Archive for August, 2008

Big advantage for Obama

August 26, 2008

I saw the first clear indication to me that Obama’s got a big head start.

I saw a bumper sticker that said “NObama 08″.

You can’t win an election running against someone. You might be able to come close, but it won’t fly all the way.

We learned this lesson in 2004, when we got stuck trying to elect anyone-but-Bush (what was his name? the windsurfing dude?), and anyone-but-Bush lost (or caved in on recounts in Ohio, depending on how you look at it).

Also, a basic rule of advertising, is that negative advertising doesn’t work, it just gives your competitor more name recognition. It was very hard from reading this bumper sticker to see the subtlety of it (i.e. one letter, the “N”). To a casual viewer it was yet another Obama sticker.

So if the election is between Obama and not-Obama, Obama’s got a tremendous advantage right there.

The imminent death of the N word

August 20, 2008

Growing up in un-PC New York in the 70’s and 80’s, the only time I remember hearing the “N” word was from old Richard Pryor records, from some older not-necessarily-racist white folks who were set in their ways, and from some outright racists. I never heard black folks saying that shit (at least not around me). I certainly didn’t hear it in music or popular culture.

By the mid-80s, it seemed the word was very dead. It was the time of Papa Cosby’s ratings triumphs; and Dr. Cosby had a significant influence, especially on black performers and comics. Eddie Murphy was huge, and I never heard the word out of him, no matter how edgy and outrageous (and homophobic, and sexist, etc) his rants got. In his material, his people were “brothers” instead, a much more positive word, revived from the early 1970’s Black Power movement.

All that changed at the end of the 80’s, when a weird, violent subculture of rap oozed out of South Central L.A. and started taking over the hip-hop world. And then the N word came back, with a vicious vengeance, and would not leave. I loved that the gangsta rappers brought back old early 1970’s classic funk grooves, but winced at the shit they rapped over it. I much prefered Public Enemy and KRS-One, and I lost interest in rap about the time the gangsta’s took over.

One of the most jarring things I’ve ever heard, was white kids (in Texas, of all places!) calling each other that shit, sometime in the mid 1990’s. WTF? Um, you’re white. Cut that out. It definitely seemed wrong to me; chalk it up to a generational gap I suppose.

But, in the near future, I predict that a side-effect of Obama’s nomination, and quite possibly from his election and service as President of the United States, is that the N word will retreat back into the hole from whence it came, and once again be heard only coming from old folks and outright racists.

It will be wonderful to hear black folks calling each other “brother” again.

Don’t Be a H8r

August 9, 2008

After working with a lot of young people over the past 10 years– in the Linux orbit and now in the music orbit– I’ve noticed that the younger generation has zero tolerance for gossip or talking shit about people. They view it as a serious character flaw, and don’t want anything to do with it, or the people who do it. It seems to be an offense on the order of being racist or sexist– it’s just not OK.

I don’t remember such a strong taboo against gossip and trash-talking when I was younger. I remember many people doing it, all the time. Particularly in the business world, we were always venting about such-and-so, or gossipping about what various other people, departments, executives, etc, were up to. There was a very high-bandwidth grapevine, and the scuttlebutt flew fast and wide. Granted, we didn’t diss our own friends and close circle of trusted confidants, but outside of that, it was a continual bitch-fest.

But now, kids get visibly embarassed hearing “hating on” anyone at all, and definitely don’t want to be perceived as being a “hater” themselves. I haven’t heard anyone who is now under the age of 30 talk shit about anyone else, ever.

Granted, if you look back a hundred years ago or longer, gossip has always been considered a sign of bad character and poor breeding. But that taboo relaxed sometime, and became fairly common by the late 20th century. And now it’s a taboo again.

I’m curious where that return to tradition happened, and how. Is it from the rap scene, where all the “h8ting” turned into inter-crew violence in the 90’s? Is it from the now ubiquity of the Internet, where any trash-talking or gossip is too easily traceable back to its source, and forwarded or shown to its subject? I remember when I first started using email almost 20 years ago, how quickly (and traumatically) I learned to be scrupulously careful about anything I write and sign. To this day, it can take me an hour to finish even the simplest email, after many cycles of revising and reviewing. But informal communications were verbal back in those days (we had IRC, and then ICQ, but it wasn’t nearly as ubiquitous as IM is today), and there was no “audit trail” for it like there is now. Today, if you dash off a quick IM dissing someone, you run the risk of that getting logged, forwarded, or shown to that person. It doesn’t take too many screw-ups to get shunned and learn not to do that again… or to learn to shun people who do.

So one possibility is that the Internet has made the world more like an old-fashioned, closely-knit, traditional community where everyone knows everyone. Have the kids learned to be more polite because getting along well with others has become a much more critical skill? Another possibility is that the Internet put us Americans more closely in contact with other cultures in other parts of the world who have maintained their more traditional moral standards, too.

However this cultural shift back to more traditional standards of manners and conduct has occurred, I consider it a very good thing. Old habits die hard, and I’ve always loved to complain (hence, a whole tag on this blog titled “bitch bitch bitch”), so I often make missteps in this new world (wasn’t I just hating on chubby girls wearing skirts too tight only one post ago?), so it takes consistent focus for me to stay on the new straight-and-narrow. But I think a world in which people simply don’t say anything disparaging about anyone else could be a much more pleasant world for everyone, so I’m glad to do the work to help keep it that way.

Fashion idiocy

August 4, 2008

Maybe this is a sign of my getting old. But I went out the other night, and noticed a silly new fashion trend: chubby or overweight girls in skirts that are ridiculously too tight and way way way too short. So they’re spilling out of these things, first of all compressed by them, and then they can’t even lean over in it without becoming basically bottomless. And in 50-degree weather too.

WTF? I don’t get the fashion-victim trip. Completely impractical. Looks totally uncomfortable. Probably freezing cold. And, is it supposed to be sexy? Maybe some very tiny model might be able to pull it off, but that’s not who I saw wearing this.