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  <id>tag:henryjenkins.org,2011://2/tag:www.henryjenkins.org,2007://2.1963-</id>
  <updated>2011-09-07T21:45:04Z</updated>
  <title>Comments for <![CDATA[&quot;Meet me at my crib . . .&quot;: Reading the official &quot;Crank That&quot; video]]></title>
  
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  <entry>
    <id>tag:www.henryjenkins.org,2007://2.1963</id>
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    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://henryjenkins.org/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=1963" title="&quot;Meet me at my crib . . .&quot;: Reading the official &quot;Crank That&quot; video" />
    <published>2007-11-01T04:00:00Z</published>
    <updated>2007-11-01T11:47:48Z</updated>
    <title>&quot;Meet me at my crib . . .&quot;: Reading the official &quot;Crank That&quot; video</title>
    <summary>Yesterday, I shared the first of two blog post which Xiaochang Li, a CMS masters student, wrote about Soulja Boy for our Convergence Culture Consortium blog. Today, I run part two which centers around the official version of the &quot;Crank...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>Henry Jenkins</name>
      <uri>http://www.henryjenkins.org/</uri>
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      <![CDATA[<p>Yesterday, I shared the first of two blog post which Xiaochang Li, a CMS masters student, wrote about Soulja Boy for our Convergence Culture Consortium blog. Today, I run part two which centers around the official version of the "Crank Dat" video, which, like the many fan remakes, circulates via YouTube -- in this case with the active support of Soulja Boy himself.  I can't decide what fascinates me the most about this story: the fact that this teenager broke into the front ranks of the entertainment industry by using tools and processes which in theory are accessible to every other person of his generation or the fact that he has recognized intuitively the value in spreading his content and engaging his audience as an active part of his promotional process. As Xiaochang notes here, it's really intriguing that his video lays out his own analysis of the relations between the old media power of the labels and the new media power that brought him to fame in the first place.</p>

<p>She recently shared with me another fascinating clip -- <a href="http://www.vidrap.com/2007/10/soulja-boy-at-b.html">Soulja Boy at BET hip hop music awards</a>-- and notes that his vision of participatory culture extends to getting everyone else to do the Crank Dat dance while making only the most minimal gestures towards performing it himself.</p>

<p><br />
<strong>"Meet Me at My Crib...": Reading the Official "Crank Dat" Video<br />
by Xiaochang Li</strong></p>

<p>Yesterday, I brought up the  phenomenon surrounding Soulja Boy and the "Crank Dat" dance craze  that propelled him to success and touched upon a few of the things  that drew my attention to this particular case. Today I thought  I'd dig in a little further, and try to tease out some of the things  that Soulja Boy really embodies for me (as a concept more than as a  musician or performer) through a closer examination of his <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vum3qgoh0x4">official music  video</a>, which touches upon a lot of these themes of production,  participation, and distribution in the age of convergence.</p>

<p>Before I can talk about the content of the video, though, I have to  talk a little bit about the context in which I'm watching it. I have  to admit, I watch television almost exclusively on my computer, so I  can't say for certain whether or not this video is getting airtime on  MTV. What I do know is that it is on YouTube, uploaded by Soulja Boy  himself, and has been viewed there over 15 million times, framed by  the thousands of comments and hundreds of response videos. Rather  than repurposing the track for (re)distribution within a traditional  broadcast model, here we are given Crank That in its natural habitat  -- not a discreet media product, but one video within a network of  thousands of others that make up the phenomenon.</p>

<p>The video itself is a retelling of Soulja Boy's rise to fame in three  acts: Collipark's discovery of Soulja Boy, Collipark's ride to Soulja  Boy's house to sign him, and then the signing. In the process of  reenactiment, it then dramatizes many of the themes central to the  Soulja Boy phenomenon, presenting at the center a dichotomy between  the established music industry and its trappings and the ground-up,  digitally mediated methods of production, promotion, and distribution  that Soulja Boy employes.</p>

<p>In the opening sequence in the video, before the song even starts,  Collipark plays the part of the ignorant executive, asking a couple  of kids dancing in his office " "Who's Soulja Boy, and what in the  heck is that dance?" to which they they respond by reasking the  question, incredulous, to each other, as if Collipark's ignorance of  Soulja Boy isolates him to the extent that he can no longer be part  of the same discourse.</p>

<p>As an answer to the question, the video cuts to a following shot of  Soulja Boy, a webcam passing conspicuously in the foreground as he  pulls his chair up to a computer and the song begins. But instead of  getting up to dance and sing, Soulja Boy instead focuses on his  computer screen, where we see images of streaming video of people  doing the dance, surrounded by enthusiastic user comments. This is  crosscut with shots of Collipark gazing at his own computer screen,  and culminates in a shot of a chat client window:</p>

<blockquote>CP: This is Mr. Collipark, I want to sign you to a record deal.

<p>Soulja Boy: Meet me at my crib . . .</blockquote></p>

<p>The emphasis on cribs, or home turfs, is interesting here,  considering the way Soulja Boy's space is populated with devices of  digital production and distribution, and Collipark's office is  burdened with the structures and divisions of industry -- assistants,  paperwork, gold records on the wall, and a huge desk separating him from the kids who are in the know. The video also starts out in  letterbox, opening to full-screen only once the song begins, to  further delineate the two spaces. And Collipark finally meets Soulja  Boy on his own turf in yet another way, by contacting him through a  chat client instead of by phone or mail.</p>

<p>The second act, in which Collipark makes good on this request, we see shots of him in the darkened back of a limo as he drives through the  streets crosscut with various groups of people -- girls in the park,  boys on a bridge, two old men with canes, a man in a superman  costume, a traffic cop -- all either watching the video on mobile  devices or starting up the dance or some combination thereof. It is  only once Collipark finishes watching the video on his own mobile  device that he looks out his window, gaping at all the Soulja Boy  performances taking place all around him.</p>

<p>The whole sequence comes across like an ad for media convergence. The  video and dance is shown spreading through numerous devices and, more  importantly, generating discussion, sharing, and participation,  quickly establishing itself as a social practice instead of just a  media property spread over numerous technologies.</p>

<p>And here again we see the contrast of the record exec isolated in  what is visual shorthand for entertainment industry success (riding  in the back of a limo in near-darkness), but instead of presenting an  image of success, it shows how sealed off he is from what's happening  in the world around him, literally kept in the dark about what young  people are doing everywhere outside his car. What's interesting here  is not only the depiction of the seclusion the record industry versus  the mobilization of the audience, but that the internet is repeated  collapsed into the physical world. What happens on the videos is  what's happening outside, and the internet phenomenon is translated  into a real-world phenomenon.</p>

<p>What's more, there are a number of disparate groups represented  across gender, age, and location, all of them reinterpreting the  dance through their own communities, and linked through their ability  to watch the videos across various devices, emphasizing at once a  sense of connectivity, but also an urge to represent local  communities and groups. In short, Soulja Boy as a phenomenon presents  itself as more of a mode than a community, a practice that allows  existing communities based on characteristics that are generally thought to be "disappeared" in the digital space (gender, age, race  etc.) to foreground themselves.</p>

<p>Then finally, after several performance sequences, we have the  culmination of the video, where Soulja Boy gets signed (and here  again we see the interjection of digital mediation and online  discussion). As I mentioned before, the signing takes place at his  house, suggesting that the industry has to come to him. Morever, it  is done through the passing of bling, a gesture that's more symbolic  than official. The necklace bears a strong resemblance to a medal,  and he receives it more like an award than an opportunity. In other  words, the record signing is not the start of his career, but rather  simply the recognition for the work he's already done and will  continue doing.</p>

<p>Furthermore, he puts on his sunglasses before the  look is complete, suggesting a persona that was crafted prior to  industry involvement. And all of this is again framed within networking technologies, with the crucial moment in which Collipark  passes the necklace show on a computer screen show only as a  streaming video clip, with a chat discussion between two people  commenting on the events, suggesting once again the pivotal role of  fan participation in the entire ordeal.</p>

<p>An interesting question was brought up by Henry Jenkins regarding some of what has  been discussed here: would our reactions to Soulja Boy be the same if  we were to find out, some time down the line, that Soulja Boy wasn't  real, but rather the next iteration of something like LonelyGirl15?</p>

<p>The answer is yes, and no. Yes, in the sense that we may feel duped,  but no in the sense that, in a lot of ways, Soulja Boy already is  Lonelygirl15. He has never been shy about his intentions -- from the  beginning, he was clear that his goal was to sign a major record  deal. There were never pretensions about Youtube and Myspace as  merely expressive platforms. For Soulja Boy, it was about promotion  from the start, in an effort not to eschew the record industry  altogether, but to enter it in untraditional ways. And any discover  of disingenuousness of Soulja Boy as an individual would not wholly detract from Soulja Boy as a phenomenon, because what has grown up  around him has also grown past him and while he was the beginning, he  is no longer the central to what has happened. In other words, we no  longer need Soulja Boy in order to Crank That.</p>

<p><b>Xiaochang Li</b><em> completed a N.A. at New York University in 2006, where she wrote an undergraduate thesis on narrative structure in Proust's In Search of Lost Time while also exploring various aspects of media production through internships in film production, publishing, and web design and advertising. She then spent the interim year in Germany on fellowship through the Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange, where she spent her time working with independent film production firms in Berlin and Saarbrucken and going 220 km per hour on the Autobahn. She entered the Masters program in Comparative Media Studies at MIT this fall. Her current researhc interests include the emergence of narrative forms in the digital landscape that shift our understanding of, and interaction with, the structure of texts and the relationships of gender and sexual performativity between Eastern and Western media through the lens of fan-generated content. She is part of the Convergence Culture Consortium research team.</em></p>]]>
      
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  <entry>
    <id>tag:www.henryjenkins.org,2007://2.1963-comment:188845</id>
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    <title>Comment from Hillary Kolos on 2007-11-02</title>
    <author>
        <name>Hillary Kolos</name>
        <uri></uri>
    </author>
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="">
        <![CDATA[<p>Xiaochang's posts caught my eye on the C3 blog a couple weeks ago as I was mystified by the "Crank that" phenomenon as well.  I was amazed by Soulja Boy's savvy and the video's ability to inspire countless iterations of not only Crank that Soulja Boy but also the creation of new songs/dances like Crank that Forest Gump and Crank that Ryu. </p>

<p>Now that the dust has settled though, a new aspect of the song has gained my attention: the lyrics.  Seems there is a rather heated debate on numerous blogs about the meaning of Soulja Boy's lyrics and how they are interpreted.  The debate is going back and forth between those who take the lyrics as offensive to women and those who see the lyrics as harmless hip-hop slang.  Some see what he's saying as sexually explicit and others see it as just calling out dance moves.  As someone who honestly rarely listens to lyrics, I find myself now most interested in Crank that because the form (as a beat, video, and dance) has become so infectious and popular it has completely overshadowed (and maybe made irrelevant) it's content.  Just another layer to consider!</p>]]>
    </content>
    <published>2007-11-02T05:51:26Z</published>
  </entry>

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