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Can't Stop Won't Stop (Young Adult Edition)

Jeff Chang

Can't Stop Won't Stop (Young Adult Edition): A Hip-Hop History

Jeff Chang

  • 115-page comprehensive Study Guide
  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and multiple sections of expert analysis
  • The ultimate resource for assignments, engaging lessons, and lively book discussions

Can't Stop Won't Stop (Young Adult Edition) Part 2 Summary & Analysis

Part 2: “Loop 2: 1983-1990”

Part 2, Chapter 7 Summary: “The Big Crossover”

Hip-hop was becoming a worldwide phenomenon. Wild Style was popular in Japan, major MCs were sent by Kool Lady Blue to tour in England and France, and hip-hop was featured in major films like Flashdance, which spawned a series of hip-hop movies. Breakdancing was amassing popularity, even being sold in the form of toys and children’s fashion. Commercials by popular fast-food chains featured hip-hop. Although its popularity was a positive, it began to be seen as a marketing tool and moved away from its roots. B-boying was replaced by one dance fad after another, and DJing was slowly replaced by rap producing in the form of a drum machine. Rap moved out of the clubs and onto the radio, creating a new type of segregation between white pop and rock stations and Black R&B/hip-hop stations.

By 1984, Run-DMC was the most popular rap crew. They came from Queens, a place where Black families became re-segregated after they moved in and the previously occupying white families moved out. Gangs and suburban living were integrated into one another. Run-DMC spent their beginning months travelling to Manhattan or the Bronx for shows.

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