Ban The Video Ho
By DuEwa M. Frazier
What do Jay-Z, Mystikal, The Cash Money Crew and Ludicris have in common
besides the bling-bling they wear and the millions of albums they've
sold? They all feature women in videos, barely dressed and mostly Black, baring their breasts and backsides in front of the roving eye
of the hip hop video camera worldwide for all to see. Call me a hater, but I am disgusted with the images of women in the
majority of hip hop videos today. Sex sells the way my foremothers
and fathers were sold during slavery. Must we continue to be slaves
to an industry that seems only to appreciate and condone the disabling
images of women seen in videos today? Lap dancing, clad in the
"thong-the-thong-thong-thong" and "shaking it fast", women of today's
hip hop videos are shown in flashes of body parts, without a
personality or intellect to match. From the looks of these videos the rap artists seem to have no concern
that our impressionable youth are viewing and imitating much of the
images and behavior seen in them. The other day, as I
was leaving a store in my Brooklyn neighborhood, a boy no older than
eight years old, said to me, "Damn Miss, you got a fat a*s!" I was
angry and wondered what influenced him to speak to me, an adult, like
this? The over-exaggerated focus on the use of women as objects purely to
satisfy the hip hop male artist's insatiable sexual appetite, only
helps to perpetuate societal stereotypes that Black women are ho's and
prostitutes and Black men are sexually aggressive pseudo-pimps. Our
rap videos have now elevated (or rather plummeted) to the level of
R-rated. What happened to the days when hip hop was fun and "PG"
rated? When L.L. Cool J crooned "I Need Love". When rappers like
Kwame and Kid N' Play merged energetic dance moves and unique
fashions with story lines about the honey they were trying to get
with? And what about Will Smith's "Summertime" video and Chubb Rock's
"Just the Two of Us", when folks were shown at outdoor gatherings,
bar-b-queing, dancing and just having a good time? I miss those days of hip hop when women seemed to be portrayed more
equally in videos and were the object of the rap artist's love
desires as opposed to misogynistic ones. Back then, rappers talked about
falling in love, not loving 'em and leaving 'em. There's no balance
in today's hip hop videos. For every image of a female freak and ho
shown, there should be other images of feeling, thinking women who are well-rounded. The rappers in these videos who are telling us they have "ho's in
different area codes" and that women "have to know how to work nice
hips" in order to be down are missing the point. It shouldn't just be all about making the dollars and proving who has
the finest women. It should also be about integrity, love for
community and care for the images of the people who have helped to put
these rap artists on their international maps of super-stardom. I am as much
a supporter of hip hop as anyone else. I just hope that our rap
artists will begin to look at the negative impacts of degrading images
of women in their videos and realize hip hop can still be powerful and
lucrative without all the bare booty stuff. DuEwa M. Frazier is a writer, performer, author and Founder of both
Lit Noire Publishing and Sisters of Creativity for Positive Hip Hop.
She can be reached at duewa_frazier@litnoirepublishing.com.
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