A while back NPR reported on a study which proved that the lyrics in popular music has become increasingly narcissistic over the last 25 years. In 1985 the #1 song was We Are The World
I asked my Facebook and Twitter followers what they thought about the issue and I got a lot of responses, many of which blamed the rise of narcissism in our pop-culture on the self-aggrandising nature of social media. Others pointed out that narcissism is the foundation of most reality TV.
All that's true but I think the most interesting thing about this pop-culture phenomenon is not that it's on the rise, it's that the public seems to crave it. When I was a teen MTV's The Real World
was the big reality show. It topped out at 5.5 million viewers. The Real World San Francisco featured a man named Padro, who was gay and living with AIDS. He became a cultural icon and when he died the President actually issued a statement mourning our nation's loss and thanking him for helping to raise AIDS awareness.
As for the music, well I'll be the first to admit that I love a lot of those narcissistic songs. When you dance, sing or simply blast them from your car stereo they no longer belong to the musical artists who created them, they belong to you. And therefore those narcissistic lyrics feel personally empowering. And although I'm not a Jersey Shore or Real Housewives fan maybe those who are are driven by similar motivations. After all most of us wouldn't run around acting like a drunk diva (à la Snooki) or as selfishly as one of those bleach blonde Orange County housewives. But maybe part of us wishes we could every once in a while. Maybe we wish we could have a taste of that level of confidence and entitlement. Maybe that's always been the appeal of rock-n-roll. Yes, it's true that Mick Jagger has never gotten on the stage, grabbed the mic and screamed, "There's nobody as bomb as me."
But he sure as hell implied it. And his badass energy continues to infect those of us who tune into it.
And we loove him for it.


3 comments:
I had this same thought on my way to work this morning when the new Jay-Z/Kanye song came on the radio. I'd never heard it before. The entire song was about how rich they are and all the fancy things they own because of their money. When did that become the message of Rap and Hip Hop?
Wasn't that music once about being disenfranchised?
I admit to an unhealthy addiction to some reality TV. Project Runway, Top Chef, So You Think You Can Dance. But I don't randomly watch annoying people be annoying for no reason. No Jersey Shore and could we please get those Kardashians off of everything? I thought Paris Hilton was bad...
I am still perplexed by the fascination with reality TV. Is it being watched by all the "nice" people who wish they could be rude and selfish all the time? You know, living vicariously through others? I'm certainly in the minority that I don't watch any of that stuff on TV and I don't understand how people find it interesting...yet, I'm fascinated by the fact that they DO find it interesting! Hmmmmmm.
It's the same in Australia. I can't believe people are famous for being famous.
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