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Quiz: Jay-Z is to Rush Limbaugh as Eminem is to ...?
October 1, 2009 12:45 AM

This article in the NY Times comparing rap music with right-wing talk radio is nothing short of brilliant!

If you're driving alone through the plains of Nebraska and need a little company, you can't do better than the nationally syndicated maestros of political talk radio. Hour after hour, rant after rant, it is a feast of words and feverish emotion, interrupted only by regular commercials and the occasional call from the awe-struck fan. But as soon as you dig beneath the surface, the similarities between talk radio and gangsta rap are nothing short of uncanny.

Yes, there are actual parallels between Jay-Z and Rush Limbaugh!

Examples abound:

EGO Extolling your greatness is nearly as crucial to rap as it is to talk radio. One consistent theme of Jay-Z's lyrics is the genius of Jay-Z's lyrics. He claims a charisma that is almost mystical and skills on the mic that make him the "Mike Jordan of recording," "the Bruce Wayne of the game," a "god."

Rush Limbaugh peppers his show with self-adulating incantations that would seem right at home on a Snoop Dogg track, calling himself "Chief Waga-Waga El Rushbo of the El Conservo Tribe," "doctor of democracy," and "a weapon of mass instruction." Both he and Jay-Z have referred to themselves as "a living legend."

HATERS You're nobody in hip-hop until you claim to have hordes of detractors. The paradox, of course, is that the artists who regularly denounce their haters have a huge and adoring audience. How does Lil Wayne complain in song about the legions who seek his ruin even as he dominates the charts? Ask Michael Savage, who is forever describing himself as an underdog, marginalized by the media -- on the more than 300 stations that carry his show.

FEUDS 50 Cent vs. Ja Rule. Lil' Kim vs. Foxy Brown. Jay-Z vs. Nas. Every couple of years, one rapper will pick a fight with another and battle it out with the winner typically determined by sales. This will sound familiar to anyone who has followed, say, Bill O'Reilly's broadsides at Mr. Limbaugh ("Walk away from these right-wing liars!" Mr. O'Reilly said of an unnamed rival, described as someone who smokes a cigar and owns a private jet) or Mark Levin's attack on Mr. O'Reilly. ("He has a fledgling radio show, that has no ratings," Mr. Levin said in 2008, "and he'll be off radio soon because he's a failure." Levin's predication came true in January of this year.) Liberal ranters can partake, too, as MSNBC host and fulminator par excellence Keith Olbermann has proven with his long running O'Reilly spat.

VERBAL SKILLS Without them, you can't rap and you'll never make it as a talk radio opinion-machine. Free-style rap requires precisely the facility with words that it takes to free-associate for two or three hours a day. Forget, for a moment, what the Fox TV and radio gabber Glenn Beck is saying and marvel for a moment at how long he can say it -- and how sharp and funny he can be. In a recent and genuinely hilarious bit, he lampooned the sleepiness of NPR talk shows by affecting a plummy British accent and repeatedly urging a caller -- a member of his coterie in actual fact -- to "please use your indoor voice," though the caller was talking at a perfectly reasonable volume.

The comparison goes on and on:

Even beyond simple matters of style, rap and conservative talk radio share some DNA. Once you subtract gangsta rap's enthusiasm for lawlessness -- a major subtraction, to be sure -- rap is among the most conservative genres of pop music. It exalts capitalism and entrepreneurship with a brio that is typically considered Republican. (Admiring references to Bill Gates are common in hip-hop.)

Rappers tend to be fans of the Second Amendment, though they rarely frame their affection for guns in constitutional terms. And rap has an opinion about human nature that is deeply conservative -- namely, that criminals cannot be reformed. The difference is that gangsta rappers often identify themselves as the criminals, and are proud of their unreformability.

Finally, rappers and conservative talkers both speak for a demographic that believes its interests and problems have been slighted and both offer stories that have allegedly been ignored.

It's actually quite amazing when you start comparing the two worlds, although the author left out one big, big difference: right-wing talk show hosts influence how millions of citizens vote...which ends up deciding how the pile of tax-payers' money sent to Washington is ultimately split up.

The rap artists? Their audience consists of kids who don't vote.

Finally, the answer to our quiz (found in the article): Jay-Z is to Rush Limbaugh as Eminem is to ...Michael Savage!

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