StarTalk Radio - The Science of Hip Hop with GZA (Part 2)
Episode Date: July 28, 2013The role of science in hip hop culture is the theme that runs through the conclusion of Neil deGrasse Tyson’s interview with rapper GZA, with hip hop expert Prof. Chris Emdin. Subscribe to SiriusXM ...Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
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Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
Welcome to StarTalk Radio. I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson.
National physicist, American museum of natural history.
Here in New York City, come by, check it out when you're in town.
I got with me the one, the only, Chuck Nice.
Thank God.
Thank God there's only one and only.
No, apparently there's not,
because I went to find you on Twitter,
and there's 22 other Chuck Nices.
This is so true.
You're not the one and only.
You're the one and only Chuck Nice comic.
That's right.
That you know of.
I've got with me also in studio Chris Emdin.
Chris, thanks for coming on to do this.
Absolute pleasure to be here.
I found you because we're featuring clips from GZA, the hip hop artist, and this is
your specialty, thinking about inner city hip hop culture and how you can actually parlay
that into science education.
Absolutely.
Which is an awesome job.
I mean, that's just, we'll clone you.
We'll put you on the top of the list for the clone.
Then I'll be just like Chuck.
Yeah, there'll be 22 more of you.
I'm just curious, because you came to this show in a bow tie, in a jacket, in a starched shirt, and a pocket.
Pocket square.
Pocket square.
Looking good.
Yeah, the last time I looked at folks spitting raps, their pants are hanging low.
So first, what's up
with that well you know the thing is that hip-hop artists like the most prolific scientists of our
time are very anti-establishment so whatever the norm is in the world they want to be the opposite
and so you know for a lot of young people they look at who they perceive to be the most
anti-establishment oftentimes little folks who are in the criminal justice system and so the
aesthetic like the look of the pants hanging low is just from prison culture.
Because they take your belt. Right, but the
students don't know that. So they don't realize that
their pants are hanging low because in prison
you don't have a belt, so you can't kill
yourself, pretty much. And so that's why your pants
are hanging low. Or others.
But young people don't know that. They just see the look
of it. And then beyond that also...
Wait, wait, I'm sorry. Maybe I just never paid attention
to the buttocks of prisoners. But but you haven't been to the right prison sir
but you know that's such a great point i'm just saying so had i paid attention you're saying i
would have noticed that they don't wear a belt they don't wear a belt they wear jeans in the
many prisons and so the pants just have to hang where they do right and beyond that also but beyond that having to build it so it's sort of in prison culture it's also a sign show
other inmates that you are available right with the pants low but the thing is that the young
people aren't they don't they don't know the sort of nuances of where that the prison nuance right
the prison nuance they just see what it just see what it looks like and it looks anti-establishment
it looks bad boyish it looks you know it makes me look different than the norm.
They wear it without knowing the history behind it.
Oh, my God.
Listen, I talk to young people all the time, and I say, let's talk about this pants hanging low.
Do you know where it comes from?
Nah, it looks cool.
It looks cool.
Let's talk about where it comes from.
And once I start telling them, they are mortified.
Not too thrilled by it.
They are mortified.
Did you know that your pants hanging low is really saying to another inmate,
call me.
Thank you for this illuminating history of the low hanging pants.
You're welcome.
In my interview with Giza, I wanted to know the history of the Wu-Tang Clan, because he's one of the founding members.
Let's find out what he tells us about that.
Tell me about a little bit of history of the Wu-Tang Clan.
Wu-Tang is a group mostly from Staten Island.
Well, Staten Island bass group.
Some of us are from Brooklyn.
And we put an album out in 93 called Enter the 36 Chambers.
Wu-Tang.
And nine members at the time.
Some of us had solo careers prior to that.
So you were assembled out of the musical theater.
Just like a band.
Assembled.
Yeah.
Many of us childhood friends.
And tell me about his influence.
Very strong influence.
Yeah.
How do you account for that?
Other than just your great performance.
There's got to be something else going on there.
Well, nine individuals.
Because it affected...
Nine different personalities.
Of course.
As though hip-hop took a turn.
Well, every now and then, you know, history takes its turn, you know.
You have conscious rap at some point, then you have party rap, then you have revolutionary
rap, then it comes back around again, conscious, party.
And you would characterize...
Wu-Tang was just this group that was just, you couldn't resist at the time.
Nine members, nine nine individuals different personalities
great music we all had solo careers also i mean albums that were charting four or five albums on
the charts at the same time this big explosion this big bang and um the influences so how would
you say rap and hip-hop differed emerging on the other side of the wu-tan clan compared to before
that's a portal that the genre passed through.
I think it's forever going through portals.
It's forever changing.
Well, if it's not going through portals,
it means people aren't as creative as they ought to be.
Or they're just going into certain areas they've never been
and don't know anything about.
But, I mean, it's forever changing musically,
as far as corporate-wise.
I mean, it's on a whole other level as far as the money, the business side.
But I think lyrically, it's regressed.
What do you mean?
I mean, as far as the lyrical side of it.
I mean, if you take hip-hop from the 80s or this golden era, or even in the 90s,
and the majority of the MCs that were out there, they were mostly lyrical.
Even my first trip I made to the Bronx, one of my first trips to the South Bronx from Staten there, they were mostly lyrical. Even my first trip I
made to the Bronx, one of my first trips to the South Bronx from Staten Island.
Born and raised in the Bronx.
I was around 11. And we had two MCs in our whole borough of Staten Island. And when I
got to the Bronx, a whole bunch of MCs. And I have this line where I say, I was born with
the mic in my hand and I took it from Brooklyn to the S.I. land. I pulled up on the block, got out the truck. It was the first of pit stops, the era of the spinning top around the birth
of hip hop. That was something I had identified with. So I made it my point to exploit this fly
gift. And me and the RZA made trips to the BX, a mass of ferocious MCs, town of T-Rex, giants in
every ways, rap flows for every day. We knew we would get a reward with a price to pay.
The basic training was beyond entertaining, just a cadence of verbal expression, self-explaining.
So those were my early days of traveling to the Bronx, but they had this mass of ferocious MCs,
and everyone was so lyrically good that it only made us sharpen our sword.
Nowadays, it's not like that.
I mean, I hear stuff you hear.
So they're not as literate.
No.
That's what you're saying.
At all.
Do they still have ideas?
They just don't know how to express it?
I think many imaginations are sterile at the time.
Why?
Because you're not producing anything new.
They don't have a muse.
It's the same thing.
The universe is talking to you, and you're responding.
Yes.
They've got nothing talking to them.
They just, no, they don't hear. You know, when your parents say, you're not listening to me. you and you're responding. Yes. They've got nothing talking to them. They just, no, they don't hear it.
You know, when your parents say, you're not listening to me.
You know, you know they're speaking.
You hear the sound.
You feel the vibration, but it's not resonating.
It doesn't get in there.
No.
So the universe is talking to you every day.
Of course.
Now.
Not only the universe, the earth, people, planets, objects, beings.
I'm inspired by all.
You know, I once said, you know, in a lecture,
when I was speaking about inspiration,
I can be inspired by the spider
because his web is 50 times or 20 times stronger than steel.
So that's amazing in itself, and I'm inspired by that.
And I can write.
So you have to know enough about the spider's web
to even be inspired by it.
Yes, but you have to be willing to learn and listen.
Right, right, right.
So there's a whole community of rappers who've lost their sources of creativity. That's got to by it. Yes. But you have to be willing to learn and listen. You've got to be curious. Right, right. So there's a whole community of rappers who've lost their sources of creativity.
That's got to be it.
Yeah.
And everyone is following.
The majority is following.
If it's 199 follow, only one raps in his own voice.
So everyone is following.
So it's the same thing over and over and over and over.
So we've got to spread this.
And it's not really the story you're telling.
It's how you tell the story.
I think being in a club can be interesting depending the story you're telling is how you tell the story i think being
in a club can be interesting depending on what you're talking about when we come back more of
my interview with jizza and the banter consequential to that when we come back We're back on StarTalk Radio.
I got with me Chuck Nice in studio,
Chris Emden, professor dude from Columbia University.
Thanks for coming into studio for this.
We're analyzing the culture of hip-hop and rap,
and your specialty is exploring how to bring science to the inner city in ways that are culturally relevant.
And that's awesome. Just give me an example of that.
I mean, you know, just basing this on the last clip we heard from Jesus, this infatuation in hip-hop with sort of completion and circle of motion is really, really intriguing.
The fact that when rappers get together, they engage with each other, they do so in what they call a cipher. And a
cipher means that we have to position ourselves in a circle. And this notion of completion within
our modes of communication and also completion and circle of motion in the universe and in outer
space. Some of this sounds kind of new agey. Well, it is. It is new agey. But that's how
scientific thought is developed, right? Isn't it? You know, you get to a point where you need a fresh idea. Yeah, exactly.
Take you to a new place. Exactly. And that's what we're doing.
But at some point, your plane has to land from that. I mean, you got to land somewhere.
Yeah. All right. You land. You land on a curriculum.
You land just enough to make some sense of what's just happened. And then you take off once more.
Oh, OK. All right. That can work. And so when does the layover happen?
Depends on who you fly with.
In my interview with Jissa,
he mentioned the five percenters.
Is this a cult?
So I had to explore it a little
more. Apparently it was started in Harlem
by Clarence 13X,
who was a
disciple of Malcolm X.
So this would have been the Nation of Islam back then.
Is that what they called them?
The American local version of Islam was...
The American local version of Islam
was the Nation of Islam.
It could be described in some way
as a splinter group.
I guess.
And you can sort of describe the 5%ers as a splinter
off the splinter.
I don't know if that's good orinter. Off the splinter? Right.
I don't know if that's good or bad, but...
They're the toothpick group.
Gotcha.
We had the splinter group
and then now we just...
I'm a 5%er.
Okay, so they were otherwise known
as the nation of gods and earths.
I have my notes here.
I got to try to understand more about that.
Wait, so if we do the math right,
they asserted that only 10 of the
people in the world know the truth of existence that's right 85 percent of the world want to keep
15 in ignorance right but there's only five percent who are the the the upper echelon those
who are who become self-aware who have knowledge of, which has actually been added on as one of the extra pillars of hip-hop. So hip-hop
is rapping, emceeing,
b-boying, and DJing.
What's b-boying? B-boying, you would know as breakdancing.
It's commercially known as b-boying. I wouldn't know.
Excuse me. No, I'm not trying to play you,
you know.
And so those are the four elements, the four pillars
of hip-hop, and knowledge of self has become an
extra pillar of the culture.
Well, it's a good thing.
Yeah, yeah.
It's paying respect to the influence of the five percenters on hip-hop culture.
Okay.
Let's find out what GZA says about this.
All right.
Because I wanted to know how that played with spirituality because he cared much about this.
And I come to it as a scientist, and sometimes the intersection of those two can produce
great art.
So let's find out what GZA tells us.
So tell me about the five percent. The nation of the gods and earths? Yeah. It's mysterious to me. Well,
5% nation is the nation of the gods and earths. It started from Clarence. Gods on earth. Gods and
earths. Gods and earths. Yeah, it's called the nation of gods and earths. 5%? Yeah. And 5% of
what? Well, 5% represents 5% of the population of the planet.
Okay.
That knows the truth about certain things and not mystery worshippers, as far as worshiping
a mystery god or a god that you have to die to see in order to be able to see.
Okay, so the gods on Earth, they're there and tangible.
Yeah, it was gods in Egypt, you know.
Among them. Well, you know, and this was started in there and tangible. Yeah, it was gods in Egypt. Among them.
Well, you know, and this was started in the 60s.
Who started it?
Clarence XIII X Smith was his name.
And he was part of the Muslim mosque and he left.
For the Nation of Islam.
Yes, the Nation of Islam. And he left and he took some followers with him.
Well, he left from the Nation of Islam.
It's a spinoff.
Yes.
Okay. And, you know, took some of the. It's a spin-off. Yes. Okay.
And, you know, took some of the Muslim lessons,
the alphabets and all that,
and started teaching the youths in the street.
People never happy with the religion.
There's always a split.
Look at the history of religions.
Yeah.
That's why there's so many religions, right?
You start with one.
Oh, I need to feel a little differently about it.
Let me go this way and that way.
Okay.
So how many are part of this?
I mean, I can't tell you. I couldn't tell you the numbers.
I mean, is it a hundred, a thousand, a million?
Probably several million.
Worldwide?
Yeah.
Okay. So you associate with this?
Yeah. From my early days.
Okay. So what does it do for you?
It got me where I am now because it all started with us studying lessons and we would study
our lessons. Some of the lessons related to Earth science,
like what makes rain, hell, snow, and earthquakes.
That was part of the quest from early days.
You know, that was one of the lessons.
So it was an academic curriculum involved.
Yes, the circumference of the planet, you know,
light traveling at 186,000 miles per second.
These were some of our lessons that we studied coming up.
So it kind of gave us an edge on being lyrical, with theplay and flowing and just knowing things word for word, you know, and started us on our venture to learn more about the universe.
So forgive the word, but it's kind of like a baptism into the natural world.
Yes, it is.
Yeah.
Baptism to the natural world.
Way of life.
Not a religion, though.
It's 5% group.
It's a philosophy.
Yeah. Not a religion. It's 5% group. It's a philosophy. And you say it's not a religion, because religion normally there's mystical beings that are praised.
Right. Idols that are worshipped.
None of that is in this?
No. It's just about uplifting the youth and teaching them that they are great and God is within yourself.
As opposed to somewhere out in the clouds.
Yeah, you can't see. You're somewhere in the clouds.
On Mount Olympus, wherever.
Yeah, and how everything is within yourself.
And so that can be a powerful philosophy for someone who doesn't think they're worth anything.
They're on the street.
That would be a great philosophy for someone that doesn't think they're worth anything.
Only if they believe it.
Well, some do, right?
Some don't get out.
Yeah, some don't.
Well, I'm heartened to learn that the natural world can serve as a force of good in this way.
Most people that I know who come up, you know, there's their life and their religion,
and then the natural world is something else out there.
And they don't see themselves as part of it.
And your lyrics and just your tone and everything you say makes it clear that you are part of this world,
and the world is becoming part of you.
Yes. Together. Yes.
Together.
One.
No, that was some deep stuff.
That is some deep stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What's your reaction?
What's your reaction?
To me, it just reaffirms the deep connections between science and hip hop culture.
I mean, this sort of philosophy of hip hop, the philosophy.
In this case, it was nature.
Yeah, nature.
But I mean, let's think really quickly about, you know, folks who developed philosophies
of science, like the Coons and the Polanyis of the world.
And the way that they position science as, you know, this sort of elite group and the folks who make the decisions for the rest of the world.
And, you know, that aligns to a five percenter view of hip hop.
And so you have those corollaries philosophically.
But then also in the nature of the interactions of the five percenters is a sort of a distinct language.
Science for many people is really all in the naming.
Right.
By identifying a certain practice.
Is Pluto a planet or not?
Right.
No, no, genuinely.
Right.
Or if I have a certain way of knowing and being and existing in the world, it can be either pseudoscience or science based upon whether or not my theory is accepted by a set of peers who accepts that as scientific.
Or no, however, there is some empirical evidence that must exist
for it to be science.
It's not whether something's
true, it's whether the experiments show.
So the theory exists,
and the empirical evidence supports the existent
theory. And then it becomes a valid
theory. Yes, correct.
You can invent anything you want, but
nature's the ultimate arbiter.
And that model, if you look within hip-hop culture and what the 5%ers produce, it's really exactly just that.
So there's a theory for how we look at how we exist in the world, that the God is within the human being.
And so if that's the case, then they provide the followers with evidence to support the fact that the Asiatic man is God over all they contain.
Now, it sounds
kind of pseudoscience and weird-like, but the process for validating that way of thinking is
inherently scientific, i.e., I develop a theory, and then I find the empirical evidence to support
the fact that that theory exists. Right, but you got to be careful, because if you can be so
committed to an idea, wanting it to be correct... Then you try to prove the idea. You'll force
yourself to come up with the answer. Right, right, right. And you dust under the rug those things that don't fit
your idea. There's a lot of that that goes
on. Everywhere.
Everywhere. Like, for instance,
the theory that I am
a one percenter when everyone
knows that I'm broke.
Exactly.
So,
if this five percenter movement is is successful then they're no longer five percent
they're like 10 or 50 or 100 right they don't have a movement the quest eternally continues
right so and but no once they can tell everybody that that it's within everybody and no one is
withholding the knowledge i think it's's an acceptance of the tension that will forever exist.
So that makes the supposition
that there will always be
85% of the people who are just
ignorant. It does in many respects,
but the quest of the person who has
the knowledge is to always ensure that you
pull as many as possible into the fold. I mean, there is
a tension that you can never resolve.
Okay. But again,
that's inherently the nature of science.
We're back on StarTalk Radio.
And I've got Chuck Nice here and Chris Emden down from Columbia University.
Thanks for coming. Chuck, I just had to quickly sayden, down from Columbia University. Yep. Thanks for coming.
Chuck, I just had to just quickly say, you've got a show.
Yes.
You just bust into people's homes and talk about it.
That is exactly what happens.
There's a show with that title.
Yes, it is.
I don't even want to believe that.
Home Strange Home.
On Home and Garden.
On HGTV.
HGTV.
Every Friday at 9.
You are so not coming to my house, because I don't know if the camera's behind you.
I'll be there whether you want me to or not.
Talking about strange people with their strange homes.
Damn.
Not even the home is sacred anymore.
Well, we'll still look for that Friday night.
Friday night, man.
I'll be watching.
So, but that's not what we're here to talk about.
We're talking about the hip-hop culture.
Yeah.
And GZA, I'm featuring clips from my interview with GZA.
pop culture, and GZA, I'm featuring clips from my interview with GZA, and you were getting so in the previous segment, so deep into the philosophy of the five percenters, and from
where I sit as an empiricist and as a scientist, it looks a little out there, and I've got
to pull in the reins a bit so that it can actually confront reality, and maybe you've
got to float before you land.
I'm okay with that.
It certainly is a case of floating before you land, right?
Because at the end of the day, you're a science educator, you're an education professional.
It's got to land as a curriculum somehow.
There's got to be some lesson plan that comes out of this talk.
You know what it is?
There has to be an appreciation of the complexities of the culture
in order for you to be able to use it.
And there are a lot of folks
who do hip-hop education.
They do rap education.
They have no idea about the 5%ers.
They have no idea about
what the experience is like
of youth in urban settings.
And so in order for me
to do this kind of work,
to connect young people to science,
I have to ensure that I'm deeply immersed
in all of the culture.
Okay, so you're not taken by surprise, and you can tap
it if necessary, if it's fertile. Absolutely.
Exactly. Right. And, you know,
I'm curious about role models.
I think the concept of role model is overrated
personally, but, because you can be
inspired by anything, whether or not it's
a human being, and nor should you
be so invested in one individual
that you're committed to everything they do.
Spread it out. Do it a la carte, is how I think about think about it i spoke with jizza about what does it mean does because
he clearly is a role model to some people just how does he react to that i would read you uh
posting on our on our facebook page michael rafales i pronounced that right as a teenager
this is we solicited inquiries because they they knew you were going to be on Star
Talk. As a teenager, it was not my school, but it was Wu-Tang who taught me the idea of knowledge,
wisdom, and understanding. It was because of this idea that I went into physics. I'm now a high
school science teacher with a passion for sharing my love of science and improving science literacy.
Wow. That's great. With that going on, I'm not even necessary.
Let's do more of that.
What do we need me for?
If you can sing, your influence does this.
This is all we're trying to do here.
I think that's one of the unique things about being an artist
is that you have a voice that people hear and listen to,
so it's important to say something that's important.
How many artists don't?
99 out of 100.
So if your audience are not just moving to the beat, they're being philosophically schooled.
Schooled in a good way, not in the abusive way.
Right.
You got schooled.
Philosophically schooled. That's a whole other understanding of the role music can play in our
lives, isn't it? I mean, think about it. Most music,
nobody's saying, I want to play this
so that my mind
can be in a new academic
place. That doesn't happen.
I think some musicians think
like that. Well, they can be
in a new musical place, but
in a scholarly place.
Right. The person
here telling me he's a physics teacher in high school
because he listens to Woon-Tang?
I don't know anyone who's listened
to any other performer
who could make that claim.
No one said, Elvis, you know,
I became a science teacher
because I listened to your song.
This just doesn't happen.
So have you fully embraced
the power over life's trajectories that you might actually be wielding?
Yes, I have.
I mean, that's just one story out of many.
I mean, I've heard several stories throughout the years just about the influence that Wu-Tang has had on two generations now of people.
People that started with us, grew with us,
and then their children, or their nephews or nieces.
So it's like a whole other generation of kids that's listening.
I'm honored to be part of that.
That's a great thing.
Wow.
So I have to tell you, before I began my interview with GZA, I had no understanding of the magnitude
of their influence.
And like I said, if it's one thing to say, oh, I was inspired to stay in love or to break
up or to be happy today because of a song I listened to, nobody talks about pop music
as something that sends them back to school.
So how do you, that must make you feel good.
Absolutely, I love it.
Educator.
It confirms everything I believe in.
Everything.
But it makes sense because if you think about it, kids, when they listen to hip hop, they
listen to it over and over and over and over again.
And as they start to do that,
they start to recognize what these words are saying.
Right.
And therein lies the inspiration.
Right.
Particularly if a young person is listening to a rapper
who is pulling from different spaces.
And so, you know, it forces people to want to study.
You know, if you listen to a jizzer,
and he's talking about the cosmos,
and he's talking about stars,
he's talking about the universe.
It's like, whoa, where did that come from?
Right.
I'm memorizing the lyrics,
and all of a sudden, I want to understand it.
So it's inspiration to then learn more.
Absolutely.
There it goes.
More on my interview with Jizzu when StarTalk Radio comes back.
This is StarTalk. We've just returned. I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson. I'm here with Chuck Nice and Chris Emden. Thanks, Professor Chris Emden.
Chris Emden. He's got it that he tied it himself. I still am learning to do that.
I'll get lessons from you later.
I'm amazed that you're wearing a bowtie
and you're here advising us on the hip-hop culture.
Because I don't know that I've ever seen a bowtie
on anyone spitting a rap.
So, have you?
Have I spit a rap?
No, no.
Am I advising other people?
All it would take is for you to spit a rap
and that would...
We just need more stylists in hip-hop and this will change the whole thing.
So, you know, we talked about GZA as a role model in a previous segment.
What intrigues me is what role science and the themes that we discover as scientists
have played and can play in the creativity of artists.
And I had to get GZA's reaction to that. So let's see what he says.
First, I make music for myself
with the hopes of other people liking it
and accepting it and embracing it.
But I'm not going into the studio
with this idea that I want to put out a song
that's going to draw in all ages.
Let me put this in a different way.
I don't go into the studio thinking about making a club song or a club hit
and hoping that a whole bunch of club party goers will like this song.
It's not done like that.
It's done from here first for myself, then it's put out.
And then hopefully it reaches others and they can learn.
It just means you're a pure artist.
That's what that means. You're doing it because it's
in you, not because it's been acquired of you. Two different products come out of those
two possibilities.
I think it's about becoming one with whatever you do with your music. You know, like when
I watch physicists or astrophysicists speak about the universe. I mean, they're so excited about it,
enthused about explaining it,
and they have this passion for it.
That's how it is with writing and lyrics.
So I like that.
I mean, first, I think it's a luxury for an artist
to just create art without reference to who's going to buy it.
And so if he's just creating art and he's feeling the universe,
the universe is going to show up in his art.
You agree with that?
Absolutely.
It works. We ought to take
all performers
and give them science class.
Just to up the chance
that maybe something might happen
in their creativity. By the way, there's already some of that,
but it's a little more explicit.
Do you know the Galaxy song from Monty Python?
I don't think I do.
Yeah, yeah.
It gives data on the universe.
It gives the age of the universe, the speed that Earth is going.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, and there's another one about the sun.
The sun is a ball of incandescent gas.
So those are explicit science songs, obviously, and they're fun.
There's the Element song by, what's the guy's name from Harvard?
The guy, Timothy Leary, right?
Okay, so he recites all 103 then-known elements in a song.
He rhymes them.
Yeah, that was a challenge.
No, so that's obviously, that's a different kind of creative process.
It's not so much from the soul as it is, here's a lesson plan, let me hand it.
But I think all of that can play a role.
Yeah, the explicit connections allow you to be able to have a command of the information you're given in the moment.
So if the goal for you in your science class is to...
Did you hear that sentence?
The explicit connections.
I'm sorry, I'll slow it up.
No, that was a great sentence.
It was a great academic sentence.
That was an academic sentence it was a great academic it's an academic sentence alright that was an academic sentence
I love it
so let's
if I'm really
if I'm really like
clear about
giving you the
scientific information
that'll only get out of it
you will only be able
to give back to me
a specific set of
scientific information
yes
so if I
if I create a periodic
table rhyme
you will know all the
elements on the
periodic table you wouldn't necessarily the elements on the periodic table.
You wouldn't necessarily be intrigued by the periodic table.
And you'll get them in rhyme order, not in an appropriate order.
Not in order of atomic number.
The halogens will be there, here.
You'll be like, what the heck's going on?
And so the explicit connection, it fosters the type of education system that we have, which is really a banking model.
I deposit information.
You give me back information.
And if we have a schooling system where that's the focus of science and that's the type of-
The banking model of education, right?
That's what we get. The more implicit connections where you make these connections for the young
people, but you don't give all the information in between, what Giza does when he's taking these
disparate ideas and making that into rhyme, that forces the person to be curious, one to explore on their own.
They will still be able to give you the core information, but it fosters the creativity
necessary to become a scientist.
What you're saying, if you get handed information and you're supposed to spit it back for an
exam, there is no occasion to be creative about it at all.
At all.
And you end up being a successful science student,
but it doesn't necessarily mean that you'll be
a successful scientist.
Nor a creative artist.
Right.
That makes sense.
It's like teaching a child
the ABCs.
Right.
But you can sing
that ABC song all you want.
It doesn't mean you can read.
Right.
You know, that same rhyme
is to Twinkle, Twinkle,
Little Star.
Did you know that?
You know what?
That's the first time
I made that connection.
No, you sing ABCs. We'll go out with Twinkle Twinkle Little Star. How I wonder where you are. StarTalk Radio. We'll be back in a moment.
Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your host.
I got Chuckie Nice here.
What's up?
Love to have you.
And Chris Emden, thanks for coming down from Columbia to do this.
Pleasure to be here.
Put an academic angle.
A little spin on it. A little spin on our interview clips with GZA.
This is our last segment, and I'm sad because I wanted this to just keep going. And we, one of the important points
you made in the last segment was that you can just learn information, spit it back. You might
even get an A on the test and you'll be rated as a good student. But at the end of the day,
where's your creativity? And creativity
comes from putting together pieces of information that you were inspired to explore further. You
agree with this? Absolutely. And so what I know as a scientist, and what I think some people
also know, is that the universe can serve as a muse for science because there's a lot of information out there
that is still in need of connectivity.
I still need it. I still want it.
And so I spoke with Giza about, you know,
how science factors in to his creativity.
And let's go early with this clip and see what he tells us.
What's your favorite science concept
that keeps coming back to you when you're penning lyrics?
Could be an idea or an object or a thing.
It's just how everything is connected.
Because we are connected.
Yes, I mean it's all amazing.
So it inspires you because it's amazing
and so it inspires you.
So now I worry that if you learn so much about it
that it's no longer amazing, will it stop inspiring you?
I don't think I can ever learn so much about it.
I mean, because we're learning every day.
Even with physicists, y'all discover new things.
Yeah, every day.
All the time, y'all.
Crazy stuff too.
Build stronger, more powerful telescopes
and y'all going further back in time.
And the particle accelerator, yeah.
Exploring new things.
So I don't think I can ever learn.
So the universe is your muse.
I love it.
As I think the universe has been for many artists of late.
I get a phone call every couple of weeks.
There's an artist who's designing a sculpture for a city and they want to align it with the sun.
There's a star.
And they're feeling the universe.
And there was a day when artists, there a star, and they're feeling the universe.
And there was a day when artists,
there was other things inspiring artists, but not science.
So do you think it's because science is more accessible today
that it's reaching into the soul of the artist?
I think it's more accessible.
I also think that people are learning more and more
about themselves and their connection with the universe.
So, Jizz is a deep guy.
Yeah.
Much deeper.
I'd known only very little about him.
I read his bio before I started the interview, and I came out saying, wow, if every artist
were this moved and inspired by the messages they want to deliver.
There'd be a lot less crap on the radio.
That's definitely true.
Or not.
Right. Or maybe there'd just be more intelligent crap. Look radio. That's definitely true. Or not. Right.
Or maybe there'd just be
more intelligent crap
on the radio.
Thank you.
There it is.
Because I think about it,
and I say,
look at all the ways
a person,
someone growing up,
they're exposed to advertising,
they're exposed to TV,
they're exposed to movies,
they're exposed to,
and if everybody
had a mission statement
that we want to be
more educated
at the end of your day,
that's a whole different world
we're talking about. Yeah. But you're at the pulse of your day, that's a whole different world we're talking about.
But you're at the pulse of that, right?
And that's what I find most fascinating about...
Because you wrote a book. What's the title of that book again?
Urban Science Education for the Hip Hop Generation.
Urban Science Education for the
Hip Hop Generation.
So that's for, I guess, other educators.
It's for educators. It's for anybody who's
intrigued about what connections are there
between hip hop culture and science.
Because they're going to presume none up front.
Absolutely.
I always get that.
What the heck are you doing?
Right.
It makes no sense.
They're actually promoting this?
Yeah.
My God, man.
Well, okay, so maybe the next book would be promoting science in country western music.
Don't stop at hip-hop.
I think the thing about hip-hop is that it's so stop it, hip hop. I mean, you know, I think the thing about hip hop is that it's
so deeply connected, I find.
I mean, youth who are immersed in hip hop
culture, you know, we're having this conversation
about jizz and how insightful he is and how
deep he is. And I go into urban public
schools every week and I
meet at least five jizzers
every week. Young people who
have the potential to have that type of deep
insight.
That, I think, is what's most fascinating.
By virtue of being a piece of hip-hop culture,
they develop a way of thinking and knowing and looking at the world
that can very easily be aligned.
So your job is to alert that teacher to
take note of that if they see this evidence.
Watch that. Look at that. Don't miss that.
Don't beat that out of that person.
Because if you do, then...
See, the thing about schooling as we know it oftentimes is that it just doesn't foster the creative mind.
It's the Einstein story all over again, a million times over.
The most brilliant scientists of our time, darn near flunking out.
And that model continues today.
I mean, look at Giza. And I hate to bring up a story in detail.
This is a guy who you...
You got 30 seconds to bring it up in detail.
Brilliant. Intelligent, right?
Didn't get an opportunity to complete school.
Why?
That's not a function of his intelligence.
It's a function of the inability...
Or his motivation.
Or his motivation.
It's a function of the inability
for the school system to foster it.
So what you're saying is
our school systems are failing.
I mean, I hate to sum it up like that, but...
Our school system is failing,
but if it focuses more explicitly on
culture, there's
possibilities for us to reframe it. See,
with Chuck's case, the teacher didn't beat out of him
when he was cracking up in class, you see?
That just stayed with him his whole life.
That, and I am highly rebellious.
We gotta wrap this up, Chuck.
Thanks for being again on another episode of Star Talk.
As always.
I love it.
Neil deGrasse Tyson signing off, telling you all to keep working up.