What’s ‘digital blackface?’ And why is it wrong when White people use it?

The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
consider the source .. CNN.



What’s ‘digital blackface?’ And why is it wrong when White people use it?

https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/26/us/di...cec/index.html


Analysis by John Blake, CNN
Updated 7:56 AM EDT, Sun March 26, 2023



Kimberly "Sweet Brown" Wilkins became a meme after a news clip of her being interviewed in 2012 by CNN affiliate KFOR took the internet by storm.
KFRO


CNN — Maybe you shared that viral video of Kimberly “Sweet Brown” Wilkins telling a reporter after narrowly escaping an apartment fire, “Ain’t nobody got time for that!”


Perhaps you posted that meme of supermodel Tyra Banks exploding in anger on “America’s Next Top Model” (“I was rooting for you! We were all rooting for you!”). Or maybe you’ve simply posted popular GIFs, such as the one of NBA great Michael Jordan crying, or of drag queen RuPaul declaring, “Guuuurl…”


If you’re Black and you’ve shared such images online, you get a pass. But if you’re White, you may have inadvertently perpetuated one of the most insidious forms of contemporary racism.


You may be wearing “digital blackface.”


What is digital blackface?

Digital blackface is a practice where White people co-opt online expressions of Black imagery, slang, catchphrases or culture to convey comic relief or express emotions.


These expressions, what one commentator calls racialized reactions, are mainstays in Twitter feeds, TikTok videos and Instagram reels, and are among the most popular Internet memes.


Digital blackface involves White people play-acting at being Black, says Lauren Michele Jackson, an author and cultural critic, in an essay for Teen Vogue. Jackson says the Internet thrives on White people laughing at exaggerated displays of Blackness, reflecting a tendency among some to see “Black people as walking hyperbole.”



This Tyra Banks moment from "America's Next Top Model" in 2005 became an enduring meme.From CBS Television Distribution


If you’re still not sure how to define digital blackface, Jackson offers a guide. She says it “includes displays of emotion stereotyped as excessive: so happy, so sassy, so ghetto, so loud… our dial is on 10 all the time — rarely are black characters afforded subtle traits or feelings.”


Many White people choose images of Black people when it comes to expressing exaggerated emotions on social media – a burden that Black people didn’t ask for, she says.


“We are your sass, your nonchalance, your fury, your delight, your annoyance, your happy dance, your diva, your shade, your ‘yaas’ moments,” Jackson writes. “The weight of reaction GIFing, period, rests on our shoulders.”



Why digital blackface is wrong

Some may say posting a video of Sweet Brown saying, “Oh Lord Jesus, it’s a fire” is just for laughs. Why overthink it? Why give people yet another excuse for labeling White people racists for the most innocuous behaviors?


But critics say digital blackface is wrong because it’s a modern-day repackaging of minstrel shows, a racist form of entertainment popular in the 19th century. That’s when White actors, faces darkened with burnt cork, entertained audiences by playing Black characters as bumbling, happy-go-lucky simpletons. That practice continued in the 20th century on hit radio shows such as “Amos ‘n’ Andy.”



RuPaul's colorful reactions on his reality TV series, "RuPaul's Drag Race," have spawned many memes.From World of Wonder


Put simply: digital blackface is 21st-century minstrelsy.


“Historical blackface has never truly ended, and Americans have yet to actively confront their racist past to this day,” Erinn Wong writes in an academic paper on the topic.
“In fact, minstrel blackface has emerged into even more subtle forms of racism that are now glorified all over the Internet.”


Wong says that digital blackface is wrong because it “culturally appropriates the language and expressions of black people for entertainment, while dismissing the severity of everyday instances of racism black people encounter, such as police brutality, job discrimination, and educational inequity.”



Defining digital blackface isn’t easy

In trying to define digital blackface, it depends on who you talk to. The standard for some is comparable to what one Supreme Court Justice once said when asked his test for pornography: “I know it when I see it.”


This guidance might help: If a White person shares an image online that perpetuates stereotypes of Black people as loud, dumb, hyperviolent or hypersexual, they’ve entered digital blackface territory.


And yet even with that definition, it’s hard to figure out exactly what is and isn’t digital blackface.


This is the challenge that Elizabeth Halford faces.


Halford, a brand designer, wrote an apologetic essay in 2020 about how she made a meme out of Wilkins’ “Ain’t nobody got time for that” catchphrase and sent someone a GIF of the singer Beyonce repeating, “I’m not bossy, I’m the boss.”


“I’ve engaged in digital blackface,” Halford wrote.” I’ve laughed at people of color on the news facing horrifying crime and disaster and loss. I’ve appropriated Black trauma as punchlines and peeled their faces off to put on my own and say what I can’t say, to make you laugh, or just because it went viral.”



Comedian Holly Logan has helped popularize the "hold my wig" meme.From Holly Logan


Halford tells CNN she was bothered that she overlooked the context of Sweet Brown’s interview. The woman had just experienced a tragedy.


“I guess we find it funny, the way (Black) people tell their story with so much flair,” she says. “but at the end of the day, one woman’s apartment building burned down while she was in bed.”



But Halford says that doesn’t mean she won’t use any more GIFs of Black people. She doesn’t object to the Beyonce “I’m the boss” meme because she thinks it empowers women. She says that as long as a meme or GIF “is empowering and not demeaning” she feels free to use it.


Besides, Halford says, if she refrains from using any Black memes, she runs into another problem:


“Those are the most effective, because White people are so boring,” she says.


Jackson, in her Vogue essay, acknowledges it can be hard to know where to draw the line.


“Now, I’m not suggesting that white and nonblack people refrain from ever circulating a black person’s image for amusement or otherwise…” she writes. “There’s no prescriptive or proscriptive step-by-step rulebook to follow, nobody’s coming to take GIFs away.”


But no digital behavior exists in a deracialized vacuum, she says. A White person can spread digital blackface without malicious intent.

“Digital blackface does not describe intent, but an act — the act of inhabiting a black persona,” she adds. “Employing digital technology to co-opt a perceived cache or black cool, too, involves playacting blackness in a minstrel-like tradition.


“No matter how brief the performance or playful the intent, summoning black images to play types means pirouetting on over 150 years of American blackface tradition.”



So whatever happened to Sweet Brown?

Another challenge with defining digital blackface is that some of the alleged victims of the practice might chafe at being labeled casualties of racism.


Consider what happened to the woman now known as Sweet Brown after she went viral. She hired an agent and appeared on “The View” and “Jimmy Kimmel Live.” An Auto-Tuned version of her original video now has at least 22 million views.


Sweet Brown did go public with accusations that she had been exploited. But it had little to do with her race.
eccieuser9500's Avatar
It's not wrong. Sir.

Lifetime Prevalence of Victimization and Perpetration as Related to Men's Health: Clinical Insights


The victim-perpetrator overlap formed the largest group, in which the incidence of having experienced multiple types of violence was significantly higher compared to victims and perpetrators. The age-crime curve flattened more slowly with increasing age in this group. Although the perceived severity of exposure to violence is lower in the overlap group, its health status and adverse health behaviors were worse. Interventions should focus on this group since they constitute a burden for the healthcare system.


Conflict of interest statement RB is employed by “Berufsförderungswerk Düren GmbH”. He was not employed there during the project period of the survey and evaluation of the study. The “Berufsförderungswerk Düren” was not involved in the study. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.









Get some help.
The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
It's not wrong. Sir.

Lifetime Prevalence of Victimization and Perpetration as Related to Men's Health: Clinical Insights



Get some help. Originally Posted by eccieuser9500

what exactly does this study have to do with the topic? which is ...


What’s ‘digital blackface?’ And why is it wrong when White people use it?

https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/26/us/di...cec/index.html

this makes it wrong.


If you’re Black and you’ve shared such images online, you get a pass. But if you’re White, you may have inadvertently perpetuated one of the most insidious forms of contemporary racism.


You may be wearing “digital blackface.”


is not the definition of racism the favoring of one race over another? the author's statement is blatant racism
Here is a great example of “digital blackface”

https://atlantablackstar.com/2016/02...g-al-sharpton/
The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
Here is a great example of “digital blackface”

https://atlantablackstar.com/2016/02...g-al-sharpton/ Originally Posted by Jackie S

bahhaaaa



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWRoEpYuHwI


Clinton should have been roasted alive by the press for this
Hillary lol...you know she is long gone and living the happy liberal life. She was never locked up or even indicated


2016 and she still occupies you head. Maybe at least try to get a life and move on a bit
... ohhhh.. and there's the rub...

So when Whoppi or a black media-person - or sports bloke
from ESPN pokes fun at Trump or Biden or a white-skinned
fellow missing the football catch or dropping the baseball
- will NOW be considoured "digital whiteface"??

Okay - glad to see we surely got that all cleared up...

Crikey! ... THIS might last about as long as the "Me Too" movement.

#### Salty
Lol little angry person just keep hanging on to Hillary
Why_Yes_I_Do's Avatar
I thought digital black face was Rachel Dolezal?!?

Here's an oldie (44 sec)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpAOwJvTOio

My recollection is she had come over to the dark side (conservative) these days, but articles about that seem limited. However, in her interview with Alex Jones in early 2013, she had a couple interesting thoughts.

Regarding the local Police:
“Where I live at — and where I was at — the police here’s running it. I’ve seen it with my own eyes…I just moved from Cleveland Heights to Cleveland. Cleveland, you can walk outside butt-naked. You go to Cleveland Heights, they going to arrest you, say you raped someone, because you’re butt-naked. The police is running it all.”
Regarding flu shots:
“I got faith in God going to heal me.”
The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
I thought digital black face was Rachel Dolezal?!?

Here's an oldie (44 sec)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpAOwJvTOio

My recollection is she had come over to the dark side (conservative) these days, but articles about that seem limited. However, in her interview with Alex Jones in early 2013, she had a couple interesting thoughts.

Regarding the local Police:Regarding flu shots: Originally Posted by Why_Yes_I_Do

lol Obama Phone. yes she did see the light and the folly of the ghetto ways



as for the fake black cunt .. looks like she's still playing the game. she now claims she's "trans-black". bahhaa


Rachel Dolezal on Why She Can't Just Be a White Ally

Rachel Dolezal talks about being trans-Black, how her identity challenges white supremacy, and why she just couldn't be a white ally.



https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/...e-ally-n738911


mom, dad and big bro must be so proud.




















what a striking family resemblance



BAAHHAAAAA
The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
eccieuser9500's Avatar
what exactly does this study have to do with the topic? which is ...


What’s ‘digital blackface?’ And why is it wrong when White people use it?

https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/26/us/di...cec/index.html

this makes it wrong.


If you’re Black and you’ve shared such images online, you get a pass. But if you’re White, you may have inadvertently perpetuated one of the most insidious forms of contemporary racism.


You may be wearing “digital blackface.”


is not the definition of racism the favoring of one race over another? the author's statement is blatant racism Originally Posted by The_Waco_Kid

Did that article make you feel victimized? That was the point. I'm sure you don't feel guilty for posting your old racists GIFs. Nor should the article make you feel guilty. You think they are funny.

I don't feel anything for posting a White man's meme. That "source" was just looking for clicks and views. It did go too damn far.









Whiteface victimhood.

Victim or perpetrator?
The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
Did that article make you feel victimized? That was the point. I'm sure you don't feel guilty for posting your old racists GIFs. Nor should the article make you feel guilty. You think they are funny.

I don't feel anything for posting a White man's meme. That "source" was just looking for clicks and views. It did go too damn far.



Whiteface victimhood.

Victim or perpetrator? Originally Posted by eccieuser9500

didn't read it. off topic. leftist nonsense.
eccieuser9500's Avatar
It was about feeling like a victim for posting your memes and GIFs. I think we are similar that way. No feelings.

Yeah, it was nonsense. Like the thread itself.