Public Enemy founder Chuck D (Kim Metso via Wikimedia Commons)
Public Enemy founder Chuck D (Kim Metso via Wikimedia Commons)

With beta testing complete, Bring the Noise is now in full effect.

Public Enemy, founder and legendary MC Chuck D has fronted the release of a new culture media app called Bring the Noise.

โ€œItโ€™s a flow in its usage like a billion other apps,โ€ย Chuck promised in an impromptu 45-minute interview with the National Newspaper Publishers Associationโ€™s live morning show, “Let It Be Known.”

โ€œThis is just dedicated to culture. To the F.A.M. โ€“ Film, Art, and Music.โ€

As noted by HipHopDx.com, Chuck Dโ€™s app should come as no surprise, considering how adamantly he has pushed for Hip Hop to have a board dedicated to sorting out the needs of the culture. 

The website noted that, in July 2022, Chuck D, KRS-One, Kurtis Blow, and Doug E. Fresh teamed up to establish the Hip Hop Alliance.

In January, the alliance issued a statement in response to Bow Wow claiming Hip Hop needs a โ€œboardโ€ to discuss cultural happenings.

โ€œLike every other aspect of societyโ€™s workforce, the artists and creators of hip-hop need protection, support, and advocacy,โ€ read the statement. 

โ€œFrom label disputes to intellectual property retrieval and the need for an overall governing body, the Hip Hop Alliance (HHA) was established.

Recent comments created a unique opportunity to bring forth a conversation that many in hip-hop and R&B have been addressing for a long time: the need for a governing body for hip-hop, the artist explained.

โ€œH.H.A. aims to empower artists to make informed decisions about their career and ensure that their rights are respected and protected.โ€

A Long Island, New York, native, Chuck D counts among hip-hopโ€™s trailblazers. Born Carlton Douglas Ridenour, Chuck D attended Adelphi University in New York.

Thatโ€™s where he met his would-be Public Enemy co-star, Flavor Flav. The groupโ€™s hit albums included โ€œYo! Bum Rush the Show,โ€ โ€œIt Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold us Back,โ€ and โ€œFear of a Black Planet.โ€

Public Enemy also contributed to the soundtrack of Spike Leeโ€™s โ€œDo the Right Thingโ€ and โ€œHe Got Game,โ€ which starred Denzel Washington.

The new app dropped this month and is about โ€œless of what they want where you can create more of what you want,โ€ Chuck declared.

โ€œHistory will be made for culture media being greater than social media,โ€ he asserted. 

While all ages are welcome and encouraged, the targeted demographic remains those 35 and older.

โ€œWith โ€˜Bring the Noise,โ€™ weโ€™re not telling anyone to leave social media,โ€ Chuck exclaimed. โ€œThis is culture media. You might not know me, but you definitely donโ€™t know those people you checked โ€˜I acceptโ€™ to.โ€

The hip-hop legend added that social media has โ€œeverybody in a sandbox,โ€ explaining the difference in culture media.

โ€œOne thing that culture media does is the music, the craft, and the art, and itโ€™s not uninviting to 35 and under if you want to give it a name, figure, or number. It engages a conversation in a room that just keeps it to the art and culture, and thatโ€™s what it is.โ€
Chuck concluded: โ€œI just think social mediaโ€™s all over the place. Everybody feels like they have a mic and a camera and are a superstar, so Iโ€™m just like, โ€˜Cool, stay there if you want to,โ€™ but you could go to BringTheNoiseApp.com.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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