3. Because I Got High
Ms. Jackson.
My Name Isโฆ Ignition.
There are many low-angled, close up shots in hip hop videos, to imply
the artistsโ power over their audience. The low angle gives them the
power, because they look down on the audience and the close up gives
status because it implies theyโre important enough to have a frame to
themselves.
4. In In Da Club, there are many two shots of 50 Cent performing, whilst a
woman stands irrelevantly next to him. There are four of these in the
space of one minute, which are used to indicate how appealing and
desired 50 Cent is, something which is meant to suggest status.
This also represents women as irrelevant and meaningless., as he
dismisses each one within seconds.
5. Jay and Silent Bob dancing in time
People in In Da Club dancing in to the music in Because I Got
time to the music. High.
In hip hop music videos, a crowd is usually shown dancing or
bouncing their arms in time to the beat of the song. This makes them
look as if they are actually dancing to the song, which implies that
they like the song. This gives credibility to the song/artist, because it
shows that people do like the song, which makes it easier for the
audience to like the song.
6. The clothing is generally basketball shirts or other sporting attire, to
signify strength and sporting prowess, something supported by
physical workouts in music videos. Display of
physical
strength in
Basketball In Da Club
shirt in
Ignition.
Sport
jerseys worn
in In Da Club
and Ms.
Jackson.
7. Expensive jewellery in R Kellyโs Ignition and 50 Centโs In
Da Club.
There are lots of
references to the
wealth of the
artist through the
use of mise-en-
scene (money,
cars, jewellery
etc.). Expensive
things signify
wealth, which
supposedly
signifies status.
Expensive car and a stack of money
in Nicki Minajโs Superbass
8. It Wasnโt Me. In Da Club
Ms. Jackson. Stan. The Real Slim Shady
There tend to be lots of males in hip hop videos. The men are often featured
with their โposseโ to signify power, as there is strength in numbers. It also
shows he is โpart of the groupโ ie. not a loner or social outcast, something
again which signifies status.
9. Nicki Minaj showing how fierce and
empowering she is by turning herself into
a sex object in Superbass. The men may
be sitting down as opposed to the women
standing, but they clearly are the
dominants as they do not have to do
anything, or move, something associated
with status and power.
Shaggy is shown as the dominant in
this shot, as he is in the centre of the
frame. The women are wearing
revealing clothing, which also shows
them as just sex objects to Shaggy.
Men have all the power in every media text ever made ever hip hop
videos. Women are shown as disposable, interchangeable and as objects
of lust and nothing more.
10. In Speakers Going Hammer by Soulja Boy, white suburban America is
depicted as โblack and whiteโ, which signifies it being old-fasioned and
outdated. When Soulja Boy arrives with his other black friends, the
whole scene turns into colour, inferring that they are new and up-to-
date, and are what society need to be fresh. He uses binary
oppositions to mock white suburban America.
11. Eminem mocks societal practise in his videos. In Without Me, he
mocks the hypodermic needle by having โRap Manโ โsave โa boy
listening to his CD, because it says โparental advisoryโ on it. He
overdramatisises it to mock it, because it makes it seem ridiculous.
12. In Da Club. Superbass.
Ignition. Special mention to the Because I Got High.
bald guy getting his head rubbed.
Because itโs hilarious.
However, the general message nowadays in hip videos is: letโs go
out, go to a party, get drunk/high/whatever and have lots of sex.
14. โHe always in the air but he never
fly coachโ. Lovely grammar.
Superbass โ Nicki Minaj. โThey say itโs puppy loveโ. Ms Jackson โ
Outkast.
In hip hop videos, there is usually some link between the music and lyrics. In
most, it is as simple as showing an object they are referring to. This is
because narrative is not a huge thing in hip hop videos, so the need for
these objects to appear links the video to the song. This needs to happen
because otherwise the video is seen as irrelevant.
16. There is rain in the track at the In many videos, including In Da Club
beginning and final part of the Stan, and (above), Ignition and Superbass, the
this is matched in the video by showing bouncing and dancing is edited to fit
pouring rain. Here, the music/visuals in with the time of the beat. In these
link, as well as the rain in the track, are instances, this makes it appear that
used to represent the stormy time the the people are actually listening to it
protagonist, Stan, is going through. in the video.
18. There are many, many close ups in hip hop videos. These are useful
for establishing the artist, but they also establish the โpowerโ or
importance of the artist, because they take up a lot of the frame.
19. In hip hop, it is status
quo for artists to work
together and promote
each others work (eg. G
Unit). Dr. Dre helped
launch Eminemโs career,
so he features in many
of Eminemโs videos.
The Real Slim Shady My Name Isโฆ
My Name Isโฆ The Real Slim Shady. Some artists have
running themes
throughout their songs,
which are reflected in
their videos. Eminemโs
songs have a running
theme of mental health,
so he reflects it in his
videos.
21. Looking through a TV
in these cases (It
Wasnโt Me/Because I
Got High) shows the
artist to have โmade
itโ, that they are
โstarsโ, because they
are on the TV
(Afroman is in the Looking through the TV
van). In todayโs in Stan fits the narrative
culture, being on TV of the song, to show
makes you โStanโ hero-worshipping
supposedly famous. Eminem.
Eminem watching 50 Cent in In Da
Club can be seen as (surprisingly)
meaningful. It could give the
message that somebody is always
watching; that there is no privacy
any more.
22. Voyeurism is used extensively in hip hop videos, because the general
audience for hip hop is male, so applying the Male Gaze theory to videos
ensures they keep viewers and attract new people into their audience.
24. Jay and Silent Bob in Jay and Silent Bob in Jay and Silent Bobโs
Afromanโs Because I Got Dogma. original appearance
High. in Clerks.
For lesser known artists, such as Afroman and (at the time) 50
Cent, intertextuality is used to give the artist some reputation
and to attract fans of these things to their music.
Eminem in 50 Centโs In Da
Club. In 2003, when the
song came out, 50 Cent
was relatively unknown in
mainstream music.
25. Eminem in Just Lose It Michael Jackson in Billie Jean
Michael Jackson isnโt
wearing the same outfit as
Eminem here, but
Eminemโs outfit instantly
signifies Michael Jackson,
as he has recreated
Michael Jacksonโs most
famous outfits.
Intertextuality can
also be used by
more established
artists to create
humour. It is often
used to parody,
something
Eminem achieves
โThe Shady Bunchโ The Brady Bunch. in both lyrics and
From My Name Is. video.