Quote:
Originally Posted by Dien Rice
I wanna know! Please spill the beans...! 
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Thanks Dien
1.
Todays extreme is tomorrows mainstream.
As Chartreuse says: "you must understand the extremes if you want to understand the future because that’s where the middle (the mainstream) comes from."
2.
While Eminem and 50 Cent have earned the most out of Rap / Hip Hop - its influence could be seen well before they came to the scene.
Tupac has been rapping since 1991.
Wu Tang Clan started in 1993. (They have a fascinating story of how they banded together to become famous and conquer the hip hop market.)
But in the 1990s - only a select niche listened to Hip Hop. Most of these artists as well as listeners were African American.
In the 1990s, Hip Hop was the extreme. In 2000 - it became the mainstream.
3.
“Every generation needs a new revolution.” - Thomas Jefferson
How could the white kids rebel?
Kids started wearing baggy pants and listening to Hip Hop. It started out as a form of rebellion. (Rebellion to what? Read a bit below...)
Chuck Berry and Elvis Presley have become Tupac Shakur and Eminem, and the Baby Boomers' reaction to them is much like their own parents' reaction to Chuck and Elvis. But instead of saying, "Take a bath, cut your hair and get a job," we're saying, "Pull those pants up, spin that cap around and wash your mouth out with soap." - Roy H. Williams
A point is to be made about "Peer Pressure." Most kids didn't understand Hip Hop. But still liked it. Why? Because their friends liked it.
Every big phenomena has only a handful trend setters. While most are trend followers. Its the same with Hip Hop too.
4.
But if rebellion was all it was, Hip Hop would have been a fad. It isn't. The reason for that?
The trend setters loved Hip Hop for what it conveyed and what it stood for. In one phrase:
Down with fakery.
In one word, they craved:
Authenticity.
The revolt was against years of accumulated hype. Against perfectionism.
"I'm stupid, I'm ugly, I'm dumb, I smell. Did I mention I'm stupid?" - Eminem
Do you now understand why "Be Real" has been the Hip Hop mantra?
This rebellion against hype can be seen in other arenas too. Roy H. Williams said it best in a workshop I attended:
Yesterdays James Bond is todays Jason Bourne.
James Bond was always dressed perfect and rode the hottest car with the best gadgets. Jason Bourne? Has amnesia. Rides banged up cars he stole. Has no super weapon.
The last James Bond movie didn't do as well as it used to do 10 years ago. The last Jason Bourne movie?
It may have started out with Hip Hop and kids. But the whole world is revolting against perfectionism. Give us authenticity instead.
Action Summary:
Its ok to have faults and reveal them.
If you want the world to like you and buy from you, be authentic*. Be yourself. Don't sugarcoat your faults (instead - try fixing them). Be real.
* Don't fake it. Remember Janet Jackson. Her stunt blew up in her face not because she showed a boob on TV. But because she faked it and was found out.