Episode 12 is up and running

September 21, 2008

Due to the sheer exhaustion Claudia and I are feeling from the enormity of the last episode we decided to take a little break and do a music episode.  I didn’t want to leave you guys with nothing so I took great care to pick out past songs from the previous episodes that I thought would be enjoyable to listen to in a play-list.   And if you’d like to know the names of the songs and artist played on the show by all means check out the show notes.  So enjoy :)

Click on this link to go straight to the audio feed

Click on this link to go to the show notes and to download the episode


Episode 5 of my podcast has finally posted

August 3, 2008

The wait is finally over (for anyone that was actually anticipating episode 5).  I finally recorded, edited and posted the hip-hop episode for all to listen.  I pretty much wrote down my thoughts in essay form (so as to not ramble on too much) and recorded it into three segments between some kick-ass independent rap music.  If I whetted your appetites and you’re would like more then by all means go to the following links:

Click on this link to go straight to the audio file

Click on this link to go to the show notes as well as play episode


When will we be free of the “N” word?!

July 22, 2008

So Nas’ newest album was released earlier this month and it was originally going to be called “Nigger”.  Not only that, but, it was going to contain a rather offensive single called “Be a Nigger Too” in which he calls every ethnicity by its derogatory term and invites them all to join in his celebration of being a nigger.   Thankfully the corporate executives put a squash to those two items (even though the video to that single is still viewable on youtube).

Nas’ Video for your viewing pleasure:

Now I find this word extremely offensive as is obvious by my title and as of the past few years I have had very mixed feelings on the state of hip-hop and rap music in general.  Call me old-fashioned but I yearn for the days of just positive party songs, the afro-centric movement and when songs pointed out the injustices of the political system and tried to give advice to the urban youth on how to better themselves.  Hell, I even miss the early gangsta rap that didn’t necessarily show a positive way of life but showed the harsh reality of living in the ghettos and protested the police brutality that helped maintain this negative state.

Unfortunately, the commercialism of rap music has put it in a state of selling a lie and propogating this fantastical image of thuggery as living the good life; instead, of the more positive images that the old civil rights leaders used to conjure.  Alas, there is still some hope.  There are some rappers both in mainstream and in the underground that are fighting against this continued state of denigration.  I look forward to talking a little more intimately about my feelings of today’s rap music in my podcast this weekend.  But for now, I leave you with some more video clips.  Two are from an underground Artist, NY Oil, who I will be showcasing in my upcoming podcast episode.  The last video clip is an old Chris Rock joke where he divides the black community into two sections: Black folk and niggas.  Enjoy

NY Oil’s take on the N word and the state of hip-hop today

Chris Rock’s take on the denigration of his own people