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<text id=93TT0527>
<title>
Nov. 15, 1993: Shootin' Up The Charts
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CRIME, Page 81
Shootin' Up The Charts
</hdr>
<body>
<p>When gangsta rappers turn to serious gunplay, is it life imitating
rap?
</p>
<p>By RICHARD LACAYO--Reported by John Dickerson/New York, Joyce Leviton/Atlanta and
Jeffery Ressner/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> Can't find peace on the streets
</p>
<p> Til the niggaz get a piece
</p>
<p> F---the police
</p>
<p> Lines to live by from gangsta rapper Tupac Amaru Shakur, 22,
who not long ago gave an interview on MTV with what looked to
be a pistol tucked into his waist. Last week Shakur was arrested
in Atlanta and charged in the shooting of two off-duty police
officers.
</p>
<p> After a concert at Clark Atlanta University, cars carrying Shakur
and his friends nearly struck Mark and Scott Whitwell, brothers
and suburban police officers, who were walking in civilian clothes
with Mark's wife. In the argument that followed, Shakur allegedly
shot Mark in the back, his brother in the buttocks. Some witnesses
say one of the Whitwells may have pulled a gun and fired first.
Mark Whitwell's attorney says they were surrounded by Shakur
and at least a dozen others, some of them armed and screaming
threats.
</p>
<p> Is life imitating rap? Faster than you could rhyme "niggaz"
and "triggaz" (standard rap prosody) people were asking whether
rappers--especially those from the Thugs-`R'-Us subcategory
called gangsta rap--are too quick to use the guns they brag
about in their songs. "Who is the man with the master plan?"
asks a lyric by Snoop Doggy Dogg. "A nigga witta motherf-----'
gun." Two weeks ago Snoop, 22, was charged as an accomplice
to murder.
</p>
<p> Last week, just a day after Shakur's arrest, Flavor Flav, 34,
court jester of the otherwise unsmiling rap group Public Enemy,
was arrested for attempted murder. On Tuesday morning Flav,
whose real name is William Drayton, accused a neighbor, Thelouizs
English, of fooling with his girlfriend. After Drayton pulled
a gun, English fled to the lobby, where Drayton allegedly caught
up with him, took a shot and missed. Released on $15,000 bail,
Drayton, who once served 20 days in jail for punching his girlfriend,
checked into the Betty Ford Center. His record company says
he is seeking treatment for crack addiction.
</p>
<p> Rappers aren't the first pop stars to cross from outlaw poses
to real bloodletting. Sid Vicious of the Sex Pistols stabbed
his girlfriend to death. Squeaky Claudine Longet, a vanilla
songstress of the '60s and '70s, shot her boyfriend, a killing
that she called accidental and a jury called criminally negligent
homicide. But for the most part singers, even the ones who like
to pal with mobsters, have been content to leave gunplay to
the pros. Not gangsta rappers. In a world where it can seem
as if everybody's "strapped"--meaning armed--the rapper
Spice 1 bragged to TIME last week, "I'm gonna be strapped 24-7."
(That's 24 hours a day, seven days a week.) "I've got an AK
on the way, and that's real, you know? I've got a TEC-9. I got
a little chrome .32 and a .380. I'm gonna get some more Glocks,
I want some twin Glocks." Half a dozen armed friends keep Spice
safe from "player-haters," who he says try to bring down successful
rappers. "Six guns coming out is gonna get us out of there,
wherever we are."
</p>
<p> The gangsta style took off in Los Angeles in the late 1980s
with albums from N.W.A. (Niggaz with Attitude) and Ice-T. Pounded
out in lyrics where testosterone always gets the last word,
it updates the Three Penny Opera equation of gangsterism and
rawboned free enterprise. The rhyming talk about Glocks and
Uzis, the porn fantasies and rat-a-tat expletives--all of
it helps establish the rapper's ghetto credentials, excite the
white teenage boys who are among rap's main consumers and provoke
the mainstream press.
</p>
<p> In interviews the rappers play hide-and-seek, sometimes claiming
that the tough-guy poses are just the work of artists assuming
a character, other times bragging that their bad-boy credentials
are for real. Both things can be true. Caught up in the echo
chamber of pop culture, rappers can hear their own songs egging
them on to their old mayhem, even as their record sales lift
them out of the ghetto.
</p>
<p> After graduating from high school in Long Beach, California,
Snoop Doggy Dogg--real name Calvin Broadus--spent three
years in and out of prison on a drug charge and subsequent parole
violations. "That was the key to my whole life," he once said.
Snoop, now one of the most wanted new stars of gangsta rap,
provided a good part of the lyrics and vocals on The Chronic,
a 2 million-selling album by Dr. Dre, who pleaded no contest
in June to battery for breaking a man's jaw.
</p>
<p> The current charge against Snoop stems from an incident on Aug.
25. According to the Los Angeles Times, his friend Shawn Abrams
allegedly argued with Philip Woldermariam, a probationer who
Snoop's lawyer says had threatened the rapper with a gun on
an earlier occasion. Police say Abrams, Snoop and his bodyguard
McKinley Lee tracked Woldermariam down at a park in West Los
Angeles, where Lee shot him. Lee says Woldermariam pointed his
gun at a Jeep in which Snoop was at the wheel. Authorities say
some witnesses claim Woldermariam was unarmed.
</p>
<p> Tupac Shakur seems to be enjoying as much material success as
Snoop. Besides racking up strong sales for his second album,
Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z., last summer he played a postal worker
who romances Janet Jackson in Poetic Justice, the film by Boyz
N the Hood director John Singleton. But judging from his background,
Shakur might have been a shooter no matter what career he had
pursued. In a sense he was doing time even before he was born.
His mother Afeni is a former Black Panther, one of a group accused
in the early 1970s of conspiring to plant bombs in New York.
Though eventually acquitted, she spent part of her pregnancy
in a jail cell awaiting trial. Shakur's father was shot to death
not long after being released from prison. Shakur "would have
been even quicker to use a gun if he didn't have an album,"
says Russell Simmons, founder of Def Jam records.
</p>
<p> Even before the Atlanta incident, Shakur faced criminal and
civil suits from Menace II Society co-director Allen Hughes,
who says that after he dumped Shakur from the cast, the rapper
attacked him with a lead pipe. Last year he was denounced by
Dan Quayle himself after a car thief who murdered a Texas state
trooper claimed to have been inspired by Shakur's debut album,
2Pacalypse Now. Though the jury didn't buy that defense in the
killer's trial, the trooper's widow brought a multimillion-dollar
product-liability suit against Shakur. For his part, Shakur
has a $10 million civil rights suit against the Oakland, California,
police department, in which he claims that he was beaten by
two officers who ticketed him for jaywalking.
</p>
<p> A backlash against gangsta has been forming, especially among
blacks who may be fans of other, less bloody-minded styles of
hip-hop. "They send messages to children, and kids are impressionable"
says Von Alexander of the National Political Congress of Black
Women, which has launched a national petition drive to bring
pressure on record companies. Rap Sheet magazine will no longer
accept ads for albums that show rappers with guns.
</p>
<p> KRS-One, a rapper who began to sour on the gangsta image when
one of his associates was killed, says rap felons are proof
that "you can't sweep society's problem children under the rug.
When you look under that rug you're gonna get blasted in your
face." But Eazy-E, a former member of N.W.A., thinks that, if
nothing else, self-interest ought to persuade them to cool off.
"A lot of rappers are trying to live a fantasy," he says. "They
have careers, and something stupid could end everything that's
goin' good for 'em."
</p>
<p> It's too soon to tell how it will play for the trio of rappers
booked in recent weeks. Though Snoop is free on $1 million bail,
his problems have delayed release of his solo debut, Doggy Style,
which is widely expected to debut at No. 1 on the Billboard
charts. It's expected now to be out later this month. How much
longer Snoop will be out is another question.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>