Wednesday, 12 December 2007
On September 14, 1930, Allan Bloom was born in Indianapolis, Indiana. Known for his Platonic and Socratic philosophies, Bloom was a famed American philosopher when he died in 1992. Bloom, strongly influenced by philosophers of the likes of Friedrich Nietzsche and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, is most widely known for his criticism of the American higher education system in his bestselling book, The Closing of the American Mind.
One of Bloom's most convincing arguments involves modern American music. Music, he says, "has one appeal only, a barbaric appeal, to sexual desire-not love, not eros, but sexual desire undeveloped and untutored."
All in all, Bloom's argument is that man, when presented with modern rock and hip-hop music, is able to eliminate sane thought and replace it with purely barbaric emotions. Thankfully, Bloom was wrong. Yes, that's correct. Allan Bloom, the University of Chicago graduate who taught at deplorable schools such as Cornell, Tel Aviv University, and Yale University, was a man so deaf and dumb he could not appreciate the intricate meaning behind the songs that currently top the MTV video charts.
In fact, to prove Bloom wrong, I have gathered lyrics from the song that currently sits atop the "iTunes most downloaded" list: Crank Dat Soulja Boy, by Soulja Boy. That's right, the ultimate source of credibility and respectability: a song downloaded a lot on the internet.
Forget college educations, forget jobs teaching at America's best Ivy League institutions, it's iTunes that determines a person's intellectual capability. After all, if the American people like it, it has to be good.
Soulja Boy, whose real name has yet to be discovered due to national security purposes, was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1990. Clearly a child of great intellectual potential, Soulja Boy has been rapping since he was five and produced his first big hit at the age of only seventeen. It has often been claimed that wisdom is only attained through age. Clearly, Soulja Boy has proven that this is not the case. Let us begin by analyzing his lyrics, lyrics which are often claimed to embody his honor to the infamous hip hop artists, Sean Paul, Eminem, and of course, P. Diddy (also referred to as Diddy, Puff Daddy, Sean Combs, Sean John Combs, Sean John, and, though not a confirmed nickname, Puffleberry Diddymuggins). Soulja Boy, which is the artist's name and part of the song title (ingenious, no?) begins his song as follows:
- Soulja Boy Off In This Hoe
Watch Me Crank It
Watch Me Roll
- Watch Me Crank Dat Soulja Boy
Then Superman Dat Hoe
Now Watch Me Do
(Crank Dat Soujla Boy)
Now Watch Me Do
(Crank Dat Soulja Boy)
Now Watch Me Do
(Crank Dat Soulja Boy)
- Then Watch Me Crank Dat Robocop
Super Fresh, Now Watch Me Jock
Jockin On Them Haterz Man
- Dance (Dance)
Let Get To It (Let Get To It)
Nope, You Can't Do It Like Me
Hoe, So Don't Do It Like Me
Folk, I See You Tryna Do It Like Me
Man That Shit Was Ugly
All in all, Soulja Boy proves to Allan Bloom that the American mind hasn't "closed." In fact, it has opened. It has opened so much, in fact, that it is willing to accept the art behind the music of hip hop. It has looked beyond the "hip" to find the "hop;" a hop that includes Cranking Dat Soulja Boy and Supermanning Dat Hoe. Clearly, Soulja Boy's background (born in Chicago, raised in Atlanta, moved to Mississippi at age 14) dwarfs that of Allan Bloom (one, if not the, most laudable philosophers in American history) and disproves the theory of the "Closing of the American Mind." Bloom argued that music invoked the barbaric, sexual demons that lurk in the soul of human beings. Soulja Boy, evidently, has a different soul(ja) than others because the motives behind his song are anything but sexual. Supermanning a hoe does not mean what it...is believed to mean. And super soaking a hoe simply means to spray her with a water gun, nothing else. Apparently, it is Bloom's dirty mind which has developed these terms into sexual ones and claimed that the beat and rhythm of rock and hip-hop music invokes violent sexual actions in its listeners. Bloom, clearly, is the one to blame for this closing of the American mind. In fact, maybe he should write a book entitled, The Opening of the American Loins (because obviously Soulja Boy had nothing to do with that). When it comes down to it, we can only hope that Soulja Boy's hit, "Crank Dat," is followed by a new and exciting single. Perhaps, "Crank Dat Some More."
The story above is a satire or parody. It is entirely fictitious.
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