Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up listening to Ice-T’s cop killer and 2Pac, Jodeci, Nas, all kinds of rap music that’s “misogynistic” and a lot of R&B that is very sexual. I’m a lawyer. I’m fine and I have healthy, nonviolent, respectful relationships.
I don’t think you should censor what your son is listening to. I’m pretty sure almost all of us at some point have listened to some really good music that has questionable messages. You like what you like and many times it’s not necessarily because of the words. As long as you’re raising your son right in everyday interactions and teaching him how to treat people I doubt the music is going to change him. It’s kind of silly to me, actually.
I love when people say “I’m a lawyer” like it is a claim to honor, achievement, and human decency. I’m not one to tell lawyer jokes because there are lawyers who are incredible human beings, but there are also lawyers who are the lowest our species has to offer. The title itself tells me next to nothing about you.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up listening to Ice-T’s cop killer and 2Pac, Jodeci, Nas, all kinds of rap music that’s “misogynistic” and a lot of R&B that is very sexual. I’m a lawyer. I’m fine and I have healthy, nonviolent, respectful relationships.
I don’t think you should censor what your son is listening to. I’m pretty sure almost all of us at some point have listened to some really good music that has questionable messages. You like what you like and many times it’s not necessarily because of the words. As long as you’re raising your son right in everyday interactions and teaching him how to treat people I doubt the music is going to change him. It’s kind of silly to me, actually.
Anonymous wrote:I've taken my clues ont his stuff from a book I read years ago that argued the best way to deal with the messages the world sends your tweens and teens is to make them talk about the messages and teach them to be critical consumers. Eventually the stuff seeps in no matter what you do. So, better to form a dialoge that allows you to influence the way your kids think.
I have 15 year old and a 12 yr old. We love Maclarmore for his lyrics. My 15 year old DD loves Cardie B but I have threatened to sing along to "My pussy feels like a lake" with her friends in the car just to point out how embarassing and ridiculous her lyrics are. It hasn't stopped her from listening but she also gets to listend to me critique how ridiculous it is.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up listening to Ice-T’s cop killer and 2Pac, Jodeci, Nas, all kinds of rap music that’s “misogynistic” and a lot of R&B that is very sexual. I’m a lawyer. I’m fine and I have healthy, nonviolent, respectful relationships.
I don’t think you should censor what your son is listening to. I’m pretty sure almost all of us at some point have listened to some really good music that has questionable messages. You like what you like and many times it’s not necessarily because of the words. As long as you’re raising your son right in everyday interactions and teaching him how to treat people I doubt the music is going to change him. It’s kind of silly to me, actually.
Anonymous wrote:CARDI B is the best!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I don't think you should stop anyone from listening to music they like. Yes, she says some pretty weird things in her songs sometimes but its just a song... all of the singers your son listed are great singers!
Anonymous wrote:My 11 yo son likes Bruno Mars, Adele, John Legend, Drake, Sia... basically the usual Top 40 hits. My husband, a very middle class and non-macho WASP, has always loved rap, which I generally don’t like because of the misogyny. My husband thinks I'm too protective of our kids, and we've had many arguments in the past about how to discuss drugs, porn, crime around them (I’m much more conservative than he is on these things.) Anyway, yesterday, my husband and son got into a discussion about the merits of Cardi B vs Bruno Mars. My husband vehemently took Cardi B’s side, saying that he really admires her talent and tried to convince my son to listen to her more. So I looked up her lyrics to educate myself, and, as I suspected, they are so crude and misogynistic (yeah, she's a woman but so many women in pop culture just blindly take on the mens’ perspective.) Now I'm not sure what line I should walk here. I don't think this music will instantly evaporate my 11 yo son's brain, but I do think that a parent (especially father to son) endorsing those kinds of values just perpetuates misogyny and the attitude that being rude and crude is cool. And I’m not only thinking about my son in this scenario, but the many girls he will socialize with as a teen, and also of my own daughter, who is now 9 and will one day have to choose between being “sexy” and being comfortable in her own skin.
So: am I being unreasonable?