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Keke Palmer Is Not About to Let Y’all Drag Tyler Perry Anymore

The two were recently on a podcast together where they discussed the criticism Perry often receives over his films.

After Tyler Perry ruffled a few feathers with his clapback towards critics of his films and โ€œhighbrow negroesโ€ during his appearance on Keke Palmerโ€™s podcast, โ€œBaby, This is Keke Palmerโ€ earlier this week, Palmer is coming to his defense.

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As previously reported by The Root, the podcastโ€™s conversation was spawned by the recent performance of Perryโ€™s latest film, โ€œDivorce in the Black.โ€ which dropped on Prime Video earlier this month. After debuting with a shocking 0 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes and a myriad of people once again calling Perry out on his consistent negative and downtrodden portrayals of Black women onscreen and inconsistent storytelling methods, Perry took the time to address the criticism.

โ€œYouโ€™ve got this โ€˜highbrow negroโ€™ with his nose up looking at everything, and then you got people like where I come from who are grinders and really know what itโ€™s like,โ€ the writer and director said. โ€œWho are you to say which Black story is important or should be told? Get outta here with that bullshit.โ€

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

As his comments naturally began to circulate online, folks further called out Perry, but Palmer wasnโ€™t having it. After a person online spoke his peace in response to Perryโ€™s comments on X/Twitter in a since-deleted tweet, Palmer responded in kind, defending the Madea creator and alleging that the problem isnโ€™t with Perry or his artโ€”itโ€™s the Hollywood system as a whole.

โ€œThe enemy isnโ€™t Tyler itโ€™s the system that makes it hard for multiple black artist to shine at one time. Oppression turns you against the person that gets the shine opposed to questioning why there can only be so few at a time. Tyler is not the gatekeeper of all black stories heโ€™s just one creative who broke through the system. Advocating for others to do the same is the fight, not hating Tyler for his work that many do love,โ€ she wrote.

https://twitter.com/KekePalmer/status/1816305139776643245?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

When another user on X/Twitter responded to Palmerโ€™s point citing the fact that Perry doesnโ€™t hire writers and puts out โ€œthe same misogynoiristic bullshit movies every time he wants to release a shitty movieโ€ and that โ€œheโ€™s part of the system,โ€ Palmer retorted:

I believe heโ€™s definitely found a way to work in the system and heโ€™s employed a lot of black people, including writers which we speak about in the interview. So, not just in front of the camera but behind. His set was the first set I ever saw a black crew, so that gets my respect. You donโ€™t have to love his movies though, I just donโ€™t blame his movies for oppression.

She later added in two followup tweets:

โ€œThis is fair. But taste is so subjective, hallmark is always telling the same story and thatโ€™s considered a niche. So Iโ€™m giving that same grace to our creators. There is criticism thatโ€™s based in what something is and criticism based on what you want something to be. Lifetime is never gonna be HBO and itโ€™s not supposed to be. I like them both...I think itโ€™s less about changing Tyler and more about uplifting and popularizing other work that we love. There is Issa Rae, Tracy Oliver, Justin Simien, Jordan Peele, Jeremy Oโ€™Harris, Janicza Bravo, Nia DaCosta etc. Heโ€™s not the only black creator creating and they all deserve the right to share their perspective.

Do Palmer and Perry have a point?

Straight From The Root

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