Summary Of Hip Hop Planet

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I have read your text on “Hip Hop Planet”, and the subject of this is to start embracing hip hop instead of avoiding it. Mr. McBride, I understand that you wrote this essay explaining your personal experience with the hip hop world. You spoke about how you have missed the cultural change of hip hop throughout the world. Hip hop has dramatically impacted the world, and changed the culture of many people. Hip hop is unique from other genres of music, it can stand on its own with or without the support of certain people. In your essay, you have stated that you live in a “hip-hop planet”, that the world is no longer yours and you have to live in it. I personally agree with this. Mr. McBride, you claim that “This defiant culture of song, graffiti, and dance, collectively known as hip …show more content…

It is much more unique from different genres of music, which include more of music, hype, class, and etc. Whereas hip hop is more classified as its own on every topic such as its own dance. For example, country music has square dancing, while hip hop has breakdancing. Hip hop has taken over other genres of music, and removed their popularity. Everywhere I go, hip hop music is usually playing. From the mall, the radio, many advertisements, and etc. According to you, “To many of my generation, despite all attempts to exploit it, belittle it, numb it, classify it, and analyze it, hip-hop remains an enigma, a clarion call, a cry of “I am” from the youth of the world.” (paragraph 8). I also believe that hip hop illustrates how people are from the newer generations. In my school, most people listen to hip hop. It can easily be seen as one of the most influential genres of music. At my school, hip hop has influenced the way people act and dress. I can easily sort out the people who listen to hip hop and who does not. Those people who are not into hip hop are more mature, and influenced by the other genres of

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