Hip Hop and Prison for Profit

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Ninety percent of what Americans read, watch and listen to is controlled by only six media companies. PBS’s Frontline has described the conglomerates that determine what information is disseminated to the public as a “web of business relationships that now defines America’s media and culture.” Business relationships. Last year a mere 232 media executives were responsible for the intake of 277 million Americans, controlling all the avenues necessary to manufacture any celebrity and incite any trend.

Time Warner, as owner of Warner Bros Records (among many other record labels), can not only sign an artist to a recording contract but, as the owner of Entertainment Weekly, can see to it that they get next week’s cover. Also the owner of New Line Cinemas, HBO and TNT, they can have their artist cast in a leading role in a film that, when pulled from theaters, will be put into rotation first on premium, then on basic, cable. Without any consideration to the music whatsoever, the artist will already be a star, though such monopolies also extend into radio stations and networks that air music videos.

For consumers, choice is often illusory. Both BET and MTV belong to Viacom. While Hot 97, NYC’s top hip hop station, is owned by Emmis Communications, online streaming is controlled by Clear Channel, who also owns rival station Power 105.

There are many other startling overlaps in private-prison/mass-media ownership, but two underlying facts become clear very quickly: The people who own the media are the same people who own private prisons, the EXACT same people, and using one to promote the other is (or “would be,” depending on your analysis) very lucrative.

http://hiphopandpolitics.com/2013/04/24/jailhouse-roc-the-facts-about-hip-hop-and-prison-for-profit/

Friend of mine posted this on FB. Thought it was interesting so I copied and pasted it here. I wasn't able to check the external links cause I'm at work.
 
as long as you have a appetite for knowledge, you'll never fall into da traps set by those who want to oppress you.
 
and one more thing tho...

i think it matters when they bought the shares in CXW

i mean...this gangsta **** has been around and glorified on MTV and BET since NWA, its not new

and if anything, hip hop culture has been trending away from the whole crack dealer gangsta ****. especially the stuff you'll catch on a major network.

so before people start yelling conspiracy and agreeing with it, there should be more research done.

i mean, realistically these groups are probably invested in a bunch of profitable things. the prison hustle was just as likely just seen for them as being a big come up, and they knew they'd be able to use their power to lobby.
 
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