The "N**gas in Paris" Twitter controversy is deeply rooted in a lack of agency and ownership over our own vast influence on mainstream culture, Rebecca Carroll writes in a piece for Ebony.
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The black digerati had their panties in a tweet on Monday when Gwyneth Paltrow โ ever the antithesis of all that is negro โ tweeted a pic of herself on stage in Paris with Kanye and Jay-Z along with the caption: โNi**as in paris for real.โ Naturally, minutes later the headline โGwyneth Paltrow Tweets the N-Wordโ then spread like wildfire on the interwebs. Paltrow was in Paris attending Jay and Kanyeโs โWatch the Throneโ tour โ so she got the Paris part right. Less clear to Paltrow was the fact that we don't now, nor have we ever needed her to cleverly kick song titles with the N-word back to us. Yes, it is the title of a Jay and Kanye hit song (Paltrow responded to the criticism in a follow up tweet: โHold up, itโs the title of the song!โ), but, um, we knew that homegirl.
Read Rebecca Carroll's entire piece at Ebony.
The Rootย aims to foster and advance conversations about issues relevant to the black Diaspora by presenting a variety of opinions from all perspectives, whether or not those opinions are shared by our editorial staff.
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