Left Turn - Notes from the Global Intifada (original) (raw)

A Review of I MIX WHAT I LIKE! A MIXTAPE MANIFESTO by Jared Ball
AK Press, 2011

_“The ability to determine which forms of cultural expression are widely disseminated and which are not is purely ideological and serves a colonizing purpose”_- Jared Ball, I Mix What I Like!: A Mixtape Manifesto

I have a confession. I’ve most likely seen every episode, reunion and thrown down of Love & Hip-Hop. Critical consciousness intact, I sit guilty and mesmerized by one solid hour of television dedicated to black women man chasing, trash talking and fist fighting. For months I’ve tried to analyze what it could be about me, my homies, and apparently a large segment of the nation that, though we know it is wrong, can’t seem to look away. Many of us use a train wreck analogy to justify our attraction to such a rachet show: I can’t look away because I want to see how bad it gets.

However we justify it to ourselves, most of us rely on personal responsibility and question ourselves: why do I have this sick obsession? But, I began to notice Love & Hip-Hop and the weave-pulling drama that goes with it, is always on the air—morning, after school, nighttime, and that’s not even the marathons. If one is to turn on VH1, Love& Hip-Hop is what’s on. The other music channels are not much better.

Jared Ball’s I Mix What I Like!: A Mixtape Manifesto properly places Black America as a colonized people within a nation, and therefore recognizes a colonized hip-hop nation within this colony.