Sunday, October 28, 2018

Blog #2: Gender Representation in Music Viedos

Logic - 1-800-273-8255 ft. Alessia Cara, Khalid

Prompt #1: The cultural object I chose is the music video for the popular 2017 song 1-800-273-8255 by Logic featuring Alessia Cara and Khalid. The video tells the journey of a teenage boy struggling to come to embrace his sexuality. It shows the life of a typical high school boy on the track team surrounded by people yet feeling alone trying to cope with the pressure to find a way to accept himself and having to tell his family after being caught with a male magazine in his room. The video shows the turn the life of the boy as he is outed for being gay after spending the sleeping in the same bed as his male best friend. After his locker is defaced by his fellow teammates, he feels the weight of coming out to be too much, he pulls a gun hidden in his home and struggles to point it at himself. He continues on by running, so as to clear his head, and then calling the suicide hotline. The end of the video shows that despite an agonizing journey, there is light despite all the darkness. I chose this particular music video because it reminded me of a friend from high school who is an open transgender male who was going through depression at the time and told me his experience calling the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline one day.

Prompt #2: 5 Key Questions
1.     The creators of 1-800-273-8255 are the record label Def Jam Recordings and the artist Logic, Alessia Cara, and Khalid who wrote the song and were featured in the music video. It took various writers, producers, record label executives along with video directors and editors to approve and create the final version of this song and the story of the young boy struggling with his sexuality the music video follows.
2.     The video utilizes an eye-level viewpoint that allows the audience to picture themselves alongside the boy, as if looking at his journey over his shoulder. The dark lighting in the majority of the video accentuates the despair those who are struggling with their sexuality, depression, and many other issues feel constantly entrapped in. The people in the video are shown as living normal lives. The protagonist is an ordinary teenage boy who goes to high school, is on the school track team, and has a close friend who he can talk to. As this is the typical high school experience, every person who watches this music video and went to high school can relate their teenage years to at least one aspect of the story. This makes the story feel real and can apply to anyone who has felt alone, viewing suicide is the only answer to end their suffering.
3.     Personally, I have not had an experience like the one conveyed in the video. Being straight, I do not know nor have experienced the disquiet a person struggling to accept their sexuality. However, I have a friend who once called the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline whose story is similar in the way that he is transsexual and felt rejected from his family for being who he truly was. As people have different views and personal beliefs, most shaped by religion, there are people who are likely to disagree with the message this video is trying to convey. Deeply religious viewers who are strongly opposed to the LGBTQ community may interpret this message as appalling, something that shouldn’t be mentioned or acknowledged.
4.     The inner turmoil of sexuality other than the “socially accepted” heterosexuality is represented in this message. Audience members who are a part of the LGBTQ community and anyone who has felt deep loss for life are invited to connect with the video. The idea of that people apart of the LGBTQ community struggle with coming to accept and embrace their sexuality, especially at a young age, go through many times alone. The video also depicts the possible consequences of being bullied as well as not being accepted by family for being anything other than socially acceptable.

5.     1-800-273-8255, both the song and the music video, was created to raise awareness in listeners/viewers of the free National Suicide Prevention Lifeline anyone can call for support 24/7. The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline gains from this song because it gives a large-scale exposure to their service on mainstream media and gets people talking about resources available to anyone in need. The benefit of this song is for individuals going through a crisis with no help and are in need of someone to talk to.  


4 comments:

  1. I remember this music video, my friend was triggered by the scene when he pulled out the gun.

    The funny thing is all the music videos with LGBT community hardly have happy stories. Symphony, Wild trilogy, Take me to church, they are all sad endings.

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  2. Hey Donna. Loved your idea and push to use Logic, a very popular and favorable artist to relate and reach out to an audience in desperate need of the help and attention. I think that we lived in a society where our culture has made up a lot of unspoken language and underlying understandings of things that we do not always verbalize one and I believe that the challenges that those who like the same sex face falls into this category. However, it is great that visually we are able to see through the music video and the lyrics of the song these obstacles and journey in actuality.

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  3. Hey Donna! I completely agree with Brianna and couldn't have said it better myself. I admire the fact that some artists like Logic and G-easy use their voice and amount of following to talk about important and controversial topics. Instead of just singing catchy simple songs, these artists are sharing stories to change peoples lives and hopefully save some!

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  4. Hello Donna! Great topic what really makes it interesting is how it reflects the reality of many people in the LGBTQ community who are struggling to come out or have come out, but not without troubles. Unfortunately for men in this scenario its harder because they are held to a much higher standard with their sexuality thanks to societal norms. Living in such a structured society is hard for anybody that is looking to come out in a world that is still black and white.

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