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Current News
New Documentary, Campaign Ask Youth To Critically Examine Hip Hop
Culture
By Patrick Harris
Feb 19, 2007, 08:19

 

Hurt is a former college quarterback turned activist who decided to make
a film about the gender politics of the music he grew up with.

WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif.

In his new documentary, "Hip-Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes", Byron Hunt
presents images, samples and interviews that he hopes will expose and
take apart the structures of violence, hyper-aggression and misogyny
present in much of today's hip-hop.

 

Produced by Stanley Nelson, known for such documentaries as "Marcus
Garvey: Look for Me in the Whirlwind," the 60-minute film is scheduled
to air nationally on the PBS Series "Independent Lens" on Tuesday,
February 20.

 

"I was doing a lot of work, spent a lot of years mentoring boys and
young men about sexism and men's violence against women and masculine
identity and I had to find the right outlet to get us men to take a hard
look at ourselves," Hunt says while describing the inspiration for
creating the film.

 

In the process of making the film, Hunt interviews a variety of
scholars, hip-hop historians and a number of male rappers - including
Public Enemy's Chuck D, Talib Kweli, Mos Def and Busta Rhymes. 

 

While the film is not a crusade to change the face of the mainstream
music industry, Hunt says he hopes that the film will inspire viewers to
open their minds and be self-reflective. "It's up to us as consumers to
challenge some of the representations of masculinity that we see in
American culture," he says. "We have to start saying, 'I don't buy into
this idea that a man is supposed to be violent or sexist or
homophobic.'"

 

"Beyond Beats and Rhymes" has a very strong activist component. Hunt
says he would like it to become an educational tool - there is a
curriculum to be taught in conjunction with the documentary and he is
currently hosting screenings at colleges across the nation. 

 

Colleges, he says, are important places to show the film - important
because "that's one place where young people are engaging in critical
thinking. They're there to push their own consciousness, and I think
that's a really great place for change to begin." Hunt also plans to use
the film in prisons and juvenile detention centers, where he says many
young men have bought into societal views of masculinity.

 

But most importantly, he says, he wants to reach as many people as
possible through the film. "PBS has a certain demographic, but I also
want to reach the people I'm making the film for, and that's young
people inside the hip-hop generation, particularly young males." 

 

The national broadcast of the film will be supported by a comprehensive
national Community Engagement Campaign, which is designed to educate
both young consumers and media makers about the issues of gender, race
and community values. The overarching goals of the campaign is to create
a national conversation using hip-hop as a focal point to address
violent, materialistic and sexually explicit facets of American culture.


 

For more information on the film and about the campaign, visit 
http://www.itvs.org/outreach/hiphop/

 

--Patrick Harris

 

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