Unless you belong to an arbitrarily specific religion that prays exclusively to Gayle King and/or Oprah Winfrey, neither of those women are gods. Which means that neither is infallible. And if, for instance, you allowed Gayle to borrow your last $20 and she refuses to pay you back, or you invited Oprah to a game night and she stole all of your forks, âfuck Gayleâ and âfuck Oprahâ would be reasonable responses to those acts.
What is unreasonableâwhatâs past unreasonable, actually, and is legitimately gross and violentâis the vitriol these women are receiving for doing things some (wrongly and stupidly) perceive to be antiblack. In Gayleâs case, both Anne Branigin and Maiysha Kai have recently written brilliant pieces articulating the fallacy of believing now is âtoo soonâ to think about, discuss, and reckon with how and where the sexual assault allegations against Kobe Bryant fit in his legacy. And Maiysha specifically deconstructed the explicit misogyny in Snoopâs response to Gayle and the tens of thousands of digital and spiritual co-signs it received. So I wonât go back down that road.
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But I will say this: Kobe is dead, yâall. And as shocking and tragic and devastating as that still is for many people, erasing a crucial part of his legacyâand attempting to flatten the voices of people uninterested in hagiographyâainât gonna bring him back. And it ainât gonna change who he was, what he was accused of doing, and the still-vibrating reverberations from that fallout. We all leave footprints when we leave here, and âColoradoâ is cemented, forever, in the soil. This doesnât mean that redemption was/is impossible. Just that the world is messy. And weâre the ones who make the mess. And if finding space to grapple with both the Kobe Bryant you wish to memorialize and the Kobe Bryant that Gayle King asked Lisa Leslie about breaks your brain, good! Itâs supposed to be hard! But thatâs honest. Thatâs necessary. Thatâs human.
Whatâs easyâwhatâs the easiest thing Iâll think about and/or do todayâis Snoop.
Snoop Dogg has been fortunate enough to shift into this current, classic rock/elevator-rap phase of his career, where he retains status as an âelderâ and even allows himself to be called âUncle Snoop.â Heâs used his tremendous platform to be a vocal critic of what he perceives to be antiblackness. Along with his critiques of Gayle, heâs shared similar thoughts about Kanye West. The irony here is that while heâs accusing Kanye and Gayle and Oprah of being sellouts, if being demonstratively antiblack is what makes you one, Snoop has been a sellout his entire career. And he isnât just a garden-variety sellout; heâs perhaps the most prominent sellout in the fucking country (and definitely the richest). The Michael Jordan of sellouts.
Understanding this requires a fundamental shift in how antiblackness is commonly thought of and assessed. Basically, you have to decenter black men and center black people. In his almost 30 years (!!!) now of being a public figure, thereâs nothing Snoop has done to suggest that he doesnât hate black women; nothing you can nod to in his âreal lifeâ as a mere counterpoint to the art heâs created, which has consistently and happily displayed an antipathy for black women and encouraged disrespect and/or violence towards them. He is an unfathomably rich and middle-aged black man who, in his almost 50 years of life on Earth, has only displayed public affection for one womanâMartha Stewart (who is, um, white)âwhile relentlessly shitting on the women who look like him.
Again, this is easy.
Whatâs also easy to see is that those insults and threats towards Gayle were a performance. When watching that video, I didnât see a man who was hurting; pouring his grief out on film and through anger. I saw an expert performer who (rightly) assumed his fury would seem righteous if directed at a black woman he believed to be vulnerable to claims of antiblackness. Everything about it, from the positioning of the camera to the bonnet or whatever the fuck he was wearing, was stagecraft. A bullyâs greatest weapon is his emotional intelligence. The best ones are experts at reading people/rooms and understanding human nature, and this is what enables them to choose the right targets. And of course, Snoop knew there was a virtual army of people ready to ride with him, as he has 150 million in the bank that proves that the vocalized and weaponized public disrespect of black women is a booming business. Perhaps Americaâs boomingest.
When youâre that consumed by and entertained with the hate of an entire demographic, is it even possible to love someone as much as he claims to have loved Kobe? Of course, itâs possible to love a myth. Itâs possible to love a performance. Itâs possible to love how Kobe made him feel. But can you love a full person? Does he possess the emotional bandwidth for that? Hmm, weâre back to the hard questions again. Letâs end with an easy one.
Is Snoop Dogg a sellout?
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