Selon une étude faite aux Etats-Unis, les jeunes qui écoutent le rap ont plus de chance de verser dans l'alcool, la drogue et la violence.
C'est vrai qu'à force d'écouter des rappeurs comme Snoop Dogg et 50 Cent, un ado a de quoi dévier vers le côté obscur de la société!
- article : Rap listeners prone to alcohol, drugs and violence
Study raises questions about alcohol industry marketing through hip hop
A survey of more than 1,000 community college students found that rap and hip hop listeners were more likely to abuse alcohol and illegal drugs and to engage in aggressive behavior when compared to listeners of other types of music. Rap and hip hop music are regularly used for alcohol advertising.
Young people who listen to rap and hip hop music are more likely to have problems with alcohol, drugs and violence than listeners of other types of music, a new study shows. The link to these problems raises serious questions about the alcohol industry's use of rap and hip hop to market products, the study author said.
"People should be concerned about rap and hip hop being used to market alcoholic beverages, given the alcohol, drug and aggression problems among listeners," said lead author Meng-Jinn Chen, Ph.D., a research scientist at PIRE Prevention Research Center.
Recent studies of popular music by other researchers reveal that nearly half of rap/hip and hop songs mentioned alcohol as compared to around 10 percent or less of other popular music genres. Nearly two-thirds of rap songs mentioned illicit drugs as compared with one-tenth of songs from other genres. Rap and rock music videos depict violence twice as often as other music genres.
C'est vrai qu'à force d'écouter des rappeurs comme Snoop Dogg et 50 Cent, un ado a de quoi dévier vers le côté obscur de la société!
- article : Rap listeners prone to alcohol, drugs and violence
Study raises questions about alcohol industry marketing through hip hop
A survey of more than 1,000 community college students found that rap and hip hop listeners were more likely to abuse alcohol and illegal drugs and to engage in aggressive behavior when compared to listeners of other types of music. Rap and hip hop music are regularly used for alcohol advertising.
Young people who listen to rap and hip hop music are more likely to have problems with alcohol, drugs and violence than listeners of other types of music, a new study shows. The link to these problems raises serious questions about the alcohol industry's use of rap and hip hop to market products, the study author said.
"People should be concerned about rap and hip hop being used to market alcoholic beverages, given the alcohol, drug and aggression problems among listeners," said lead author Meng-Jinn Chen, Ph.D., a research scientist at PIRE Prevention Research Center.
Recent studies of popular music by other researchers reveal that nearly half of rap/hip and hop songs mentioned alcohol as compared to around 10 percent or less of other popular music genres. Nearly two-thirds of rap songs mentioned illicit drugs as compared with one-tenth of songs from other genres. Rap and rock music videos depict violence twice as often as other music genres.
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