Stereotypes In Pop Culture

Words: 1342
Pages: 6

From since civilization has established, entertainment has summoned and resonated within our culture through its diverse types of media, which includes film, television, art, and other comparably impacting arts. As time progressed, entertainment has fabricated a controversial division between those limited to their ideal traditionalism and those open to neologism within the famous industry. Contemporarily, the entertainment industry projects ideas and actions that influence the broad demographic of those who pay their attention to the forever growing pop culture. However, pop culture and what is infused in the content are not the ventriloquists of society as their final decisions are up to them. If anything, pop culture gives them ingress to …show more content…
One latter-day genre of music, hip-hop has chronicled the cry of the youth and has preaches the younger generation who may be going through a difficult time. Most notably from Lauryn Hill’s famous Hip-Hop r&b blended youth anthem, “Everything is Everything”, Hill chants the unforgettable clause, “It seems we lose the game before we even start to play”, which defines the ‘game’ as a reference to the game of life. ‘Everything is Everything’ is about the struggles of inner city youths in America, and these people ‘lose the game; “Before we even start to play” is essential because they are born without the start-ups that other children have as they challenge the fundamentalism and traditionalism of those who are birthed before them. One perception that was altered through his documented text was Charles McBride, famous National Book Award winner, who initially deprecates then becoming accepting of the growing music culture. In his self-reflection memoir, “Hip-Hop Planet”, McBride expresses, “Not since the Beatles invaded America and Elvis packed up his blue suede shoes has a music crashed against the world with such outrage. This defiant culture of song, graffiti, and dance, collectively known as hip-hop, has ripped popular music from its moorings in every society it has permeated. In Brazil, rap rivals samba in …show more content…
McBride, author of Hip Hop Planet, provided an anecdote on his first experience with this form of entertainment. In the article, the scriber expresses, " earlier that night somebody talks are record on the turntable, which sent my fellow student stumbling onto the dance floor, howling with delight and made me a jazz lover, cringe. It sounded like a broken record it was a version of an old hit record called 'good times' the same four bars loops over and over". The author's tone and choice of vocabulary exhibits his dislike into the new music. However, this altered in this text provided. Charles McBride later expressed his deep remorse or regret for ignoring this new invention of hip hop music as said in this text: " I high stepped away from the music for 26 years because it was everything I thought it was more than I ever dreamed it would be but mostly because it has everything I wanted to leave behind in doing so I missed the most important cultural events in my lifetime". McBride using the word hi Stefan describes his perception of the music as conventional people like him deems hip hop as substandard where the fact of reality is hip hop music is currently the lyrical face of society. In regards to "Reality is broken" by Jane McGonigal