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- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!news.unomaha.edu!cwis!thaaang
- From: thaaang@cwis.unomaha.edu (John Dorrance)
- Subject: Re: Marky Mark and Calvin Klein (was Re: Scott Masden)
- Message-ID: <thaaang.721976913@cwis>
- Sender: news@news.unomaha.edu (UNO Network News Server)
- Organization: University of Nebraska at Omaha
- References: <1992Nov15.040728.10571@spdcc.com> <69575@cup.portal.com> <thaaang.721931083@cwis> <1992Nov16.191434.25299@spdcc.com>
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 05:08:33 GMT
- Lines: 173
-
- dyer@spdcc.com (Steve Dyer) writes:
-
- >>This is disturbing. Is 'White rapper' an oxymoron?
-
- >Close to it. Let's just say that someone who pretends to be a rapper
- >and is white has a few more credentials to prove before being taken
- >seriously. This guy is just from the same hit engine as NKOTB (don't
- >give me this crap about being unaffiliated--he's the brother of one of
- >them, and I say that as someone born and bred in Dorchester, home of
- >Steve Dyer, Donna Summer, _New Edition_, Marky Mark and NKOTB.)
-
- How many white rappers do you know? The only one's I'd suspect
- you know are the media sensations: Marky Mark, Vanilla Ice, and
- DJ Jazzy Jeff... er, oops. (now wading into unfamiliar terri-
- tory, as rap isn't my forte') What about the Beastie Boys (after
- their Fight for your Right to Partay crap had been purged and
- they started releasing some stuff that was (I'm guessing) worth
- some attention, of course)? What about 3rd Bass? What about
- House of Pain (I flinch to cite them, because I've only heard
- one song by them, which was a big hit, and they might not be
- consistent at all)? It's not fair to equate white with inability
- to rap. It's going to look that way because the pap pop white
- rappers got more attention from the white media, but then what
- about Hammer? DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince? Heavy D and the
- Boyz? The Fat Boys? Black people can be crappy rappers too. Are
- we dividing along color lines needlessly? I think maybe.
-
- And one of the big things that bothered me about George was one
- time in IRC when we were talking and he mentioned that all rap
- was sexist and bad music, and wouldn't listen to a thing I said
- (ever heard Arrested Development?) to try to explain that it's
- pretty unfair to make generalizations that huge. He allowed that
- some of the women were acceptable (something I agree with whole-
- heartedly), but said that he didn't have to listen to any of it
- anymore because he'd heard more than enough of it to know what
- it was about. Need I mention that rap is only 10 years old? Isn't
- it kind of obvious that it had some infantile stuff that could
- very well have been worked out? He wouldn't even listen, though.
- It really pissed me off.
-
- >>(and NKOTB
- >>was hardly 'exploiting a black art' anyway, unless the boundaries
- >>for 'black territory' encompassed a lot more than I'd thought...)
-
- As far as I'm concerned, NKOTB was so white as to not even touch
- black roots. Their music was a grotesque emulation, not related
- to black music in any real way.
-
- >Well, it's probably seems that way in Nebraska. NKOTB was simply
- >_New Edition_ in white face, and if you don't understand NKOTB's
- >black roots, you're not understanding their music and how it's a
- >miracle of co-option and assimilation. Of course, you don't have
- >to understand their music to like it: NKOTB was _much_ more lucrative
- >than New Edition ever was. QED.
-
- Fine. Because they're white. What's your point? That the buying
- public is rascist? Wow.
-
- NE and NKOTB were one and the same, fine. But why is NE more acceptable
- than NKOTB simply because the NE kids were black? Why can't a white
- person with talent explore black roots and artforms? Am I doomed to
- emulate Barry Manilow because if I do otherwise I risk appropriating
- another culture? Oh, fuck, he's Jewish, isn't he? God, I'm going to
- have to be Shaun Cassidy.
-
- >>How often do people other than George flame other people for talking
- >>about aesthetics?
-
- >Perhaps as often as people other than Donald Agarrat talk about race
- >relations.
-
- Are you saying that talking about race relations and flaming about
- aesthetics are equally important pasttimes? Both George and Donald
- are talking about minority issues, but I'd have to say that soc.motss
- is more in need of racial awareness than aesthetic diversity, and
- George goes off on people a lot more often and more virulently than
- Donald does, with a lot less justification (see Prince example
- below).
-
- >You know, both can be pains in the asses, but they have a
- >point to make which gets lost in the assumptions of the majority.
- >(I don't mean to trivialize race relations in this comparison; it is
- >arguably more pressing and agonizing than an aesthetic of what turns
- >people on, I simply wish to use the analogy as a tool.)
-
- It's not really a good one, though. Donald talks about race
- relations (among other things, need I add), and there is most
- definitely a 'good' side and a 'bad' side to the issue.
- George is talking aesthetics, and that's just not cut and dry.
- I'm not belittling looksism here, because I see it and try not
- to be a perpetrator, but Donald's NWA is infinitely more
- respectable to me than George's HGWA.
-
- >>Like Melinda said, it's more like 'Oh no, all that Furr crap again'.
- >>And it's because of crap like this. You simply can't talk about
- >>what you find attractive without telling people that they should be
- >>ashamed of themselves for liking anything other than your ideal. It's
- >>sickening, and I really wish you would accept the fact that some
- >>people have different tastes than you do and just shut the fuck up
- >>and let people think the way they want to.
-
- >The "people have different tastes" claim is really a claim that
- >"all gay men have a single taste", which is really the taste of
- >Calvin Klein ads, 90210, Melanoma, bad plaster casts of Michel-
- >angelo's _David_ in the foyer, and millenia of young beardless
- >ephebes.
-
- Well fuck you too. I'm not saying anything like that; you're acting
- like I'm into twinks or something. And I'm not; my tastes are a lot
- more in line with George than they are with Melmon. But George's
- hair supremacy kick is just too much. He's not just raving about
- bears; noone minds that, I hope. He's raving, then twink-bashing,
- and that's not right, any more than the opposite. I appreciate the
- diversity offered by people talking about different types of people,
- but I do *not* appreciate people trying to censor other people.
-
- >In such a milieu of shared assumptions, and heavy with
- >the institutionalized taste of centuries, why shouldn't there be
- >a discordant note sounded from those who feel marginalized?
- >"Fine, if they'd only know when to shut up." Right. This should
- >sound familiar as well.
-
- I'm pretty non-twink in my affections as well, and it still bothers
- me. This isn't just someone asserting their tastes, or standing up
- for an unpopular choice; it's someone actively insisting that others
- accept his as the superior, and being disdainful of anything that's
- not related to their tastes. It really got on my nerves, for example,
- when George spewed a flame just because me and Sim each posted an
- article in which Prince's Sexy MF was mentioned. Prince is hardly
- mainstream (though admittedly more than whatever it is George listens
- to), but George still felt it was necessary to jump in from out of
- nowhere and make it known that Prince was not to his liking, and
- (and this is the big thing) went on to bitch about Prince's song-
- writing ability and talent. There was absolutely no reason for him
- to do that; argumentativeness could cover it, but it's hardly a
- reason. We weren't acting like everyone *had* to like Prince;
- we didn't even indicate that we did.
- And he does the same thing with looks. When it would be fine to
- assert or display or proclaim affection for a certain type of man,
- he goes beyond that to flaunting scorn for anyone who isn't that
- type. He's talked about how awful shaving is, and that's not
- exactly a mainstream fetish (well, I guess in a way it is, but
- for him to act like FWA is Uncle Tom for his smoothness is pushing
- things beyond the scope of reality).
- In short, he's needlessly hurting people that don't necessarily
- deserve it just because some people do. Sure, people are all
- looksist to some extent, but he's being more antagonistic than
- anyone *I* know. I know people who go eww at a hairy/older/what-
- ever guy, but they don't shun me for liking him. George does.
-
- >I am happy when everyone expresses an opinion, including when
- >people like George and BBC do as well. That's not to say that
- >inconsistencies shouldn't be pointed out (Steve Arrants's comments
- >on BBC's reaction to MM if he were bearded and covered with fur
- >is a case in point.)
-
- But George squelches the opinions of others more than he actually
- voices his own. It's not like soc.motss is bear-unfriendly; I'd
- like it a lot less if it were. People sure as hell don't go ick
- every time someone talks about a furry guy. The only time this
- happens is when someone acts like there is no other option than
- fur. When they do things like that, they deserve to be flamed,
- just as people do when they pretend twinks make the world go
- around.
-
- John, thinking he makes sense here, and hoping Steve'll help
- him understand if he's overlooking something important
-
- --
- John Dorrance * Sexyfunky Motherfuckerdiva * thaaang@cwis.unomaha.edu
-
- I bet if you threw that ass into the air
- It'd turn into sunshine!
-