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Ballad of the Bullet: Gangs, Drill Music, and the Power of Online Infamy

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How poor urban youth in Chicago use social media to profit from portrayals of gang violence, and the questions this raises about poverty, opportunities, and public voyeurismAmid increasing hardship and limited employment options, poor urban youth are developing creative online strategies to make ends meet. Using such social media platforms as YouTube, Twitter, and Instagram, they’re capitalizing on the public’s fascination with the ghetto and gang violence. But with what consequences? Ballad of the Bullet follows the Corner Boys, a group of thirty or so young men on Chicago’s South Side who have hitched their dreams of success to the creation of “drill music” (slang for “shooting music”). Drillers disseminate this competitive genre of hyperviolent, hyperlocal, DIY-style gangsta rap digitally, hoping to amass millions of clicks, views, and followers—and a ticket out of poverty. But in this perverse system of benefits, where online popularity can convert into offline rewards, the risks can be too great.Drawing on extensive fieldwork and countless interviews compiled from daily, close interactions with the Corner Boys, as well as time spent with their families, friends, music producers, and followers, Forrest Stuart looks at the lives and motivations of these young men. Stuart examines why drillers choose to embrace rather than distance themselves from negative stereotypes, using the web to assert their supposed superior criminality over rival gangs. While these virtual displays of ghetto authenticity—the saturation of social media with images of guns, drugs, and urban warfare—can lead to online notoriety and actual resources, including cash, housing, guns, sex, and, for a select few, upward mobility, drillers frequently end up behind bars, seriously injured, or dead.Raising questions about online celebrity, public voyeurism, and the commodification of the ghetto, Ballad of the Bullet offers a singular look at what happens when the digital economy and urban poverty collide.

288 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 12, 2020

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Forrest Stuart

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Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Lydia.
343 reviews1 follower
October 29, 2022
Very good ethnography that I feel helps overturn so many misconceptions through its detailed and personal approach.

Namely, it is easy to criticize gangs and drill music, yet in part, it comes from the same desire for dignity and recognition that exists in "safer, economically stable neighborhoods" where "privileged residents are free to engage in rabid online self-promotion—posting pictures with their diplomas, videos of their European vacations, or status updates from their prestigious internships—without worrying that this content will ever threaten their lives."
Profile Image for Benny Nicholson.
42 reviews2 followers
August 29, 2024
drill music exists in this superposition where it feels impossible to talk about without recapitulating its violence through your own voyeurism. this book approaches this challenge with a gaze that is all at once scholarly and personal, critical and empathetic. it is a reminder of what ethnography can do at its best
Profile Image for Niklas Laninge.
Author 8 books78 followers
April 27, 2023
Fresh take! Impressive work, sociology and/or anthropology at its best ✊🏻🤘🏼🙌🏼.
Profile Image for Amelia O’Halloran.
61 reviews
December 2, 2025
I almost never rate non-fiction books, but this was just an incredible exposition of perception versus reality of crime through stories of violence-related music and music videos in Chicago. I read it as a response to the question of why perceptions of crime have increased even though actual crime rates have gone down in Chicago. Also appreciated the fascinating and generative analogies to Bourdieu’s “autodestructive homages” and Meyrowitz’s context collapse of media. Glad I read this!!!
Profile Image for Della fuckboi.
107 reviews
November 9, 2024
En bra etnografisk studie på gängkulturen i Chicago och dess påverkan av sociala medier. Stuart fångar alla de delar av platstagande, risktagande och intryckesstyrning för att förklara drillrapparnas vardag, och hur passerandet är den viktigaste överlevnadstekniken i gängkulturen.

En spännande bok som kan läsas som en skönlitterär bok och som inte kräver en djupare förståelse för kriminologiska teorier för att få en inblick i gängkultur på nätet.
Profile Image for Joel.
81 reviews1 follower
October 4, 2023
Read for a sociology class, pulls the reader into a world that is unfamiliar, and paints a portrait of young black men who are often characterized as “hyper-violent” as individuals with lives and families. Provides a compelling argument for the concept that black and white teens use and benefit from social media in very different ways.
182 reviews
December 31, 2022
This is one of the most incredible, heartbreaking, well thought-out and researched books that I've read this year. Incredible!
Profile Image for WizardAnon.
1 review
April 3, 2023
Read this for school, but this was easily one of, if not the best, assigned reading I've ever had to do
108 reviews3 followers
June 13, 2023
Liked the unpretentious, but descriptive writing style and enjoyed learned about drill music and how it connects to broader topics in sociology
Profile Image for Elsa.
148 reviews3 followers
June 23, 2024
This was great!! A very respectful account on all fronts; I learned a lot.

(Well-referenced and with good footnotes. Love me some good chunky footnotes.)
Profile Image for Connor.
122 reviews2 followers
June 21, 2025
Audiobooked. The sociological description of a Chief Keef music video is hilarious.
Profile Image for forest.
32 reviews
December 18, 2024
ethnography on chicagoan drill rappers. great analysis. doesnt really cover the role of women in drill rap
Profile Image for Piper Graham.
27 reviews2 followers
March 17, 2023
Incredible book that unpacks the reality of the influence of music on youth in Chicago & the reality of violence in our city. If you want to understand the Southside of Chicago, read this book.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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