How Hip Hop Changed the World

2011
How Hip Hop Changed the World
6.6| 1h37m| en| More Info
Released: 12 August 2011 Released
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Synopsis

Presented by actor, DJ, MC and lifelong hip hop fan Idris Elba (The Wire, Luther) and featuring stars from both sides of the Atlantic (Snoop Dogg, Mark Ronson, Nas, Rakim, Debbie Harry, Jessie J, Chipmunk, Tinchy Stryder and N Dubz, to name just a few), How Hip Hop Changed the World counts down the defining moments of a culture that exploded out of the wastelands of 1970s New York and went on to become one of the most dominant global economic, political and social forces of our time. From the birth of turntabalism to the UK grime artists who are now conquering the world, this two-hour special reveals everything you need to know about hip hop.

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Idris Elba

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Jackson Booth-Millard I saw this programme, and I did watch it because it looked interesting enough, and there are many forms of hip hop music that I have enjoyed, and I hoped to spot and embrace them again. Presented by Idris Elba this programme is near enough like a regular countdown show, where it looks at the 50 defining moments that have made hip hop what it is today, and has made an impact on the world, whether it be in music, television, film, politics and much more. These moments include the 2012 Olympcs Logo (made by graffiti apparently), George W. Bush saying "Yo Blair!", Kanye West at the Princess Diana Memorial Concert, hip advertising crossing the road and yogurt, the Wham! Rap, Simone, the SP 1200 sampler, the song "Me So Horny", Andy Warhol graffiti art and Banksy, The Streets ("Dry You Eyes, Fit But You Don't Know It"), Beastie Boys whore wore VW badges, a rap by John Barnes, Soulja Boy ("Crank That"), Britain's Got Talent winners Diversity, B Boys and other break dancers, LL Cool J ("In Da Club"), OutKast ("Hey Ya!"), Missy Elliot ("Get Ur Freak On"); G Funk, Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre, The Fugees ("Read Or Not") and Lauren Hill solo, MC Hammer ("You Can't Touch This") and Vanilla Ice ("Ice Ice Baby"), Bling - added to dictionary, the Blondie rap, the film Boyz n the Hood, Kanye West appeals for Hurricane Katrina, DJ Kool Herc (the inventor of hip hop?), Run DMC with urban fashion, Biggie Smalls (the Notorious B.I.G.) and the Wu-Tang Clan, De La Soul and Tribe; Timbaland, Neptune and Justin Timberlake, Yo! MTV Raps, Pirate radio by Tim Westwood, Dizzee Rascal – including on Newsnight and mention of Grime, Africa Bambaataa and The Zulu Nation, Eminem, Sugarhill Gang ("Rapper's Delight"), Run DMC feat. Aerosmith ("Walk This Way"), Jay-Z at Glastonbury, Def Jam Recordings, N.W.C. (Ice Cube group) ("Fuck The Police") and Gangster music, So Solid Crew ("21 Seconds"), the TV show The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air; Grandmaster Flash, the Quick Mix theory, DJing, Turntables and scratching, Rakim (the first ever rapper?); Salt-N-Pepa ("Push It", "Let's Talk About Sex"), Queen Latifah and Lil Kim, Public Enemy, Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five ("The Message"), Tupac or 2Pac – murdered alongside Biggie Smalls; Def Jam taken over Jay-Z, 50 Cent and hip hop becoming an industry, and number one being Jay-Z helping Barack Obama become president. With contributions from N-Dubz, Goldie, Tinchy Stryder, Snoop Dogg, Tim Westwood, Ashley Walters from So Solid Crew, Flawless, Jessie J, Chipmunk, Blondie, Noel Clarke, will.i.am, Mark Ronson and Roll Deep. Good!
bob the moo As part of Channel 4's weekend of urban music and dance, this special was billed as a documentary into how hip-hop has changed the world – not how it has grown as a genre in and of itself per se, but rather how it has impacted the mainstream on its journey to being the mainstream. Add to the mix that it is presented by Idris Elba (a hip-hop fan and a great actor) and I decided to watch it. Very quickly my hopes for a serious documentary were dashed because I could tell from the presentation and from the commentators involved early on that this was more of a list show and indeed it does list the 50 moments where hip-hop changed the world (in a numbered format too).On the plus side a lot of what is in here is pretty interesting whether as a reminder or as just being something of note because ultimately the massive impact of hip-hop from its early minority roots to what it is today is worthy of examination; it is a global cultural shift of some note. Moments range from the comic (George Michael with Wham being the first UK rap smash!) to the cheesy but culturally significant (Bush saying "yo" as normal language, break dancing preformed for Reagan etc) but also moments of actual interest to hip-hop fans (Kool Herc's influence, the impact of Public Enemy, the pop successes of MC Hammer and Vanilla Ice, the adoption of graffiti culture in advertising in the early 80's etc). The number one slot is saved for the election of Obama as a sign of the influence of hip-hop, which is arguable but makes sense.Some of the 50 moments are cheesy but they are all significant. So, do I like Vanilla Ice or think he should be a "greatest" list of any note? No – but his chart success is one of the moments in the ongoing series of moments of hip-hop changing the world (not for the better perhaps but it is still a mainstream moment). Being a fan of the music and able to recognise a lot of the older and newer artists, I was able to enjoy the special even though it wasn't quite documentary so much as "pop culture list". A lot of the contributions are worthy with some solid names in there and some others who speak with a passion and knowledge. Of course we also have people who are just the c-grade celebs of the genre that go for this at the drop of a hat: N-Dubz being the most grating inclusion and their contributions should be kept for the follow-up show "50 ways hip-hop sank into the toilet". Big names Nas and Snoop are pretty pointless and gave the camera very little to work with (Nas in particular looks and sounds like he just woke up, then got stoned, then did his bits). Elba is energetic but his rather sensationalist hosting and overdone physical movement does rather push the film away from being a documentary.Overall this special was engaging and fun, although the contributions add little and it was just yet another list programme. A lot of the things covered are still interesting but could have used more time and more factual eye – because the growth and impact of hip-hop is significant and culturally interesting. Put together with energy this is an OK list programme but a little less Ndubz and a bit more insight would have made it much better – the subject and a lot of the artists deserves insight and review, they don't need pop stars of the moment with nothing to say of note.