Ben Shapiro’s hip-hop hypocrisy and white male grievance lands him on top of pop music charts for a brief moment
Originally published in The Conversation. Republished under a Creative Commons License.
Over the past decade, conservative commentator and podcaster Ben Shapiro has made a living telling his followers that rap isn’t music.
If anyone thinks so, Shapiro tweeted in 2012, “you’re stupid.”
Shapiro explained his reasoning during a 2019 interview:
“In my view, and in the view of my music theorist father who went to music school, there are three elements to music,” Shapiro said. “There is harmony, there is melody and there is rhythm. Rap only fulfills one of these, the rhythm section.”
As a result, Shapiro concluded, rap is “basically spoken rhythm.”
“It’s not actually a form of music,” he said. “It’s a form of rhythmic speaking.”
Leave it to Shapiro, then, to drop a “rhythmic speaking” song filled with white grievance during the early days of the 2024 U.S. presidential campaign.
Teaming up with Canadian rapper Tom MacDonald, Shapiro released “Facts” in January 2024. Given today’s bitter partisan divide and extremist culture wars, it comes as no surprise that Shapiro’s track quickly found a devoted following. But his racist, anti-rap rap lyrics ultimately repeat the same tired charges right-wing politicians have used against hip-hop since its birth over 50 years ago.
Pop goes racism
My father isn’t a music theorist. But as a scholar who earned a Ph.D. by writing a rap album and continues to release rap music about race and American society as my academic work, I knew a hit song filled with racist diatribes like “Facts” was bound to happen.
It’s not the first time blatant racism has propelled an artist to the top of music charts.
In July 2023, Jason Aldean, a white country singer, released a video for “Try That In A Small Town” that was criticized for promoting racial violence. That song shot up to No. 1.
In November 2023, a video of country singer Morgan Wallen, who is also white, surfaced and went viral. In the video, he is captured saying, “take care of this p— a– n—.” While Wallen was roundly condemned and apologized for his racist and sexist language, his music has also topped the charts.
But to simply call MacDonald and Shapiro’s “Facts” racist would be too quick a dismissal of all that is at play.
By performing over a popular-sounding trap-style beat, Shapiro and MacDonald might lead listeners to overlook their heavy reliance on Black vernacular speech, which toes the line between minstrelsy and abject cultural appropriation.
Because it’s delivered in the form of a conventional rap song, a listener might even be convinced that the racism and sexism the artists are performing are expectations, and Shapiro and McDonald are just doing what all rappers do.
It’s a clever gambit. It’s “rapwashing” racism so audiences don’t perceive the obvious intent.
Early in the song, MacDonald tries out a melodic delivery, rap-singing:
“This ain’t rap. This ain’t money, cars, and clothes. We won’t turn your sons into thugs or your daughters into h—.”
The song goes further:
“Claim that I’m racist. Yeah, alright. I’m not ashamed because I’m white. If every Caucasian’s a bigot, I guess every Muslim’s a terrorist. Every liberal is right.”
For a brief moment, during the last week of January, the song hit No. 1 on the iTunes U.S. chart, which gave Shapiro the audacity, and the apparent receipts, to call himself the “#1 rapper in America.”
White male grievance
It’s not surprising that such a large swath of music consumers would find “Facts” entertaining.