After disgraced radio host Don Imus fired, is rap next in the crosshairs?
Miriam Liddle  |  by www.cbc.ca. All rights reserved. 15.04 | 2:28

NEW YORK (AP) - As Don Imus fought in vain to keep his job, the embattled radio host argued that rappers routinely "defame and demean black women" and call them "worse names than I ever did."
That's an argument many people made as the fallout intensified, culminating with Imus' firing on Thursday for calling the Rutgers women's basketball team "nappy-headed hos." Now that Imus has been silenced (for the moment), some critics are moving down the radio dial to take on hip-hop, boosting the growing movement against what many see as harmful themes in rap.


"We all know where the real battleground is," wrote Kansas City Star columnist Jason Whitlock. "We know that the gangsta rappers and their followers in the athletic world have far bigger platforms to negatively define us than some old white man with a bad radio show."
Pointing out that the rapper Mims uses "ho" and worse epithets in his chart-topping song "This Is Why I'm Hot," columnist Michelle Malkin asked: "What kind of relief do we get from this deadening, coarsening, dehumanizing barrage from young, black rappers and their music-industry enablers?

"
Rev. DeForest Soaries Jr., who as pastor of the Rutgers coach helped mediate the Imus imbroglio, said Friday that he is organizing a countrywide initiative to address the culture that "has produced language that has denigrated women.

"
"We have to begin working on a response to the larger problem," he said.
Rev. Al Sharpton, among the loudest critics calling for Imus' termination, indicated that entertainment is the next battleground.

"We will not stop until we make it clear that no one should denigrate women," he said after Imus' firing. "We must deal with the fact that ho and the b-word are words that are wrong from anybody's lips.""It would be wrong if we stopped here and acted like Imus was the only problem.

There are others that need to get this same message."
It is a message that was spreading even before Imus' comments.
After "Seinfeld" actor Michael Richards was castigated for a racist on-stage rant, the New York City Council passed a symbolic resolution banning the n-word, and other cities around the country have passed similar measures.


Cultural critic, author and columnist Stanley Crouch, a longtime foe of rap music, suspected the Imus ordeal would galvanize young black women across the country. He said a key moment was when the Rutgers players appeared at a news conference this week: poised, dignified and defying stereotypes seen in rap videos and "dumb" comedies.
"When the public got to see these women, what they were, it was kind of shocking," Crouch said.

"It made accepting the denigration not quite as comfortable as it had been for far too long."
Some defenders of rap music and hip-hop culture, such as the pioneering mogul Russell Simmons, deny any connection between Imus and hip-hop. They describe rap lyrics as reflections of the violent, drug-plagued, hopeless environments that many rappers come from.

Instead of criticizing rappers, defenders say, critics should improve their reality.
"Comparing Don Imus' language with hip-hop artists' poetic expression is misguided and inaccurate and feeds into a mindset that can be a catalyst for unwarranted, rampant censorship," Simmons said in a statement Friday.
Criticism of rap is nothing new.

It began soon after the music emerged from New York City's underclass more than 30 years ago.
In 1990, the rapper-turned actor Queen Latifah challenged rap's misogyny in her hit song "U.N.

I.T.Y.

" In 1993, C. Delores Tucker, who was chairwoman of the National Political Congress of Black Women Inc., led an organized movement, which included Congressional hearings, condemning sexist and violent rap.


That same year, Rev. Calvin Butts of the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem drove a steamroller over a pile of tapes and CDs.
In 2004, students at Spelman College, a black women's college in Atlanta, became upset over rapper Nelly's video for his song "Tip Drill," in which he cavorts with strippers and swipes a credit card between one woman's buttocks.

The rapper wanted to hold a campus bone marrow drive for his ailing sister, but students demanded he first participate in a discussion about the video's troubling images. Nelly declined.
In 2005, Essence magazine launched its "Take Back the Music" campaign.

Writers such as Joan Morgan and Kierna Mayo and filmmaker Byron Hurt also have tackled the issue recently.
T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting, author of "Pimps Up, Ho's Down: Hip Hop's Hold on Young Black Women" and a professor at Vanderbilt University, said many black women resist rap music and hip-hop culture, but their efforts are largely ignored by mainstream media.

As an example, the professor pointed to "Rap Sessions," the 10-city tour in which she's participating. She said the tour and its central question - does hip-hop hate women? - have received very little mainstream media coverage.


Car bombings killed nearly 50 people in Iraq on Saturday, including 37 at a crowded bus station in the holy city of Karbala, police and hospital officials said.
A sea of flag-waving demonstrators poured into the streets of Ankara Saturday to protest a possible presidential run by the pro-Islamic prime minister, whose party has been eroding secular Turks' longtime grip on power.
Two suicide bombers blew themselves up in Casablanca near a U.

S. cultural centre on Saturday, four days after similar attacks in the city.

A cluster of six cases of bovine tuberculosis in Britain suggests the cow illness may spread by human-to-human contact, say researchers who traced transmission of the disease between patrons of a bar and a nightclub.

Canadians who face financial hardship because of the skyrocketing cost of prescription drugs could be helped, but the political will is lacking, NDP Leader Jack Layton said Friday.
Medical research that led to the breast cancer drug Herceptin is among four discoveries to be honoured by the 2007 Gairdner International Awards, one of the most prestigious awards in biomedical science.
June Callwood, Canadian journalist, humanitarian and social activist, died early Saturday after a long fight with cancer.

She was 82.

Prince William and his longtime girlfriend, Kate Middleton, have ended their relationship, a British newspaper reported on Saturday.
Pinewood Studios, the largest film facility in Europe, is expected to open a 100,000-square-foot film complex in Toronto, according to a newspaper report.

CBS — which has online video-distribution partnerships with the internet TV startup Joost, AOL, Microsoft and others — says the shows could be available as early as summer.
Canada's federal broadcast regulator will be considering extending its jurisdiction over new media in public hearings into cross-ownership of broadcasting companies to begin in September.
Privacy settings on social networking websites such as Facebook give people a false sense of security that could expose them to phishing attacks, a computer security researcher says.

Seeking to expand its ability to sell targeted internet ads, Google said Friday it will buy ad-management company DoubleClick for $3.1 billion US in cash.
Cott Corp.

is reported to be in talks with private equity investors about joining Cadbury Schweppes's beverage division.

Agricore United has given James Richardson International until April 20 to match or top the latest $1.6 billion takeover offer from Saskatchewan Wheat Pool.

A CBC News investigation has found that the average fat content in doughnuts from four of five major chains was higher than the companies claim.
U.S.

officials warned consumers that some contaminated pet food may still be on store shelves, despite an extensive recall issued last month.

Budget airline Ryanair is aiming to send travellers from Europe to North America for as little as $12 US, the chief executive of the Dublin-based company has announced.
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Sean Avery scored a fluky goal and then set up Brendan Shanahan, who buried the winner with four minutes left in regulation to give the New York Rangers a 2-1 playoff victory over the hometown Atlanta Thrashers on Saturday.
Nashville Predators forward Alexander Radulov was slapped with a one-game suspension on Saturday after hitting San Jose's Steve Bernier from behind on Friday night.

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Keywords: Hip Hop, Black Women, New York, Rap Music, Don Imus, New York City, Young Black, Young Black Women, York City
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