segunda-feira, 11 de outubro de 2010

Eminem fala sobre a homofobia presente em suas músicas


O rapper Eminem esteve no programa 60 Minutes, exibido na noite de ontem pela emissora americana CBS.

O apresentador Anderson Cooper – um dos maiores nomes na luta contra a homofobia nos Estados Unidos – aproveitou para esclarecer a homofobia nas músicas do cantor e questionou o uso excessivo da palavra faggot (veado) em suas músicas.

“É uma palavra tão presente, sabe? Veado era uma palavra usada constantemente, uns com os outros, como em uma disputa, você entende o que eu quero dizer? Eu não tenho problema com ninguém, entende. É indiferente,” declara Eminem.

Quando o assunto é ser homofóbico, o rapper se coloca no papel de vítima.

“Eu senti como se estivesse sendo atacado. Sentia que estava sendo discriminado. E eu sentia, ‘não tem a ver com a minha cor? É por causa disso que estão prestando mais atenção? Será que é porque alguns rappers dizem e fazem o mesmo que eu?’ Eu nunca ouvi ninguém reclamar [dos demais rappers]. Eu não inventei as ofensas.”

As CNN’s Anderson Cooper puts it, the controversy surrounding Eminem has never toned down. In the latest edition of 60 Minutes, the rapper talks a bit about the issues that have gotten him the most (negative) press.

For instance, claims that he was homophobic and misogynist, and that he didn’t believe some people should be treated with the same respect as others.

As many fans may recall, early in his career, Eminem was targeted by various groups – GLAAD being only the most vocal – about certain lyrics in his songs.

Accusations against Eminem have ranged from being a hate-filled misogynist to being a flaming homophobe who would not see reason.

As the video below can confirm, Eminem wants his fans (and critics alike) to distinguish between him as an artist and him as a person.

After visiting Detroit and the streets he grew up on, including one of the underground clubs where he used to perform, Eminem is asked whether there is any substance to the claims made against him.

Cooper came prepared, even quoting lyrics from an older song by Eminem before asking him why he’d include certain offensive words in his music if he didn’t believe in them.

“The scene that I came up in, that word was thrown around so much, you know? [Expletive] was, like, it was thrown around constantly, to each other, like in battling, you know what I mean?” Eminem said.

Cooper pushed the rapper, directly asking him whether he had a problem with the gays or women.

“No, I don’t have any problem with nobody, you know what I mean. Like, I’m just whatever,” Em said in what many saw as an attempt to dodge the bullet and avoid the question.

Em also believes he was “singled out” for this precisely because he’s white: because no one hears anyone complaining about black rappers saying the exact same things as he does.

“[Other rappers] do and say the same things that I’m saying. And I don’t hear no one saying anything about that. I didn’t just invent saying offensive things,” the rapper says.

He then went on to explain that the vocabulary in his music is not the vocabulary he uses around the house. Actually, there’s no profanity at home.

Fonte: Dolado
Fonte: Softpedia

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