Monday, 21 October 2013
Thursday, 17 October 2013
Representation '2'
Nowadays many hip hop artists will include certain women in
their videos to attract men to watch it and for the male audience to enjoy the
video more. Not only will they make sure they certainly have the right girl but
they will need to ensure she can dance in the right sexual way and have certain
assets like big ‘booty’ or large boobs.
‘In many rap videos women have no
identity except as sexual playthings and "eye candy”’.-
I definitely agree with this statement because many
rap videos will express the fact that the women are all there for the rapper.
The women are usually always flocking one man who is splashing his money or
drinking expensive alcohol. Such as in Wiz Khalifa’s video ‘On my level’ he
sits in a chair while drinking and smoking with women flocking him. The women
are used to make the rapper look bigger and better as they make him seem like
their god. Many videos will show the rappers having sex or kissing lots of different
video girls. This is proven in 50 Cents video ‘Candy Shop’ where he is sexually
touching and kissing a variety of different video girls. Usually
though the women are just there for eye candy that will attract male attention,
this is to make male or female viewers enjoy it better as they have good
looking girls dancing on their screen.
‘These images do provide
pleasures to some viewers. But the concern is that men may internalise the
notion that women are nothing more than sexual objects waiting to be used’-
. I believe some
of this statement is true as a fair amount of men will agree and see women as
nothing more than sexual objects. A majority of viewers will only be watching
it for the women whereas some for just the music. Watching many influencing rap
videos such as Asap Rocky’s video ‘Goldie’ which is explicit and has nude
scenes will definitely influence an older generation but more so a younger
generation to view girls as sexual objects. ‘Waiting to be used’ is a good way
to put it as many young boys watching will be ‘wanting to use’ these video
girls which are purposefully trying to attract boys to the video by acting in a
sexual manor.
‘These sorts of images are not
unique to hip hop. Objectified female bodies are everywhere. They appear
throughout our culture in films, advertisements, television programmes etc.
However, within music videos, this is virtually the ONLY vision of women
available.’-
Personally I think that hip hop videos have started this ‘trend’ of by
attracting publicity to their videos by adding lots of video girls acting
sexually. Then movies programmers etc. have realised this and started to make
women act sexually and have BIG impacts on younger girls of this generation.
What these girls are seeing on their computer screens and TV’s is making them
act and dress in a way that is making them grow up a lot faster, and the clothe
they wear make them look a lot more mature but liable to have comments and
attention from men a lot older than them. I disagree with the last part of this
statement though, ‘However, within music videos, this is virtually the ONLY
vision of women available’ to make that statement correct I would add that in
Hip hop or many genres of music videos this is the only vision of women we see.
That statement refers to all kinds of music videos such as classical which is
very unlikely to have women in bikinis dancing on tables in it.
Monday, 7 October 2013
Pink-Justin Bieber Presentation
WWW:
1) We added lots of detail into each of the questions we answered.
2) Our layout was clear so that it could be easily read by the audience.
3) We presented it well and it was clear how we each spoke in turn.
EBI:
1) We made it into a video and added sound such as the 2 songs.
2) We had the video playing in the corner of the pay while the presentation was being played.
3) It was more interactive so that the audience could join in.
Wednesday, 2 October 2013
Rap Representation
Personally I agree with the three statements as many famous
rappers are all the same and videos all have lots of similarity. In many videos
you see them flashing money and dancing with half naked women, one statement
expresses that a real man will have control over lots of women and you will
always dominate them. Rappers and hip hop artists such as Jay Z and 50 Cent use
these stereotypes in their videos, 50 Cent’s video ‘Candy Shop’ shows him being
flocked by many women who are worshipping him, also he is the only male in the
whole video and this shows he is dominant.
Throughout many hip hop videos you will see hip hop artists
wearing expensive clothes and with accessories such as chains and watches. This
is a show of wealth and that they have lots of money which is stated in the
statement. In 50 cents ‘Candy Shop’ it shows him sitting on the bonnet of an
expensive fast, red car wearing a big chain this makes 50 cent look very rich
and highly powerful which will attract girls to him. It then zooms into his
trainers, they say G Unit on and that’s the name of his group, by wearing these
it shows he has lots of money to create his own brand of shoes and that he is
powerful. Jay Z’s ‘Pimpin It’ starts
with a huge yacht sailing across the ocean this shows he has plenty of money,
it then shows Jay Z on the yacht with plenty of women scattered around the
whole boat. Jay Z is sitting down smoking a big Cuban cigar, when I see
somebody smoking a Cuban cigar I assume they have lots of money and people look
up to them as being powerful. More recently hip hop videos have the artist
wasting expensive alcohol around and this is also done in Pimping It this shows
they have money to waste.
Many of the lyrics refer to other meaning such as in Candy
Shop he calls it a candy shop but in reality the ‘candy’ are the women. He
later says he is ‘the love doctor’ this shows he is dominant over the women and
they all come to see him with their problems and he can sort them out.
So personally I agree with these statements as this is what I
see hip hop as. But at the end of 50 Cent’s ‘Candy Shop’ he wakes up sitting in
his car in a drive through collecting his takeaway, he was daydreaming which
shows he doesn’t actually have the life that is portrayed in the video. So even
though you and I may believe all hip hop artists are the same but in reality
they aren’t and that videos over exaggerate what a hip hop stars life is like.
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