
Afrika Bambaataa's problematic hip-hop legacy + What's driving Canada's current box office boom?
Commotion with Elamin Abdelmahmoud
New York City rapper/producer Afrika Bambaataa was one of the most pivotal figures in the early evolution of hip-hop in the early ‘80s, thanks to an Afrofuturist aesthetic that thrust the music out from the streets of the Bronx onto dancefloors around the world. However, his reputation as a musical visionary and community leader was forever tarnished when allegations of child sexual abuse surfaced in 2016. In the wake of Bambaataa’s cancer-related death last week at the age of 68, Duke Black American Studies professor Mark Anthony Neal and hip-hop writer/broadcaster Jay Smooth grapple with the legacy of a problematic pioneer. Plus - it has been a long time since Canadian films did as well as they’re doing now at the Box Office. Globe and Mail film critic Barry Hertz joins Elamin Abdelmahmoud to explain WHY – and what it may have to do with Canadian pride.