***UPDATED*** 

As I am writing this, it is 5:16pm PST (8:15pm EST) and I am watching Paula Zahn special on Hip Hop.

If you are watching this program, share your thoughts if you like.

5:22pm – Okay, let me get this in before I eat dinner. So far Chuck D as expected put ALL THE BLAME on White corporate executives who use these poor and innocent kids who apparently are in the same predicament as the scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz – No brain to reason – to make them a ton of money. Michael Dyson (who IMO is impressive only to the extent that he can cram a bunch of statistics and big words within a minute) continued this tune by saying that Hip Hop is only a reflection of a violent society. To an extent I do agree with him, but where he looses me is his assertion that the participants in this culture are innocent victims of America with being a gangster or video ho as the only way out of poverty.

5:39pm – Dyson said this: “If you go to the average church…they are hearing a gospel that says ‘women should be subordinate to men’. Now, they are not is violent, as vicious or as vocal as hip hop but they are saying the same thing”. Again, here is another great example of how Dyson will go to the nth degree to push blame on someone else. The nonsense of this comment is obvious and as a Reverend I would think he would know that–or is Rev. just a title?

Lauren Lake: I hear ya sis, but please sit down! You disqualified yourself by admitting that you sing along with 50 cent in your car.

I’ll return to this post after I eat and finish watching the program. Forget it! :)

6:01pm – (At this point I am looking at what I recorded) In the section regarding homophobia in hip hop, Dyson once again excuses it by claiming that these artist act out this way because their regular masculinity has been beat up upon by society.

Why did I know he was going to go there? :~

6:05pm – Based on what I have seen tonight with John Mc Whorter should stick to witting. He had a very weak showing tonight

Okay, based on what I have seen tonight–nothing new. While I do agree with the assertion that hip hop is being scapegoated to a certain extent, it still does not take away the burden on us–Black folks– to deal with the crap that is being put out there in the world of music. (added 2/22: One thing is for certain, while many of us love to take credit for the global influence of hip hop music, we find it very easy to excuse ourselves from any negative aspects of the genre–and the panel personified this point. Many of these artists rap about a ghetto they have never lived in or experienced. Yet to this panel, songs that degrade women or glorify violence is a DIRECT reflection of poor people in America who supposedly do not have the personal choice to live on the “straight and narrow”. What an insult!!!! This is uppity-ism being masked as compassion and fairness). What both Dyson and Roland Martin may not have realized in their persistency to hold record company execs EQUALLY responsible for the content, they were portraying the Black community at large as bunch of weak and helpless folks who are incapable to act on our own defense unless “Whitey” does some of the work. Here are the two cents I would offer to this panel:

From achildswaiting.com

“We are thankful to our families and appreciate their commitment. Unfortunately, the placement statistic do not accurately reflect the children still waiting. There are currently 150,000 children waiting for a home in the United States alone. Of those children, 85% are African American, 60% are boys, many are over the age of 8 yrs, and most have siblings.”

Question: Do we need White record executives to deal with this problem or….

nevermind!