These words and lyrics are tremendously toxic. In addition to those three things, black masculinity is also an enormous and toxic part of hip-hop culture. Black masculinity is how the media views black men: violent, hypersexual, and incompetent beings. Hip-hop came from the South Bronx ghettos, where blacks and Latinos were abandoned by the city. With all the violence that came from the Bronx, hip-hop and rap were ways to respond to violence and tell a story within. Black men in hip-hop have always seen out to be muscular, dominant, part of a gang, and to always carry a gun on their hip. Hip-hop for black men is a way to flaunt their toughness and grit. In particularly any rap/hip-hop music video, there’s always black men with their shirt off flaunting their fancy cars and women. “Love me” by Lil Wayne Ft. Drake and Future is one of the many perfect examples for expressing hyper masculinity, degrading women, and black masculinity. Dancing women in some to no clothing, explicit lyrics and video, and flashy jewelry, this music video having almost 200,000,000 views on YouTube is one to add to the toxic hip-hop list. Balling till the day they fall, Lil Wayne, Drake and Future don’t care for anything as long as their women adore them.
“I got some down bitches I can