This 1981 20/20 segment on rap music will make you cringe
In 1981, two years after “Rapper’s Delight” was released as a single, ABC’s 20/20 ran a segment on this zany thing called rap music. It is a masterclass in white-splaining, and the number of times someone defines rap music is almost comical. The jumping off point for reporter Steve Fox is Blondie’s “Rapture.”
“Rap music: it’s all beat and all talk. It tells a story and makes you want to dance!”
Right off the bat, Hugh Downs does not seem to be that impressed with this “new” genre, calling attention to a lack of melody in many of the songs.
What really sticks out, though, is how far Fox goes to lay out the historical roots of rap music in relation to African-American culture, citing everything from oral tradition, jazz music, and Muhammad Ali. It makes a sort of sense as Fox’s aim seems to be convincing (white) skeptics that rap is a legitimate form of artistic expression that has evolved and is not some weird fad. And yet: “Inner-city kids learn rhyme in their street games” is said with matter-of-factness over b-roll of three children playing double dutch.