As the saying goes, the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
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Apparently so is the road to terrible music videos. English singer-songwriter Lily Allen seems to have decided to make a statement on the Miley Cyrus-ification of pop culture by making her latest video an in-your-face attack on the sexual exploitation of women in the music industry. Her new single, โHard Out Here,โ includes girl-power lyrics like, โDonโt need to shake my ass for you โcause Iโve got a brainโ and โIf I told you about my sex life youโd call me a slut, when boys be talking about their bitches no oneโs making a fuss.โ
So far so good, right? Well, itโs all downhill from there.
While Allenโs lyrics are making the case that women and men shouldnโt be held to different standards and we shouldnโt have to exploit ourselves to get ahead, the video conveniently includes plenty of footage of scantily clad backup dancers gyrating in ways that would make some hardcore gangsta rappers blush. (Letโs just say bananas and other objects are involved.)
Did I mention that none of the backup dancers are male?
Did I also mention that nearly all of them are black?
Allen and her defenders will likely say that those of us who are critical of her video simply donโt get satire. They will argue that Allen was trying to expose how silly this type of oversexualized behavior really looks. But if Allenโs video were merely harmless satire, then why didnโt she strip down alongside the black women who looked practically naked next to her? Furthermore, why didnโt she bend over as if she were engaged in a sex act, the way they did, if the video was all in harmless, good fun and represented satire at its best?
At the end of the day, Allen is yet another misguided, well-meaning โartistโ who seems to think that admiring a few black people and admiring and appropriating certain aspects of black culture should give her cover for demeaning said culture. I call this the Quentin Tarantino defense, which can be translated as, โI love black people so much and think youโre all so cool that you really canโt take it personally when I demean you. Itโs done in tribute!โ
Well, you can keep your tribute. Weโd rather keep our integrity.
If Allen really wanted to make a statement about sexism, sexual exploitation and racial exploitation in the music industry, then a real satire might have included a bunch of scantily clad white males writhing around as alcohol is poured over them. Instead of satire, Allen merely perpetuated the status quo. That doesnโt make her interesting, artistic or edgy, but just as desperate for attention as those she seeks to mock.
Keli Goff is The Root's special correspondent. Follow her on Twitter.
Keli Goff isย The Rootโs special correspondent. Follow her on Twitter.ย
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