1.) R.I.P. to Eric B.'s daughter, Erica. 2.) Rap music caused so much friction in homes during the 1980s & early 1990s, especially with the emergence of "gangsta rap". Most rap songs, up to that point, were either conscious or misogynistic (2 Live Crew, I'm 👀 at you). 3.) As a fan, I do believe it's the best music genre to come from the 20th century! Jazz is second.
@Chandros Evans I won't call you a racist or anything because I understand and respect your opinion. I am a black girl and I am attracted to white men so I just felt offended by your comment
@Chandros Evans it's pretty ridiculous to generalize all interracial relationships involving white men and black women don't you think? Yet, judging from your comment you'd probably pop a blood vessel if the same were said about the reverse. Anyway, I was only complimenting her beauty and this was not the place for you to insert your bitterness and negativity.
Chandros Evans so it’s a problem when black girls date white guys but when black guys date white women it’s ok. We see you sexism sir, that and your controlling behavior
So what? Isn't that what the shows about? That in the end it doesn't matter which shade of brown you are if you grow up in society that stigmatizes all of them. And that mixed and whatever is but a concept created by white suppressors in the first place.
nini the little girl who plays Santa Monica is actually black she just has colored eyes like my 2 cousins my older cousin she was born with green eyes and light brown hair and her younger brother who is my cousin was born with blue eyes and blonde hair and both of their parents are black my aunt is brown skin with brown eyes and their father is brown skin with blue eyes and the middle child my cousin their sister has black hair and brown eyes all 3 of them have the same mother and father black comes in all shades and we all have different eye colors to
Why folks think rap is bad. It's just music. Music hasn't harm this country one bit. Folks are too judgemental. Most rappers have families and own businesses and give to charities and schools.
People need to stop judging rappers on the music and judge them by their character. Music doesn't cause society to fall our inability to act during struggle will lead to our downfall
@@Oliviagarry69420 Well, Pete Townshend is good or rather, great as a guitarist and a songwriter, but as a judge of other music, he can be quite iffy. For instance, he didn't like Led Zeppelin much, regardless of which album it was, and was quite jealous of their success. He said that Zeppelin copied the Who, but that is upon a close listen to their oeuvres, an extreme allegation. Zep ripped off a bunch of artists, but they made the songs extraordinary, and I ain't sure about them ripping off the Who.
Back then the white people in power and the media tried to called it evil because of where it originated from the black neighborhoods. Rock music wasn't seen that way although alot of violence happened at the concerts
That's not true, when rock and metal first emerged it created a very large controversy, especially in the 80s and 90s. People like Ozzy Osbourne were often attacked by the mainstream media back then. In the 90s, Marilyn Manson was one of the most attacked public figures, and was even being blamed for Columbine. Even Metallica was attacked by boomers blaming teen suicides on their songs like Fade to Black. ua-cam.com/video/YrCJ4cGNVb0/v-deo.html
Watching a 2010’s show that takes place in the 1980’s is like seeing a caricature. That certain things that are off that this suu hi pa doesn’t get right.
Yeah it's difficult for some shows to get certain details right, oftentimes because the budget only allows for certain things, but sometimes because not enough research has been done
Not really, you would think that but these were the old-school hippies who were in their late teens, early adulthood in the 60s before hip-hop was even a genre which really started off in the 70s so they would be quite surprised at the time hip-hop was popularised by Sugar Hill Gang from 1979 and other artists and then the 80s blew up with the likes of Eric B. & Rakim, Public Enemy, Boogie Down Productions, LL Cool J, Big Daddy Kane all who were part of the Golden age of hip-hop which made fantastic rap music and really showed their lyrical skill and style on the decks, some of the best music I have ever heard and you could dance to it and then things started to turn gangster when it came to groups such as NWA in South Central LA/Compton and the East Coast took more of a grittier sound and more hostile topics were rapped about to do with hardship and making it in difficult socio-economic environments where there is poverty, crime and racism being rapped about as part of the issues that surround them which I respect because it brought a sense of realism to the music, about putting daily experiences, terrible experiences into music especially of living life as a young black person having to go through that (a lot of these rappers were predominately black and spoke from their perspective) and telling the world a story that doesn't usually have a happy ending until they rap about how they have made it out of there and allow their story to inspire others in a similar situation. Once it came to the mid-90s where hip-hop became so commercial, that's when record label executives and the music industry tried to package these artists to a predominately white audience who mainly listened to whatever music was popular in the era as there was a lot of money to be made in the genre and went even more extreme in terms of the type of people they would sign and what music they would have them make, all of a sudden it started becoming about flaunting money, jewellery and women and then that just kept repeating and repeating to the point where there were more rappers doing this but many of them got less and less popular and were more disposable whilst some who did it became big and stayed big such as P. Diddy (who used other talented rappers such as Biggie to propel his success). By the time it got to the 2000s, hip-hop's commercialisation continued and people started hearing less and less lyricism and more visuals for the rich and party lifestyle kept coming, by 2006 hip-hop sales started to decline and this was more due to how the music industry as a whole was because of issues to do with piracy which took money away from record labels and artists and hip-hop was a genre were piracy happened a lot unfortunately. In the 2010s the sound changed to a more new school style with more EDM like production and still rapping about the same topics, the lyricist is less likely to get signed and there are less of them in the mainstream. late 2010's is when mumble rap was founded, the worst sounding, least lyricial version of hip-hop, if it can even call itself that which only talks about ice, froze, lean, women and bands (stacked money) literally with anything else that rhymes in the most basic way with a terrible delivery that is computer synthesized to the point it sounds unrecognisable when the vocals are performed live. How far we have come, evolved a genre to the point where it's worse than when it started, such a shame.
Natalie12768 they couldn’t even come up with a different name it’s weird asf that her name last name was the same as her husband name before they even got married and had kids this proves to you how lazy the writers are
Honestly, i side with the parents- especially in this modern day. Some hip hop and rap was used to get info out about the ghettos and racism. It was used to empower. But now, most popular rappers/artists are minstrels for white people. The whole reclaiming of the n-word has failed significantly and has given even non-american whites and other non black people of color the balls to throw it around willy-nilly(best believe they use it in a derogatory sense too!). 90% of those rappers never gave back to their communities or tried to end gang violence. Once they left the hood, they left their people and tried really hard to make sure that not everyone could be a big rapper or share the wealth. Most of them are misogynistic, most of them disrespect black women and uplift non black women due to self hatred, most of them beat and abuse women, most of them use hard drugs and openly promote it. Honestly, gangsta rap was the beginning to all of this but at least their beats were original and had some slight consciousness. Now a-days, the music and artists are trash 💁🏾
Truth. Hip hop used to tell a story. Now, Its a highly toxic culture that they profit from. They talk about the same thing even when they are in their 40s and 50s. The ones who change and start talking about respecting women instead of violence get a lot of hate.
@@charlesjonessr3684 I don't understand how you can hate an entire genre of music. You're gonna think I sound pretentious when I say this, but I listen to whatever music sounds good, regardless of genre. Rock, blues, pop, hip-hop, rap, etc.
This was explained in an episode of Black-ish-- both families have the last name Johnson. Rainbow got it from her mother Alicia, and Dre got it from his father Earl.
You sound like a young girl. I grew up listening to Erik Rabin and others in the 80's. It was new and white adults as well as black adults with kids didn't understand it or liked it.
Imgine telling your parents there not woke enough and it actually working
Must be nice. Can't relate
Can't relate AT ALL!
Image telling your parents they're wrong in ANY WAY and it actually working.
These guys are exhippies so I guess it works on them. I tried it on my liberal parents but they hit me with "some of my best friends are X"
No parent is ever woke. Awake maybe lol
The youngest daughter is a mess! Lol!
@DONT label me part of your party First of all don't comment something as stupid as this. It wasn't meant as anything bad.
The amount of retards in the comment section who don’t realize she’s joking
Crystal Sherman she’s like a thirty year old woman 🤣🤣😂
@@crystalsherman8896 'The youngest daughter is a mess!'... which part of that 'wasn't meant as anything bad'?
@Hanna Tekie, Ängskolan F-6, 6B I know that. Thank you! Smh!
1.) R.I.P. to Eric B.'s daughter, Erica.
2.) Rap music caused so much friction in homes during the 1980s & early 1990s, especially with the emergence of "gangsta rap". Most rap songs, up to that point, were either conscious or misogynistic (2 Live Crew, I'm 👀 at you).
3.) As a fan, I do believe it's the best music genre to come from the 20th century! Jazz is second.
Jina Koffi she died?
@@sbrooks729: Yeah. Car accident.
@@lewisalvarez2859: You might want to read a thread before commenting. I hope you don't mean Eric's daughter...
@@lewisalvarez2859 Hahaha, that's you.
Tika Sumpter is so gorgeous ❤️.
@Chandros Evans what is wrong with that exactly . She is attracted to white men and how is that an issue
@Chandros Evans I won't call you a racist or anything because I understand and respect your opinion. I am a black girl and I am attracted to white men so I just felt offended by your comment
Didn't even know she was married. Technically, she's not married now, but she was married to Hosea Chanchez from "The Game".
@Chandros Evans it's pretty ridiculous to generalize all interracial relationships involving white men and black women don't you think? Yet, judging from your comment you'd probably pop a blood vessel if the same were said about the reverse. Anyway, I was only complimenting her beauty and this was not the place for you to insert your bitterness and negativity.
Chandros Evans so it’s a problem when black girls date white guys but when black guys date white women it’s ok. We see you sexism sir, that and your controlling behavior
Ironically, Rakim never cursed in his rap.
I know right lolol 🤣🤣🤣
Cussing also is expressing the bad and ugly( real)
Actually he did
ua-cam.com/video/4CZDMIrXi40/v-deo.html
@@JaneDoe-em7zi
ua-cam.com/video/4CZDMIrXi40/v-deo.html
Charles Jones Sr. Several years after his career started.
Rainbow's mother in Black-ish looks like Native American and her mother in this show is darker than her mother in Black-sh.
So what? Isn't that what the shows about? That in the end it doesn't matter which shade of brown you are if you grow up in society that stigmatizes all of them. And that mixed and whatever is but a concept created by white suppressors in the first place.
@@SimonR4y Well everyone looks like the young version of the grown up version in blackish except rainbows mothers.
@@Ur_Majesty_Nala It doesn't matter, Black is Black! And they're being caricatural here
Nzambi black is not black . One girl is mixed and the other person is clearly has more Western African features let's be real
nini the little girl who plays Santa Monica is actually black she just has colored eyes like my 2 cousins my older cousin she was born with green eyes and light brown hair and her younger brother who is my cousin was born with blue eyes and blonde hair and both of their parents are black my aunt is brown skin with brown eyes and their father is brown skin with blue eyes and the middle child my cousin their sister has black hair and brown eyes all 3 of them have the same mother and father black comes in all shades and we all have different eye colors to
Why folks think rap is bad. It's just music. Music hasn't harm this country one bit. Folks are too judgemental. Most rappers have families and own businesses and give to charities and schools.
It's the protest music of Our Generation poetry of the streets.
Preach nigga
They were way worse in the 80s
People need to stop judging rappers on the music and judge them by their character. Music doesn't cause society to fall our inability to act during struggle will lead to our downfall
The one thing I will agree on is that they need to limit the use of the b word
When she said they arent all the same her parents were quiet mine wouldve talked over me and shut me down😤😤
Ironically Pete Townsend (The Who) said that it isn't his generations job to understand rap, they have to shut up and listen.
Jessica Victoria Carrillo ok Pete Townsend is amazing!!
@@Oliviagarry69420 Well, Pete Townshend is good or rather, great as a guitarist and a songwriter, but as a judge of other music, he can be quite iffy. For instance, he didn't like Led Zeppelin much, regardless of which album it was, and was quite jealous of their success. He said that Zeppelin copied the Who, but that is upon a close listen to their oeuvres, an extreme allegation. Zep ripped off a bunch of artists, but they made the songs extraordinary, and I ain't sure about them ripping off the Who.
Salt n Pepa is Sex Positive and carries messages of empowerment. *sniff* I can't believe hip hop made it to the AARP
I swear, sometimes Santa Monica deserves a slap.
Back then the white people in power and the media tried to called it evil because of where it originated from the black neighborhoods. Rock music wasn't seen that way although alot of violence happened at the concerts
That's not true, when rock and metal first emerged it created a very large controversy, especially in the 80s and 90s. People like Ozzy Osbourne were often attacked by the mainstream media back then. In the 90s, Marilyn Manson was one of the most attacked public figures, and was even being blamed for Columbine. Even Metallica was attacked by boomers blaming teen suicides on their songs like Fade to Black.
ua-cam.com/video/YrCJ4cGNVb0/v-deo.html
@@razebeats308 @calm104 OMG I can see that since both weren't "mainstream" that they were labeled as threatening.
Uh, you might wanna check out 1969 for rock concert violence. No no, not Woodstock. Google Altamont. They hired Hell's Angel's for security. Have fun
They called it evil until they learned how to monetize it.
What?! They called rock the devils music both were hated but for different reasons
"That's what happens when you spare the rod."-That was funny and true.
Only your kids can teach you how to be their parent, I love my kids so much and I love the people they are turning into.
Watching a 2010’s show that takes place in the 1980’s is like seeing a caricature. That certain things that are off that this suu hi pa doesn’t get right.
Yeah it's difficult for some shows to get certain details right, oftentimes because the budget only allows for certain things, but sometimes because not enough research has been done
like what
You would think hippies would like hip hop
Not really, you would think that but these were the old-school hippies who were in their late teens, early adulthood in the 60s before hip-hop was even a genre which really started off in the 70s so they would be quite surprised at the time hip-hop was popularised by Sugar Hill Gang from 1979 and other artists and then the 80s blew up with the likes of Eric B. & Rakim, Public Enemy, Boogie Down Productions, LL Cool J, Big Daddy Kane all who were part of the Golden age of hip-hop which made fantastic rap music and really showed their lyrical skill and style on the decks, some of the best music I have ever heard and you could dance to it and then things started to turn gangster when it came to groups such as NWA in South Central LA/Compton and the East Coast took more of a grittier sound and more hostile topics were rapped about to do with hardship and making it in difficult socio-economic environments where there is poverty, crime and racism being rapped about as part of the issues that surround them which I respect because it brought a sense of realism to the music, about putting daily experiences, terrible experiences into music especially of living life as a young black person having to go through that (a lot of these rappers were predominately black and spoke from their perspective) and telling the world a story that doesn't usually have a happy ending until they rap about how they have made it out of there and allow their story to inspire others in a similar situation. Once it came to the mid-90s where hip-hop became so commercial, that's when record label executives and the music industry tried to package these artists to a predominately white audience who mainly listened to whatever music was popular in the era as there was a lot of money to be made in the genre and went even more extreme in terms of the type of people they would sign and what music they would have them make, all of a sudden it started becoming about flaunting money, jewellery and women and then that just kept repeating and repeating to the point where there were more rappers doing this but many of them got less and less popular and were more disposable whilst some who did it became big and stayed big such as P. Diddy (who used other talented rappers such as Biggie to propel his success). By the time it got to the 2000s, hip-hop's commercialisation continued and people started hearing less and less lyricism and more visuals for the rich and party lifestyle kept coming, by 2006 hip-hop sales started to decline and this was more due to how the music industry as a whole was because of issues to do with piracy which took money away from record labels and artists and hip-hop was a genre were piracy happened a lot unfortunately. In the 2010s the sound changed to a more new school style with more EDM like production and still rapping about the same topics, the lyricist is less likely to get signed and there are less of them in the mainstream. late 2010's is when mumble rap was founded, the worst sounding, least lyricial version of hip-hop, if it can even call itself that which only talks about ice, froze, lean, women and bands (stacked money) literally with anything else that rhymes in the most basic way with a terrible delivery that is computer synthesized to the point it sounds unrecognisable when the vocals are performed live. How far we have come, evolved a genre to the point where it's worse than when it started, such a shame.
@@codesm96 What song is playing on the boombox with all the BEEPs that Paul and Alicia are listening to? I cannot recall it.
I love how, in this show, the parents grow as much as the kids do
just like My family did raised me went i was 7 back in 2008 and hurting someone feelings from bully somebody on social media since 2016.
"That's what happens when you spare the rod"
A move like living with siblings with get you slapped by a sister 😂
I've had this talk with my parents when I was a kid
this is a typical conversation I've heard many times before parents who believe in the Pacific something and go against a specific type of music
This was me and my parents when I started listening to rap!
Wait why is her last name Johnson when she’s not married to Andre yet???
Both families have the last name Johnson.
I guess Rainbow has always been the most reasonable person.....
Welllllll sometimes 🤣🤣🤣🤣
One of the best episodes. Oh the memories. Haha. I love all music.
Well said.
Me: I don't like K-Pop but that's what headphones are for. Same goes to other genres. As my people say, "me vale..."
Santa Monica not everything is about you girl
Would be watching this 👍👍👌👌
So that’s a pretty big house for people who use to live in a commune
These arguments are literally what people throw at me for listening to Deathcore
This is a good, funny, informative show. The kids are biracial and that respectfully means NOT white or black.
Man, you know you’re dead when your parents pull out the full name
If you're reading this, look up Sonnie Johnson's interview on Unregistered about her observations about the origins of Hip Hop.
Wouldn't it be nice if Lark Voohries were his wife here?
This just unblock a memory of being hid in the closet making phone calls
HOW MANY OF THESE CHARACTERS ARE GETTING A SPINOFF...
I thought mixedish was done
This is totally unrelated but I love Rainbow’s top
So Rainbow’s married name is the same as her maiden name?
Yes, Dre married a lady with the same last name.
An episode in Season 2 has discussed about that.
Natalie12768 they couldn’t even come up with a different name it’s weird asf that her name last name was the same as her husband name before they even got married and had kids this proves to you how lazy the writers are
I have an aunt whose last name was smith before marrying her husband
Her husband's surname is Smith, so she's still a Smith
@@justjewelz9711, they did that way before this show existed. They made an episode about it on blackish.
Nice house. Reminds of the Brady bunch. Zoey.
Dang Zack Morris is old.
Well, dude is 46 now! 💁
He's also Trash 🗑
🛎 **bell rings** 🛎
Hyou Vizer what he do👀
Johan's tapes of rap ya mean his poems
Bow isn’t wrong
I’m still mad at how she’s called Johnson and she’s not yet married to Dre😂
They have the same last names
Our parents would never understand rap
so. her last name was already Johnson?
The name Johnson is the name of Dre, how come Bow already has it?
They were both born with the same last name.
Sojourner? 🤦🏾♂️
Lol!
Wait her maiden name is also Johnson
Yes.
Wait a second her maiden name is Johnson also
I genuinely lolled at that. Bow’s name is Rainbow Johnson-Johnson haha. Her dad’s last name is Jackson but the kids took their mom’s last name Johnson
How would they react if they saw Straight Outta Compton?
Tupac, Nipsey Hussle, Kendrick Lamar, dropmore names of you can.
J Cole
Inez Qtaish say it is what it is
Cerjurner????
Not judging but it sounds very interesting
Zack Morris put Bow up to this
Why does she look like my girlfriend😛
Then your girlfriend must be beautiful. 😉
Sam Lenard which one exactly... and how old are you
Because she don't
Honestly, i side with the parents- especially in this modern day. Some hip hop and rap was used to get info out about the ghettos and racism. It was used to empower. But now, most popular rappers/artists are minstrels for white people. The whole reclaiming of the n-word has failed significantly and has given even non-american whites and other non black people of color the balls to throw it around willy-nilly(best believe they use it in a derogatory sense too!). 90% of those rappers never gave back to their communities or tried to end gang violence. Once they left the hood, they left their people and tried really hard to make sure that not everyone could be a big rapper or share the wealth. Most of them are misogynistic, most of them disrespect black women and uplift non black women due to self hatred, most of them beat and abuse women, most of them use hard drugs and openly promote it. Honestly, gangsta rap was the beginning to all of this but at least their beats were original and had some slight consciousness. Now a-days, the music and artists are trash 💁🏾
Truth. Hip hop used to tell a story. Now, Its a highly toxic culture that they profit from. They talk about the same thing even when they are in their 40s and 50s. The ones who change and start talking about respecting women instead of violence get a lot of hate.
Confettifun but there will always be rappers who speak more positively and no matter what you can’t generalize the whole community
@@ElizaBeth-fh4rd that's bullshit. You just have this Old good New bad mindset .
Y'all can fuck off
This is exactly how people born in the 80s view "mumble rap".
Listen to the lyrics, it's about the human conditions as much as any other genre.
Nope. Mumble Rap is garbage. Even some in this generation hates it.
@@charlesjonessr3684 I don't understand how you can hate an entire genre of music. You're gonna think I sound pretentious when I say this, but I listen to whatever music sounds good, regardless of genre. Rock, blues, pop, hip-hop, rap, etc.
@@brandondavidson4085 So do I but Mumble Rap is still garbage. And it's not just me. A lot and I do mean a lot of people don't like it.
what lyrics
You mean read the lyrics right? Because you cant listen to something when you can barely make out what they are saying.
How is it the her last name was Johnson then 🤷🏽♀️
Both families had the same last name
This was explained in an episode of Black-ish-- both families have the last name Johnson. Rainbow got it from her mother Alicia, and Dre got it from his father Earl.
I wonder how these two would feel about the foolishness of some of the modern musicians.
Sojourner!
Lyrics of 1985 is NOTHING like today. Do I need to mention Cardi B's W.A.P.?
Uhm she said she the she will sign ❕app
Wait I thought her mom was white on Black-ish
Johan and Santamonica are kiss-ups
She looks like Jennifer Beals
The vid did not represent hip hop...stop trying to replace its weak ...
You sound like a young girl. I grew up listening to Erik Rabin and others in the 80's. It was new and white adults as well as black adults with kids didn't understand it or liked it.
@@calm1047 Who is Erik Rabin?
Hip hop is what you fought for... gangster rap was so pleasing.
Rap is a war cry. Zzzzzzz
Santa Monica for the win!!!
Ok so Diane is a copy of Santamonica. LOL
Younger rainbow looks nothing like the older rainbow. Also, older rainbow really let her face go.
No its true hip hop and rap is bad messages and its not music ........Now Jazz is music.
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
Lol rap dont harm u
Who actually watches this
I do.
Is this propaganda?
Propaganda for what?
This show sucks
‘Everything we fought for’ lmfao who writes this crap
a person with feelings