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We're Hiding From the Ugly Truth in the Imus Scandal

By Matt Taibbi, RollingStone.com. Posted April 18, 2007.


People say that Don Imus isn't funny, but let's face it, there is a joke in all of this -- a joke on the black community.
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"Ultimately, the fact that rappers are now being held accountable for something Imus said shows the bias many people have against hip-hop culture. Hip-hop is often the scapegoat of everything gone wrong in America, but hip-hop didn't slander the Rutgers women's basketball team, Don Imus did, so let's stay on point here. ... The point is, hip-hop didn't invent cursing, slurs, bad language, sexism or misogyny, though hip-hop like so many other fictional forms of the culture uses this type of language as a form of expression, however problematic it might be. This expression represents the way people in the streets talk. It might not be pretty or politically correct, but it is a unique form of fictional expression that emerges from the minds and mouths of young black men." -- Dr. Todd Boyd, professor of critical studies at USC, writing for ESPN.com

The most annoying thing about the Don Imus fiasco? The instant it blew up into an absurdly overdone national controversy, we all knew exactly how everyone was going to play it -- or overplay it, as it were.

We all knew that the angry-white-guy columnists of the Townhall.com ilk were going to turn even the previously-hated liberal Imus into a martyr of the political correctness age ("Imus, Political Correctness, and the end of America" was Douglas McKinnon's not-at-all-hysterical offering). We knew Al Sharpton would show up, business card in hand, at the back of the ambulance, offering his services. We knew campus feminists would surface en masse to paint Imus as a hatemongering symbol of the old-boy white male power structure that secretly still insists on its power and privilege in American society, his show a daily vulgar wink to fellow members of the Matrix. And we knew - or at least I knew, since I've personally been through a couple of these media ass-whippings before -- that virtually every editorial denouncing Imus would include a line in there that would read something along the lines of, "And the worst thing is, his so-called 'jokes' aren't even that funny."

Canny observers of the cultural issues underlying the Imus controversy could have also made a few other predictions. The first is that the angry-white-guy crowd would try to turn the tables on Imus's accusers and point the finger at the hip-hop culture that introduced old white liberals like Imus to use words like "nappy-headed hos" in the first place. The second is that black intellectuals like the above-quoted Dr. Todd Boyd of USC would use their advanced degrees to find a way to split the necessary rhetorical hairs to repel these attacks, dismissing Imus as a worthless bigot on the one hand while upholding rap and hip-hop as a "unique form of fictional expression" deserving of the broad indulgence we grant to true art forms.

They're all full of shit, all of them. With very few exceptions almost everyone who jumped onto the Don Imus pigpile was a shameless opportunist whose mind was made up years before this incident even happened, and used the occasion of a radio jock stepping in shit to robotically jerk off his constituency for a cheap buck. First of all, let's just get this out of the way: the idea that anyone in the media world gives a shit about the dignity of women, black or white, is a ridiculous joke.

America's TV networks have spent the last forty years falling over each other trying to find better and more efficient ways to sell tits to the 18-to-35 demographic. They make hour-long prime-time reality dramas these days about shopping-obsessed sluts hitting each other with pocketbooks, for Christ's sake. Paris Hilton, a dumb, rich slut with a cock in her mouth, gets her own primetime show. MTV, the teenie mags, the pop music industry, they're basically all an endless parade of skinny, half-naked brainless whores selling makeup and jeans to neurotic, self-hating, weight-obsessed little girls.

The idea that NBC -- the company that proudly produced 241 episodes of Baywatch, a show whose two main characters for nearly a decade were Pamela Anderson's tits -- the idea that that network was "offended" by the use of the word "ho" is beyond preposterous. Until this incident, I would have wagered very good money that "Ho" would be in the title of at least one NBC-produced reality pilot within the next ten years. You can't see that? Trivia-battling sluts in Ho-llywod Squares? An irony-for-irony's-sake callgirl-improvement show called Pimp My Ho? Would you bet real money that the Paris-and-Nicole vehicle The Simple Life wasn't originally called Whore Acres at some stage of the pre-production process? I sure as hell wouldn't. Programming decisions of the The Bachelor ilk aren't spontaneous mid-show farts by an aging drug-battered brain like the Imus deal -- they're wide-awake decisions, forged in the crucible of number-crunching corporate reflection, to use reactionary images of cheap brainless skanks to sell Fritos and pickup trucks.


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Matt Taibbi is a writer for Rolling Stone.

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WRONG!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by: Grozny_Guy on Apr 18, 2007 12:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Pop Quiz: where did the practice of calling all black women, and especially black women who are not actual prostitutes, Hos?"

Where did the practice... come from?

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» RE: WRONG!!!!!!!!!!! Posted by: DontSweatTheTechNick
» RE: WRONG!!!!!!!!!!! Posted by: wheresarah
tao2
Posted by: tao2 on Apr 18, 2007 1:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Freedom…Is A Beautiful Thing.


I watched all the pundits; it obviously would be the topic of the day, so much so, Tim Russert of “Meet the Press” fame, did not stop the flow. He said he was to cover other issues, but felt the need to let the conversation go on. It is that important. I’m saying that I agree with him that it is that important and about time. I still have to say that no one touched on the basic issues that are central to the Imus firestorm this week at CBS Radio. I agree with those who said that this is not centrally a racial issue. There was also a lot of sentiment against him getting fired. It appeared all over the press, blogs and talking heads the consensus was, it was wrong, he was sorry, let’s move on.

First, I never listened to his show; I probably will when he gets another, white male, angry, trust me, there is an audience. Second, I understand since he has come up so largely on the public’s radar with the statement he made, and as he has been making those types of statements for such a long time, folks wonder what the big fuss was all about. Third, let this be known from this point forward, Al Sharpton and Jessie Jackson are products of the media elite who so often complain about the idiot comments or remarks they make. They never have been or ever will be selected by the at large black community as our representatives. You have yourselves to thank for both of those monsters as they serve no genuine purpose. They do not represent the black community. They may represent whatever African American community that you also came up with, as our people constantly re-indentify themselves for you. I digress.

The beauty of not being oppressed is a blessed affair; however it doesn’t release one of corresponding guilt. I didn’t have anything to do with slavery, my family wasn’t in America then, our family was poor back then, and our ancestors were sharecroppers. Those excuses from the American experience never address the position of the oppressed. While your family didn’t own slaves, they benefited by the Jim Crow laws, attitudes and mindset that protected their group at the continual detriment of all those slaves freed up after the Civil War. The whole country benefited from the lack of labor cost that would have or should have been borne out of the free labor slavery provided. No one is innocent or free of the blood of so many deaths to keep this way of life here. We as a western society are just coming to terms with the damage we have caused around the world with ordering people around, doing business with known international criminals in order to circumvent those who differ with our way. At times, attacking those legally chosen by their people to lead. Just look at Iraq, perfect example of going after those who knew us not.

This brings me back to the point about the impact of Don Imus’ derogatory comments about women in general, black women in particular. The fact that anyone white or black thinks it’s okay to call women ho’s is the first issue, the reference to quality of hair is an in-house cultural issue they picked up on, the way we taught it to them. The hypocracy of all media outlets who's bottom line has gotten fatter with that type of language on our air waves as they fire Mr. Imus is beyond deeper mention. That Mr. Imus didn’t think it was a big deal at first, certainly was not a good thing. Still, none of this addresses the most poignantly sad part of this whole sorry experience. As big a moment as it was and should have been, for those young ladies to come just one win shy of being named national champs, will forever be tainted. The fact that one old white guy still felt the freedom in his position, today, to make such comments is such a sad statement. He can’t understand that all women of the world are oppressed. He has that freedom.

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» RE: tao2 Posted by: mobile68
» RE: tao2 Posted by: tao2
Bojangles?
Posted by: aethr on Apr 18, 2007 2:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"You throw a couple dozen talented black artists mid-level stockbroker money and they'll be ho-calling bitch-slapping modern Bojangles acts till the end of fucking time."

So, hip-hop music is just the latest in a long series of shuck and jive routines wherein black men seek to gain status among black people by kissing the white man's ass for money? Did I get that right?

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blankteevee
Posted by: blankteevee on Apr 18, 2007 3:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Actually, the bigger joke is on everyone who has been crying out for more voices against Bush, his Administration and the war, and for more honest voices in the media.

They just lost a very loud one.

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Great article... two comments
Posted by: Eddie-george on Apr 19, 2007 5:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This Imus schtick was episode 846560493 of the "Outrage and Morality" series. You know the script. Person X says something rude. Cue the hoardes of moralizers who come on teevee to tell us how outrageous the comments were, and how the commenter should be expelled from civilized society.

Take a step back and you realize immediately that the loud-mouth moralizers expressing outrage are obviously more cretinous than Imus himself. The idea that we need to be lectured about what we should think about the remarks is surely the most fucking annoying thing about all these episodes.

And the second thing is that Imus personalized an offensive remark. You can usually get away with it if the target is a powerful figure, not so when the target is a bunch of fresh-faced college kids. And that's not because the outrage merchants are any less noisy in the former case, its because most folks, I believe, have a problem with cheap shots taken at innocent people.

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Economics of acceptable language
Posted by: lamar on Apr 19, 2007 7:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
White suburban kids subsidize the racism of their parents by funding the art forms that legitimize that racism.

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The State!
Posted by: The Populist on Apr 19, 2007 8:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Plutocracies best tool for dividing the working men and women of this world is racism and intolerance. Our country is racist to the bone. It founded by "slave owners that wanted to be free"...George Carlin 1981.

Hip Hop artist of today are the Little Richards and Chuck Berrys of the 1950s. Public Enemy is the only Hip Hop group that never worked for the man...and the man wants us at each others throat so we don't go for his! Hip Hop=consumerism!!! BLING!!!

Los Populistos Blog

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» Lets add... Posted by: kwalla
Taibbi tells it like it is
Posted by: JDHURF on Apr 19, 2007 11:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This may be the best, most on point and hysterically funny piece of journalism I have ever read; certainly the best regarding the Imus incident, by far.

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Excellent Article
Posted by: dmadry on Apr 20, 2007 9:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
unlike "old-ass white men" like Imus, rappers are "not talking about no collegiate basketball girls who have made it to the next level in education and sports. We're talking about hos that's in the 'hood that ain't doing shit."


i am sure the "ho's in the hood's" parents fully understand that their daughters are worth less than those who can throw a ball through a hoop. and i for one will sleep better knowing snoop has the power and authority to determine where the levels are set.

man, you hit the nail on the head with this one, Matt.

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what a courageous stand, Matt!
Posted by: gretavo on Apr 21, 2007 6:16 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We'll file this one under "Hack so-called journalist tries to score points by getting all indignant over something he admits is pointless but doesn't want to be left out of."

Such incisive social commentary! And so many hard-hitting bad words to give it that irreverent edge!

Now, Matt. Maaaaaatt... We know what's really on your mind, and that is "how on earth do I get people to forget that I promised to address the impossible physics of the official 9/11 conspiracy theory now that I realize how stupid it was to go to bat for the real perpetrators of the mass murder by libeling the truth movement?"

Well, you're doing a great job by not writing that column you promised, but unfortunately for you there are more than a few of us who took offense and will remind you at every opportunity that you are indeed guilty of knowingly assisting in the concealment of crimes including arson, fraud, and murder. That's a pretty pickle, Matt, especially now that David Ray Griffin's devastating rebuttal to the official conspiracy theorist apologists (that's you, Matt) is being scooped up faster than it can be printed.

Debunking 9/11 Debunking it's called, Matt. Have you heard about it? You no doubt will, and even though you're not famous enough to have been mentioned in the book along with Popular Mechanics' James Meigs, you're famous enough for us to be sure you never forget what a stupid move you made by lashing out at the truth movement for an amount of money you've probably already blown through.

Oh Matt--a smarmy and ascerbic wit such as yours is a terrible thing to waste...

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» RE: what a courageous stand, Matt! Posted by: The Populist
» who reads your blog, dude? Posted by: gretavo
» RE: what a courageous stand, Matt! Posted by: The Populist
It's not "what's said", it's "who said it"
Posted by: mizipi on Apr 21, 2007 6:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Think of the insults and lies that Prez Bush and his admin have said about certain people - uh, Saddam, O'Sammy, Valerie P............ This whole deal is nothing more than the mainstream media blowing something out of proportion. Don Imus is not the cause of the War in Iraq, he is not responsible for uselessly spending of billion$ to enrich the already rich people of America, etc. But, on the plus side for him, he could have gotten a blow-job from a fat teenager and kept his job.

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The problem with Imus
Posted by: TerryS on Apr 21, 2007 8:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem with Imus, was that he was being
described and marketed as some sort of liberal.
Democratic politicians and mainstream reporters
have regularly been on his show. Although for
years most black reporters have refused to go
on his show (despite being invited repeatedly).

So for someone who is supposed to be mainstream
and even liberal to be regularly making racist
comments year after year and then apologizing
year after year, was finally beyond the pale.

For someone on the right to be making the kind
of comments and "jokes" that Imus makes would
be much more understandable, after all what
can you expect. But if Don Imus is supposed
to be liberal or a supporter of Democrats,
then he should be held to a higher standard.
Or at least his guests should be held to a
higher standard, and condemned for going on
his show.

I understand how a writer for Rolling Stone
has to defend rappers and Don Imus as no worse
than anyone else, but if Alternet started
publishing writers who wrote the sort of comments
and "jokes" that Imus made, I think Alternet
readers would have a real problem with Alternet.

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Trash is Trash
Posted by: neptune on Apr 21, 2007 3:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"... it is a unique form of fictional expression that emerges from the minds and mouths of young black men."

In other words: ignorant, misogynistic, homophobic trash.

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Good analysis, but....
Posted by: gillianr on Apr 23, 2007 8:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sigh. Good analysis, but you lost me when you started using the same woman-hating language you were supposedly deploring.

Nonetheless, I do appreciate your special knack for calling media hypocrites on the carpet.

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» RE: Good analysis, but.... Posted by: The Populist
We're Hiding From the Ugly Truth in the Imus Scandal
Posted by: typology on May 10, 2007 2:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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