Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Project Ideas

Primarily, I'd like to write a script for a short-format on-line television show. The piece, which is a fantasy about a girl living in a musical world, will be about five minutes long. Along with the script, if adding some techy things is necessary, I'd like to experiment with Wiki or a sort of Graffiti Research Lab. I can see a sort of urban dictionary, but different version, being set up. The Graffiti thing will include other people's "soundtracks" of their lives, or songs that represent milestones of their lives. So a questionaire, or survey, could be a starting template where visitors could follow and contribute their songs as answers.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Put Yo' Stunna Shades On



Since the birth of the Hyphy movement, Southern California has yet to come up with a creative answer to the popular Nor Cal rap genre. Ghost riding the whip, making that thizz face, and going stupid are only a few examples of the trendy lingo several Bay Area rappers are popularizing through the music.

Off the top of my head, I can think of one kind of rap movement that was highly commercialized by So Cal artists: gangsta rap. I'm not a big fan of it, but I do remember growing up and listening to it on the radio. As far as "shaking them dreads" (violently moving your head so that your dread locks fly free) or "showing your grillz" (flossing those fronts or caps), gangsta rap encouraged no such fashion trends--except maybe a glock, an AK, a gat, or any combination of those.

All in all, take "California Love" for example, when Tupac had no idea there was going to be a separation of state, so to speak. Back then, it was an east coast/west coast rivalry, and Cali was unified more as a whole. That may happen with the hyphy movement, too, as you can see from my So Cal friends joining in the stunna shade fun. Though, I can't help but feel sometimes they may be mocking it more than feeling it.