Essay About Hip Hop Culture

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America’s Scapegoat Hip hop has not only become one of the most listened musical genres in the past decades, but it has also become the top among young American’s. “Of all the radio musical styles available in the BIGinsight database, Hip-Hoppers skew the youngest. In fact, the second youngest audience, Alternative fans, is almost three years older on average. Almost two thirds of the audience is between the ages of 18-34. Very few are over the age of 65. If this is the youngest format audience, it stands to reason that the members of the audience have made the least progress in pursuit of a career – and that is why it comes in dead last among format groups in terms of annual household income. It skews very high in the number of students, military and unemployed individuals in the audience.”
Knowing that hip hop reaches out most to the youth of America, it often is blamed for the corruption among young teens. Studies say that hip hop listeners are prone to drug abuse, alcohol abuse, and aggression. Report’s also …show more content…

The Black subculture that emerged in the South Bronx in the early to mid-1970s began as what hip hop pioneer Afrika Bambaataa called the five elements - graffiti art, break dancing, rapping, deejaying and “doing the knowledge”. Hip Hop culture isn’t just music, it refers to language, body language, fashion, style, sensibility, and worldview. In a book why white kids love Hip-Hop wankstas, wiggers, wannabes, and the new reality of race in America, author Bakari Kitwana writes, “Part of the reason the culture is so influential among today’s youth is that most young people who identify with hip-hop, unlike rock and roll and other musical generes, identify with more than music.[...] Hip Hop’s emergence in a global information age is a major variable that sets it apart, vastly increasing its capacity to reach beyond anythinh the world has

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