EPISODE · Dec 5, 2025 · 1H 2M
Iran’s cultural explosion: is it real or state controlled? | Eye for Iran | EP 80
from Eye For Iran · host Iran International English
This week on Eye for Iran, we look at Iran through three connected lenses: history, culture, and a society that some say is transforming in real time.First, Ambassador John Limbert – one of the American diplomats taken hostage in 1979 – reflects on what he witnessed in the early days of the revolution, how the Islamic Republic has (and hasn’t) changed over five decades, and why the hostility between Washington and Tehran has outlasted the Cold War. He reacts to Donald Trump’s assertion that “Iran is a bully no more,” and explains why he’s wary of predictions about the Islamic Republic's collapse.Then, researcher and postdoctoral fellow Siavash Rokni breaks down the controversy over Shervin Hajipour’s licensed album and the sudden “normalization” of rap in Iran. He explains how shows like BaZia and state-linked streaming platforms are being used to hijack youth culture, control the rap aesthetic and turn 25 years of underground music into a profitable, controllable industry and why he sees it as a sophisticated PR performance.Finally, journalist and senior Iran analyst at DAWN Omid Memarian joins to examine Iran’s apparent social renaissance: street concerts, jazz festivals, desert raves, and a Gen Z that openly pushes back on hijab rules and refuses to live a double life. He argues that the loosening of social restrictions is driven from below, not granted from above, and that this movement has deep political implications, even if the clerical establishment tries to present it as a controlled opening.You can watch this week's episode of Eye for Iran on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing. Contents of this video:00:00:00 – Intro: Is Iran really changing?00:01:49 – Ambassador John Limbert joins the program00:02:03 – Trump says “Iran is a bully no more” – Limbert reacts00:06:30 – How the hostage crisis reshaped Iran and crushed democratic hopes00:11:28 – Same rulers, new society: what has (and hasn’t) changed in 45 years00:16:35 – Brain drain, diaspora, and a creative generation stuck between two Irans00:22:18 – Segment 2: Siavash Rokni on youth culture and rap00:23:27 – What is BaZia and why it matters for Iran’s rap scene00:30:02 – Why the state is “normalizing” rap: money, control, and PR performance00:39:12 – Shervin Hajipour backlash: betrayal, survival, and public anger00:41:06 – DIY and parallel economies: how independent artists resist the system00:45:36 – Segment 3: Omid Memarian on Iran’s social opening and crackdown00:46:24 – Mahsa Amini, the 12-day war, and a “worn out” repression machine00:51:55 – Not just Tehran: how far the social shift reaches beyond big cities00:53:20 – Explosion of expectations: Gen Z vs the system00:55:27 – Raves, festivals, and imagining a future without the Islamic Republic01:02:11 – Outro and Eye for Iran newsletter/info#iran #shervinhajipour #music #rap #news #culture #podcast #youtube #shorts #usa #trump #eyeforIran #genz
What this episode covers
This week on Eye for Iran, we look at Iran through three connected lenses: history, culture, and a society that some say is transforming in real time.First, Ambassador John Limbert – one of the American diplomats taken hostage in 1979 – reflects on what he witnessed in the early days of the revolution, how the Islamic Republic has (and hasn’t) changed over five decades, and why the hostility between Washington and Tehran has outlasted the Cold War. He reacts to Donald Trump’s assertion that “Iran is a bully no more,” and explains why he’s wary of predictions about the Islamic Republic's collapse.Then, researcher and postdoctoral fellow Siavash Rokni breaks down the controversy over Shervin Hajipour’s licensed album and the sudden “normalization” of rap in Iran. He explains how shows like BaZia and state-linked streaming platforms are being used to hijack youth culture, control the rap aesthetic and turn 25 years of underground music into a profitable, controllable industry and why he sees it as a sophisticated PR performance.Finally, journalist and senior Iran analyst at DAWN Omid Memarian joins to examine Iran’s apparent social renaissance: street concerts, jazz festivals, desert raves, and a Gen Z that openly pushes back on hijab rules and refuses to live a double life. He argues that the loosening of social restrictions is driven from below, not granted from above, and that this movement has deep political implications, even if the clerical establishment tries to present it as a controlled opening.You can watch this week's episode of Eye for Iran on YouTube or listen on any podcast platform of your choosing. Contents of this video:00:00:00 – Intro: Is Iran really changing?00:01:49 – Ambassador John Limbert joins the program00:02:03 – Trump says “Iran is a bully no more” – Limbert reacts00:06:30 – How the hostage crisis reshaped Iran and crushed democratic hopes00:11:28 – Same rulers, new society: what has (and hasn’t) changed in 45 years00:16:35 – Brain drain, diaspora, and a creative generation stuck between two Irans00:22:18 – Segment 2: Siavash Rokni on youth culture and rap00:23:27 – What is BaZia and why it matters for Iran’s rap scene00:30:02 – Why the state is “normalizing” rap: money, control, and PR performance00:39:12 – Shervin Hajipour backlash: betrayal, survival, and public anger00:41:06 – DIY and parallel economies: how independent artists resist the system00:45:36 – Segment 3: Omid Memarian on Iran’s social opening and crackdown00:46:24 – Mahsa Amini, the 12-day war, and a “worn out” repression machine00:51:55 – Not just Tehran: how far the social shift reaches beyond big cities00:53:20 – Explosion of expectations: Gen Z vs the system00:55:27 – Raves, festivals, and imagining a future without the Islamic Republic01:02:11 – Outro and Eye for Iran newsletter/info#iran #shervinhajipour #music #rap #news #culture #podcast #youtube #shorts #usa #trump #eyeforIran #genz
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Iran’s cultural explosion: is it real or state controlled? | Eye for Iran | EP 80
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