The real reason Bronx Puerto Ricans are attacking Tariq Nasheed’s documentary on hip hop!

Published 2023-10-29

All Comments (21)
  • @SkoolkraftE313
    Foundational Black America✊🏾😤WE ARE THE CULTURE
  • @rogerpace3749
    this narrative is a disrespect to the funk bands, soul bands, rhythm bands, and motown bands, especially James brown, so we don't need nobody's help creating music every music we created is by ourselves, wow such disrespectful words coming out of his mouth, foundational black Americans creation 100% we also created rap and hip-hop and the five elements.
  • While attending a New York university during the 90s, I experienced first hand their disdain of Foundational Black Americans. In addition, they made it a point to delineate themselves from us. Initially, I was caught of guard because I subscribed to flat Blackness. This was my first mistake and an eye opener concerning their jealously and disrespect of FBAs. From Puerto Ricans to Caribbeans, FBAs constantly lived in their dreams. Don’t get me wrong, a few were allies, but the vast majority wanted nothing to do with FBAs. Fortunately, I was usually considered to be a Dominican, so I was able to infiltrate their conversations and take notes. Colon epitomes the true meaning of a culture vulture. He’s not a Hip Hop scholar, nor does he represent the culture in any capacity.
  • @javionriley8739
    37:29 this Third World, Mexican, immigrant from Puerto Rico really said Latinos inspired James Brown. There’s hardly any Latino Mexicans in Georgia today. Let alone 1940. 😂
  • @battleaxe.
    These people needs to STOP! They haven’t mentioned one name in terms of a Puerto Rican individual being a founder of a portion of Hip Hop. PLEASE SIT DOWN! 🪑
  • @BlackMusicGenre
    Here's with Colon . He doesn't stick to strictly Puerto Ricans influences. He's all over the place. One minute he's talking about Cubans the next it's Jamaicans and then it's Africans. He can't stick to what his people have done. I have no problem with other groups in hip-hop, but it's a problem when the misinformation starts.
  • @chinablack9790
    Colon also wanted to interview me, cuz he knows that I was 'there' and know these Pioneers! I would be a damn fool, to give him my facts and knowledge of it, so he can twist my words or edit out what I say, then turn around and use my info acting as if he knew those things, all along! He has been known to do all of those things, when the truth doesn't fit his narrative!
  • @dus1009
    They just joined in. They did not help create nothing
  • @chinablack9790
    They need to stop with the history lesson about Puerto Ricans! Most of them like to say that they are 'Taino ', but when the Hip Hop conversation comes up ..... they say they are Black! Meanwhile, we know that they also have European ancestry, hence the color of some of their skin tone!
  • @aw2bwealthy
    Colon is a liar most of the words he speaks are not historically documented. All of FBAs music has a history. As I said before fat Joe was born 1970, Colon was born 1968. Rhymes wasn't born when HH was created, do the math of their age.
  • @Jake_Moreno
    FBA Hip Hop culture haters over the decades are in dire strait. From so-called ghetto music to the 2024 Olympics. I have had Puerto Rican friends all my life. Back in the 1990's, I would attend the Puerto Rican day parades with them. The younger Puerto Ricans were cool with Hip Hop. The older Puerto Ricans in their families would call Hip Hop ghetto music. They would attack younger Puerto Ricans even for wearing FBA style hair cuts. Blocks and fades back in the 1990's. I even saw younger Puerto Ricans getting attacked for wearing Malcolm X shirts. The older Puerto Ricans would also boo at the Puerto Rican day parade trucks that were playing Hip Hip music. When Tariq's film hits the theater, it's going to put people in their place. If they're going that crazy over a two minute trailer, wait until the two hour film drops. Any FBA who grew up in the 1980's, 1990's and were around the Puerto Ricans will tell you that the older peoples in their families, always wanted to keep a distance from FBA people, music and culture. The younger Puerto Rican would rock with us.. The younger Puerto Rican would tell us how their older family members were.
  • @Taino76
    Man im Puerto Rican and we didn't invent no hip hop.i dont know why they being culture vultures smh embarrassing.and thats the Ny Ricans us Ricans from the island the true Ricans we proud of our culture.this are the White Ricans,i consider myself from the black side of Ricans since my dad is a Black Puerto Rican and my mom is white skinned.Brother not all Puerto Ricans are the same dont say thats how they be thinking.cause in 1980 when we came here blacks treated Puerto Ricans like crap in New Jersey and were very disrespectful to our people.im not gonna say they all bad cause that would be ignorant.Black people have opened the doors and supported everyone non white, expecting for those groups to unify with them to fight this oppressors but they turned on them and sided with the enemy.i see how Hispanics are with black people and is wrong.im glad black people are waking up and defending there culture "Bravo".But one thing i can say to black people Ricans are the people that stick with ya out of everyone.God Bless our people in both sides.
  • @wwefan12505
    Motha fudga we are the culture!!! FBA👍🏾💪🏾👊🏾👋🏾✊🏾
  • @johnlucius1665
    Foundational Black Americans created all the genre's that have become mainstream in the last 140 yrs. This includes The Blues, Country, Gospel, Jazz & Ragtime, Rock & Roll, R & B, Soul, Funk, Disco and Hip Hop by ourselves.
  • @gheamarrie1008
    I have always wondered about him He’s another GEORGE LOPES that’s his true state of mind Peace and Blessings
  • @narmar9mm
    The real Question is! What is Hip Hop without Black America?
  • My family told me years ago Puerto ricans did not deal with Black people they thought they were above wouldn't be caught dead with us fact so a hard no they did not create hip hop