The New Face of Propaganda

Written by Rizoh. Posted in Mixtapes

Published on April 19, 2005 with 4 Comments">4 Comments


“We write…about wrong ’cause it’s hard to see right” - Common

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When was the last time you read an article heralding MC’s that have improved their skills lately? Have you ever seen a rap page entitled “Congrats! You’ve Stepped Up Your Rap Game”? From Vibe to Murder Dog, to the so-called leading rap mags, XXL & The Source, controversy and shock new have become the crux of urban journalism. Why? Controversy sells, duh? Truthfully, a small portion of it would help maintain the balance in the good vs evil setting of modern day society. But, when such negative ramblings become our only available information, then it spells comic like the WWF they’ve compared rappers to. No wonder NaS set music magazines ablaze(literally) early last year.
The outlets that claim to be preserving our culture turn out to be a huge part of the blaxploitation process. The Source affirmed this point in the most recent issue of the diminishing Rap magazine. The Hip Hop writers bashed Chuck Taylor aka The Game and 50 Cent comparing their alleged ‘beef’ to the fake acts of the WWF. It’s not the bashing that I find disturbing. It’s the fact that Rap magazines have stopped reporting issues from the observer viewpoint, gradually immersing entire publications in political subtleties. The art of reporting should always be upheld with impersonal perspectives. Even the underground Hip Hop community’s last hope for ‘realness’ XXL lies on the polar end of these destructive publications, indulging in ‘dick-riding’ and aiding publicity stunt by average pop-rappers who blindly chase after SoundScan.
I’m still looking forward to the day atop 5 lyricist like Canibus(referred to as “that little fucker” by XXL), Talib Kweli, or a living legend like DJ Premier or The Roots will grace the cover of a leading Hip Hop journal. Instead of paying attention to aesthetics and those that pour their hearts into the skillet of near-perfection, all I’ve seen is recycled covers and lop-sided features in today’s magazines. Image hosted by Photobucket.comImage hosted by Photobucket.com Image hosted by Photobucket.com
Let’s go back to the basics. Let’s return to the backbone of craft that is Rap. If all we see is dollar signs everytime we fill a blank paper with ink, then that’s all we live for. Truth is the real nurturer of conscience.

TRU

Rizoh

Rizoh is the most powerful man in all the lands. He lives in Houston where he earned a BS in Nerf Herding. He's the founder of The Rap Up, the editor of Roc4Life.com, and is in the Grammy-awaiting band Pervertable Disciples.

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  • emcrorie

    WOW, what a well written blog! I’m clueless about hip hop, and your blog helped me learn about a different art form. Thank you.
    Beth

  • emcrorie

    WOW, what a well written blog! I’m clueless about hip hop, and your blog helped me learn about a different art form. Thank you.Beth

  • Verz

    ^^”In Hip-Hop the H’s are always capital”-Riz

    Yes Riz sure has a way with words. And this entry sure has a good point and one i never really thought of, but considering i dont read rap mags besides Scratch i wouldnt really know what they were talkin bout. But nonetheless way to tackle a critical subject in the Hip-Hop community

  • Verz

    ^^”In Hip-Hop the H’s are always capital”-RizYes Riz sure has a way with words. And this entry sure has a good point and one i never really thought of, but considering i dont read rap mags besides Scratch i wouldnt really know what they were talkin bout. But nonetheless way to tackle a critical subject in the Hip-Hop community

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