taken from the village voice
The Queer
Issue
Remixing the Closet
The Down-Low Way of Knowledge
by Jason King
"Pride on THE DL." Those four words of colossal irony were
printed across a flyer I was handed during the summer of 2001. It
was an invitation to a hip-hop party for men of color, called Brooklyn
Sensation. At the time, the media were in a feeding frenzy over black
and Latino MSMs (men who have sex with men) living "on the down
low." In refusing to disclose their homosexual adventures to
their female partners, these guys were being blamed for skyrocketing
HIV rates in communities of color. The homothug had become the new
millennium's stealth bisexual, hiding his "true" identity
behind a Sean John hoodie.
This
panic has created a whole industry of "experts" dishing
out advice to straight women who want the real deal on what their
men are doing behind closed doors. J.L. King offers lectures like
"The Five Personality Types of DL Men" for up to $10,000
a pop. "Being on the DL is being in the closet about your sexual
feelings for the same sex," King informed me in a recent interview.
"When I hear the word 'closet,' I think it means to hide being
gay and in the gay lifestyle." But the "PRIDE ON THE DL"
party betrayed these assumptions. Why would undercover brothers want
to openly celebrate being in the closet? The journalist in me couldn't
resist hopping the 2 train to Brooklyn to find out.
Nobody let the dawgs out that night at Brooklyn Sensation. Instead,
"PRIDE ON THE DL" brought out gaggles of flamboyant twentysomethings
rocking the latest hip-hop gear, desperately trying to look tough.
One petit guy sported a wifebeater that inched up his torso to disclose
a pair of Hilfiger boxer shorts and a midriff Scorpion tattoo. The
sweat on his powdered brow was held in check by a Fubu headband, and
his mustard-colored oversize Timberlands weighed him down like a pair
of gravity boots. With his swishy gait and lilting falsetto, this
brother was a universe removed from the menacing homothug portrayed
in the media.
"I
call them thug princesses," says Lewis Nicholson, editor of Glamma
magazine. "Even the voguing queens are now wearing their pants
dropped off their ass, and they're claiming to be hard." Nicholson
claims that such surreal scenes are becoming commonplace at DL parties
and thug clubs across the country. A perusal of HX produced the following
options for Gay Pride week: Thug Passion (named for the drink), Thugs4thugs,
Erotic Fight Club (featuring "muscle thugs, escorts, DL playas,
hoodlums, and wrestling in oil . . . men of color only!")and
those are just the sex parties.
On his
self-distributed debut EP The Notorious Homothug, TruDawg raps about
a day in the DL life over a house music beat. A self-proclaimed SGL
(same gender loving) rapper who calls himself "out and proud,"
TruDawg (Anthony Truly) has a day job as a fitness instructor, and
he's bared it all in the gay porn rags. TruDawg uses the homothug
label as a marketing tool, a way to get over. But open up the CD and
you'll find an X-rated photo of TruDawg demonstrating the safest way
to put on a condom. Rapping about homothugs is a way for him to save
lives rather than sermonize.
If there's
a DL community today, it's the result of this sort of brazen marketing.
In the late 1980s, a group called A1BlackElite launched Bla-tino,
a hugely popular series of sex parties thrown in secluded locations
across the East Coast. Bla-tino's street-promo strategy targeted men
who wouldn't otherwise fraternize at gay-identified clubs: "ruffnecks,
barriboyboyz, thugs, popichulos, shortys, manchismos, brolic mutherfuckers,
'n your neighbor." The door policy rejected fats, femmes, and
anyone sporting an "AIDS look." Implicit in this rhetoric
was the fear of effeminacy, a terror that bubbles under the surface
of epithets like faggot. This intense ambivalence about the visible
signs of gayness is part and parcel of DL culture. Undercover guys
strive to be unclockable: undetectable.
In the
wake of parties like Courvoisier Urban Thug Night, this ambition has
become more like an ironic pose. Guys who call themselves incognitos,
playas, real nikkas, thug bottoms, and pretty thugs fill online chat
rooms to maximum capacity. These men are advertising their DL status.
Nicholson finds such a contradiction hard to swallow. "Once you
start putting thugs' faces all over billboards, it's no longer down
low," he says. "People in Atlanta have begun to refer to
DL as Dick Lovers."
Living
on the down low is not new. Working-class and poor MSMs of color have
always had to be low-key about their sexual preference, since they
haven't had the same access to the safety nets that exist for white
and middle-class men. But calling yourself DLa term popularized
in the 1990s in the presumably heterosexual lyrics of performers like
TLC and R. Kellyhas become a way for some black men to admit
they like guys without resorting to words like gay, bisexual, or queer.
Some
men on the DL are true hardcore thugs who might rob you or do whatever
it is that real thugs are supposed to do. But DL parties suggest that
that many hip-hop-identified MSMs, even the most flaming ones or those
who don't sleep with women, are rejecting classic identities in favor
of simply coming out as "undercover"despite the ambivalence
and irony that underlie that strategy.
In the
narrative of the closet that's dominated the gay movement since the
late 1960s, men are supposed to be full of self-loathing about their
secret sexuality until they emerge into the public like fluttering
butterflies or strutting peacocks. But DL offers a new-school remix
of the old-school closet, an improvisation on the coming-out narrative
that imagines a low-key way of being in the world.
For some
DL men, there is no "gay" essence to reveal, or a bisexual
or straight one, for that matter. They may oscillate between male
and female partners, but it would be a mistake to call such a brother
a closeted bisexual, since it would imply that underneath the veil
he's settled on a stable gender identity. DL is not an identity but
a performance. It may even be working toward that elusive phenomenon
hip-hop heads call "flow." Flow is when the MC locks his
rapping into a groove, bringing the performance to a rhythmic, surging
sense of balance.
Bernard
Jones, owner of FreakDawg Productions, a black gay adult-entertainment
company, notes that he's "seeing more people who just completely
defy any category of sexuality. One of the models I work with is not
hard, he's not soft, he's not effeminate, he's not thuggish. He likes
men, he likes women, he's about to have a daughter, loves to be fucked,
and plays with dildos. He's clearly someone who flows across a spectrum
of sexuality and gender."
Kelvin,
a middle-class friend of mine, has always had a penchant for hip-hop.
He's been openly gay to his family and co-workers for some time. But
several years ago he discovered that he could disguise his identity
and meet self-professed thugs in online chat rooms. So he began the
process of coming out for a second time, as DL. Kelvin would lose
the suit and tie and don Rocawear lounge suits, and he began to grow
cornrows. He'd break into ebonics and deepen his voice into a Barry
White basso profundo when chatting on the phone with other "thugs."
In arguments, Kelvin called me "bourgie" while insisting
he was keeping it "ghetto." He stopped hanging out in queer-identified
spaces and events, and opted for more anonymous venues popular among
the DL crowd: sex parties, subway platforms, parks, and darkened clubs.
Unlike
the traditional closet narrative, where men are in isolation, DL brothers
tend to be relatively open about their sexualityif only to each
otherbut under the radar. Creeping is not the same as being
invisible.
Creeping
on the down low, besides being rough on the knees, is high-maintenance
work. But it often has a social end. For Kelvin, being on the DL became
an elaborate drag show to "get in the door," to meet and
hook up with other hip-hop-identified guys he wouldn't likely encounter
otherwise. Weeks into developing a relationship with a fellow "thug,"
Kelvin would drop the thug patina and become "himself,"
shedding the hip-hop gear and phony accent around his new friend.
In most cases, the revelation seemed to cause no harm to the relationship.
Dressing
up in campy thug gear would seem to deflate the original impulse to
be undercover. But it's a strategy that often makes sense for MSMs
trying to carve out space in hip-hop culture. There are few opportunities
for such brothers to meet. At a time when homo-panic crimes like the
recent beating of a gay man at Morehouse College are all too common,
playing at being a thug may also be an important way for some MSMs
of color to simply stay alive.
José
Esteban Muñoz, author of Disidentifications: Queers of Color
and the Performance of Politics, notes, "We are so used to white
masculinity setting the standard for the closet. Now when we talk
about it in relation to communities of color, it's not so much about
the single man on a subway; it's about a network of men who recognize
each other as DL, and they have this new concept or word to describe
it that isn't the closet. It's a way of projecting out a bunch of
likes and dislikes, a code of the way you experience the world in
relationship to desire and sexuality."
By equating
extreme visibility with power, the gay movement manufactured a one-size-fits-all
model for coming out. This tribal identity may have suited the politics
of its time, but it left little room for folks to improvise and personalize.
Hip-hop offers a new model, based on the recognition that a song can
be riffed into many recombinant possibilities. DL's immense popularity
suggests that a new generation is remixing the pride agenda.
Whether
they pass as playas, blend into the skateboard scene, or live by critic
Mark Simpson's concept of the "metrosexual"a low-key,
urban gent more likely to identify as a shopaholic than a gay manyoung
people of every race and class are responding to something in the
air. It may seem like a retrenchmentand in some ways, it isbut
their demand for self-determination extends a core value in gay liberation.
Will the movement acknowledge the rap at the door?
Jason King teaches hip-hop and popular music at New York University's
Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music.