The author managed to state many truths, but I felt the article was too long for her purpose. While some of references were helpful in making her point, they became redundant, too drawn out and at times, irrelevant. It’s not too challenging for writers to instill a realization about the impact of Black language and Rap music. Her initial examples were interesting, but later I found myself skimming the text and having to go back and read properly. The explanation on how pop language renews our culture and how the popularity of Rap has been adopted as some notion of “fighting the power”, I found laughable. The experience I have with language, be it Black language, catch phrases or corporate-speak is usually an attempt to assimilate and impress, not to rebel. Other times, her essay was redeemed by simply stating how the language has shaped culture through the sensibilities of various genres of music. She was able to express how the Black language and culture was considered in years past while avoiding an overt racial impression.
The more interesting part of the essay was how the Black language was extracted and disseminated for commercial purposes. It was the second read that I associated this content with my own interest in subject matter such as womb-to-the-grave marketing and pacification through consumerism. Considering the price of a BMW, a bottle of Sprite or a life-saving drug and how much of that price is due to the cost of market