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Tag: Lizzo

  • Gabourey Sidibe Responds to Kathy Hilton Confusing Her with Lizzo on Live TV: ‘I Have Been to That Lady’s House’

    An old, embarrassing moment for Kathy Hilton is making its rounds once again.

    Source: John Nacion / Gilbert Flores

    On an August 2022 episode of Watch What Happens Live! with Andy Cohen, the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills alum played a game of “Will Kathy Know Them?” in which she guessed a celebrity’s name based on a photo.

    When the 66-year-old was shown a photo of Lizzo, she said, “I feel like I do [know her]. Precious?” which caused some uncomfortable laughter from host Cohen and the studio audience.

    That’s when Hilton tried to cover her tracks, adding, “That’s, like, what I call her. Her nickname’s Precious to me….”

    Now, years later, Gabourey Sidibe–the actress who famously played Precious in the eponymous film–has reacted to the viral moment on the One54 podcast, published Wednesday, Feb. 4. According to the star, the moment was particularly strange because she’d had interactions with Hilton in real life, making the mix up all the more disrespectful.

    “That was weird because I have been to that lady’s house and had a meeting with her,” Sidibe said. “I was like, ‘I know you— Kathy.’ “

    “I’ve never met Lizzo, but Lizzo and I do different things,” she continued. “I’ve been confused for many a Black fat, like many, many, many women. And it’s always weird and tinged with racism. I did think that was weird, Kathy Hilton. Because I have been to that woman’s house and had a meeting with her because she wanted to dress me. I was like, that’s so strange.”

    Not only that, Hilton didn’t even refer to Gabourey by her real name on the show, which added another layer of confusion.

    “You oughta know my real name, also, ’cause she said ‘Precious?’ I just, I don’t know,” Sidibe said.

    Hilton, who also mistook several other celebrities during the same Watch What Happens Live! segment, spoke out about the incident after receiving backlash.

    “The screen was so far away and my vision is terrible. If you recall, I couldn’t even make out who Justin Timberlake or Melissa Etheridge was,” she wrote in a comment on Instagram at the time.

    A source went on to tell E! News that the Real Housewives star felt “terrible” about her comments and “would never intentionally hurt anyone’s feelings.”

    Rebecah Jacobs

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  • Blue Note LA Announces Star Studded 2026 Lineup – LAmag

    Nick Jonas, Jill Scott, and Lizzo are among the big names that will pack the glitzy Los Angeles jazz club

    Less than a year after the iconic New York City jazz club Blue Note opened its bigger (in space) sister club in Hollywood, the Los Angeles location has announced a kaleidoscopic assortment of big-name residencies and single sold-out shows for 2026 that will include Nick Jonas, Lizzo, and Jill Scott.

    Jill Scott will enjoy a residency at Blue Note on Sunset Boulevard
    Credit: Courtesy of Blue Note LA

    Located near the iconic Cinerama Dome, Blue Note Los Angeles has already brought in the boldest names in jazz, hip-hop, and R&B fusion. And its lineup for 2026 is just as star-studded. A calendar of events can be found HERE.

    Grammy winning rapper and musician headlined the grand opening of Blue Note Los Angeles Wednesday night where music royalty from around the world gathered to celebrate the legendary jazz club's west coast expansionGrammy winning rapper and musician headlined the grand opening of Blue Note Los Angeles Wednesday night where music royalty from around the world gathered to celebrate the legendary jazz club's west coast expansion
    Grammy-winning rapper and musician Robert Glasper headlined the grand opening of Blue Note Los Angeles last summer
    Credit: Miles Bitton for Blue Note Los Angeles

    Since its opening last October, hosted by Robert Glasper, the Blue Note’s west coast club has been home to an array of the top names in music, a haven for superstars who want to perform in an intimate setting.

    Michele McPhee

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  • Khatia Buniatishvili is a classical music superstar. Her new album honors Mozart — in her own way

    Khatia Buniatishvili is a classical music superstar. Her new album honors Mozart — in her own way

    NEW YORK (AP) — Khatia Buniatishvili has been one of the most well-known classical musicians for more than a decade, but she prefers to keep the chatter about her celebrity buried beneath the crescendo of her music and charismatic performances.

    “If I start to talk about my charisma, I think it might be the end. It’s like the peak of narcissism, right?” Buniatishvili said bashfully in a recent interview.

    But it’s her command of the stage, combined with her expressive performance energy and glamourous exterior that has made her a household name in classical music. The pianist, born in the country of Georgia, along with a new generation of artists like Icelandic pop-jazz singer and celloist Laufey, French violinist Esther Abrami, Nigerian opera singer Babatunde Akinboboye and even pop superstar Lizzo, a classically trained flutist, are helping remove the elitist stigma often attached to the genre and are attracting millennial and Gen Z audiences.

    “I’m the happiest person when I hear that … young people, it’s the movement of life,” said Buniatishvili, a two-time winner of Germany’s top award for classical performers, the Opus Klassik. “You can bring new life to them — to composers — thanks to these young people who are listening to it. I think it’s the major achievement you might have in life.”


    The 37-year-old French-Georgian, who has collaborated with major mainstream artists like Coldplay and A$AP Rocky, released her sixth solo album Friday, “Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 20 & 23” with the Academy of St Martin In The Fields chamber orchestra.

    Buniatishvili, who first performed with the Tbilisi Chamber Orchestra at just 6 years old, talked with The Associated Press about notoriety, Mozart, and creating a more level playing field in classical music. The answers have been edited for clarity and brevity.

    AP: With as much fanfare that surrounds you, why do you shy away from talking about fame? You specifically mentioned narcissism.

    BUNIATISHVILI: It’s very easy to become (narcissistic) if you don’t pay attention to it, I think, when you’re an artist because it might seem like everything is around one person, but actually, it’s much more than that. It’s not about one person. It’s about what you leave.

    I think it’s a very important thing to give an example to the younger generation also that it’s nice to have a mirror and to have selfies — that’s very nice — but it’s very important not to miss life in those moments.

    AP: How did you develop your lifelong connection with the piano?

    BUNIATISHVILI: It was there from the very beginning. Like my parents and my sister, they were there when I was born, but also, the piano was there. … Even though I could do different things in life, this was there like my family, and it felt comforting.

    AP: What was the recording process like for creating “Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 20 & 23?”

    BUNIATISHVILI: What was special in this recording was that it was with the orchestra, a chamber orchestra, but without conductors — I was directing the orchestra. So, this was a very special feeling because you communicate with the orchestra and you have to be convincing for them because you are not a conductor. … You have to make them feel what they are actually: quite special and very unique and irreplaceable. And at the same time, you have to achieve your own interpretation.

    AP: Why did you choose to create this album without a conductor?

    BUNIATISHVILI: I wanted to do something as I felt it. And sometimes conductors, they can help with that. Sometimes they propose something different and you might like it or might not like it. … I really wanted to do it in my way.

    AP: What are you most proud of professionally?

    BUNIATISHVILI: I’m proud that I achieved — independently from conductors, from male powers or even female. Sometimes I was not invited by the best orchestras in the world. But I would think, “No problem, I’ll play alone.” … Actually, I achieved my career with my recitals being alone on stage because, often, I was not part of this great power or great systems.

    We should work on the equality things because not everybody has this chance. And I guess that’s something we have to work on also in classical music because classical music can be very beautiful, but the system of it can be quite separating.

    ___

    Follow Associated Press entertainment journalist Gary Gerard Hamilton at @GaryGHamilton on all his social media platforms.

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  • Singer Lizzo Accidentally Admits That the Entire Country Will Become Detroit If Kamala Harris Wins

    Singer Lizzo Accidentally Admits That the Entire Country Will Become Detroit If Kamala Harris Wins

    Credit: Screenshot via The Guardian News YouTube

    Just days after Vice President Kamala Harris claimed that any suggestion that the country “would turn into Detroit” if she wins is essentially a racist dog whistle, rap artist Lizzo said the exact same thing.

    Yes Lizzo, Melissa Viviane Jefferson, dropped what can best be described as some accidental truth. Because accidental is the only kind of truth you’ll ever get out of the left.

    “I’m so proud to be from this city, you know they say if Kamala wins then the whole country will be like Detroit,” the “Truth Hurts” singer declared.

    “Proud like Detroit, resilient like Detroit. The same Detroit that innovated the auto industry and the music industry. Put some respect on Detroit’s name.”

    Detroit is consistently ranked among the top 5 most dangerous cities in the United States based on crime data. Crime rates are higher than the national average, especially for violent crimes like homicide, assault, and robbery. The successes mentioned by Lizzo happened well over half a century ago.

    Detroit is a cesspool of failed liberal experimentation. Now, as Lizzo states, Harris wants to bring that blight nationwide.

    Hard pass.

    Kamala Thinks Saying America Is Going To Turn Into Detroit Is Racist

    Lizzo’s comments about Kamala Harris turning the entire country into Detroit wouldn’t be nearly as hilarious as they are if not for the fact that the Democrat candidate for President recently indicated anybody who says such things is racist.

    Or maybe it’s just because Trump said it that makes it so racist.

    Trump issued the following warning during a speech to the Detroit Economic Club.

    “The whole country is going to be like, you want to know the truth? It’ll be like Detroit. Our whole country will end up being like Detroit if she’s your president. You’re going to have a mess on your hands,” he predicted.

    Harris sat down with former CNN contributor Roland Martin for a live-streamed interview last week where they discussed those very comments.

    The Veep delivered another one of her signature word salads in response:

    “Yes, yes, yes. I- I- you know, there’s this whole – I talked with somebody once who said, ‘You know, if you just look at where the- the- the stars are in the sky. Don’t look at them as just random things, look at them as points. Look at the constellation, what does it show you.’”

    That’s when she turned the Detroit criticism and general observation that cities run by Democrats are garbage into a racially driven commentary.

    “You just outlined it Roland, what does it show you?” she asked after making the constellation analogy. “That the cities that he picks on in terms of black population or black mayor or both. C’mon.”

    I Guess Lizzo’s stars are creating a constellation of racism too then.

    RELATED: Megyn Kelly Eviscerates Woke Singer Lizzo – ‘Morbidly Obese’

    Lizzo Addresses ‘You Hos’

    Prior to flying out to Detroit to stump for Kamala Harris, Lizzo was showing off her fossil fuel-guzzling private jet and declaring she was a “bad […]” ready to “save democracy”.

    Which, incidentally, is the same thing Adam Kinzinger calls himself when looking in the mirror every morning before he throws on his little J6 boxers and starts his day.

    “This is how a bad […] saves democracy. You ho’s couldn’t even spell democracy,” she said. As to who the “ho’s” are, she wasn’t specific.

    Lizzo’s grasp of the English language though is tenuous at best. As is her grasp on decorum. And decency. Rational thoughts. Intelligence. Etc.

    Here she is playing a 200-year-old crystal flute once owned by Founding Father James Madison during a concert in DC while wearing a skimpy bodysuit and “twerking.”

    Ever the gifted orator, Lizzo, who is a classically trained flutist, played a few notes and exclaimed, “[…] I just twerked and played James Madison’s flute from the 1800s.”

    “History is freaking cool, you guys” she elucidated.

    Turning what the Founding Fathers envisioned for this nation into a dump like Detroit, isn’t cool.

    Here Are Trump’s Best Jokes At The Al Harris Dinner – Absolutely Nobody Was Spared, Especially Tim Walz

    Rusty Weiss

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  • Trump, Harris go on campaign blitz in battleground states as race enters final stretch

    Trump, Harris go on campaign blitz in battleground states as race enters final stretch

    Vice President Kamala Harris turned to star power Saturday on the campaign trail, as she held events with musicians Lizzo and Usher in Michigan and Georgia, while former President Donald Trump rallied in the crucial battleground state of Pennsylvania.

    At a rally in Atlanta, Harris said that Trump was “cruel” for how he talked about the grieving family of a Georgia mother who died after waiting 20 hours for a hospital to treat her complications from an abortion pill, as she put combating restrictions on reproductive care at the center of her pitch to voters.

    Harris blamed Amber Thurman’s death on Georgia’s abortion restrictions that took effect after the Supreme Court in 2022, with three Trump-appointed justices, overturned Roe v. Wade. It comes as Harris is looking to the issue to propel support to Democrats, who have pledged to restore a national right to abortion if they win the White House and enough seats in Congress.

    “Donald Trump still refuses to take accountability, to take any accountability, for the pain and the suffering he has caused,” Harris said.

    Thurman’s story features at the center of one of Harris’ closing campaign ads, and her family attended her Atlanta rally, with her mother holding a photo of her daughter from the audience. Harris showed a clip of Trump saying during a recent Fox News Channel town hall, when he was asked about the Thurman family joining a separate media call, “We’ll get better ratings, I promise.”

    Early voting is also underway in Georgia. More than 1.2 million ballots have been cast, either in person or by mail. Democrats hope an expansive organizing effort will boost Harris against Trump in the campaign’s final weeks. Harris referenced that former President Jimmy Carter recently voted by mail days after his 100th birthday.

    “If Jimmy Carter can vote early, you can too,” Harris said.

    Harris was joined at the rally by hometown music icon Usher, drawing again on star power as she looks to excite voters to the polls. Earlier Saturday she appeared with Lizzo in the singer’s hometown of Detroit, marking the beginning of in-person voting and lavishing the city with praise after Trump recently disparaged it.

    “All the best things were made in Detroit. Coney Dogs, Faygo and Lizzo,” the singer joked to a rally crowd, pointing to herself after listing off the hot dogs and soda that the city is famous for.

    Heaps of praise for the Motor City came after Trump insulted it during a recent campaign stop. And Harris continued the theme, saying of her campaign, “Like the people of Detroit, we have grit, we have excellence, we have history.”

    More than 1 million Michigan residents have already voted by mail in the Nov. 5 election, and Harris predicted that Detroit turnout for early voting would be strong.

    She slammed Trump as unstable: “Somebody just needs to watch his rallies, if you’re not really sure how to vote.”

    “We’re not going to get these 17 days back. On Election Day, we don’t want to have any regrets,” the vice president said.

    Lizzo also told the crowd, “Mrs. Commander-in-Chief has a nice ring to it.”

    “This is the swing state of all swing states, so every last vote here counts,” the singer said. Then, referencing her song of the same title, Lizzo added, “If you ask me if America is ready for its first woman president, I only have one thing to say: “It’s about damn time!”

    Meanwhile, Trump’s campaign had suggested he would begin previewing his closing argument Saturday night with Election Day barely two weeks away. But the former president kicked off his rally with a detailed story about Arnold Palmer, at one point even praising the late, legendary golfer’s genitalia.


    Trump, Harris zero in on Pennsylvania in race’s final stretch

    01:32

    Trump was campaigning in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, where Palmer was born in 1929 and learned to golf from his father, who suffered from polio and was head pro and greenskeeper at the local country club.

    Politicians saluting Palmer in his hometown is nothing new. But Trump spent 12 full minutes doing so at the top of his speech and even suggested how much more fun the night would be if Palmer, who died in 2016, could join him on stage.

    “Arnold Palmer was all man, and I say that in all due respect to women,” Trump said. “This is a guy that was all man.”

    Then he went even further.

    “When he took the showers with other pros, they came out of there. They said, ‘Oh my God. That’s unbelievable,’” Trump said with a laugh. “I had to say. We have women that are highly sophisticated here, but they used to look at Arnold as a man.”

    Trump senior adviser Jason Miller told reporters before the speech that Trump planned to preview his closing argument against Harris and “start to get into that framing.”

    Trump eventually hit many of his favorite campaign themes but didn’t offer much in the way of new framing of the race or why he should win it. He instead boasted of creating strong tax policies and a strong military during his first term in office.

    He slammed Harris as “crazy” and added a profanity.

    “You have to tell Kamala Harris that you’ve had enough, that you just can’t take it anymore, we can’t stand you anymore, you’re a s— vice president,” Trump said to roars of the crowd. “The worst. You’re the worst vice president. Kamala, you’re fired. Get the hell out of here.”

    He also criticized Harris for suggesting during her unsuccessful run for president in 2020 that she’d support a ban on hydraulic fracking, which is important to Pennsylvania’s economy and a position Harris’ campaign says she no longer supports.

    Trump invited on stage members of a local steelworkers union that endorsed him. He donned a construction hat with his name on it.

    He also said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called him amid Israeli’s ongoing war with Hamas in Gaza.

    “He said, ‘It’s incredible what’s happened,’” Trump said of the Netanyahu call before moving to a criticism of President Joe Biden, saying that the Israeli prime minister “wouldn’t listen to Biden.”

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  • New Library of Congress exhibit spotlights rare historical artifacts

    New Library of Congress exhibit spotlights rare historical artifacts

    Washington — Housed inside the Library of Congress, the nation’s oldest federal cultural institution, is a treasure trove from past and present in the new “Collecting Memories” exhibit which opened this week.  

    “What we want people to get from looking at just a sample, a small sample of the treasures of the Library of Congress, is these are their memories,” Librarian Carla Hayden told CBS News. “These are their items. It is the nation’s library.”

    The exhibit showcases rare artifacts spanning centuries of history — beginning with a handwritten draft of President Abraham Lincoln’s historic Gettysburg Address in 1863, and a photo of Lincoln from that day.

    “That’s the only photo we have, or anybody has, of him at Gettysburg,” Hayden said.

    The exhibit also has the contents of Lincoln’s pockets from the night he was assassinated, including a pocket watch, two pairs of glasses, a handkerchief, and a billfold with his name.  

    There’s also a crystal flute first lady Dolly Madison saved when the White House was burned by the British in 1814, made famous again after pop star Lizzo visited the library and played it at one of her concerts in September 2022.

    “After Ms. Lizzo played that flute, we had a teacher contact us and said, ‘I think there’ll be more children who want to play the flute after seeing that,’” Hayden said. “…It took off, and people said, ‘What else does the Library of Congress have?’”
     
    With more than 178 million items, the library narrowed down the exhibition to just over 100 of its most prized possessions, including Oscar Hammerstein’s “Do-Re-Mi” lyric sheet from “The Sound of Music,” the original Spiderman drawings, the designs from the Washington Monument and the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and the sewing machine used to construct the AIDS Memorial quilt.

    “These are the things that we want everyone to be able to see,” Hayden said. “You don’t have to be the president of the United States. You don’t have to be a visiting ambassador…You can see it, it’s free, and you can have that pinch me moment.”

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  • Does Lizzo Consume Weed

    Does Lizzo Consume Weed

    She has won Grammys and awards from BET, BillBoard and more while redefining enticing. But does she consume weed?

    She burst into the mainstream in 2019 with her third studio album, Cuz I Love You and has been making waves ever since. Resetting standards of how a female music star needs to look and behave, she has been the center of ongoing dissuasions.  Through all this, you wonder does Lizzo consume weed to chill and relax. She has attracted legends of fans called Lizzbians, a number of social media trolls and Grammys, BET awards, Billboards Awards and appearance on SLN, Ugly Dolls, Hustlers, and more  . She rode another wave of popularity when she featured an original single titled Pink in the Barbie movie.

    RELATED: Yacht Rock Pairs Perfectly With Cocktails

    She started her career in hip hop music. After doing a couple of studio albums, she signed with  with Nice Life Recording Company and Atlantic Records releasing Coconut Play.The album spawned the singles Juice and Tempo. The deluxe version of Cuz I Love You topped the US Billboard Hot 100 and became the longest-leading solo song by a female rapper. In 2021, Lizzo released the single Rumors (featuring Cardi B), which debuted in the top five of the Billboard Hot 100. Her fourth studio album, Special (2022), was preceded by its lead single “About Damn Time“, which reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and made Lizzo the first black female singer since Whitney Houston in 1994 to win the Grammy Award for Record of the Year.

    Like everything in her life it seems, she is unabashed about her use of marijuana. Her Instagram shares she is on a fan consuming and treats it just like drinking wine. She has even been cheeky about her use including wink wink tweets about marijuana suppositories.

    RELATED: How To Be Discreet When Using Weed

    Lizzo grew up attending the Church of God in Christ but has since embraced a more open concept where she sings hip hop mixed with soul and blues. Lizzo being so open about herself and weed use is similar to the late Mama Cass, who refined talent, fun and what is like to be a celebrity.

     

    Anthony Washington

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  • Truth Hurts: It Doesn’t Matter If Lizzo Feigns Quitting Music, The Damage to Her Brand Is Already Done

    Truth Hurts: It Doesn’t Matter If Lizzo Feigns Quitting Music, The Damage to Her Brand Is Already Done

    As Lizzo rounds out her recent rash of bad publicity by pulling a Doja Cat and declaring she was “quitting” music only to clarify days later that, actually, what she meant was she’s only quitting “giving any negative energy attention,” it’s pretty apparent that the scandal-mired singer was merely testing the waters to see if anyone would give a fuck. And, unlike Doja Cat, who initially said, “I fuckin quit i can’t wait to fucking disappear and i don’t need you to believe in me anymore. Everything is dead to me, music is dead, and i’m a fucking fool for ever thinking i was made for this this is a fucking nightmare unfollow me,” Lizzo didn’t come across nearly as adamantly about jettisoning “the biz.”

    If her former employees’ accounts of her overinflated ego are to be believed, then it certainly tracks that her false statement was a bid for attention, designed to redirect eyes on the “terrifying” notion of what the music world would be like without her: empty. At least, from her perspective.

    After all, Lizzo has prided herself on being the lone spokeswoman for big girls in an abyss of twiggishly thin musicians. It is that brand that has been both her boon and her bane. Especially when one of the accusations lobbied against her in August of 2023 was that she fat-shamed her dancers. Despite numerous former employees of Lizzo’s coming forward to corroborate the allegations made by three dancers in particular from her The Special Tour, it hasn’t done all that much to dissuade people from supporting Lizzo and her music. For, when Beyoncé is on your side, it usually means you’ll survive. Not only that, but Lizzo just headlined a Biden fundraiser with three presidents (two former) in attendance, two of whom (Biden and Clinton) have well-known sexual misconduct claims against them. Which is precisely why it might not have been the best look for Biden to tap Lizzo for such an event (or any event). But, as it is said, desperate times call for desperate celebrity appearances.

    Lizzo’s current inability to be truly “canceled,” in many ways, mirrors the Michael Jackson effect. Not just because she’s still so beloved, but because she’s Black. And clearly, there is an inherent aversion to watching Black heroes fall because of how infrequently society “allows” for the creation of such heroes in the first place. Just look at how long it took Bill Cosby and R. Kelly (and now, Diddy) to receive their just deserts (the former of whom still ended up averting proper jail time). With Lizzo, the “truth hurts” even more because she was presented as a radiating beacon of light and hope in a world where thin white girls still reigned (and reign) supreme in terms of the pervasive messaging in social media, fashion (both high and low) and ads for just about anything. Even the “big girls” that are revered—the Kardashians—are a “carefully curated” kind of “big.” And also, lest anyone forget, white. Try as the Kardashian-Jenner clan might to make people lose literal sight of that fact. 

    And so, Lizzo, for her Bigness and her Blackness, was, to many, a welcome breath of fresh air. As embraced as she was reviled. Kardashian’s former husband, Kanye West (now Ye) was in the reviling category, telling Tucker Carlson in one of now many illustrious interviews, “The media wants to put out a perception that being overweight is the new goal when it’s actually unhealthy.” Rather than leaving it at that, he continued, “For people to promote that, um…it’s demonic.” “Why do you think they would want to promote unhealthiness among the population?” Carlson asked. Without missing a beat, Ye replied, “It’s a genocide of the Black race. They wanna kill us in any way they can.” That, it would seem, includes using Lizzo as a Trojan horse for sanctioning fatness.

    Such conspiracies recall a certain apropos 30 Rock episode from season one, “Cleveland,” during which Tracy Jordan (Tracy Morgan) informs Liz (Tina Fey) that the Black crusaders are out to get him. “Cancel” him being the better word choice, but that wasn’t a part of the cultural lexicon in 2007. Nor had the aforementioned Bill Cosby himself been canceled, still held up as an epitome of Black excellence (this also being before “Black excellence” became such a big part of the cultural lexicon). Therefore able to be taken seriously (in 30 Rock) when he says, “Tracy Jordan has made a career out of exploiting Black stereotypes. He is an embarrassment to African Americans.” That, of course, wouldn’t become drenched in irony until much later, considering the exposure of Cosby’s sordid history. As of 2007, however, he remained a gold standard in how Black people should be presented. Much the same way Lizzo is…or rather, was.

    And yes, she, too, would likely be subject to the vagaries of the Black crusaders, a cabal Tracy describes as “a secret group of powerful Black Americans. Bill Cosby and Oprah Winfrey are the chief majors. But Jesse Jackson, Colin Powell and Gordon from Sesame Street, they’re members too. And they meet four times a year in the skull of the Statue of Liberty.” Presumably to discuss who from the Black community they should oust from being famous. Or, as Tracy puts it, “They ruin anybody they think are makin’ Black people look bad.” Lizzo is presently falling under that category as she suffers from headlines like, “What Did Lizzo Do? How to Talk About Her New Lawsuit” and “Lizzo’s Dethroning Has Been Swift.” Even if these types of headlines entail a certain amount of implied empathy for the singer. That we shouldn’t all be so quick to lash out at her at once (better to stagger the venom instead). That it’s important not to make one person “the entire representation” for all of society’s ills—most of which stem directly from an abuse of power.

    But with Lizzo, the, let’s say, “temptation to be cunty” is far too great to resist because it’s rooted in the societal love of detecting hypocrisy (often setting people up to fall into that trap). Here is a woman who founded her entire career on self-love, body positivity and all-around “positive energy,” yet she’s being accused of not only creating an unbearable and toxic work environment, but also actually shaming one of her dancers for gaining weight. Yes, Lizzo, the person who once said, “…never ever let somebody stop you or shame you from being yourself” is being accused of doing exactly that to those who worked for her. 

    Worse still, permitting her dance captain, Shirlene Quigley, to take the reins and engage in her bizarre religious tirades that were often at odds with such sexually-charged acts as pantomiming oral sex via a banana and expressing that her biggest sexual fantasy is being splooged on by ten dicks. As for the former example of unprofessional behavior, Lizzo clearly has her own banana fetish if a resurfaced interview from 2019 about her desire to go to Amsterdam’s Bananenbar and “eat a banana out of a pussy” is any indication. Her dream apparently came true as this was the bar where one of her dancers, Arianna Davis, said she was pressured into touching a nude dancer’s tits after saying no multiple times until Lizzo led others in a goading chant that urged her to just do it. Or risk losing favor with Lizzo, who evidently thinks it’s her responsibility to give a more grotesque update to Mae West bawdiness. This posing as her encouragement to “be comfortable with who you are,” all while making others uncomfortable under the guise of “pushing necessary boundaries” to “achieve a healthy self-perception.” 

    And this is where Lizzo’s cult-like nature comes into sharp focus. Something about her reeking of the overly pushy and manipulative 1980s televangelist when she spouts shit like, “I want you to know that you woke up this morning, and that’s a blessing, I want you to know the sun is shining somewhere, that’s a blessing, and even if it’s raining, it’s cleansing you—it’s a blessing. I want you to know that whatever you’re going through, if it doesn’t feel good, that you will feel good again, and you have whatever it takes to feel good again.” Obviously, toxic body positivity is a stone’s throw from full-stop toxic positivity. Another case in point, Lizzo declaring, “…I’m surrounded by love and I just want to spread that love…”

    But there was no “love” spread to Arianna Davis, Crystal Williams and Noelle Rodriguez, the three dancers suing Lizzo for the following: hostile work environment, failure to prevent and/or remedy hostile work environment, religious harassment, failure to prevent and/or remedy religious harassment, sexual harassment, racial harassment, disability discrimination, intentional interference with prospective economic advantage, assault and false imprisonment. 

    Quigley was the one largely responsible for creating an environment of religious harassment (though Lizzo is the one who clearly failed to prevent and/or remedy it). Not only constantly “preaching,” but also antithetically doing and saying weird, sexually explicit things, including latching onto the intel about Davis’ virginity and consistently bringing it up. As for the racial discrimination charge (which, again, harkens back to the overall hypocrisy of Lizzo that’s being dredged up by this case), it relates to how Lizzo’s white production/management team treated her mostly Black dancers. Having switched in recent years to this team, “the lawsuit claims Black members of the team were described as ‘lazy, unprofessional and having bad attitudes’ in criticisms that were not levied against non-Black dancers.

    Beyond garden-variety racial discrimination, Davis and Williams got their first taste of sexually-related uncomfortableness on Lizzo’s reality show, Watch Out For the Big Grrrls (a title that proved to be valid in its ominous forewarning). It was Davis in particular who suffered during an episode called “Naked.” Which features a plot summary that itself blatantly refers to her state of discomfiture: “In this emotional episode Lizzo encourages the girls to break through the negativity and past body trauma by embracing their curves fully through a nude photo shoot, but not all the dancers are comfortable with shedding their clothes and exposing the skin they’re in…” By trying to turn that blatant unease into her “pet project,” Lizzo was able to further position herself as the “patron saint of body positivity,” even if telling a different tale behind the scenes. 

    Perhaps as someone who insists, “Your criticism has no effect on me, negative criticism has no stake in my life, no control over my life, over my emotions…” she’s convinced that the same should apply to other people. That they ought to develop, um, thicker skin. But maybe, Sophia Nahli Allison, the erstwhile director of the Lizzo documentary, Love, Lizzo, might have offered some criticism that stuck when she came forward to say, “She is a narcissistic bully and has built her brand off lies. I was excited to support and protect a Black woman through the documentary process but quickly learned her image and ‘message’ was a curated facade.”

    Another former backup dancer who isn’t part of the lawsuit, Courtney Hollinquest, also came forward to say, “I’m not a part of the lawsuit—but this was very much my experience in my time there. Big shoutout to the dancers who had the courage to bring this to light.” Lizzo’s former creative director, Quinn Whitney Wilson, would repost that statement to her own social media account, adding, “I haven’t been a part of that world for around three years, for a reason. I very much applaud the dancers’ courage to bring this to light. And I grieve parts of my own experience.”

    As for the people/devoted Lizzo fans who insist that you can’t “make” someone do (or feel) anything, they’re perhaps forgetting the pressure-laden situations that arise in any workplace, regardless of industry. Especially “after hours,” when you’re expected to do many unpleasant things in the name of “team bonding.” So no, you don’t want to be the “wet blanket” who upsets the boss by not touching a stripper on a company outing. Though the dancers involved didn’t want to go, it was an unspoken rule that those who did go on these outings would get preferential treatment and a seemingly greater chance of job security (ergo, the part of the lawsuit involving “intentional interference with prospective economic advantage”). 

    In spite of the corroborated stories and sentiments about the singer, those committed to defending Lizzo have two go-to “trump cards” (a phrase that has admittedly been ruined by an orange ex-president) to make people second-guess themselves about believing victims who report abuse. 1) She’s fat (a word that will probably, at some point, become as unacceptable to use as “retard”) and 2) she’s Black. And there’s no doubt that Lizzo herself might use these qualities to denounce the “plot against her,” saying how this wouldn’t be happening if she was thin and white. 

    Nonetheless, it’s a “plot” she helped cultivate by, per her dancers’ account, “pick[ing] and choos[ing] when she wanted to be professional and when she wanted things to be personal.” While Davis in particular was singled out for gaining weight, Lizzo told the other dancers involved, “You know dancers get fired for gaining weight; you should basically be grateful to be here.” According to the legal documents, Lizzo “called attention to [Davis’] weight gain with thinly veiled concerns, though she never explicitly stated it.” Davis herself added, “It was very nuanced and very underlying underneath all the other issues that were going on. I just had this feeling that they had a problem with the way I was gaining weight.” In truth, that could have very well been because Lizzo wanted to be the “main big girl attraction,” and not have any eyes taken off of her. 

    Per the plaintiffs’ lawyer, “Lizzo used to have an all-Black management team. In the last two years, that changed. Now it’s white Europeans. The team was treating the Black dancers differently… and Lizzo was constantly talking about everyone else’s weight. The idea of weight and weight gain was brought up then explicitly.” Which ties into how Lizzo talks about weight to the point of it not being “embracing,” so much as an all-out means of “identity carving.” This making it as toxic as incessantly talking about thinness as the ideal body type. And, the thing is, someone who talks about how great they feel in their skin all the time probably doesn’t. Call it, “The lady doth protest too much, methinks…against depression.” And living in a world where being overweight is still not at all accepted. 

    So maybe that’s also part of why Lizzo redirected such fatphobic rhetoric at her own dancers. The ones she was supposedly championing for “looking like her.” To add insult to injury, rather than trying to validate their feelings in addressing the lawsuit, Lizzo could only write off her dancers’ experiences as “sensationalized stories.” Not only branding the claims as outright false, but also declaring, “I am not the villain” (spoken like someone who kind of knows they’re the villain). And yes, that word choice is also pointed in fortifying the not-so-coded language that Americans love to hear: someone is “good” and someone is “bad,” with no room for shades of gray in between. This applies especially to celebrities. And when one of them takes a fall, it’s not always assured it will “stick” depending on the height of their influence in the culture (let us again refer to Michael Jackson, who was never actually canceled, even after something as concrete as Leaving Neverland). 

    But everything you need to know about the veracity of the dancers’ “claims” (a.k.a. the truth) is manifest not only in how they used it as a last resort to resolve their ignored issues and grievances, but also in Lizzo’s choice of legal representation. One, Marty Singer. Better known as the man who has taken on cases for Bill Cosby (a recurring talisman, it seems), Chris Brown, Jonah Hill and, now, Lizzo.

    Singer is an appropriate choice for her not only because Lizzo once said of Chris Brown that he’s her “favorite person in the whole fucking world,” but also because, rather than at least acknowledging the trauma of the victims, Lizzo has opted for the old white male staple of denial, denial, denial. Hence, her statement, “Usually I cho[o]se not to respond to false allegations but these are as unbelievable as they sound and too outrageous to not be addressed.”

    Unfortunately, what’s actually “too outrageous” is the difficulty with which the “Cult of Lizzo” has taken the so-called patron saint of body positivity/love and light off her pedestal because, in this scenario, believing victims is even more to ask than usual. Likely due to the fact that, in some minds, it means “making it okay” to body shame again without the continued protection of their formerly unbesmirchable saint.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Lizzo has an emotional message for her critics: ‘I QUIT’

    Lizzo has an emotional message for her critics: ‘I QUIT’

    Lizzo is “tired” of being dragged on the internet. On March 29, the 35-year-old musician slammed “lies being told about me for clout & views” in an emotional, yet cryptic Instagram post.

    “I’m getting tired of putting up with being dragged by everyone in my life and on the internet,” she began. “All I want is to make music and make people happy and help the world be a little better than how I found it. But I’m starting to feel like the world doesn’t want me in it.”

    Lizzo continued, “I’m constantly up against lies being told about me for clout & views… being the butt of the joke every single time because of how I look… my character being picked apart by people who don’t know me and disrespecting my name. I didn’t sign up for this shit—I QUIT.”

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    Lizzo’s post has since been swarmed with supportive comments from fans and celebrities. “We love you Queen😍👑,” wrote Paris Hilton, while Sophia Bush replied, “All of this. The internet isn’t real life. Protect you. We love you.”

    Though Lizzo did not specify what sparked her cryptic post, the singer has been at the centre of a bombshell lawsuit since August 2023, when three of her former backup dancers accused the singer of sexual harassment and creating a toxic work environment. In February, a judge denied Lizzo’s request to dismiss the lawsuit, though Billboard reports that he tossed out some of the suit’s claims.

    Most recently, a lawyer representing her ex-dancers criticised Lizzo for performing at a fundraising event for President Biden on March 28. “It’s shameful that Lizzo would be chosen to headline an event like this amid such egregious allegations,” Ron Zambrano told NewsNation. “Without getting into the politics, I can’t imagine why anyone would want Lizzo representing them in any way given her reprehensible behaviour. It’s just a terrible look.”

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  • ‘I Quit’: Lizzo Releases (Not So) Cryptic Announcement

    ‘I Quit’: Lizzo Releases (Not So) Cryptic Announcement

    Wildly famous musician, entrepreneur and TV host Lizzo has long been known for her intensely candid presence both in person and via social media. Her remarks via the latter—Instagram, to be exact—sent shock waves across the internet Saturday morning, as it appears she’s ready to quit. 

    But what, exactly, she’s planning on quitting is uncertain.

    In a grid post (that’s right, not the more ephemeral “stories” function of the app) published Friday evening, the polymath wrote, “I’m getting tired of putting up with being dragged by everyone in my life and on the internet.”

    All I want is to make music and make people happy and help the world be a little better than how I found it. But I’m starting to feel like the world doesn’t want me in it. I’m constantly up against lies being told about me for clout & views… being the butt of the joke every single time because of how I look… my character being picked apart by people who don’t know me and disrespecting my name.”

    The artist, whose birth name is Melissa Viviane Jefferson, did not give specific details regarding the situations she cited in the post, and representatives for Lizzo did not respond to Vanity Fair’s request for comment by publication time. However, it’s possible she’s referring to the furor over a lawsuit filed last August by three of her former dancers in Los Angeles County Superior Court. 

    According to the suit, Arianna Davis, Crystal Williams, and Noelle Rodriguez alleged that they suffered disability discrimination, assault, and sexual and religious harassment while working with the singer. Former Lizzo employees voiced their support of the lawsuit, and documentarian Sophia Nahli Allison, who had been hired to make a documentary about the singer, admitted that she’d walked away from the project after allegedly witnessing “how arrogant, self-centered, and unkind [Lizzo] is.” 

    Lizzo has previously defended herself from those allegations, saying via Instagram that “The sensationalized stories are coming from former employees who have already publicly admitted they were told their behavior on tour was inappropriate and unprofessional.”

    “My work ethic, morals, and respectfulness have been questioned,” she wrote in the August, 2023 post regarding the claims. “My character has been criticized. Usually I chose not to respond to false allegations but these are as unbelievable as they sound and too outrageous to not be addressed.”

    Since then, much of the chatter has appeared to have died down, and the singer was even the subject of a glowing interview regarding her new swimwear line in the New York Times earlier this week. In the discussion, Lizzo questioned the use of the term “body-positivity,” suggesting that it had fallen out of favor with those who believe in fashion inclusivity.

    “The idea of body positivity, it’s moved away from the antiquated mainstream conception,” she said. “It’s evolved into body neutrality.”

    Though the interview did not address the online commentary every woman in the public eye experiences regarding her body, Lizzo did note that “My body is nobody’s business.” It’s possible that we see an echo of that final stance in the conclusion of this weekend’s post from the singer, as she ended the Instagram announcement saying “I didn’t sign up for this shit — I QUIT,” followed by the emoji for the peace sign (peacing out, perhaps?).

    Fans were quick to respond with their support, including actor Sophia Bush, who commented “The internet isn’t real life. Protect you. We love you.” Holly Robinson Peete also commented, writing in part that she needed to “shut out the noise,” while Queen Latifah commented, “F that do you.”

    Eve Batey

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  • SZA, Teyana Taylor, Brandy, Flo Milli & Jordyn Woods Honored At Femme It Forward’s Give Her FlowHERS Awards Gala

    SZA, Teyana Taylor, Brandy, Flo Milli & Jordyn Woods Honored At Femme It Forward’s Give Her FlowHERS Awards Gala

    The Black Girl Magic was off the charts at the Femme It Forward 2nd Annual Give Her FlowHERS Awards Gala, recognizing game-changers like Brandy, SZA, Teyana Taylor, Flo Milli, and Jordyn Woods.

    Source: Femme It Forward/Jerritt Clark / Courtesy of Femme It Forward/Getty

    On Friday, Nov. 10, some of Hollywood’s biggest stars stepped out to give visionary women their FlowHERS. Femme It Forward President and CEO Heather Lowery served as host. The night was dedicated to “trailblazing women who have made a profound impact in their respective fields.”

    Femme It Forward Give Her FlowHERS Awards

    Source: Jerritt Clark / Getty

    Executives, artists, influencers, and leaders gathered to celebrate the achievements of women like Monaleo, Nova Wav, and more.

    According to a statement, Femme It Forward is a “multi-format music and entertainment company dedicated to celebrating, educating, mentoring, and empowering female visionaries.”

    The organization also recognized “the women who have made an invaluable impact as mentors of the organization’s mentorship program, Next Gem Femme, which aims to help improve equity in the workplace and accelerate career opportunities and trajectories for young women of color. As Femme It Forward’s flagship initiative, the Next Gem Femme mentorship program connects emerging talent with influential women executives from organizations like Amazon Music and Atlantic Records.”

    The 2023 Give Her FlowHERS Awards Gala Honorees

    Lori Harvey presented The Visionary Award to Teyana Taylor. It recognized her career as a “multi-dimensional creative who is changing the game for the future of women in music.”

    Teyana Taylor x Lori Harvey

    Source: Femme It Forward / Courtesy of Femme It Forward

    Teyana took to Instagram to share her thanks for the recognition and pictures rocking the red carpet with daughters Junie and Rue.

    “Father God, I thank you for who you are. All seeing, all knowing and all powerful! Thank you for reminding my heart that your plan is far greater than any plan I have for my life,” she wrote.

    “Thank you for reminding me & all of the amazing women in this room that the wait was not punishment it was preparation for what was already written in the palm of your hands & your plans. I am forever THANKFUL.”

    Femme It Forward Give Her FlowHERS Gala 2023

    Source: Robin L Marshall / Getty

    Lizzo presented SZA with the Big Femme Energy Award for her impact on this generation’s music. In addition to the award, Heather Lowery presented SZA with a birthday surprise. Lizzo then led the crowd in singing “Happy Birthday” to the sizzling Scorpio.

    Femme It Forward Give Her FlowHERS Awards

    Source: Jerritt Clark / Getty

    In a special mother-daughter moment, Sonja Norwood gave Brandy the Muse Award. The honor recognized the Vocal Bible’s living legend status for inspiring her peers and future generations with timeless music.

    Femme It Forward Give Her FlowHERS Gala 2023

    Source: Robin L Marshall / Getty

    Flo Milli accepted the Bloom Award as a breakthrough artist who forged her own path to success.

    Femme It Forward Give Her FlowHERS Awards

    Source: Jerritt Clark / Getty

    Jordyn and Jodie Woods won the My Sister’s Keeper Award for defining the spirit of sisterhood.

    Femme It Forward Give Her FlowHERS Gala 2023

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Nova Wav accepted the Pen It Forward Award for an epic pen game behind some of music’s biggest hits. The duo wrote and produced hit songs for artists like Beyoncé, Jazmine Sullivan, and Teyana Taylor.

    Femme It Forward Give Her FlowHERS Awards

    Source: Jerritt Clark / Getty

    Monaleo received the Self-Love Award as a mother and artist who embodies confidence and self-acceptance.

    Check out more A-list attendees at the star-studded Femme It Forward 2nd Annual Give Her FlowHERS Awards Gala below.

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  • Stars record a tribute album to Henry Mancini

    Stars record a tribute album to Henry Mancini

    Stars record a tribute album to Henry Mancini – CBS News


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    In honor of the composer’s centenary next year, the family of Henry Mancini has been recording a tribute album featuring some of the Oscar- and Grammy-winner’s most beloved music, performed by some of the most celebrated artists today. Correspondent Tracy Smith talks with flutists James Galway and Lizzo, who are putting their paws on the “Pink Panther” theme; and Michael Bublé, recording the song that Audrey Hepburn made famous, “Moon River.”

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  • Lizzo Accepts Humanitarian Award on the Heels of Another Lawsuit

    Lizzo Accepts Humanitarian Award on the Heels of Another Lawsuit

    Lizzo has been sued again, this time by a former employee in her wardrobe department. The complaint, handled by the same legal team representing three dancers who previously filed legal action against the performer and her production company Big Grrrl Big Touring, alleged that Lizzo’s wardrobe manager Amanda Nomura was verbally and physically abusive to her staff member Asha Daniels. Along with Lizzo and Nomura, the suit names Lizzo’s production company and tour manager, Carlina Gugliotta, as defendants.

    Daniels alleges in the suit that during the 2023 tour, Nomura would “mock both Lizzo and Lizzo’s background dancers on multiple occasions. Nomura would imitate the dancers and Lizzo by doing an offensive stereotypical impression of a Black woman. Nomura would also refer to Black women on the tour as ‘dumb,’ ‘useless,’ and ‘fat.’” She also allegedly shoved Daniels into a clothing rack, which injured her foot, and would not allow her to wear orthopedic shoes on the job to reduce her foot pain. Daniels blames the work culture on Lizzo and claims her company was aware of the conditions Daniels worked under. 

    “Lizzo’s Management was well aware of this pattern of behavior,” the complaint reads. “Lizzo’s tour manager even requested Plaintiff to record Nomura without her knowledge, which Plaintiff did not do as it was both unethical and possibly unlawful.”

    Stefan Friedman, Lizzo’s spokesperson, responded to the suit with a statement: 

    As Lizzo receives a Humanitarian Award tonight from the Black Music Action Coalition for the incredible charitable work she has done to lift up all people, an ambulance-chasing lawyer tries to sully this honor by recruiting someone to file a bogus, absurd publicity-stunt lawsuit who—wait for it—never actually met or even spoke with Lizzo. We will pay this as much attention as it deserves. None.

    Friedman is referring to the Quincy Jones Humanitarian Award at the 2023 Black Music Action Coalition Gala on Thursday. Lizzo received the award for her $250,000 donations to The Marsha P. Johnson Institute, Black Girls Smile, and the Sphinx Organization in June, among other philanthropic organizations. The performer’s current “Big Grrrls” and “Big Boys” dancers presented her with the award before she gave her acceptance speech. Nomura and Gugliotta did not immediately respond to VF‘s requests for comment.

    “It’s easy to do the right thing when everybody’s watching you, and it’s what you do in those moments where nobody’s watching that defines who you are,” the performer said. “I’m going to continue to be who I am, no matter who’s watching. 

    “I’m going to continue to shine a light on the people who are helping people because they deserve it,” she continued. “I’m going to continue to amplify the voices of marginalized people because I have a microphone and I know how to use it. And I’m going to continue to put on and represent and create safe spaces for Black fat women because that’s what the fuck I do.”

    Lizzo is also facing a lawsuit from three of her former dancers, Arianna Davis, Crystal Williams, and Noelle Rodriguez. They claim a series of workplace transgressions and sued after they were fired from or left the company. They sued Lizzo for failing to prevent sexual or religious harassment, disability discrimination, and assault, and added her production company, Big Grrrl Big Touring, and Shirlene Quigley, captain of her dance team, as defendants. 

    Lizzo has vigorously denied all of the dancer’s allegations against herself and her company in a statement posted to Instagram and through her lawyer Marty Singer. She called the claims “unbelievable.” Quigley has said the accusations against her are “baseless” and “profoundly hurtful.” In August, after the allegation, Lizzo’s current dancers also released a statement defending their employer. 

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  • Lizzo facing new lawsuit from former employee alleging harassment, discrimination

    Lizzo facing new lawsuit from former employee alleging harassment, discrimination

    Lizzo is facing another lawsuit from a former employee who alleges that the entertainer condoned a hostile work environment in which staff were subjected to harassment, discrimination and bullying. Asha Daniels, a wardrobe designer who worked on Lizzo’s tour earlier this year, filed the new complaint in Los Angeles Superior Court on Thursday, the same day Lizzo was expected to receive the Quincy Jones Humanitarian Award from the Black Music Action Coalition.

    The suit names multiple people involved with the most recent tour, including Lizzo, whose given name is Melissa Jefferson, her production company Big Grrrl Big Touring, Inc. (BGBT), and her wardrobe and tour managers, Amanda Nomura and Carlina Gugliotta. It comes on the heels of another lawsuit filed in August by three of Lizzo’s former dancers, who accused her of sexual harassment and fostering toxic working conditions in which they were subjected to taunts, racism and weight-shaming. 

    Identified in the court filing as a professional clothing designer, Daniels said she was contacted in January 2023 by Nomura, who asked her to join Lizzo’s 2023 tour. She was tasked with altering and repairing clothing for the tour’s dancers, which she had designed in 2022, according to the lawsuit.   

    What are the allegations in Asha Daniels’ lawsuit?

    Daniels alleges in the new suit that she endured racial and sexual harassment during her term of employment with Lizzo, as well as disability discrimination, assault and illegal retaliatory termination, according to the complaint.

    The suit alleges Nomura, who was Daniels’ direct supervisor, and other members of Lizzo’s team established a working environment for the dancers that was “set up to humiliate, degrade, alienate, and, in some cases, fire, the Black female performers.” Daniels claims the dancers were forced to change with “little to no privacy” and that members of Lizzo’s stage crew, who were mainly White men, “would lewdly gawk, sneer, and giggle while watching the dancers rush through their outfit changes.”

    Lizzo
    Lizzo performs at Qudos Bank Arena on July 23, 2023 in Sydney, Australia.

    Don Arnold/WireImage


    The lawsuit claims Daniels was instructed “not to dress attractively” in front of Lizzo and told she shouldn’t interact with the entertainer or her boyfriend. 

    Daniels alleges that in a group chat with more than 30 members of Lizzo’s tour team, a backstage manager sent a photo “graphically depicting male genitalia,” which other management personnel “found … to be comical.”

    Daniels claims that throughout her employment she was routinely forced to work 20-hour days, frequently denied breaks and, in one instance, denied medical care while suffering an allergic reaction during the tour. She allegedly heard racist and fatphobic comments from Nomura, who allegedly called Black women involved with the tour “dumb,” “useless,” and “fat,” and used threatening language in interactions with the employees whom she supervised.

    In one alleged incident, Daniels says Nomura rolled a clothing rack over her foot while they were moving it together. Nomura allegedly dismissed Daniels’ request “to sit down, as her foot was in serious pain” after the incident, and instead “proceeded to shove the Plaintiff into the rack of clothing, while asserting Plaintiff should not make excuses about her foot and must help NOMURA transport the clothing,” according to the complaint. Daniels then lost her balance and rolled her ankle, the lawsuit alleges. When Daniels later came to work wearing Crocs, “which minimized the pain,” Nomura allegedly forced her to change into tennis shoes, the lawsuit says, “so that she could move more heavy cases while injured.”

    Daniels was eventually fired, and in the wake of her termination experienced anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, migraines, ocular distortions, brain fog and fatigue, according to the lawsuit.

    The lawsuit says Daniels believes the “experiences of degradation, forced physical labor, denial of medical care, sexual harassment, and racial harassment were allowed to take place by LIZZO’s management without consequence because she is a Black woman.”

    What is Lizzo’s response to the allegations?

    An attorney for Lizzo did not respond to a request for comment from CBS News on the latest allegations from Daniels at the time of publication.  

    Lizzo responded to the allegations initially brought by three former backup dancers in August, saying the aftermath of the accusations had been “gut wrenchingly difficult and overwhelmingly disappointing.” 

    “Usually I choose not to respond to false allegations but these are as unbelievable as they sound and too outrageous to not be addressed,” she said at the time.

    Ron Zambrano, an attorney representing Daniels, told CBS News in a statement Thursday, “With Lizzo’s attack on the other plaintiffs, we’ve heard from more than two dozen former Lizzo employees sharing similar stories of abuse and harassment who could be potential new plaintiffs. This is not going away.”

    “Lizzo is the boss so the buck stops with her,” Zambrano said. “She has created a sexualized and racially charged environment on her tours that her management staff sees as condoning such behavior, and so it continues unchecked. Lizzo certainly knows what’s going on but chooses not to put an end to this disgusting and illegal conduct and participates herself.” 

    Read the full lawsuit


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  • Attorneys For Lizzo’s Dancers Hit Back After Claim They ‘Happily’ Went To Nude Show

    Attorneys For Lizzo’s Dancers Hit Back After Claim They ‘Happily’ Went To Nude Show

    Attorneys for former backup dancers who are accusing Lizzo of sexual harassment said the singer’s lawyer is attempting to victim-shame and bully them over photos that show them smiling and posing with Paris cabaret performers while they were on tour earlier this year.

    The attorneys’ comments came after TMZ published the photos, which the site said were taken backstage after a topless show, showing the dancers and cabaret performers — all clothed — smiling for the camera. Lizzo’s attorney, Marty Singer, described the women as “happily carousing” and “gleefully reveling” in the photos, which he said discredited their claims in the “bogus” lawsuit.

    In a statement provided to HuffPost, the women’s attorney Neama Rahmani accused Singer of trying the case in the media instead of the courtroom.

    Lizzo performs during Day One of the Governors Ball Music Festival on June 9 at Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens.

    “We’ve addressed all these instances where the plaintiffs appear to be happy alongside Lizzo during their time working with her,” Rahmani said. “Of course, they wanted to keep their jobs. They had bills to pay just like everyone else but they finally had enough of the abuse.”

    In the lawsuit filed Aug. 1, Arianna Davis, Crystal Williams and Noelle Rodriguez said that Lizzo and her team body-shamed them and fired one because she gained weight. The women said in the suit they felt embarrassed by “an overtly sexual atmosphere that permeated their workplace,” and mentioned the Paris show where the photos were taken. The women said Lizzo hid the fact that it was a nude cabaret bar, and the outing came a month after Davis said she was made “visibly uncomfortable” by an experience at a nude nightclub in Amsterdam.

    The lawsuit, however, notes that the Paris show “was artful and nowhere near as uncomfortable as their outing to Bananenbar,” the Amsterdam nightclub, and emphasizes that the women “were shocked that Lizzo would conceal the nature of the event from them, robbing them of the choice not to participate.”

    At the Amsterdam nightclub, the women claim in their lawsuit, Lizzo had pressured them to touch nude performers, catch dildos “launched from the performers’ vaginas” and eat bananas “protruding from the performers’ vaginas.”

    The women “were aghast with how little regard Lizzo showed for the bodily autonomy of her employees and those around her, especially in the presence of many people whom she employed,” according to the lawsuit.

    Lizzo has denied all the claims against her.

    “My work ethic, morals and respectfulness have been questioned,” Lizzo wrote in a statement posted to social media. “My character has been criticized. Usually I choose not to respond to false allegations but these are as unbelievable as they sound and too outrageous to not be addressed.”

    In his comments to TMZ, Singer also noted that weeks after the Paris show, the women renewed their contract with Lizzo and agreed to participate in a third leg of the tour, adding that “glowing comments” Davis made in an audition tape for a singing role in Lizzo’s show “contradicted” the women’s allegations of sexual harassment and a hostile work environment.

    “Singer’s victim shaming doesn’t change any facts in the lawsuit,” Rahmani countered. “The plaintiffs merely wanted to keep their jobs until they finally had enough of the abuse. Arianna, Noelle and Crystal were brave enough to come out with their stories and they don’t plan to back down in the face of these bullying tactics by Lizzo’s attorney. This strategy may have worked for the other abusers Singer has represented, but our clients remain steadfast and look forward to their day in court.”

    Singer has previously represented Bill Cosby and other celebrity figures accused of abuse. The attorney did not respond to a request for comment from HuffPost.

    “We stand by every claim in the lawsuit and look forward to trial,” Rahmani said. “We’ve been hearing from other former employees sharing similar stories, and as seen in the Los Angeles Times article today about how Lizzo used intimate footage of her dancers without their approval in the 2022 HBO Max ‘Love, Lizzo’ documentary, we’re seeing even more of a pattern of just how much Lizzo thinks of those who work for her. Clearly, not very much.”

    The LA Times reported on Wednesday that 14 backup dancers who rehearsed with Lizzo for her performance at the 2019 VMAs were initially not compensated for emotional interviews that later appeared in the HBO Max documentary “Love Lizzo. The suit was settled in February and did not involve Davis, Williams and Rodriguez.

    Since the three dancers filed their sexual harassment lawsuit, Lizzo has received vocal support from her current dance crew, The Big Grrrls, and Beyoncé, who shouted, “Lizzo, I love you,” while performing in Atlanta. Meanwhile, a filmmaker who worked on “Love, Lizzo” described the singer as “arrogant, self-centered, and unkind” in a statement in support of the dancers.

    An attorney representing the three former dancers said they’re now reviewing the stories of other people who worked for the pop star.

    “We feel extremely confident in this case and expect to be filing additional lawsuits against Lizzo as more potential plaintiffs come forward sharing similar stories of harassment and abuse,” attorney Ron Zambrano said. “We’ve heard from more than a dozen former employees and are currently reviewing their claims. Some of them will most certainly be actionable. Crystal, Noelle and Arianna stepped out of the shadows to share their stories and now others are feeling empowered to do the same.”

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  • Lizzo’s tour dancers support singer in midst of toxic workplace lawsuit – National | Globalnews.ca

    Lizzo’s tour dancers support singer in midst of toxic workplace lawsuit – National | Globalnews.ca

    A social media account representing Lizzo‘s current dance troupe has voiced support for the singer after several of her former backup dancers filed a lawsuit this month alleging workplace misconduct.

    In an Instagram post, Lizzo’s backup dancers, called the “Big Grrrls,” said they were “so honored to share the stage with such amazing talent” during the 35-year-old singer’s Special Tour, which ended in July.

    “The commitment to character and culture taking precedence over every movement and moment has been one of the Greatest lessons and Blessings that we could possibly ask for,” the statement reads. “THANK YOU to Lizzo for shattering limitations and kicking in the door way for the Big Grrrl & Big Boiii Dancers to do what we love!”

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    “You have created a platform where we have been able to parallel our Passion with purpose!” the troupe continued. “Not only for Us, but for Women and All people breaking Barriers.”

    A montage of video footage from Lizzo’s tour accompanied the post. In the clips, the Big Grrrls dance troupe is seen on stage and behind the scenes as they perform dance routines, prepare hair and makeup and pose for photos.

    It is not clear who penned the statement on behalf of the dancers.

    The defence for the About Damn Time singer comes just over two weeks after three former dancers — Arianna Davis, Crystal Williams and Noelle Rodriguez — sued Lizzo for various forms of misconduct.

    In an August 1 legal filing, the dancers claimed Lizzo sexually harassed them, criticized their weight and created a hostile workplace for employees. Lizzo was also accused of pressuring one dancer to interact with a nude performer against their will in Amsterdam.

    The dancers claimed to be victims of racial and religious harassment, assault and false imprisonment at the hands of Lizzo and her team.


    Click to play video: 'Lizzo’s backup dancers file lawsuit alleging sexual harassment, fat-shaming'


    Lizzo’s backup dancers file lawsuit alleging sexual harassment, fat-shaming


    Two days after the lawsuit was filed, Lizzo released a statement denying the allegations made against her.

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    Lizzo called the allegations “false, outrageous” and “sensationalized.”

    “These last few days have been gut wrenchingly difficult and overwhelmingly disappointing,” Lizzo wrote. “My work ethic, morals and respectfulness have been questioned. My character has been criticized.”

    “These sensationalized stories are coming from former employees who have already publicly admitted that they were told their behavior on tour was inappropriate and unprofessional,” she continued.

    In rebuttal, Ron Zambrano, the lawyer representing the ex- backup dancers, said Lizzo’s “denial of this reprehensible behaviour only adds to our clients’ emotional distress.”

    “Lizzo has failed her own brand and has let down her fans,” he continued. “The dismissive comments and utter lack of empathy are quite telling about her character and only serve to minimize the trauma she has caused the plaintiffs and other employees who have now come forward sharing their own negative experiences.”

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    Click to play video: 'Lizzo denies ‘outrageous’ harassment allegations made by former backup dancers'


    Lizzo denies ‘outrageous’ harassment allegations made by former backup dancers


    The Big Grrrls dance troupe was formed as part of the singer’s Amazon competition series Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls. The Emmy-winning production followed Lizzo and her team as they auditioned backup dancers to join her world tour.

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Sarah Do Couto

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  • Lizzo’s Big Grrrls Rally In a Big Show of Support for Singer

    Lizzo’s Big Grrrls Rally In a Big Show of Support for Singer

    The last few weeks have fallen a bit short of “Good As Hell” for Lizzo: In early August, three of the singer’s former backup dancers announced that they’d filed a lawsuit against Lizzo and her touring production company, Big Grrrl Big Touring, as well as her dance captain, Shirlene Quigley. The suit cites disability discrimination, failure to protect against religious and sexual harassment on the job, and assault, among other allegations.

    While some of Lizzo’s former associates have come out to voice their support for the backup dancers making the allegations, others have come to the singer’s defense. On Thursday, the Big Grrrls and Big Boiiis, as Lizzo’s touring backup dancers are known, took to their official Instagram page to post a lengthy statement of support for their embattled frontwoman.

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    “We have had the time of our lives on the Special tour,” the statement begins. They go on to thank Lizzo for “shattering limitations and kicking in the door way for the Big Grrl& Big Boiii Dancers to do what we love!” They said that they felt “honored to share the stage with such amazing talent.”

    In the account’s Instagram Stories, they link to a week-old post by one of the Big Boiiis, Alexx Mayo, who captioned a celebratory post about the end of the tour with “So grateful to have had such an incredible journey on tour with the most beautiful souls. Thank you to @lizzobeeating for your kindness, generosity and light you share to this world. 💖” alongside a grinning photo of himself high-fiving Lizzo.

    The Stories also linked to a post by Big Grrrl Shelby Swain, with her caption reading in part, “LIZZO I love your kindness , I love your Strength, I love the way you love people. How you encourage, inspire and motivate your many fans every night. Giving them strength, encouragement and motivation letting them know they are Special 💅🏾✨💅🏾! FUCK THE HATERS”

    The Big Grrrls account is verified by Instagram, but it’s unclear who is doing the posting—the Big Grrrls are employees of Lizzo.

    At the 2022 Emmys, Lizzo took home the statuette for best competition series for her show Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls, in which she searched for her beloved squad of backup dancers. She shouted them out onstage in her acceptance speech, alongside an emotional message of diversity, positivity, and acceptance.

    “When I was a little girl, all I wanted to see was me in the media,” she said. “Someone fat like me. Black like me. Beautiful like me.” Then, Lizzo said, she realized, “Bitch, it’s gon’ have to be you.”

    “Make some noise for my Big Grrrls!” she directed the crowd.

    Another gesture of support for Lizzo amidst her legal woes came from none other than Queen Bey herself: after appearing to remove a reference to Lizzo from her live performances of “Break My Soul (The Queens Remix)” Beyoncé has not only returned the shoutout to her stage performance, but doubled down on her public love earlier this week at a show in Atlanta, shouting, “Lizzo! I love you, Lizzo!” in the song.

    Lizzo has been quiet on her own social media accounts since issuing a forceful denial against the claims in the suit, calling them “unbelievable.”

    Kase Wickman

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  • Beyoncé Gives Shout Out To Lizzo On Stage Amid Sexual Harassment Claims

    Beyoncé Gives Shout Out To Lizzo On Stage Amid Sexual Harassment Claims

    Beyoncé seemingly supported Lizzo by giving her a shout-out amid the “Truth Hurts” singer’s ongoing lawsuit filed by her former dancers.

    Lizzo, a well-known advocate for body positivity, is being sued by several of her former dancers for alleged weight shaming and sexual harassment. The Grammy winner has publicly denied and spoken out against the allegations, calling the claims “false.”

    On Monday night, during Queen Bey’s performance of “Break My Soul (The Queens Remix),” the pop star mentioned Lizzo’s name.

    “Lizzo! I love you, Lizzo!” Beyoncé, currently on her massive Renaissance World Tour, said in a viral clip captured during her recent show in Atlanta.

    Beyoncé’s name drop of the pop star comes just a few weeks after she omitted the “It’s About Damn Time” singer’s name in the lyrics of the same track during a show in Foxborough, Massachusetts, on Aug. 1, the same day the lawsuit made headlines.

    Beyoncé lists several iconic Black women in the tune, singing the lyrics “Betty Davis, Solange Knowles, Badu, Lizzo, Kelly Rowl’, Lauryn Hill, Roberta Flack.”

    But during that specific performance, Beyoncé seemingly altered the lyrics, apparently skipping over Lizzo’s name.

    Neither Beyoncé’s nor Lizzo’s reps immediately responded to HuffPost’s request for comment.

    The Grammy winner’s mom, Tina Knowles, stepped in to defend Beyoncé earlier this month amid the rumors that she forwent mentioning Lizzo in response to the lawsuit.

    “She also didn’t say her own sisters name yal should really stop,” commented Lawson on Instagram, pointing out that the “Crazy in Love” crooner also notably left out her sister Solange during that particular performance.

    Lizzo, known legally as Melissa Viviane Jefferson, shut down what she described as “sensationalized” allegations from her former dancers, admitting on social media that she was “hurt” by the claims.

    “Usually I choose not to respond to false allegations, but these are as unbelievable as they sound and too outrageous to not be addressed,” wrote Lizzo in part in a statement shared to Instagram on Aug. 3. “These sensationalized stories are coming from former employees who have already publicly admitted that they were told their behavior on tour was inappropriate and unprofessional.”

    She noted that she doesn’t want to be looked at as a “victim,” adding that she’s “very open” about her sexuality but “cannot accept or allow people to use that openness to make me out to be something I am not.”

    Lizzo added: “There is nothing I take more seriously than the respect we deserve as women in the world.”

    Beyoncé’s Renaissance World Tour is slated to wrap up in early October.

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  • In The Wake the Lizzo Debacle, One Is Reminded That Madonna’s Own Behavior Toward Her Dancers Might Not Have Sat So Well With People Today

    In The Wake the Lizzo Debacle, One Is Reminded That Madonna’s Own Behavior Toward Her Dancers Might Not Have Sat So Well With People Today

    As Lizzo has gone expectedly silent amid a climate that doesn’t take so kindly to emotional abuse anymore, one can’t help but think back to a time when it was easier to “get away with” being both a bit bawdy and “bullying” with their dancers. For example, no one was about to cry “sexual harassment lawsuit” or “failure to prevent and/or remedy hostile work environment” in 1990, the year Madonna spent touring the world with her coterie of hand-picked gay male dancers. Many of whom contributed to making the subsequent Truth or Dare documentary as entertaining and eye-opening as it was. Indeed, they tended to feel the same way. Which is why select members of the troupe did decide to sue her after the film’s release. Those members being Kevin Stea, Gabriel Trupin and Oliver Crumes. 

    Funnily enough, it was also three dancers (Arianna Davis, Crystal Williams and Noelle Rodriguez) from Lizzo’s The Special Tour who decided not to take any further abuse from the erstwhile Svengali formerly pulling the strings. In Stea, Trupin and Crumes’ scenario, the affront came when they realized the extent to which they and their personal lives were paraded in Truth or Dare. With the lawsuit also filed in California, the dancers cited the emotional detriment of Madonna featuring scenes in which the dancers “discuss[ed] intimate facts about their personal life not previously known to the public.” Chief among them, the fact that Kevin and Gabriel were gay, and did not necessarily want that information to be so public at a time of peak homophobia in the U.S. Of course, Madonna would likely insist that she did them and the world a favor by committing something akin to “immersion therapy.” Getting viewers accustomed to seeing more gay men onscreen, as well as forcing Kevin and Gabriel to be “open” about who they were, etc. Where was the “harm” in that (apart from to the eyes of Republicans “hate watching” the documentary)? 

    What’s more, this height of Madonna’s career (so oversaturated that she eventually quipped that she only ever felt overexposed at the gynecologist’s) did not exist at a time when “consent” was such “a thing.” Not sexually or otherwise. And, to that end, it does bear noting that Truth or Dare was produced by Harvey Weinstein’s Miramax Films, therefore it was also named in the suit against Madonna and her company, Boy Toy Inc., as well as Propaganda Films (co-founded by “Madonna music video director,” David Fincher). 

    The lawsuit itself arose at the beginning of 1992, which was evidently already establishing itself as a tumultuous year for Madonna. And yet, the dancers weren’t about to, well, dance around the issue at hand. While Stea and Crumes were more concerned about rightful compensation for their images being used, Trupin was most harmed by the personal life damage it did, stating that he had to undergo therapy afterward because it “exposed him to contempt and ridicule.” Just as Lizzo’s own dancers are at this moment in time by those who refuse to believe their “god” could do any wrong. And they, too, are being asked, “How could you?” Not just by Lizzo fans, but Lizzo herself, who claims to have been “blindsided” by the dancers’ complaints. Even though said dancers stated that multiple attempts were made to get Lizzo’s attention re: the severity of the matter, and the lawsuit was the last-ditch effort to do so. In which case, mission accomplished. 

    With Madonna, the relationship with her dancers was a bit different. Not just because they were gay men who themselves thrived on sexual energy coursing through their veins the way Madonna did (and still does), but because Madonna “cultivating” them for her tour was considered more groundbreaking in that period due to their sexual orientation. While some (including Lizzo herself) would point out that Lizzo hiring “fat” dancers is also groundbreaking, it doesn’t hold the same political gravity as what Madonna was doing in 1990, and at an apex of the AIDS epidemic no less. And so, with this in mind, the dancers were likely “just grateful” to be considered for such a major world tour at all. In fact, their presence in Truth or Dare was one of the first mainstream instances of homosexuality displayed onscreen, prompting many men to come out afterward. 

    Nonetheless, that wasn’t “enough” to keep Madonna’s trio of dancers from speaking up about their violation of privacy. With Trupin’s experience being that “director Alek Keshishian told him he could delete any footage he believed was an invasion of privacy, and says that when he asked that the scene in which he kisses the other dancer [“Slam”] be removed from the completed film, Madonna shouted, ‘Get over it, I don’t care!’” Something, of course, that Lizzo would never be free to say today. Though we all know she wants to. Because the thing about major celebrities hiring “backup” is that they become mere brushstrokes in the painting of the “star” herself. Who wants the painting to look a certain way without considering the, shall we say, painstaking strokes it takes to make it look that way. 

    We may never know if the dancers of Truth or Dare were genuinely “okay” with Madonna’s sexually charged presence both onstage and off (see: the Evian bottle scene) during the Blond Ambition Tour, or merely responding to it “positively” because they were a product of the time they lived in. When you really were expected, especially as a dancer, to just be grateful to have work with such a big star, and one who paid so well. Plus, as Madonna was sure to point out, most of the dancers had never been given the chance to “see the world” as the Blond Ambition Tour was about to enable them to. Something that Madonna felt proud of in terms of her ability to “give that” to them, which, in turn, allowed for effortless emotional manipulation. Manifest in the more than somewhat problematic voiceover of Madonna saying, “The innocence of the dancers move me. They’re not jaded in the least. They haven’t been anywhere. This was the opportunity of their lives. And I know that they’ve suffered a great deal in their lives, whether with their families or just being poor or whatever. And I wanted to give them the thrill of their lives. I wanted to impress them. I wanted to love them.”

    Taking in such scenes and presentations as this prompted bell hooks to write, “Given the rampant homophobia in this society and the concomitant heterosexist voyeuristic obsession with gay lifestyles, to what extent does Madonna progressively seek to challenge this if she insists on primarily representing gays as in some way emotionally handicapped or defective? Or when Madonna responds to the critique that she exploits gay men by cavalierly stating: ‘What does exploitation mean?… In a revolution, some people have to get hurt. To get people to change, you have to turn the table over. Some dishes get broken.’”

    It was obvious that, more than viewing her dancers as “dishes” to be (further) broken, she saw them as her little dolls. To play with and “position” as she wanted. All while assuming that the dancers would be ecstatic merely for the privilege of being around her. And for a time, they were. To boot, every dancer has ostensibly “made peace” with what happened, with Madonna even joined onstage by Jose Xtravaganza for her Finally Enough Love Pride event in June of 2022. The dancers also “expressed themselves” regarding the Blond Ambition Tour via their own 2016 documentary, Strike A Pose. So who knows? Maybe Lizzo’s dancers will one day make their “catharsis doc” as well, and could even end up saying they harbor no ill will toward the self-proclaimed “Big Girl.” Who, in a similar fashion to Madonna, expected nothing but gratitude.

    In that spirit, Lizzo was reported as saying something to the effect of, “You know dancers get fired for gaining weight; you should basically be grateful to be here.” Where once (including in 1990) this “logic” might have gone largely unquestioned, it’s becoming less and less acceptable to put up with abuse just because someone is a “major pop culture fixture.” In other words, celebrity/pop icon privilege is slowly but surely starting to unravel. And one tends to believe that the recent barrage of onstage attacks has something to do with that. Not just because fans feel entitled to a “piece” of the celeb or want to create a viral moment with them, but because they no longer seem to believe a celebrity is an “untouchable creature.” Wanting to prove that point by more literally knocking them off their pedestal. 

    The modern genesis of this may very well have started with what Madonna’s dancers did. In J. Randy Taraborrelli’s Madonna: An Intimate Biography, the revelation about the trio suing her is described as follows: “Madonna was angry about the suit. ‘Those ingrates,’ she said to one colleague. ‘To think that I made them who they are, then they treat me like this.’” A line that reeks of Norma Desmond-level delivery. Taraborrelli added, “Shortly after the suit was filed, Madonna happened upon Oliver Crumes at a party. ‘If you want money,’ she told him, her tone arctic, ‘why don’t you sell that Cartier watch I bought for you?’” Everything about this exchange (whether “lore” or not) exhibits what’s wrong with how celebrities view the people in their employ. 

    Regardless, some can still only see it from the celebrity’s side, with Keshishian defending Madonna back then by saying, “…it was extortion, in my mind. They’d signed the releases and it wasn’t as if we were filming it in secret. The cameras were there all the time. They did the interviews. What did they think was being filmed—a home movie!? I didn’t respect that. I felt bad for Madonna because she really did love those kids and they turned around and did that. That’s why celebrities grow more and more weary of getting close to anybody.”

    By the same token, that’s why people in the arts grow weary of working with celebrities: the expectation that they can be treated “lesser than” just because they’re working for some post-modern equivalent of a deity. Even so, there’s no denying that the current trio of dancers’ lawsuit against Lizzo is a harbinger of change. A warning to other singer-industrial complexes that what might have eked by largely unpublicized (with Madonna eventually settling out of court), therefore unchecked, is not going to anymore.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • When Everyone Wants to Believe A Celebrity Is Andy Kaufman’ing It

    When Everyone Wants to Believe A Celebrity Is Andy Kaufman’ing It

    Ye, Taylor Swift (because Matty Healy), Lizzo, Doja Cat. When it comes to “wanting to believe” a celebrity is merely “putting you on,” the past year has provided no short supply of examples. Nor have the defensive reactions from fans insisting that everyone else deriding their “god” doesn’t know what they’re talking about, or that said “god” is simply “doing an act.” No one better embodies that latter category than Doja Cat. For, as her fans (or what’s left of them) have loved to suggest as a means to cushion the blow of her recent behavior, this entire “thing” she’s doing right now is just part of her “Scarlet persona”—or something. “Scarlet” being the name of the “character” she seems to be portraying. Or rather, an “alter ego,” if you prefer. Either way, fans are latching onto the idea that “she is now playing the role of Scarlet. They are two different characters. In an interview she said she apologized for what would happen later…she also said that she loved us before she got into the role of Scarlet. She doesn’t hate us, but Scarlet does since she’s evil. Doja doesn’t despise us, hate messages are from Scarlet!!!”

    It’s a “grasping at straws” type of reasoning, but one that makes sense considering the post-reality era we’ve been living in since Andy Kaufman’s brand arrived onto the scene. Particularly a 1982 hoax involving pro wrestler Jerry Lawler. Specifically, the time that they battled it out on an episode of The David Letterman Show. With Kaufman already in a neck brace after Lawler supposedly performed the piledriver maneuver on him, Lawler slapped Kaufman during the interview, leading them into another altercation. One that was, as revealed over a decade later, entirely staged. This was the type of “comedy” (or rather, performance art) that not only made Kaufman stand out, but also made him a legend. Mainly for being so committed to his “act” that the truth about it would take years to be unearthed. This also being why many people still speculate that he’ll emerge one day and say his death, too, was a hoax. This “approach” to celebrity would start to catch on not just with other famous people in the twentieth century (see also: Jim Carrey [who, fittingly, portrays Andy Kaufman in Man on the Moon] at the 1999 MTV Movie Awards), but even non-famous people as well.

    In other words, those members of the hoi polloi who got the message that “the hoax” was what got people’s attention. And with “reality TV”/daytime talk shows as an increasingly viable medium with which the average joe could secure his fifteen minutes of fame, the opportunities for creating false fanfare were ample. Case in point, a 1998 episode of The Jerry Springer Show (rebranded as part of “Springer Break” for MTV’s illustrious week of spring break programming), during which two roommates named Dave and Matt went on the show with Dave’s girlfriend, Caitlin. When Matt “confesses” he’s been fooling around with Caitlin, Dave goes completely apeshit on him to a level that clearly gets Springer both salivating and scared when the camera flashes to his reaction. In the end, it turned out the trio had bamboozled the talk show host, admitting the drama was completely manufactured. That yes, Dave and Caitlin were boyfriend and girlfriend, but that the affair with Matt was made up for the sake of quality 90s daytime TV. And so, taking into account how “the art of the hoax” and what it could do for germinal forms of virality had already trickled down into the culture of “normals” (a.k.a. non-famous people), its value became apparent to many. Especially as the twenty-first century progressed. 

    That same “hoax-like” quality was also manifest in the comedic stylings of Sacha Baron Cohen, who brought his Borat character from Da Ali G Show to life in an even bigger way in 2006’s Borat (a.k.a. Borat! Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan). Interacting with “dyed in the wool” Americans who genuinely believe he’s some “ghastly” foreigner with no knowledge of American life or customs, the gimmick Cohen had in mind—to expose prejudice and racism entrenched in the very fabric of American culture—worked like a charm. Between a Southern frat boy warning Borat to “not let a woman ever ever make you who you are” to a Republican at a Virginia rodeo telling Borat he should shave his mustache to look more like an I-talian instead of a Muslim to a crowd of people at that same rodeo laughing at Borat’s thick accent before he delves into an offensive version the national anthem (“I now will sing our Kazakh national anthem to the tune of your national anthem”), the levels of misogyny, homophobia and xenophobia present in the U.S. are exposed at every turn. And all through the carefully-constructed ruse of a character like Borat. 

    Less careful constructions aren’t always met with being hailed as “brilliant.” For example, in 2008, Joaquin Phoenix ostensibly had a “breakdown” (which was in rather poor taste considering Britney’s real one the same year) after announcing his plans to retire from acting so he could pursue a rap career. The result was a 2010 “documentary” directed by Casey Affleck. Quickly revealed to be a mockumentary, I’m Still Here (not to be confused with Todd Haynes’ impressionistic Bob Dylan biopic, I’m Not There, released three years before) was met with lukewarm reviews, with many critics seeming to feel that it failed as “good performance art.” Plus, it also happened to furnish the film set that would later put Casey Affleck in the spotlight for his sexually harassing tendencies, as well as promoting a work environment that encouraged sexual harassment (à la Lizzo). So really, what “artistic value” did it have apart from being an experimental vanity project?

    The same can be said of whatever Doja Cat is “doing” right now. If, in fact, it’s contrived at all, and not just a desperate bid on fans’ part to validate her behavior (which also says something about the dangers of post-reality existence). This includes going off on their patheticness for saying they “love” her and trying to call themselves shit like “Kittenz” in honor of the way other fan bases have names (e.g., Ariana Grande’s Arianators, Taylor Swift’s Swifties, Charli XCX’s Angels, Kesha’s Animals, Lady Gaga’s Little Monsters, Nicki Minaj’s The Barbz, Beyoncé’s Beyhive, etc.). Doja made it apparent that not only does she think the people focusing their energy on this are total losers, but also that she doesn’t feel she “needs” them at all. At least not anymore. Not now that she has enough money to pursue whatever she wants creatively. Alas, she might quickly come to find that her overhead costs are no longer matching up with what she’s making if a legion of fans aren’t there to support her where it counts: financially. 

    Whether or not this is a “stunt,” some believe Doja Cat is truly immune to public opinion (à la Ye) at this point and that, “No matter how you feel about Doja Cat, it is clear that she is living her life unapologetically right now. While some fans may be freaked out by it, she seems to be happy, which is all that matters.” No one appeared to have that stance about Ye, possibly because it’s as Dave Chappelle said and the one thing you can’t do in Hollywood is speak ill of the Jewish community. Not only “speak ill,” but also go on multiple venomous tirades regarding Jewish stereotypes and conspiracies. Starting with Ye tweeting in late 2022, “I’m a bit sleepy tonight but when I wake up I’m going death con 3 On JEWISH PEOPLE.” Apart from misspelling DEFCON, the most glaring aspect of the tweet was Ye’s plea for attention, no matter how negative. An escalating need for it that only amplified as he doubled down on his offensive rhetoric, complete with praising Hitler and dining with Donald Trump and a white nationalist Holocaust denier at Mar-a-Lago. All of this occurred at the end of 2022. As 2023 began, Ye became fodder for awards show hosts (i.e., Jerrod Carmichael) and South Park in between gradually fading into the background. Perhaps he’ll try to reemerge at some point and holler, “Gotcha!” It was all an act. Just like Andy Kaufman. Just like, as fans insist, Doja Cat. 

    It’s the safest bet for coming back from bad behavior, after all. “Haha, just kidding! It was part of my ‘art.’” But, unlike Kaufman and Cohen (who Ye would be likely to point out are both Jewish so it must be some kind of conspiracy), the “performance art” being done now isn’t ironic, nor does it serve as a means to highlight a larger, unpleasant truth about humanity. Instead, the so-called performance art itself has become the larger, unpleasant truth about humanity. Even when people want to praise ultimately annoying actors and musicians, they’ll still dredge up Kaufman (because the devil can cite pop culture scripture for his purpose). For instance, Jennifer Lopez compared Jennifer Coolidge to Kaufman after working with her on Shotgun Wedding, in that you can never really tell if “that’s who she is” or she’s simply always “in character.” To put it another way, if she’s just making money off her natural persona in a similar way that Angus Cloud did with his Fez character (though it always irritated him when people wrote off his talent that way). 

    To further debunk the idea that Doja Cat is just “trolling” everyone (therefore, her behavior is “fine”), musicians who have had alter egos in the past have known better than to “trust the audience” with being able to separate the singer from the alter ego without making it explicit. From David Bowie with Ziggy Stardust to Beyoncé with Sasha Fierce to Madonna with Madame X, these were “characters” that had entire albums constructed around them. Whatever Doja’s forthcoming album turns out to be called, it doesn’t seem like the title is going to be Scarlet. Which might be the only way for her to backpedal on what she’s said and done at this point. And isn’t that what every celeb wants to do once they notice that their “artistic integrity” is affecting their bank account’s bottom line?

    Genna Rivieccio

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