Diary Of A Mad Blogger…

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Editor’s note: RAFI KAM is a crucial part of the iNternets Celebrities collective as well as the driving force behind one of the web’s most highly regarded Hip-Hop blogs, Oh Word. I chose to copy a drop from his site today because speaks to me about understanding, and RESPECTING one’s value. It’s easy to get beat up by the machine to the point where you look to join up with your abusers. RAFI says no to the Stockholm Syndrome and busts back with his own gun. This man’s uzi weighs a ton.


into the devil’s nest
· by Rafi Kam

Busta Rhymes has some kind of tirade at his listening session. Complex magazine reports on it but then pulls the audio “at the request of Interscope Records”.

Wait, you can’t properly cover the listening session you were invited to report on? Interscope doesn’t own that audio. Grow a fucking sack, Complex! I thought you’re supposed to be a big deal now? Look around, nobody’s selling records. Are you sure you still need Interscope more than they need you?

So I search out the audio elsewhere online. Some maverick operation must have it right. Ah, there it is on world star hiphop. I’m listening to busta spit some high energy nonsense as if it’s 1996 again, and then all of the sudden I hear in the middle of the clip “WorldStarHipHop.com”. EXCLUSIVE! WORLD PREMIERE! Evil Dee is on the mix – come on kick it!

See, this is why we can’t have nice things.

You want to know who’s holding down hip-hop journalism these days?

Don’t look over here to us or to any of the places in our blogroll. We got day jobs and we’re mostly in it for the groupies. Forget the magazine stands, the Complex/Rawkus/Harris Pub/Viacom/Quincy Jones conglomerates. The SOHH whats and AllHipHops… Forget all those page-view pushers, what the fuck are they good for?

The place holding down hip-hop journalism right now isn’t the Smoking Section… it’s The Smoking Gun. In the span of three weeks, the Smoking Gun has dropped the two craziest hip-hop stories of the year. First they exposed the shoddy journalism of the LA Times and how a con-man served as the source for the paper’s controversial Tupac story. Now they’ve exposed the phony, “notorious” back-story of Akon.

Hip-hop journalism? No such thing. No one is doing their due diligence out there. We got pundits, publicist lackeys, gossips, posers… How about a fucking journalist? Can we make room for just a few of those?

Or is the problem that any number of incestuous media sources would have had to kill that story since Akon’s Konvict Muzik is distributed under Interscope?

Speaking of all this shit, did you know that someone at the LA Times was incubating a multi-authored hip-hop blog?

Not sure whether this was a mission from above or just some maverick Times staffer trying to show what they could do. But they had reached out to some quality hip-hop bloggers like Robbie, Brandon and Doc Zeus. They had this publicly accessible blogspot site (I swear to god, with the damn black background) that was supposed to be secret while they tested out the operation with multiple posts going up week after week.

But then you also had blog contributor Slav Kandyba dropping a link or two to the test site. I’m not sure if that’s how the search engines and LA Observed found the blog but find it they did… Just in time to catch a post by one of the LA Times Beatbox bloggers, with a ton of bravado, claiming his allegiance to his “colleague” Chuck Phillips and attacking Sean Combs for his response to the Tupac story.

As per the LA Observed quote, the blog post shockingly read “You might be a smooth criminal, but when you pick on the media, you pick into the devil’s nest and you will get stung.”

So the cat was now out of the bag on the LATimes Beatbox, and here was this lone blogger on it, defiantly gung-ho about the right of him and his colleagues to spread lies without fear of reprisal. Bear in mind, this is already days after the LA Times has retracted their Tupac story, having been disgraced by the Smoking Gun expose. Now a blog with their name on it is saying “step off Diddy, we are the all-powerful media!” Naturally the Beatbox demo blog was obliterated that very same day and we’d have to assume the idea of an LA Times hip-hop blog along with it and, if the world makes sense, perhaps someone’s job as well?

The craziest part to me is that these would-be LA Times bloggers weren’t offered a dime for their words. For some, the supposed legitimacy of the LA Times name on their resume or maybe the idea that they’d get more exposure was the motivating factor. For others, it may be enough to belong to a powerful, infallible, and vengeful crew known as the media.

But I can’t get over the fact that these smart, successful bloggers were sort of rehearsing for an non-paying job for a commercial newspaper. As I said to Robbie (who backed out of the arrangement early), the LA Times doesn’t give him any added exposure over Unkut. When it comes to hip-hop, Unkut is super-credible… and what is the LA Times? Just a desperate print newspaper.

The gang mentality on display in that now vanished blog post is nonsensical but also horribly outdated. What does it mean “don’t mess with the media” when we are all the media? When The Smoking Gun is trouncing big media and hip-hop media alike?

There’s no fair exchange in a good blogger getting exploited by a commercial website or print publication. Most of these operations you think are powerful, are actually in a bad way. Ask yourself, are they creating any value in this world? Or do you legitimize them, instead of the other way around. You might find ultimately that you hold all the power, what then are you going to do with it?

12 Responses to “Diary Of A Mad Blogger…”

  1. evan says:

    Rafi : I completely dig your sentiments and we know it boils down to one word…access. Traditional media is scared shitless that their access to “newsmakers” is eroding because of alternative press like bloggers showing more heart and hustle in producing a good story. Everyone that has aspirations of journalism can audition themselves and test the waters to see what kind of story they can produce.

    The newspapers and magazines are gonna come calling, real hard, in the next few years for bloggers to take what was formerly a credible position at their publication. Money’s going to make the difference for a lot of people, but I’m sticking with the ascent and not the dude with a few fingers barely holding onto a ledge.

  2. Peacenice & Th eJawz tear up human flesh and vocal chords in “TTT” the destroyer and “The Meal Song”!

    http://myspace.com/branchout

  3. thoreauly77 says:

    yikes rafi. excellent piece. the funny thing is that the blogging format does allow for exceptions in the delivery of content; for example, the LA blogger’s self-righteousness is entirely acceptable in the context of a blog, but not in the context of print (except in some cases an editorial i suppose). i think the problem is that the guy was just a dick about it and the covert way they went about it stinks of cowardice. anyhow, great piece.

  4. CeezDiem says:

    DP, you put down the wrong address for the Animazing Gallery. Its was 461, not 416.

  5. 40 says:

    Great read Rafi…

    Whats interesting is that the press is suffering from the same aspects the music industry is suffering from. Which is that they are losing their means of production to the masses. The control of information was as much the distribution of it as well as the censoring of it by the corporate heads. With the ever decreasing levels of print media (not just read but music and movies can fall under this as well), these execs rested on their expiring model that they thought was infallible. So I find it interesting when corporate media entities join forces (in this case Interscope and whoever prints Complex) to regulate the flow of information.

    I’m glad you brought up the Chuck Phillips scandal, it almost gives credence to Alicia Keyes riff about the media causing the deaths of Tupac and Biggie when stories like this can come out unchecked from the second largest media market in the US and one of the tops in the world. But then again as I learned this season on “The Wire” sometimes people will cook up stories to keep their jobs, and papers will run with it to keep their circulation up.

    Are bloggers the answer to the new form of information? Not totally but they do provide a piece of the story that hopefully contributes to the overall truth of an event or issue.

  6. Marvelous Mo says:

    You have a bunch of people out there articulate enough who are willing to find out information on their own instead of believing what desperate news papers dish out for a story. Most of the time bloggers have nothing to lose, so to air out the truth is a challege worth tackling.

    [serious] Bloggers are the future. Take those doors off the hinges, don’t wait for them to open.

  7. the_dallas says:

    The problem I have with rap shit is there is no space for honest criticism. I get called a player hater for telling people someones wack raps suck ass. What art does not embrace debate and criticism?

    I understand that we have to support the kids and their crayon drawings and their macaroni glue portraits, but when a grown man(16yrs +) makes shitty art we shouldn’t be patting him on his back.

    No matter how popular his shitty art is.

    The second half of this drop is razr sharp rafi. He reminded me that I shouldn’t write for free on several occasions. When the time comes that we start to actualize and merge our varied blog sites and their communities is when we will have our power.

    In the meantime and in between time why not join the DP dot com snail mail list. You get free shit.

  8. “The second half of this drop is razr sharp rafi. He reminded me that I shouldn’t write for free on several occasions. When the time comes that we start to actualize and merge our varied blog sites and their communities is when we will have our power.”

    Very interesting point.

  9. Jay Smooth says:

    Hey wait a minute.. where is my credit for inspiring this whole post!!? lol

  10. Jay Smooth says:

    the post is dope, BTW

  11. Slav Kandyba says:

    Hip-Hop is still a joke to most in the mainstream media and Hip-Hop bloggers are the biggest clowns in Hip-Hop. You waste cyberspace. I blog to pass the time while actually getting informed about the world I live from the LA Times, the Washington Post, the New York Times. Americans are dumbed down and pathetic, middle-aged hacks like all of you are part of the problem. Where’s the solution?

  12. 911 says:

    ^^I’m offended on behalf of the idiots you’re referring. Seeing how I like to be informed myself, I associate with a few idiots and they told me “we don’t fuck with him, that motherfucker stupid”…I’m saying. By the way I’m a college student who has been around the world twice {according to my passport} and prolly’ half or even a third the age of the average consumer of said magazines, but equal in stature.

    Whats it all mean NOTHING! Everything is up for debate, {aside from what those idiots told me}such is the life in the states…I wouldn’t have it any other way. You question to learn, no?

    I’ll let you tell it. You seem to be a beacon of knowledge.

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