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African History 7.9 Music and Movies 1 Views
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Description:
African pop culture gives people a way to have fun, feel connected, and express themselves. So does streaking at football games, but when we do that, it's "disturbing," and "illegal." Whatever.
Transcript
- 00:04
Okay, we’ll admit it.
- 00:05
Talking about stuff like Gross Domestic Product can be boring. [Teacher talking to classroom full of students]
- 00:08
And sometimes gross depending on what makes up that GDP…
- 00:13
But you know what isn't boring and only occasionally gross?
- 00:16
Music and movies. [Horse galloping in a field]
Full Transcript
- 00:19
Unless you're watching a documentary on like…the life cycle of barley, or something…which
- 00:24
we highly recommend if you're trying to get to sleep, but otherwise, it'll bar-ly hold [People falling asleep while watching a film]
- 00:28
your attention…
- 00:29
Anyway, African pop culture, like soccer, is a way for Africans to shake off colonialism
- 00:33
and shout their identity to the world. [Person on a cliff shouting loudly]
- 00:36
Like everywhere else in the world, pop culture in Africa gives people a way to have fun,
- 00:40
feel connected, and express themselves.
- 00:42
It also helps development by creating thousands of jobs. [Person using a video recorder]
- 00:45
We could talk all day about all the different genres of music in Africa.
- 00:49
It’s a gigantic continent, so, though it’s full of totally different kind of jams.
- 00:54
And tons of different peanut butters…
- 00:55
Heh…and it's also full of tons of different musical jams. [Lots of african dancers in colorful clothing]
- 00:57
There are about 10 major genres in the South African recording industry alone.
- 01:02
And almost every country has its own unique genres, with many genres dating back to the
- 01:07
medieval period.
- 01:09
For example, Highlife uses a Ghanaian harmonic scale that dates back to the 15th
- 01:14
century.
- 01:15
And then there’s Berber folk music, which refers to the musical traditions of the Berbers, [People playing instruments together]
- 01:20
a group indigenous to North Africa.
- 01:22
And there’s nothing quite like those Berber Shop Quartets. [Quartet of men in striped suits singing outside a barber]
- 01:25
…Okay, those don’t exist.
- 01:26
But with a name like that, they're missing out on a golden opportunity.
- 01:31
Of course, the genres that have international appeal tend to be American imports.
- 01:35
We’re talkin’ hip-hop, smooth listening pop…that kind of stuff.
- 01:38
But when Africans put their spin on these genres, they take on a whole new life. [Man with dreadlocks DJ'in at a club]
- 01:43
Many pop stars and artists go further than just providing entertainment.
- 01:46
They bring different African countries together… [Entertainer on stage singing and clapping to the audience]
- 01:49
…and they even help fight oppression from all sides.
- 01:51
All right, now let’s talk about the movies.
- 01:53
The movie capital of Africa is Lagos, Nigeria.
- 01:57
Cool people call it Nollywood. [A sign saying Nollywood on a hill]
- 01:58
Nollywood..
- 01:59
Nollywood produces about 900 feature films a year. [Old man sitting in a chair beside a lamp]
- 02:02
That’s about twice as many as the world’s largest film industry, which is in…
- 02:06
Nope.
- 02:07
Good guess though.
- 02:08
It's actually not Hollywood, but Bollywood, in Mumbai, India. [Bollywood labelled on a space image of the Earth]
- 02:12
Bollywood actually makes the most movies every year with around 1,100.
- 02:16
Hollywood makes closer to 450.
- 02:18
and its declining every year..Slackers.
- 02:24
Of course, the main reason Bollywood and Nollywood are making
- 02:27
way more movies is that they’re doing it on the cheap. [Two men stood talking on a street]
- 02:29
The budget for the average Nollywood movie is around $5,000.
- 02:33
In Hollywood, that wouldn’t even pay for craft services. [Man stood next to a buffet table]
- 02:37
Nollywood movies are also released directly to VHS or DVD.
- 02:41
Then, they’re purchased by bars and coffeehouses across Africa, so they can easily be watched
- 02:46
by audiences who don't personally own TVs. [Family eating popcorn and watching TV]
- 02:48
So you can pick up your morning java and check out a new flick at the same time.
- 02:52
Sounds pretty sweet to us.
- 02:53
The vast majority of Nollywood movies are romantic dramas or comedies. [A series of Nollywood movies]
- 02:57
This is because violent films are heavily censored in Nigeria.
- 03:01
Like you can't show a soldier or police officer being injured or killed without special permission. [Police offer shot and camera turns off]
- 03:06
Also, action movies need larger budgets, so they’re kind of a non-starter.
- 03:10
Many Africans relate more to the upper-class Nigerians shown in Nollywood romances than [Two African men sat watching TV]
- 03:15
the upper-class Indians or Westerners in other films.
- 03:18
Though Nollywood movies can get wildly popular, even though they’re made on a shoe-string.
- 03:22
It doesn’t matter if these movies are basically unknown in the West. [Two men on a street discussing Nollywood]
- 03:27
We see that as an opportunity.
- 03:28
Next time we want to seem indier-than-thou, we’re going to tell people we’re into
- 03:33
Nollywood…
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