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'''Oprah:''' Isn't it true that you have 2,000 outfits?!
 
'''Oprah:''' Isn't it true that you have 2,000 outfits?!
   
MC '''Hammer:''' Uh yes. Yes it is.
+
'''MC Hammer:''' Uh yes. Yes it is.
   
 
'''Todd (V/O):''' The collapse of the MC Hammer empire is pop culture legend at this point. He might honestly be more famous today for his issues with bankruptcy than for any of his songs, because the man could just not quit spending.
 
'''Todd (V/O):''' The collapse of the MC Hammer empire is pop culture legend at this point. He might honestly be more famous today for his issues with bankruptcy than for any of his songs, because the man could just not quit spending.

Revision as of 19:04, 13 June 2018

The Funky Headhunter

Funky headhunter tits

Date Aired
March 19, 2018
Running Time
18:44
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Todd: Can't touch this!

(Video for MC Hammer's "U Can't Touch This" is shown)

Todd: Can't touch this!

MC Hammer: My, my, my, MY music...

Todd (V/O): If you weren't there, you can't possibly understand how big MC Hammer was. I was a kid, and Hammer was probably the first rapper I knew, but also just like, one of the first celebrities I knew, period, even though I wasn't allowed to listen to rap music.

Todd: He had a level of fame and saturation that I don't think is even possible today.

(Video for MC Hammer's "2 Legit 2 Quit" is shown)

Singers: 2 legit/2 legit 2 quit!

Todd (V/O): He modeled his approach to showbiz on Michael Jackson. He wanted to be rap's 'King of Pop', and arguably he succeeded.

Todd: But it sure did not last.

(Famous clip from infamous Behind the Music episode of MC Hammer is shown)

Oprah: Isn't it true that you have 2,000 outfits?!

MC Hammer: Uh yes. Yes it is.

Todd (V/O): The collapse of the MC Hammer empire is pop culture legend at this point. He might honestly be more famous today for his issues with bankruptcy than for any of his songs, because the man could just not quit spending.

Todd: He was '2 Legit 2 Quit' spending.

(Clip of recent MC Hammer commercial parodying his financial rise and fall is shown)

Todd (V/O): He managed to lose every last dollar he had, and several million that he didn't through a combination of extreme generosity and equally extreme self-indulgence.

Todd: But of course that's only half the story. You see, the best way to not lose all your money is to [image of...] keep making money. But Hammer was unable to sustain his career because he suddenly became very, very uncool.

(Clip of MC Hammer performing in concert during his heyday is shown)

Singer: Go! Go! Go! Go!

(Clips of Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg's "Nuthin' But a G Thang", 3rd Bass' "Gas Face" and Ice Cube's "Be True to the Game", the latter clips mocking MC Hammer are shown)

Todd (V/O): Modeling your career on Michael Jackson might have seemed like a good idea in 1990, but by 1993 no one would want to be Michael Jackson, in more ways than one. Once gangsta rap took over, overnight it was 1-8-7 on Hammer's entire image. He was getting attacked on all fronts: As soft, as a sellout, as a corny dancing buffoon in a stupid outfit.

Todd: But there was one last-ditch effort to keep Hammer time from running out. And give him credit, he did try to change with the times.

(Back to video to "U Can't Touch This")

MC Hammer: Now why would I ever stop doing this?

[Static sounds]

(Video of 2nd clip of "Pumps And a Bump" and clips of Rap City interview and Arsenio Hall performance are shown)

MC Hammer: Give me the girls with the pumps and a bump!/Just when I thought did I hit another soft spot...

Todd (V/O): Yup, Hammer went hardcore. No more cartoon shows or Taco Bell commercials. With his 1994 album, "The Funky Headhunter"... Hammer was out to prove that he was the hardest thug in the hood. Yep, that...

Todd: ...actually happened. This is Trainwreckords.

(Trainwreckords intro, followed by album cover for The Funky Headhunter)

(Clip of MC Hammer performing "Don't Stop" on the Arsenio Hall Show)

Singers: Tick tock, ya don't stop/that OG funk, that's what it is...

Todd (V/O): The reason "The Funky Headhunter" didn't do well is... It's kind of too obvious to even say.

Todd: I can can give it to you in one sentence: Hammer isn't a gangsta, the end.

(Clip of BBC interview featuring MC Hammer and a host wearing "Hammer Pants" and dancing erratically is shown)

Todd (V/O): I've watched a bunch of interviews with Hammer from around that time and it is so obvious. No one is buying it.

(Clip of BET's Rap City is shown)

Veejay: He's got a new album out and a new image. Gone are the days of the old Hammer. He now considers himself an OG.

Todd: Like look at this guy. He can't even pretend.

Veejay: He now considers himself...

Todd (V/O): And by he, he mean only he now considers himself...

Veejay: ...an OG.

(Clip of MC Hammer performing "It's All Good" on MTV is shown)

Todd (V/O): I mean the big difference was that he started dressing differently. A stocking cap and a baggy Falcons jersey doesn't make you a gangster any more than it makes you a member of (image of an Atlanta Falcons player) the Atlanta Falcons. And he didn't ease into it either. It was just, BAM, thugged out.

Todd: It made about as much sense as if I, Todd, suddenly decided I'm not a YouTuber music critic anymore. I'm now a... (image of the United States Congress) United States Senator! Look at me, everyone! I'm now (image of...) Ronald Johnson, the senior senator serving the great state of Wisconsin! I transparently am not! No one is going to believe that.

Todd (V/O): Listen to this intro.

[Intro from The Funky Headhunter playing featuring a smooth-voiced narrator]

Narrator: It's in this space that dwells one of the truest of macks, a street soldier definitely on a mission...

Todd (V/O): [image of bullshit detector] None of that is true!

Todd: But why is it not true?

Todd (V/O): Look, Hammer is not the only rapper who had to fight to establish cred after getting called 'soft'. It's not impossible to turn that around. (clips of the following rappers) LL Cool J pulled it off before him. Drake pulled it off after him. (clip of MC Hammer's "It's All Good" is shown) Hammer didn't half-ass it either. He tried as hard as he could. Why didn't it work for him?

Todd: Well the big reason is, and bear with me here, Hammer wasn't good to begin with.

(Clip of MC Hammer performance is shown)

Todd (V/O): Now this isn't a perfect comparison 'cause Hammer was such a big personality, but he was kind of the Flo Rida of the '90s: Big hooks, but completely forgettable lyrics. Hammer had hit after hit, but except for 'U Can't Touch This', no one knows a single line from any of 'em. And you know me, 'pop' is not a bad word to me. I know all the words to 'Good Vibrations' by Marky Mark, but Hammer just wasn't that interesting. Sure he was flashy, but as far as lyrical skills go, he's about the same level of rapper as Parappa the Rapper.

Todd: Which is not to say Hammer had no skills as an entertainer.

(Clip of MC Hammer performing at the 1990 MTV Video Music Awards is shown)

Todd (V/O): He was a great hype man, he was a consummate showman, he loved entertaining, and the dude could dance like nobody.

Todd: But hype and live shows aren't real high priorities to gangsta rap.

Todd (V/O): What matters is lyrics, and flow, and the ability to project realness: the exact opposite of Hammer's strengths, so a change of pants wasn't gonna do it.

Todd: None of this came naturally to Hammer, even the name of the album is off.

Todd (V/O): The Funky Headhunter.

Hammer: The funky headhunter!

Todd: Not only does that not sound gangsta, it doesn't even sound '90s. It sounds like a super old school lyric from like a (clip of...) Sugar Hill Gang song or something.

Todd: Here are titles from some actual gangsta rap albums from that era [images of...]:

Doggystyle

Ready to Die

Bacdafucup

Lethal Injection

Todd: And meanwhile, here is Hammer like (image of MC Hammer from his heyday) "I'm the funky headhunter, y'all! I'm about to get busy! Clap your hands, everybody!"

(Video to 1st clip of "Pumps and a Bump" is shown)

Todd (V/O): But let's look at the song that introduced the world to hardcore Hammer: "Pumps and a Bump".

MC Hammer: Pumps and a bump, pumps and a bump, we like the girls with the pumps and a bump, pumps and a bump, pumps and a bump, give me the girls with the pumps and a bump...

Todd (V/O): Now "Pumps in a Bump" is, in the grand hip-hop tradition, a song about ass. It's honestly, maybe, not the worst idea. Hammer wasn't gonna sell a song about killing cops but booty anthems, that was still a proven seller in hip-hop. It's not specifically gangsta but it's something a gangsta rapper could've conceivably released. So it would be gangsta without being gangsta.

Todd: I think it was a smart move.

MC Hammer: We go the pumps and bumps!

Todd: Okay, so here's the problem...

MC Hammer: Pumps and a bump, pumps and a bump...

Todd (V/O): First off, calling a big butt a "bump", now maybe I'm misremembering the '90s but I'm pretty sure that didn't catch on. It's better than humps or lumps, which we got 10 years later, but...

Todd: Bump? I don't know, when I hear "bump", I think (image of...) oral herpes.

Todd (V/O): And also, there is one major "bump" everyone was talking about after the video and it was not any girl's butts. (clips of Hammer in the thong) Nice bulge, Hammer. Yeah, right at the camera. Make it like it's going through the screen. Right into people's living rooms. (close up of the thong) Why it's almost like I can touch this.

Todd: Yeah, yeah, that's a lot of Hammer all at once.

Todd (V/O): (clips of Justin Bieber's What Do You Mean and Miley Cyrus' Wrecking Ball) And you may remember this move from other family-friendly stars trying to change their image but usually this only works for teenagers moving into adulthood. So that they could demonstrate that they're reaching sexual maturity alongside their audience and of course, various middle-aged pervs get to enjoy it too.

(Clips of Hammerman and Hammer's doll commercials) Hammer, meanwhile, was much older than his audience of little kids. (back to Pumps and a Bump) So him waving his dick and like "oh check me out, I'm growing into my sexuality." It's more like being flashed by your (image of a Boy Scout youth counselor) youth counselor.

MC Hammer: Get the pumps and a bump.

Todd (V/O): Please, Hammer... (image of scared kids) don't hurt 'em.

Todd (V/O): This video actually was too hot for MTV and they had to change to this (clip of 2nd video with a more clothed Hammer) alternate version. Probably for the best.

Todd: And here's the thing: I think the actual song is actually kinda good. In fact, it's probably my favorite Hammer song.

MC Hammer: I don't like 'em stiggity fat! (No!)/I like 'em stiggity stacked (yeah!)/You wiggity wiggity wack if you ain't got biggity back (aw!)

Todd (V/O): And even the whole album is, in a lot of ways, a lot better than his first few.

Todd: Hammer's flow is tighter.

MC Hammer: 'Cause I come equipped, read my lips, baby/You can slippity slip out ya clothes and take a trip

Todd (V/O): And his beats are a lot better too.

Female singers: All that we want...

Todd (V/O): He recruited all of the hottest producers of the time. And I don't know, maybe I just never mentally aged past the mid-'90s but that '90s G-Funk synth and bass still does it for me way more than anything else ever will.

Todd: So you know, "Pumps and a Bump" is OK.

Todd (V/O): And even at the time, I remember it being decently big. Even got a shout out from Fifth Harmony last year.

(Video to Fifth Harmony's He Like That is shown)

Normani Kordei: Pumps and a bump, pumps and a bump/I be that girl with the pumps and a bump...

Todd: Cannot believe that happened.

Todd (V/O): But while it did get decent airplay, it sure wasn't "U Can't Touch This" big. One single does not a comeback make.

Todd: And the flaws in Hammer's new approach became especially evident in the second single, "It's All Good".

(Video to "It's All Good" is shown)

MC Hammer and singers: Hey!/It's all good!/It's all good!/Y'all ready for this? (Uh-huh!)

Todd (V/O): OK, the first problem with "It's All Good" is that it's a diss track. You don't name a diss track "It's All Good". (clip of...) Now this song is actually aimed at Redman. Apparently Redman had been taking some shots at him.

MC Hammer: Now this ain't the name calling game/see, I can refrain from using names to get fame...

Todd (V/O): Yes he's not gonna name names even though he totally does at the end.

MC Hammer: Talkin' about my mama's where I draw the line Redman...

Todd (V/O): But listening to the chorus, you think that Hammer was trying to squash the feud and make nice.

MC Hammer: 'Cause it's all good! (hey!)

Todd: Secondly...

Todd (V/O): Hammer still danced... a lot.

[clip of MTV performance]

MC Hammer: [while dancing] It's all good...

Todd (V/O): A lot. I mean it was his primary skill, he had to. Of course he did make sure to dance like a gangsta, you know there's a lot more stomping involved, he made sure to keep that goofy grin off his face, but still it exposes the lie pretty clearly...

Todd: ...the way you dance like a gangsta is you don't dance.

Todd (V/O): It made his entire hardcore pose look like just choreography. He treated it like dance steps that he learned and performed. Now say what you want about the thong in "Pumps And a Bump" but this video is the real embarrassment to me.

(clip of MC Hammer grimacing while grabbing his hands)

Todd: (imitating MC Hammer's grimacing) "GRR!"

Todd (V/O): "I'm a toughie!"

Todd: The lyrics don't really sell it either.

MC Hammer: I thought you knew and boy you still can't touch this

Todd (V/O): There's a lot of callbacks to his previous singles.

MC Hammer: Boy you better pray just to make it today/they put me in the mix, too legit to quit

Todd: Yeah, you know the songs that he's trying to make people forget?

Todd (V/O): I think he's trying to re-contextualize his old hits into his new image, but it does not work. LL Cool J and Drake already had hard songs in their past that they can call back on when they need to reestablish their cred. Hammer didn't have that. He had nothing. So these callbacks are actively undermining it. It's just reminding people that this guy...

MC Hammer: You wanna beat the G, I beat you like hizzos/in the backseat of my caddy, you'll be callin' Hammer daddy

...is actually this guy.

(clip of MC Hammer dropping to the ground with his parachute pants in Taco Bell commercial)

MC Hammer: Yo sweetness!/Now that's the way the Hammer runs for the border.

Todd: The need to sell how hard he is is a big problem with the album.

(Audio of MC Hammer singing "Something for the OG's" with the MTV clip)

Todd (V/O): It just never stops. Every other line uses the word "gangsta" or "G" or "OG".

Todd: Some words I don't remember hearing were any profanities which, you know, is a pretty big tell.

MC Hammer: King of rock? You ain't the king of sh--

Woman: Hammer!

Todd (V/O): There's not even the parental advisory sticker, I don't think.

Male singers: That OG funk, that's what it is...

Todd (V/O): Also, I'm not sure if he knows that OG stands for original gangsta?

MC Hammer: All about the true OG's/not gangstas with pants...

Todd (V/O): MC Hammer wasn't a gangsta but he especially wasn't an original gangsta, he was not originally a gangsta and everyone knows that!

Todd: His other big move is to lean on his success to get respect.

MC Hammer: (They thought you was a sellout)/I'm sellin' out tours 'cause sellin' CDs, I'm the one...

Todd (V/O): You know, you know, "I made millions of dollars", as far as everyone knew at the time, he still had it...

Todd: ...so there you go, "I'm rich, bitch."

MC Hammer: Brothers getting mad 'cause over 20 million sold/and now they tryna diss 'cause they can't get gold...

Todd (V/O): "I went gazillion times platinum, you have to respect the cash".

Todd: No! No! They did not have to respect that! In fact that's the whole reason they don't respect you!

(Clip of vintage KFC commercial featuring MC Hammer dancing for popcorn chicken)

Todd (V/O): I mean, yeah, you made a lot of money but that's because you're a pop doofus who dances for KFC.

Todd: But here's the real ironic thing: in real life, Hammer is serious as fuck.

(Clips of MC Hammer being interviewed for Rap City and MC Serch discussing the time Hammer sent out gang members after him)

Todd (V/O): He may not have been a thug but he was from the streets and, because he was generous enough to employ his entire neighborhood, he had all sorts of gang connections and he was not afraid to use them. Many of the people who stepped to him have stories about coming close to death because they beefed with Hammer.

(Video of Don't Stop playing)

Todd (V/O): But he just couldn't make it come across. No matter how much bass he puts in his voice, it doesn't sound convincing. He doesn't sound hard, he just sounds defensive and butthurt and like he doesn't know what he's doing.

MC Hammer: I got the dance steps that got you pumping in your boombox...

Todd: You're a gangsta because you have the dance steps? [shrugs and scoffs]

Todd (V/O): And as much as I love '90s hip-hop, constant diss tracks and feuds at the time, I don't think they've aged all that well. Go back to it and everyone sounds whiny and thin-skinned, and it all kinda seems like just a waste of time.

Todd: Did Dre have to spend the entirety of The Chronic telling Eazy-E to eat a dick?

Todd (V/O): Who benefited from that in the end?

Todd: And Hammer might have been the most thin-skinned of all because he takes on just goddamn everybody.

(Clip of MC Hammer performing on The Arsenio Hall Show with the audio of Break 'Em Off Somethin' Proper)

Q-Tip (sampled): What you say, Hammer/proper

MC Hammer: We about to break 'em off somethin' proper!

Todd (V/O): Okay, a little backstory: one of the first acts to call Hammer a sell-out was A Tribe Called Quest, who took aim at him in their single, "Check the Rhime".

A Tribe Called Quest: Check the rhime, y'all...

Todd: "Check the Rhime" is an all-time classic, for the record. [Sings] You're on point, Tip?/All the time, Phife. Yeah I love that song.

(clip of a vintage Pepsi commercial featuring Hammer)

Todd (V/O): Anyway, they specifically made fun of Hammer's Pepsi commercials.

Announcer: We secretly replaced his Pepsi with Coke.

MC Hammer [off key singing]: Feelings...

Todd (V/O): [sarcastically] OH NO! Coke products have taken away all of his talent. Fortunately, Pepsi will restore him to the epitome of coolness that is MC Hammer.

Todd: God, the Cola wars were weird.

MC Hammer [sipping Pepsi]: Proper!

Todd: Anyway, I guess Q-Tip didn't like that, so he took some shots.

Q-Tip: And proper/what you say, Hammer/proper/rap is not pop/if you call it that, then stop.

Todd (V/O): So of course Hammer had to fire back.

Todd: And he did it by sampling Q-Tip directly.

(back to Arsenio clip with the aforementioned song playing)

Q-Tip (sampled): What you say, Hammer/proper...

MC Hammer: Break 'em off, break 'em off somethin' proper

Todd (V/O): Yep. So here we are, Hammer vs. Q-Tip.

MC Hammer: I'm selling millions/not the run of the mill/and like Big Daddy says, I'm wondering how you got a record deal...

Todd: [visibly fed up at this point] He got a rap deal because he's a better rapper than you, Hammer! How dare you, how dare you?!

MC Hammer: Step right up and be the next contestant/A Tribe Called Quest is a bad investment/I'm breakin' em off something' proper...

Todd: [huh?] Burn?

MC Hammer: A Tribe Called Quest is a bad investment...

Todd (V/O): Is that like a pun or a reference or something?

Todd: What are you talking about?!

(videos of 2Pac's Hit Em Up and Changes)

Todd (V/O): Now when we talk about rap beefs in the '90s, it always comes back to Biggie and Tupac. How they died, what a tragedy it was, what a stupid, pointless waste. And how we all need to increase the peace and stop the violence.

Todd: But if you ask me...

(Back to Arsenio clip)

Todd (V/O): Hammer vs. Q-Tip... there's never gonna be a rap beef more depressing than this. It's Q-Tip...

(Video of A Tribe Called Quest's "Can I Kick It?" playing)

Q-Tip: Can I kick it?

A Tribe Called Quest: Yes you can!

Q-Tip: Can I kick it?

A Tribe Called Quest: Yes you can!

...and Hammer...

[Back to video of "U Can't Touch This"]

MC Hammer: Every time you see me/the Hammer's just so hype/I'm dope on the floor/And I'm magic on the mike...

Todd: Can't we all just get along?

Todd (V/O): It's like finding out Carl Sagan and Mister Rogers got in a fist fight.

Singer: Man, what about Run-DMC?

Todd: Oh yeah and he took some shots at Run-DMC too. [Shrugs] Why the hell not?

MC Hammer: Been around for ten years but they been dead since '89!

Todd: Big words coming from a guy who was passe after '91. Did any of these people even notice that Hammer was attacking them?!

(Back to video of "Don't Stop")

MC Hammer: They diss and they diss and they diss but I don't fall...

Todd (V/O): It's just forced. Like I said, the tragedy is that Hammer actually demonstrated some lyrical skills for the first time and has some fantastic production. I think he could've been a really good rapper and that he just didn't really focus on that part of his act when it mattered.

Singers: Don't stop 'til you get enough...

Todd (V/O): This album is not that bad, there's a lot of good stuff here but it was never gonna succeed because it's all in the service of such a bad idea.

Todd: Honestly, he might've had a better chance if he just stayed MC Hammer.

Todd (V/O): Pop rap wasn't dead in 1994. It had more of an edge but it was still around.

69 Boyz: Let me see the tootsie roll!

Todd (V/O): Could've had those G-Funk beats without having to use the word "gangsta" every other line. If he had, I think he could've survived. After Biggie and Pac died, everyone wanted to cool things down. Will Smith's big solo move was just around the corner. Hammer could've waited it out. As it was, Funky Headhunter sold one-time platinum, which was a big step down for him but also just big enough that people will always remember the image of Hammer at the most flop-sweaty, wannabe phase of his career. And I gotta be honest, as many elements as I like from this album and as much of a nostalgia buzz I got from it...

Todd: (sighs) ...the whole project just made me feel kinda sad.

(clip of MC Hammer and his wife from the infamous Behind the Music episode is shown)

Todd (V/O): The whole MC Hammer story reads like a Shakespearean tragedy now. His crime was that he just wanted to be loved.

Todd: In the end, I don't think gangsta Hammer is how Hammer wants to be remembered.

[vintage clip of MC Hammer performing "U Can't Touch This" in his heyday]

Todd (V/O): That isn't what Hammer was about. He was about fun and good times and that's why there's still a lot of affection for the man even now.

Todd: Do him a favor: forget about this album. Remember him at his height.

Todd (V/O): Whatever you wanna say about the guy, he has a substantial legacy in helping to make hip-hop the cultural powerhouse it is today and you have to respect that.

Todd: And I am definitely saying that because I don't want Hammer to call his homies and have them kill me. Peace. (gets up and leaves)

(End of first Pumps and a Bump video)

(Ending music: Todd plays "U Can't Touch This")

THE END

"The Funky Headhunter" is owned by Warner Music Group.

This video is owned by me.

THANK YOU TO THE LOYAL PATRONS!