jay z

BREAKING: Gov’t Buyout, AIG, & Obama’s “Brand Black”

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

Obama 2008

WOW.

Things are moving even faster than I thought in the re-ordering of the American economy. It’s four PM on Wednesday 3/18/09. Although many people don’t know or don’t yet understand, the link between government and finances has been totally changed.

Yes, we had AIG (see below), and the foreclosures.

But now… check this…. the U.S. government is buying a TRILLION DOLLARS in mortgaged backed securities in order to create instant liquidity in the markets (read: cash you can borrow to buy a home or a market.) I never thought the hip hop chant to “make money money, make money money mon-EEE” would become so literal.

Yes, I am a news geek; and a politics geek; and I am astounded. I linked from the NYT to this handy dandy URL you can share with your friends. tinyurl.com/USmakes-fakes-Money.

I wrote the article below earlier this morning. Already it seems dated. But bear with me as I breathe.

F

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I’ve been guesting on WNYC’s syndicated morning show The Takeaway with John Hockenberry. (Adaora Udoji is on maternity leave.) We’ve been talking a lot about branding. Some folks told us about the brands they missed (“Bit ‘o Honey” and the “Reggiebar” candy bars each got a vote).

Other folks talked about what they would rename/rebrand “too big to fail/too small-minded to give up the multimillion dollar bonuses” insurer AIG as…

Amigos in Gold

Amateurs Implementing Guile

Anti Inflammatory Geeks

A**holes Invoking God

As If God

Appalling In Greed

(And that’s just from the journalists!)

Listeners wrote, among others:

Absolutely Insufferable Greed

Angry Investor Gross

But let me take a turn here.

Yesterday, I was invited to address the US Mission to the United Nations, now led by Ambassador Susan Rice. I was part of a panel that examined how and why then-Senator Obama won the Presidency; and what lay ahead. I spoke about Brand Black, or blackness as a mature political brand, just as hip hop is now a mature media brand. Every product/entity/person who wants market share starts out in the experimental, spaghetti against the wall.

Of all the people who start blogs, relatively few keep it up and even fewer find a longterm audience. If they do find an audience—not just bloggers but political candidates, preachers, musicians, etc.—then they enter the brand-building phase. They try to bring on a core constituency first, then expand that constituency. For hip hop, the core constituency was urban blacks/Latinos, adding graf artists, b-boys and b-girls, streetcorner wisemen…. and then multicultural urban youth… and then multicultural global youth. As hip hop has become a mature brand, you see stars like Ice Cube and Queen Latifah moving into mainstream family-oriented film; P. Diddy and Russell Simmons crossing onto Broadway; Simmons into philanthropy and spirituality; and Jay Z into the economic CEO/Beyonceed celebrosphere. My argument in the speech, which I will elide, concerned the use of hip hop as a feedback loop that helped make blackness a culturally mature brand that had political capital.

Since this is a blog post and not a dissertation, peep this:

First, check out Jay Z solo.

Then, Obama on the stump.

Then the remix:

When Obama first made the gesture, it split the world into three camps: people who thought he actually had dirt on his shoulder (maybe three people or less worldwide); people who got the intent of the gesture (back up off this; you don’t matter); and people who got the specific reference to hip hop and the 2003 hit by Jay Z.

The use of hip hop signifiers and metaphors, as well as support from the hip hop community, really drove the Obama campaign at first. The hip hop generation (or at this point, really two generations) were the “early adopters” of Brand Obama. The Civil Rights generation were later adopters of Brand Obama. And Brand Obama stood on…. the shoulders of the Civil Rights generation, who took blackness from an exiled/discredited “brand” among anti-integrationist whites to a nearly-mature brand that lacked one thing… the sense that a black man could be president.

I didn’t know that Obama would win. No one did. But Obama used hip hop to leverage early youth support, which in turn built numbers for what political scientist William Jelani Cobb of Spelman calls “The Black History Month Massacre” (Obama winning 10 Dem primaries and caucuses in a row), which in turn helped justify Civil Rights generation political figures/superdelegates like John Lewis switching their allegiance from Sen. Clinton to Sen. Obama.

In the end, Brand Obama leveraged hip hop to take the White House… a final signal that “Brand Black” is mature and thriving. What happens next? I don’t know. But I’m eager to see, hear, and write more, especially now that politics has a soundtrack.

Music News You Can Use: Lil Wayne, Coldplay, meh, What’s New?

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

Weezy and Chris Martin’s Crew Lead The Nominations… For the 51st Annual Grammy Awards, that is. The nominees were announced through a live concert this year, with performances by John Mayer, Christina Aguilera, and the Foo Fighters. Lil Wayne picked up eight nods while Coldplay has seven. Other leaders in the pack are Kanye West, Jay-Z, and Ne-Yo, all who tied for six. The ceremony airs February 9 live on CBS.

Bonnaroo Has Announced Dates… The glorious Manchester, TN music and arts festival will be held June 11-14, 2009, and in attempt to absorb some of those recession woes, you can pay for your tickets in installments! The tickets, which range between $209.50 and $249.50 (depends on when you get ‘em), can be paid $50 for each installment. Lame incentive, but worth a try.

Serj Tankian and a Musical?… Yep, you read it right. The System of a Down frontman will be collaborating with writer and Spring Awakening lyricist Steve Sater for a new musical titled “Prometheus Bound,” which will be based on the Greek myth Prometheus. They also say it’s a “rock musical.” Hmm, seems fitting (I guess?).

Add Fleetwood Mac to the List of Comebacks… The rock band have announced their first tour in five years that will begin in March 1, 2009 in Pittsburgh. Tickets for the “Unleashed Tour” will be on sale December 15. Though there hasn’t been word on a new album yet, member Lindsey Buckingham says that they may return to the studio after the tour is over.

Notorious B.I.G. Makes a Comeback of His Own… Well, sort of. The soundtrack to his upcoming biopic “Notorious” has been revealed, showcasing a variety of expected artists like Jay-Z, Jadakiss, and Faith Evans, while also featuring others like Santogold, movie score composer Danny Elfman, and Biggie’s own son (with baby mama Faith Evans), CJ Wallace. The biopic and album are due in January 2009.

Lil Wayne: King of the BET Hip Hop Awards Show

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

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The BET Hip Hop Awards on Saturday could have been called Mr. Weezy’s Hip Hop Awards because the rapper Lil Wayne stole the evening. Nominated for 12 awards, Lil Wayne picked up Lyricist of the Year, MVP of the Year and People’s Champ, with the help of his hits, “A Milli,” “Lollipop,” “Got Money” and his recent single “Mrs. Officer.”

“These awards have been wonderful, especially when they call my name,” Wayne told MTV News. “That’s the best part about them. Twelve nominations—I think the only categories I’m not in are the female categories.”

Although the numerous awards may make his accomplishments seem easy, Lil Wayne beat out T-Pain (who he collaborated with on “Got Money”, DJ Khaled, T.I., Kanye West and Jay-Z for MVP.

And Weezy F. Baby, the rapper from the 17th Ward in New Orleans, announced he is expecting another son in “a couple of days” during his Lyricist of the Year award acceptance. Quite the family man, MTV reported that he dedicated the MVP award to his daughter.

According to all accounts, the show was full of surprises like T-Pain replacing comedian Katt Williams as host. And there were numerous performances by hip hop greats like T.I., Ludacris, Nas and Young Jeezy. The women also got into the mix. In an old school tribute, female rap icons, MC Lyte, Yo-Yo, the Lady of Rage and Salt-N-Pepa, whose 1993 classic “Whatta Man” song was dedicated to presidential candidate Barack Obama.

The show was pre-recorded last Saturday at the Boisfeuillet Jones Atlanta Civic Center but will air this Thursday, October 23 on BET. So, check out the show to find out the other big winners.

If you don’t know the song, “Lollipop,” what’s below is for you!

watch?v=740d8sTpM7U

Music News You Can Use: Pop-Hop-’n'-B Tidbits

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

Coachella’s coming! Dates have finally been announced for the artsy music fest that brings everyone and their ex-boyfriend’s momma’s uncles out. Spend your college savings for three days of unforgettable, blazing hot magic here.

LA folks, win tickets to see Flosstradamus. Subdrive is giving two tickets to see the Chi-town DJ duo at the Avalon on Friday October 10. The homeboys will be performing alongside Marshall Barnes and Hyphy Crunk. Ch-ch-check it here.

Coldplay and Jay-Z, can I get a wha, huh? Yet another legendary crossover collabo goes down as Coldplay will be releasing a new digital-only EP that will include a remix of their latest single, “Lost!” featuring the Jigga Man himself. The four-track mix comes out November 10.

Hold up, what about Mrs. Jay-Z? Beyonce shows she’s the quite the overachiever once again, releasing two new singles at once. The singles, “If I Were A Boy” and “Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)” are rumored to be just a couple out of 70 songs that homegirl recorded for her latest self-titled album coming out November 18. Can you say perfectionist?!?

Usher reveals tour dates to the ladies. The one-month club hop, dubbed “One Night Stand: Ladies Only Tour” will be catered to women, but men are allowed as well. My question is, who did he think he was catering to in the first place? Catch him in the “intimate setting” at New York 11/3; Chicago 11/13; San Francisco 11/18; Los Angeles 11/19-20; and Las Vegas 11/21. For more dates and ticket info, check here.

Ah, yes, John Legend’s more like it. The singer-songwriter will be embarking on a worldwide tour starting November 19 in Minneapolis. Special guest Raphael Saadiq will be accompanying Mr. Legend for the first leg. Now that’s what I’m talkin’ ’bout! Check out dates here. Legend’s upcoming album, Evolver, drops October 28.

Umm, okay. Chi-town’s finest rapper Common seems to be with the in-crowd these days (walk away from the light!), Weezer breaks five world records in the new “Troublemaker” music video, and Moby starts a punk band. Epic fail for all? You be the judge.

Music News You Can Use: Detour Fest, Crazy Comebacks, and Mixtape Madness

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

LA’s third annual Detour Festival is this Saturday, and the lineup looks delish! Come downtown to see a hodgepodge of over thirty indie and electro artists, including The Mars Volta, Gogol Bordello, Shiny Toy Guns and Cut Copy. The fest is from noon to midnight, best believe I’ll be there the whole time! For set times, a map, and tickets, go here. Also, check back with P+P Monday for my review of the all-day event.

Comebacks galore! Brit boys Oasis have issued new tour dates and are streaming their forthcoming album Dig Out Your Soul here. Also, Phish reunion rumors are confirmed; they have announced three shows in Hampton, Va. and will be announcing more shortly. Chris Cornell is collaborating with Timbaland for his upcoming album, Scream (bizaare, indeed). And finally, this one takes the cake: UK punk pioneers The Clash have a self-written biography coming out, which is less than a reunion, but more than I can ask for (yay!).

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