If one more white person says URBAN instead of BLACK.....
edulus
421 Posts
I'm a gonna do nothing, but SERIOUSLY? Stop trying to hide behind your linguistical shield. Say what you mean. Because this is what URBAN looks like now:
/Pet Peeves
/Pet Peeves
Comments
http://newblackman.blogspot.com/2012/06/saturday-edition-keeping-up-appearances.html
"Blackamerican"
Several years ago, I saw a book that was a thesaurus aimed at lawyers/advocates, and the whole thing was just a hundred pages of two columns: Words to Use If You Want To Make It Sound Good, and Words To Use If You Want To Make It Sound Bad. Want to make a wild neighborhood sound bad? "Crime-ridden." Want to make a wild neighborhood sound good? "Vibrant."
It was both tragicomic and edutaining.
Title please.
Advocacy Words: A Thesaurus.The same dude has a book called Lay Words For Lawyers that is horse-smackingly ill-conceived and more than a little racist (it is also notable--well "notable"--for referencing Ross Hogg mixtape favorite Roxette).
I didn't know that Urban was used other than in Billboard and music industry insiders to mean Black. There is a lot I don't know.
Billboard has a long history of struggling with this.
It was considered a big win against racism when Race was replaced with R&B in the Billboard Charts.
Then came Soul, then Urban.
There was also a brief period of time in the early 60s when there was no R&B charts, just the pop chart.
This was good for big stars like Ray Charles, but hurt stars with less crossover.
I think, at the time, the goal with Urban was to say, this is not Black music, it is music that urban people like, as opposed to Country which country people like.
tiny - cozy
dirt pile in the basement - rustic
raccoons living in the roof - countryside setting
Has charatcer - dilapidated
A few years back I was watching a Jurassic 5 performance (don't judge) on whatever BET's prime-time show was at the time, and in the little interview afterwards, the host just straight up asked, "So--what are you guys' racial backgrounds?" and went down the line, to the mortification of the group and viewers alike. The DJs were, of course, last, and there was palpable discomfort as neither dude seemed to relish the prospect of using the title by which his particular demographic is most widely known: "I'm, uh, Scots-Irish" and "I'm, uh, Persian." There was a horrible half-second flicker of a confused look where it looked like the obtuse-as-fuck host was gonna go in on some "Hmm, okay...now where is that, exactly?" but to the relief of all, dude just moved on.
Boondocks ??? Green Belt
Suburbs ??? Bedroom Community
White Trash ??? Country Folk
Redneck ??? Southerner
when i was buying a house i actually dropped the first realtor i was using, an "acquanitance" of mine, because he used the term "urban pioneer" when i told him the neighborhood i wanted to look in.
Racist-realtor-redlining-bullshit related.
They should have all made up fake ethnicities. I guess back then, Persian was about as much anyway lol
Hillbilly - Son of the Soil, Hillwilliam
haha
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_Urban_Music
Bush was referred to this way all the time, not sure why you think it's anything new.
add to the lexicon the ever-changing termS used for aboriginal people and 'new members' of western society. ive had people admit to me that they avoid talking to ENTIRE groups of people NOT because of hate, but out of fear of what to adress them as without offense.
Use of the term 'POTUS' goes back at least to FDR, if not further. It crept into the public vernacular during the Clinton years, though I don't remember hearing it used widely until GWB.
Urbane + black= blaque?
Nice. But then there's this:
Blaque
I was thinking more of Taurean Blaque from Hill Street Blues.
Played 'Washington' iirc.
Or was Washington the black dude in Kotter?
Maybe both.
And then there's Denzel Washington.
Stereotypical tv n film black dude naming convention REVEALED
Amazing
I don't doubt you, I've certainly seen it in print for quite a while, but never heard it pronounced w/r/t Clinton or Bush, and then heard it all the time with Obama. Probably just a Baader-Meinhof phenomenon on my end.