astro
11-14-2002, 08:05 AM
Is this "owning" of the Pimp experience and lifestyle a culturally valid and important point I'm missing about what it means to be Black in Amerika, or is it simply a silly affectation by over-indulged college students?
'Pimp' Show At Howard Is By Definition Controversial - Washington Post (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A51910-2002Nov13.html)
They're still talking about Howard University's homecoming fashion show, a month later. And they're still arguing. In the now-infamous show "Pimp Harder," a procession of sometimes scantily clad models sashayed down the Cramton Auditorium runway between clips from documentaries "Pimps Up, Ho's Down" and "American Pimp."
As the rapper Jay-Z boasted of "Big Pimpin' " and Joi sang praises of the "Techno Pimp" over loudspeakers, the models strutted in nouveau pimp gear by Tristen Blake and Earl Bannister and sizzling lingerie by Kelley Carter. One model strutted topless, her hands cupping her breasts.
Between catwalks, definitions of today's pimp were flashed on a screen:
• "One who exists as a distinct entity."
• "A shrewd understanding of human affairs."
• "The best-looking [expletive] you've ever seen."
Organizers Jessica Lima and Megan Moore, both 21, say the show was an attempt to reinvent a word in what they call the "Pimp Age," an era marked by corporate pimping, the pimping of black culture, and widespread manipulation in everyday relationships. They say the show was a challenge to the student body to "conquer what oppresses them and become pimps in their own right
But the organizers say the Pimp Age has nothing to do with exploiting women or black culture. "Pimping is a state of mind," Moore said in an interview, "a movement about no longer being the victim, a movement where women do not have to take some of the crap that men dish out, a movement that is focused on educating our people and uplifting each other."
'Pimp' Show At Howard Is By Definition Controversial - Washington Post (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A51910-2002Nov13.html)
They're still talking about Howard University's homecoming fashion show, a month later. And they're still arguing. In the now-infamous show "Pimp Harder," a procession of sometimes scantily clad models sashayed down the Cramton Auditorium runway between clips from documentaries "Pimps Up, Ho's Down" and "American Pimp."
As the rapper Jay-Z boasted of "Big Pimpin' " and Joi sang praises of the "Techno Pimp" over loudspeakers, the models strutted in nouveau pimp gear by Tristen Blake and Earl Bannister and sizzling lingerie by Kelley Carter. One model strutted topless, her hands cupping her breasts.
Between catwalks, definitions of today's pimp were flashed on a screen:
• "One who exists as a distinct entity."
• "A shrewd understanding of human affairs."
• "The best-looking [expletive] you've ever seen."
Organizers Jessica Lima and Megan Moore, both 21, say the show was an attempt to reinvent a word in what they call the "Pimp Age," an era marked by corporate pimping, the pimping of black culture, and widespread manipulation in everyday relationships. They say the show was a challenge to the student body to "conquer what oppresses them and become pimps in their own right
But the organizers say the Pimp Age has nothing to do with exploiting women or black culture. "Pimping is a state of mind," Moore said in an interview, "a movement about no longer being the victim, a movement where women do not have to take some of the crap that men dish out, a movement that is focused on educating our people and uplifting each other."