Cooper began his writing career as a music critic for
The Village Voice, serving later as an investigative reporter for the New York City
alt-weekly from 1980 to 1989. He wrote "Teddy Riley's New Jack Swing: Harlem Gangsters Raise a Genius" for the
Voice in 1987 and is credited with naming the then-new hybrid of R&B and rap. That same year, Cooper's article, "Kids Killing Kids: New Jack City Eats Its Young", published in the
Village Voice, brought him to the attention of
Quincy Jones, who hired him to rewrite a screenplay about 1970s Harlem heroin dealer
Nicky Barnes. both of which were released in 1994. According to
Spin magazine's Michael Gonzales, the three films had an influence on "hip-hop culture that can be heard in
Jay-Z's lyrics and seen in
P. Diddy's style". Thus far, the Larry Davis episode has been the highest-rated original-series telecast in BET's history. Starting in 2007, Cooper published a blog, "Hooked on the American Dream". In 2011, he published
Hooked on the American Dream, Vol. 1: New Jack City Eats Its Young, a collection of his essays and articles from the 1980s, in an
Amazon Kindle edition. He was also a contributor to the
Huffington Post. From 2017-2019, Cooper was a producer on the
Netflix television series
She's Gotta Have It and also wrote 3 of the show's episodes. ==Honors and awards==