Categorized | Affiliate Marketing 101

Culture Groups: What Do You Think About Black Males Who Wear Hip-hop Gear And Talk In Hip-hop Slang?

Where do these type of guys work because, I know for a fact NO ONE and I mean NO ONE will hire these types of people. I work in HR and every is pretty open about it too. Yet I see so many black dudes trying to fit into the hip-hop niche..Where do they get their money?

No Responses to “Culture Groups: What Do You Think About Black Males Who Wear Hip-hop Gear And Talk In Hip-hop Slang?”

  1. Radha says:

    I don’t. I ignore them.

  2. Ezra says:

    Most likely from working at McDonalds or any fast food joint, and from drugs.

  3. dj PIERRE says:

    Are you really the king of american blacks??..

  4. Horney Tyrone Jackson says:

    niqqa plz

  5. Silver †Dragon† says:

    I dunno. Try asking the white/hispanic/asian/etc people who act like that as well.
    Have an okay day.

  6. Miguel says:

    Just because you wear hip-hop gear, doesn’t mean you have to look a thug. I’m Puerto Rican and i wear hip-hop style clothes. But that doesn’t mean I listen to mainstream hip-hop all the time and have a ghetto mentality. I personally hate when dudes sag their pants and have their ********* all exposed. Its so f*cking retarded.

  7. Jade Phifer's other account. says:

    Fast food restaurants, construction, street corners.

  8. El Llave de amor says:

    Meh, not my prefer style but if they’re kind and open minded, no problem with them
    Edit: I’m sure they put the hip hop aside and dress/talk formal when their working

  9. He Hate Me® says:

    If you go to the mall depending on where you live. There’s a store in the mall called “DTLR” there’s so many hood black dudes in there, I don’t even like going in there because most of the time I can’t understand what the f*ck they’re saying. So basically what I am saying is the same places where they buy hip hop clothes a lot of them work in those stores. And why does it concern you where they get their money? You’re not their dad, mom, girlfriend none of that.

  10. Equal rights for blacks brotha T says:

    Ever notice how most trends that have become popular in the African American community automatically get classified by the white community as “ghetto”? Because whites make up 74% of the U.S. population or 80% if Hispanic whites are included, this easily becomes the popular opinion. This means that whites have yet another privilege of dictating what’s the norm since anything blacks make up and popularize is “ghetto.” This causes African American trends to carry a trashy, bizarre aura with them. On top of that, it’s not prevalent among African Americans to insult all the trends of the white community as ghetto (or better yet trailer park trash). Perhaps African Americans should label cultures such as goth, emo, rock, country, metrosexual boy bands, etc., as trailer park trash.
    As one example, all the slang frequently used and created by the white community is labeled as just plain, harmless slang (pawned, owned, sweet, sucks, bites, rules, rocks, fail, “like” at every other word, “shut up” used to express disbelief, etc.) and it’s also not connected to the white community in any way. On the other hand, all the slang used and created by the black community is labeled as ghetto, uneducated, and connected to the black community with terms like Ebonics. As another example, the white community has thoroughly revived holey jeans as being in style. Holey jeans are a trend that were first introduced by the black community twenty years ago, at a time when it was considered ghetto and unique in a bad way. Now that the white community has reintroduced it and adopted it as their own, it’s viewed as unique in a good way and no one concerned with acting and dressing by convention bats a right eye at it. As a third example, take names: the names Shaniqua, Cadesha, and Latoya are put down as ghetto and bizarre; however, the names Natasha, Cassandra, and Samantha aren’t widely regarded as ghetto and bizarre. If the latter set of names have the same sounds as many “ghetto” names, why aren’t they too regarded as bizarre and ghetto? The answer is simple: the latter set of names have become popular amongst the 80% white majority that has the privilege of determining what’s acceptable and what’s not, while the “ghetto” names haven’t — Oftentimes, whites will even go so far as putting down African Americans for naming their kids popular African American names instead of conforming to what has been popularized in the white community. A common reason used by whites for pressuring others to conform is that employers won’t hire someone with a “ghetto” name. They fail to add WHITE employers won’t hire someone with those names. The issue in that case wouldn’t be the name and African Americans wanting to partake in their culture; the issue would be anti-black bigotry still being prevalent in the white community. African Americans should not be discouraged from partaking in their culture just because it differentiates from the “norms” that the white community has set.

  11. Bleu Clues~ says:

    They’re annoying and gross.

  12. QT says:

    “Where do they get their money” lol!!

Trackbacks/Pingbacks


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archives

Powered by Yahoo! Answers