THEY'RE WHITE?!! House of Pain - Jump Around (Official Music Video) REACTION #reaction #houseofpain #reactionvideo Twitch,twitter:Tyzelr Ig:Yonko_Ty Tiktok:Zelrclips
As a black man, this is why I hate this "cultural appropriation" stuff. We all learn from each other, and appreciate good stuff when we hear/see it, then add a twist to it to create something new. i'm 53, and I promise you, everything in the 80's and 90's was just a lot more fun.
I think whoever started this whole "cultural appropriation" phenomenon has tricked the general population into thinking that it's all about respecting other cultures, but it's really a kinder, gentler way to say "white people shouldn't do black/brown/etc people things." Meanwhile, in real life, regular folks don't care about taking influence from other cultures, races, or civilizations because that's what we've always done throughout the history of humanity. America is supposed to be the "melting pot," so let's share and be happy.
03:00 had me wondering a few things, 1. Why was my mother asking me to take out hamburger meat seeing as I'm 36 and married. 2. Since when does she write like an American calling hamburger meat instead of just calling it mince 😂 This was a great review, being from Ireland this song was always very popular here, even banned from being played in some pubs after 9pm because anarchy would break out with people headbutting each other and throwing glass bottles and anything that wasn't nailed down, great times 🔥 ☘
I'm a 54 year old generation x grandmother of 5 😁 I used to hit the clubs in my early 20's and jump up, jump and get down! This jam brings back some GREAT memories! They have quite a few good jams, but "Jump Around" is a classic!
got a few years on me, but I definitely Jammed to this in high school. Jumping around at the High School parties at the cool kids house who's parents would leave them home alone for a weekend. Now as a parent myself all I can think is that those people were NUTS. Lol good times. I joke and tell my kids I'll be the guy at the old folks home blasting Slayer and trying to get a mosh pit going.
The '90s were a hell of a time to be alive. We were the last generation to come of age last century, which was both a blessing and a curse. We are blessed from having lived to have seen such times, but we are cursed from having the knowledge of what we have lost. I have often said that the 1990s didn't officially end until 8:45 AM on 9/11/01. We were a bit naive and blissfully ignorant, without any inkling of the hell storm that was crawling towards us on that horrific morning.
As someone from the era when this came out I'm continually shocked how many people today make assumptions about race based on music genre. Back in the day, it was NORMAL that it could be anyone singing. It's almost like the society has gone backwards instead of gotten more progressive and open.
Exactly this. All the progress made in the 90's/early 2k's seems wiped out now. And by who? Race hustlers (including politicians) who quite literally CAN'T AFFORD to have things any other way. Make of that what you will, do your own research.
My bf and I were talking about this 2 days ago. They told us to be color blind and get along in the 80's and 90's. So we DID! Then they realized we were too hard to control if we were 'all one', so then they pulled the old dead racisms horse out of the closet somewhere in 2015 or so? Not sure when they pulled the switcheroo, we were too busy just living life I suppose. More fool us :(
@@SaltyShaman you know who pulls the race card and fosters division? Any organization (including political party) that will lose money and power if there is no division. Think about that, you know exactly who I'm talking about...and yes, that includes organizations who claim to fight racism and inequality.
Lol, they're from Woodland Hills, a hop, skip, and a jump from Malibu, and one of the most wealthy "Wonderbread" neighborhoods in LA County. Your 1st mistake was believing the hype.
@@rollomaughfling380 But the leaders of the group were Americans of Irish descent. Boston, along with NYC were both destinations for large numbers of Irish-Catholic immigrants between the years 1840 and 1920, etc. Danny Boy and Everlast were in fact born n NYC.
@@rollomaughfling380 And nothing, they were in fact from NYC and are in fact Americans of Irish ancestry. So there was nothing hype about it. They formed their band in Los Angeles, like lots of other musicians, so on that point you are correct. But the op's point is other than where they formed the band, correct.
@@palermotrapani9067 "Nothing hype?" You're fucking delusional. This band was formed in a wealthy suburb in LA County, and intentionally and specifically formed a "blue-collar" band persona of a raucous Boston band, in conjunction with their handlers at Tommy Boy. It was a catchy groove, but ultimately frat-boy, party-band, boy-band nonsense. Nobody seriously working in Hip-Hop took this shit seriously at the time. They were like an "Archies Cartoon" of hip-hop. It was for children. No better than Mmm-Bop, later.
There is no music like 90's rock,,rap,,grunge,metal, the 90's got it all and the best of it aswell. Metallica,,Nirvana,,House of Pain,,Beastie Boys,,Pearl Jam,,OPP,,Biggie,,2Pack,,NWA the list is endless. Nothing in this time can touch them.
And don't forget techno too, the Detroit sounds. Juan Atkins, Jeff Mills, Kevin Saunderson.....Good Times! Berlin techno, acid house too. Dublin 🇮🇪 was hopping , Beastie Boys had people robbing car metal logos all over town, I rem being at a houseparty and the mantlepiece was laden with them, o dear lol Saw Public Enemy around '92, what a gig, Nirvana around tge same time damn it's mad to think that was 30yrs ago. There was hope there was something good going on, free parties, up mountains and hills, that, whatever 'that' was ended when Sept 2001 and what followed happened, like we were shunted into a different reality, memories to treasure for sure and thank god there was no stupid mobile phones to disrupt proceedings!
Metallica, Nirvana, House of Pain, Beastie Boys, Pearl Jam, OPP, Biggie, 2Pack, NWA... We knew them here to. But here in Europe, especially in Belgium, we had other stuf to dance on. In the 90's were done with guitars and mellow lyrics, the only thing we wanted to do is dance from Thursday night till Monday morning on new beat/techno/trance and later on Eurodance.
Yes, the picture doesn't lie. I am a white woman of 53 years and I love this song! This is the first reaction I've seen on your channel and it was an excellent reaction. It wasn't fake like quite a few of them. I also like Tom McDonald so I'll have to binge watch your channel today. New subscriber! You never know who you're going to get. LOL
Been listening to house of pain beastie boys and tons of other music… there are some songs that just slap and it doesn’t matter if the artist is white black brown or purple… parties I went to in the late 90s early 2000s there were select songs that just got everybody hyped up… this was one of them…
I was 14 when this came out. It was Gen X's time. It was so popular in my junior high school that someone always brought a walkman would start shiz. Whoever did the morning announcements for 6 months straight every morning? A different kid eery day. Did the announcements then said...House Of Pain Said WHAT? And then they'd play the entire song (after locking themselves in to keep from it being stopped). The entire school erupted in dance and jumping. Every morning for 10 min the school lost control. The kid got a month's detention, every time. After 6 months, they stopped kids from doing the morning announcements and said playing that song during school was now an offense that got you instantly expelled. You could do whateer during lunch but that's it. It was a massive issue. This happened in 1992 and no one reported anything. The school didn't want to be embarrassed or get in trouble. Now, most of you would be thinking. Why didn't they stop it long before that. Sorry, they were gullible of the feral creatures they had a hand in raising. Yes, back then teachers were considered your parent who was legally allowed to teach you and keep you from 7am till 2:30 pm. Eventually 2:15pm. That's how parents saw them. So, yea. Us latchkey kids, we were thrown into the world to raise ourselves. Then, we just got worse as we got older. All my friends from back then? Either: Multiple children with multiple men, one possible even multiple children with her uncle she had his first kid at 17 willingly, strong possibility of abusive relationships, in prison, in rehab or out being a junkie somewhere, out in a gang somewhere, or literally dead. Now, those that hated me and werent my friends? Did well. One at 17 with blessings from her mother married her 43 yr old bf and had like 6 kids with him (last I heard) and her then 14 yr old brother joined a gang. Those not dead, in prison, or rehab are the survivors. Oh, and mental health wasn't a thing. It was treated as an absolute joke. So, we got no help, no medications, no nothing. It's made some very interesting characters. Yes, those of you that have heard this know what it comes from, so all credit goes to them. I just don't know their name.
@@kevanwillis4571 no not Irish but they're part of the clan, you can't deny their Irish roots. "plastic paddies" no need to insult folk who hold onto their heritage, it's a different branch yes they eat corned beef, we no longer do so what, yes we're different, but we are related! Tabhair aire
man the 90's was the last greatest decade. those of us who were tennagers in the 90's, music was crazy. das efx, lords of the underground, craig mack, flipmode, wu-tang, killa army, grave diggaz, de la soul. ect
They have many great songs and the album is CRAZY: Top of the mornin to Ya, Put your head out, back from the dead, Who‘s the man and so on!!! HOP IS THE BEST GROUP E-V-E-R
See what happens when this comes on in a bar at 1:00 AM in Boston; I experienced that about 20 years ago; it was GREAT!!!!! Thought the floor was gonna break.
Bro, that message from your mom popped up and I immediately thought "hol up, i dont have hamburger meat and i moved out 2 years ago" took me like 5 seconds to realize LOL
While certain music genres tend to be predominantly from a particular ethnicity doesn't mean it has to be exclusively made by or listened to by that ethnicity.
As a Mom myself, I subbed right after I heard you show respect to your Mom. 💕 Loved your review of the song - this was a banger in the 80s for everyone. Honestly, I don't know anyone growing up in the 70s/80s who put much thought into race. We had friends of all races, cultures and backgrounds and the main thing that mattered was a person's character. I hope we get back to those days in the future because I sure do miss them.
No. There were lots of people who put thought into race. Maybe in your personal friend group it was not like that. I will say that my friends didn't go around badmouthing black people for the most part (you heard racist jokes occasionally) and if you asked them they'd say "I don't see color" but then you would actually look around at who was hanging out with whom and it was like people wanted to keep Jim Crow or something. When I was in high school the black kids even had a feud with the football team. I have no idea why, and there were black kids on the football team, but not as many as the white kids. And if a white kid got too much into rap and black culture, there was a word for him, and it rhymes with the N one but starts with W. You never hear that anymore. Things have gotten better.
Early 90’s where the so fun and easy going. For the most part, everything was about partying and having a fun time. White,black,Latin,Asian man … we all just had fun and partied together.
And Cypress started performing it again after it became a hit(before it was a song it was just a hype spot at cypress hill shows- they added the additional verses for the song version b real just to use it to get the crowd going).
Side note, Everlast (House Of Pain) was in Ice T's Rhyme Syndicate back in the early days. In effect, and he collects big checks. 1's, 5's, 10's, and 20's.. A 100 G's, and he's pullin' honey's.
There was lots of that back in the days. Not so much in hip hop in the 80s and 90s, but pretty much all rock music got jacked by white people in the 70s. Rhythm and Blues was mostly made by blacks. People did not care so much about it, and also, people didn't really know what it was. However, it was for sure looked down upon to be a white rapper. House of Pain and Beastie Boys were pretty much the only ones that got a pass in hip hop at the time. There were a few others, but not on the same level of popularity.
"Great" music is the art of a man/woman tired of being kicked while he/she was down...Jazz definitely speaks on this via tone which is the souls orchestra! Irish were the first set of America's punching bags for the upper class...this is and always has been a class warfare ladies and gents, no race/creed/color will change that, eyes on the prize!
Everlast went on to write whitey ford sings the blues and DJ Lethal started to DJ for Limp Bizkit. I know Danny Boy went on stage with Powerman 5000 and I think he might have his own label but not sure.
Funny thing about house of pain is that they're all from LA (hence why the beat sounds so fucking LA lol).... and the celtics jersey and all that shit was meant as an appeal to potential white fans.
I was checking my texts and wondering how and why my mom was texting me and asking me to take out hamburger meat. She's had dementia for awhile now, and she doesn't have a phone. Lol
Born in the 60's. Grew up listening to my dads music in the 70's and my own taste in music in the 80's. By the time the 90's rolled around I was in the marriage/parent bubble and mostly missed what I think is the most diverse and amazing decade in music. Only managed to catch up once the kids were independent and I started listening to music again. So many new genres and mixing of tunes and cultures that sometimes it was impossible to classify what genre a track belonged to. I hate to sound like an old fart, but chart music today is utter crap. No room for fun or quirky tracks. Nothing raw or new or creative. And everything is now cut and paste, marketed and manufactured souless dross. There is actually alot of good music coming out today, but it rarely if ever finds it's way into the charts anymore.
your right.i'm so fed up of music made by key board wizards taking a hit song from the past that the last 2 gens are to young to know cutting and sticking it together with beats and other instraments they got from other software samples with bad lryics with a small vocab putting it out and it becomes a hit cause the currant 2 gens aren't aware of past music. this is all they know. it's sad.
One of the Cool things about Southern California is that, you mix with everyone. You eat erveryone elsesd food and join the Sunday parties and become one and in the mix. Too bad it's s oooooo damn expensive. Oh hell no....
Yes theyre white kinda lmao, i think 2 of them are irish american and the third is latvian, I may be wrong on that idk As an irish american myself they have some good songs tho, this is probably the first one by them I heard lol
I feel sorry for the young gen. I was 15yrs old when this song came out and MTV still showed videos so we knew they were white..growing up in Ft. Lauderdale we had some all ages nightclubs..when this song came on, you had 300 teens jumping..it was beautifully insane..it was also the first time I saw a moshpit in a hip hop club..