Our four-part television event, The Tanning Of America: One Nation Under Hip Hop, concludes tonight at 11 Pm Et. We’ve spent this week catching up with some of the most influential people in media to find out how hip hop changed their lives, and extend the conversation that’s been sparked by the program. We already heard from Joe La Puma of Complex Media, Rafi D’Angelo of SoLetsTalkAbout.com, Hot 97′s Miss Info, MTV’s Rob Markman, and Revolt TV’s Sharon Carpenter. Now it’s time to discuss the culture’s impact with downtown NYC strategy director Grace Gordon.
Grace Gordon’s job is, in simplest terms, to make companies look cool. That involves being touch with what’s happening in pop culture, and, as we know, a lot of that stems directly from hip-hop. We sat down with Gordon to talk about how the genre influences her daily life,...
Grace Gordon’s job is, in simplest terms, to make companies look cool. That involves being touch with what’s happening in pop culture, and, as we know, a lot of that stems directly from hip-hop. We sat down with Gordon to talk about how the genre influences her daily life,...
- 2/27/2014
- by Ernest Baker
- TheFabLife - Movies
The four-part television event, The Tanning Of America: One Nation Under Hip Hop, has been enlightening VH1 viewers for two nights now, and it’s still running until Feb. 27, every night at 11 Pm Et. We caught up with some of the most important people in media to find out how hip hop changed their lives, and continue the discussion that’s being sparked by the program. We’ve already heard from Joe La Puma of Complex Media, Rafi D’Angelo of SoLetsTalkAbout.com, Hot 97′s Miss Info, and MTV’s Rob Markman. Now we’re breaking down the culture with Revolt TV’s Sharon Carpenter.
Sharon Carpenter spent her formative years growing up overseas in the United Kingdom. Hip-hop hadn’t fully exploded in the mainstream just yet, but it’s impact was still being felt by the British. In our video, Carpenter talks about what that experience was like for her,...
Sharon Carpenter spent her formative years growing up overseas in the United Kingdom. Hip-hop hadn’t fully exploded in the mainstream just yet, but it’s impact was still being felt by the British. In our video, Carpenter talks about what that experience was like for her,...
- 2/26/2014
- by Ernest Baker
- TheFabLife - Movies
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