WingsOfAnAngel
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ill o.g.
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Hip-hop videos gone wild: BET, Playboy music videos show more skin
By Nekesa Mumbi Moody | Associated Press
Published on Thursday, April 8, 2004
NEW YORK -- Given all the barely clad women that are booty-shaking, grinding and gyrating on BET during the day, it's hard to believe things could get any wilder after dark.
But as the rap group Whodini once rhymed, "the freaks come out at night." And on BET -- already criticized for showing hip-hop videos with a high T&A quotient -- the clips become even more graphic during the wee morning hours on "BET Uncut."
While outright nudity is blurred out, the videos still contain enough sexual content to make R. Kelly blush. There's Ludacris' "Booty Poppin'" video, featuring close-ups of jiggling posteriors as women take it all off in a strip club. And in Nelly's "Tip Drill" video, women shake so wildly that bikini bottoms pop off, and a posse of leering men grab various body parts. Later, the women simulate sex acts with themselves.
"Everybody's doing them. I think it's a helluva promotional tool," said Luther "Luke" Campbell of 2 Live Crew fame, widely considered the godfather of scandalous music videos.
Sex has long been part of hip-hop. Campbell's early '90s videos had bikinied women doing the butt-jiggle back when "dirty dancing" was still considered shocking. Tupac Shakur's "How Do You Want It" video in 1996 featured real porn stars (although they didn't have sex on camera). And these days, everyone from Snoop Dogg to Lil' Jon to G-Unit's Lloyd Banks are promoting videos that are actually X-rated.
Before, artists were mostly making sexually oriented material for the underground market -- providing them to strip clubs, or selling them as part of videos or DVDs. Now, they're bringing them directly to television, through places like "BET Uncut" and the Playboy network. And more outlets are growing for those who want to see more -- or less -- than a bikini.
"It's almost like the other videos are like foreplay and the uncut videos are the act themselves," says video director Nzingha Stewart, a woman who has directed clips for artists ranging from ODB to Common to Joss Stone.
Explicit videos aren't exclusive to rap. There were topless women on Motley Crue's 1987 video "Girls, Girls, Girls," which was recently featured on an uncensored rock videos DVD from Interscope. Madonna's "Erotica" video from 1992 featured the singer completely naked, obscured only by strategically placed black bars.
But the videos on "BET's Uncut" make Madonna seem as tame as Clay Aiken.
They typically feature full-figured black women dirty dancing at a frenetic pace. Close-ups are reserved not for faces, but for voluptuous posteriors. In Nelly's video, he swipes a credit card between a women's buttocks.
Even Big Boi of OutKast -- an avid strip-clubber who had a stripper pole built into his house -- has been taken aback by some of the content.
"Some of it is getting really distasteful -- it's like giving it a bad taste, it's really exploiting women," he says. "What they're doing now it's kind of like soft porn. I saw some (stuff) the other day. ... I didn't even know they could do that on TV."
The show started in September 2000, and airs Wednesday through Friday at 3 a.m.
Stephen Hill, a senior vice president for BET, said "Uncut" is for adult eyes only -- a disclaimer runs before the naughty videos air. "Any kid up at 3 o'clock in the morning, their biggest problem is not BET," he said.
But Stewart complains that uncensored videos promote negative stereotypes.
"I don't think there should be necessarily be censorship of the images of women, but it's an extremely one-sided look at women. There's no other images to counteract it," she says. "I can't tell you the last video I saw where a black woman had a job, and that's really more our experience than black women being strippers."
More is on the way -- the Playboy network started their "Buckwild" show this year and plans to start a block of hip-hop programming called "H.Y.P.E" later this year, as a precursor for a network of the same name.
Artists have made videos for sexually explicit songs for years. Why are the videos finally catching up?
"People want more. The sex is definitely in the music, and sex is in all aspects in the music," says Campbell.
R&B hitmaker Usher, who counts himself as a viewer, admits it's a guilty pleasure: "You're kind of in the wrong for even watching it."
"Then what's crazy about it, after it's off, the inspiration of the day comes on," he says, referring to the BET's block of religious programming, which starts at 4 a.m.
"I guess you've got to get 'prayed up' after watching it," he laughed.
By Nekesa Mumbi Moody | Associated Press
Published on Thursday, April 8, 2004
NEW YORK -- Given all the barely clad women that are booty-shaking, grinding and gyrating on BET during the day, it's hard to believe things could get any wilder after dark.
But as the rap group Whodini once rhymed, "the freaks come out at night." And on BET -- already criticized for showing hip-hop videos with a high T&A quotient -- the clips become even more graphic during the wee morning hours on "BET Uncut."
While outright nudity is blurred out, the videos still contain enough sexual content to make R. Kelly blush. There's Ludacris' "Booty Poppin'" video, featuring close-ups of jiggling posteriors as women take it all off in a strip club. And in Nelly's "Tip Drill" video, women shake so wildly that bikini bottoms pop off, and a posse of leering men grab various body parts. Later, the women simulate sex acts with themselves.
"Everybody's doing them. I think it's a helluva promotional tool," said Luther "Luke" Campbell of 2 Live Crew fame, widely considered the godfather of scandalous music videos.
Sex has long been part of hip-hop. Campbell's early '90s videos had bikinied women doing the butt-jiggle back when "dirty dancing" was still considered shocking. Tupac Shakur's "How Do You Want It" video in 1996 featured real porn stars (although they didn't have sex on camera). And these days, everyone from Snoop Dogg to Lil' Jon to G-Unit's Lloyd Banks are promoting videos that are actually X-rated.
Before, artists were mostly making sexually oriented material for the underground market -- providing them to strip clubs, or selling them as part of videos or DVDs. Now, they're bringing them directly to television, through places like "BET Uncut" and the Playboy network. And more outlets are growing for those who want to see more -- or less -- than a bikini.
"It's almost like the other videos are like foreplay and the uncut videos are the act themselves," says video director Nzingha Stewart, a woman who has directed clips for artists ranging from ODB to Common to Joss Stone.
Explicit videos aren't exclusive to rap. There were topless women on Motley Crue's 1987 video "Girls, Girls, Girls," which was recently featured on an uncensored rock videos DVD from Interscope. Madonna's "Erotica" video from 1992 featured the singer completely naked, obscured only by strategically placed black bars.
But the videos on "BET's Uncut" make Madonna seem as tame as Clay Aiken.
They typically feature full-figured black women dirty dancing at a frenetic pace. Close-ups are reserved not for faces, but for voluptuous posteriors. In Nelly's video, he swipes a credit card between a women's buttocks.
Even Big Boi of OutKast -- an avid strip-clubber who had a stripper pole built into his house -- has been taken aback by some of the content.
"Some of it is getting really distasteful -- it's like giving it a bad taste, it's really exploiting women," he says. "What they're doing now it's kind of like soft porn. I saw some (stuff) the other day. ... I didn't even know they could do that on TV."
The show started in September 2000, and airs Wednesday through Friday at 3 a.m.
Stephen Hill, a senior vice president for BET, said "Uncut" is for adult eyes only -- a disclaimer runs before the naughty videos air. "Any kid up at 3 o'clock in the morning, their biggest problem is not BET," he said.
But Stewart complains that uncensored videos promote negative stereotypes.
"I don't think there should be necessarily be censorship of the images of women, but it's an extremely one-sided look at women. There's no other images to counteract it," she says. "I can't tell you the last video I saw where a black woman had a job, and that's really more our experience than black women being strippers."
More is on the way -- the Playboy network started their "Buckwild" show this year and plans to start a block of hip-hop programming called "H.Y.P.E" later this year, as a precursor for a network of the same name.
Artists have made videos for sexually explicit songs for years. Why are the videos finally catching up?
"People want more. The sex is definitely in the music, and sex is in all aspects in the music," says Campbell.
R&B hitmaker Usher, who counts himself as a viewer, admits it's a guilty pleasure: "You're kind of in the wrong for even watching it."
"Then what's crazy about it, after it's off, the inspiration of the day comes on," he says, referring to the BET's block of religious programming, which starts at 4 a.m.
"I guess you've got to get 'prayed up' after watching it," he laughed.