize this and no longer allow it space in our communities.

There is one brotha who is out to challenge homophobia in the rap community and create progressive dialogue on the issue. His name is Khali Amani and he has a book titled “Hip-Hop Homophobes: Origin & Attitudes Against Gays & Lesbians In Hip-Hop Culture”. In his book, which comes out next month, he addresses this issue.

Below you will find a link to a lengthy excerpt from his book that addresses homophobia among rappers, talks about the contributions openly gay and lesbian rappers are making to rap and gives a direct challenge to homophobes in the rap game. Here is a quote from his excerpt:

“I'm holding this book up before the hip-hop world and asking for a Reformation. Like Martin Luther (the 16th century German/Catholic monk), who nailed his famous 95 Theses to the church door in Wittenberg, I'm nailing this tome on the door of hip-hop! And I'm looking to start a "Protest Movement"—not just against homophobia, but also misogyny, xenophobia, and the "minstrel show" that Wynton Marsalis so eloquently analogized.”

For the full excerpt on Thug Life Army click here.
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