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It Was Written

A White Man’s Look at Race and The Hip-Hop Industry

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Other People's Property
“Other People’s Property” is a very good book that is at its best when its author acts like a DJ. But don’t get it twisted: [Jason] Tanz sees hip-hop as text more than as sonic phenomenon or, for that matter, stone groove. “Other People’s Property” is made up of nine journalistic pieces, each a mix of reportage and personal reflection about race and the industry of hip-hop. It’s freaky, equally in love with Western philosophers such as Jean Baudrillard and the classic albums from hip-hop’s golden era. In a very hip-hop effort to get his shine on, the author mashes up his prose, cutting in and out of reportage and confessional styles.

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It Was Shown

A Look Into ‘Infamy’

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Cover of 'Infamy'
This cutting edge documentary not only unmasks the faces of seven individuals addicted to graffiti, but it exposes their thoughts, feelings, faults and fears — an avenue unrivaled by any graff film to date[…]”Graffiti is like the United Nations. There is a representative from all corners of the earth. Black, white and the many shades in between, man or woman.”

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Crossover Kicks

Vans shoes have been popularize with an urban crowd by the Pack\'s current single

“Vans,” a rap song by the Pack, has made the favored footwear of skaters popular with the hip-hop crowd too.

By Cynthia H. Cho (Times Staff Writer)
Los Angeles Times
August 19, 2006

Brand shout-outs in hip-hop songs are nothing new — but most focus on luxury names. Kanye West tells of a cutie with a “baby Louis Vuitton under her arm” in “Gold Digger,” Missy Elliott raps about a Cadillac Escalade in “Lick Shots” and anyone who has heard Busta Rhymes‘ “Pass the Courvoisier” knows his Cognac of choice.

Few songs, though, make a product or company their main focus. There was Run-DMC’s “My Adidas” in 1986. And now there is “Vans,” a song by Bay Area rappers the Pack that hit mainstream radio in California a couple of months ago and is shaking up the great footwear divide between the hip-hop and rock camps.

While the song has been climbing charts and driving traffic to the group’s MySpace.com page, it also has been spurring fans to plunk down $37 for a pair of Vans, the shoes that until now have been embraced mainly by skaters, surfers and punk rockers.

“It’s like the song was egging me on” to buy a pair, says 21-year-old Kyle Troupe, who says that until hearing “Vans” he’d never even been in the Vans store near his Santa Monica home. Last weekend, though, he found himself purchasing pairs No. 4 and No. 5.

“The beat is so crazy,” says Troupe, who will be a senior at Howard University this fall. The song has a hypnotic beat as it repeats, “Got my Vans on, but they look like sneakers,” over and over again throughout.

Whether plugs from hip-hop songs translate into higher sales is difficult to measure, says Lucian James, president of Agenda Inc., a research and strategy company based in San Francisco and Paris. Some Vans retailers, though, say that’s an easy call. Business has definitely improved, they say, since “Vans” hit the airwaves, and it’s bringing in a new kind of consumer for the skate shoe.

At the 510 Skateboarding store on Berkeley’s Telegraph Avenue, sales are twice as high as they were this time last year, says owner Jerry Harris, who is seeing a change in demographics among Vans buyers.

“I have definitely seen more of an urban customer coming in for Vans,” Harris says. “Previously, it was more of just skateboard kids. [Now] they’re more of a hip-hop kind of a crowd.”

The shoes have become so popular, he says, that some sizes are selling out — including those of the band members, who shop there. “They come in looking for shoes in their size and we don’t have them,” Harris says, laughing. “We tell them it’s their fault.”

The Pack — Lloyd Omadhebo (Young L), 19; Keith Jenkins (Young Stunner), 18; Brandon McCartney (Lil B), 17; and Damonte Johnson (Lil Uno), 17 — can nearly always be found decked out in a pair of Vans, a group style launched by Omadhebo and Jenkins, who have been skateboarding since middle school and wearing the shoes since high school.

“When I was in San Francisco, people would look at my Vans like I was crazy,” Omadhebo says by phone. “They thought I was dressing like a white boy because I had Vans on.” Now, he says, he owns 18 pairs.

But why did they decide to rap about them?

“It was a new thing,” he says. “It was something different. We were the first people in the hip-hop and urban community to really start wearing Vans like that.”

Their lyrics show their devotion: “You can get different colors like rainbows / Since 1966 Vans had set a trend / I got a blue pair, yeah, in a size 10.”

The song, says research executive James, is unusual, in his view. “It’s the most sustained plug for a brand that you’ve seen since Run-DMC. This is even more than that, with the whole mention of the price and the history.”

In late July, when the group visited L.A. as part of a radio tour, the guys were invited to the Vans headquarters in Santa Fe Springs and allowed to look at lines of Vans due out next year. Vans spokesman Chris Overholser says the guys were like “kids in a candy store.”

The guys from the Pack each received four or five pairs of Vans when they visited the company’s headquarters last month, but they weren’t asked or paid to record the song, Overholser says.

The Pack’s album, under Up All Nite Music/Jive Records, is scheduled to come out late this year or early next year, said Taj Tilghman, the group’s manager. The video for “Vans” premiered on Yahoo Music earlier this month and will begin airing on Black Entertainment Television next week, says network spokesman Michael Lewellen.

At Power 106 FM, a hip-hop station in Los Angeles, the song premiered in April and topped the request list after a few weeks, says E-Man, the radio station’s music director and assistant program director. When DJs played the song at high school graduation events in June, he says, “kids would take their Vans off and put them up in the air.”

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