December 22, 2024

Black Lives Matter: In the Words of Oprah Winfrey, Ciara, Lizzo and Other Stars

Black Lives Matter. 

They are words you’ve no doubt seen stamped all over the Internet. A simple phrase, meaning, quite directly, that the lives of black people matter. That they need to be protected, cherished, respected, not systematically targeted or shattered. 

An idea so straightforward, yet it’s one of the most hotly debated across dinner tables, news panels and your social media feed, with responses such as “all lives matter” being bandied about. 

Which, of course, is the point. All lives do and should matter, but it’s the black ones that are currently under attack, as the death of George Floyd once again made painfully clear. 

Many a metaphor has been employed to illustrated this. In a 2019 Harper’s Bazaar piece entitled, “Why You Need to Stop Saying ‘All Lives Matter'” academic, writer and lecturer Rachel Cargle explained, “If a patient being rushed to the ER after an accident were to point to their mangled leg and say, ‘This is what matters right now,’ and the doctor saw the scrapes and bruises of other areas and countered, ‘but all of you matters,’ wouldn’t there be a question as to why he doesn’t show urgency in aiding that what is most at risk? At a community fundraiser for a decaying local library, you would never see a mob of people from the next city over show up angry and offended yelling, ‘All libraries matter!’—especially when theirs is already well-funded. This is because there is a fundamental understanding that when the parts of society with the most pain and lack of protection are cared for, the whole system benefits.”

Nor does saying that black lives matter mean that other causes are being tossed aside, as E!’s Nina Parker reasoned, explaining why she remains flummoxed by the “All lives matter” messaging that continues to flood her social media feed. “It’s insane to me,” she said in a Daily Pop discussion last week, “because…if we’re marching for AIDS, there aren’t people coming in with posters that say, ‘What about cancer?'”

It’s long past time to listen to those at the forefront of this years-old movement. And in the wake of yet another devastating loss, many experienced voices are offering their views and sharing their accounts. Read their takes, absorb, learn. 

John Boyega, protest

Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

Jamie Foxx, Protest

Eric Risberg/AP/Shutterstock

Rachel Lindsay, Super Bowl 2019

Courtesy of HYDE Sunset

Nicole Byer, Daily Pop

Kylie Gayer/E! News

Victor Cruz, Instagram

Victor Cruz / Instagram

Travis Scott

Matt Baron/Shutterstock

Nick Cannon

Amy Sussman/Invision/AP/Shutterstock

Oprah Winfrey

James Gourley/Shutterstock

Elaine Welteroth, The 76th Venice Film Festival, 2019

Stefania D’Alessandro/WireImage

Ciara, Future, Instagram

Instagram

One World: Together at Home Event, Lizzo

Global Citizen

Ayesha Curry

Scott Kirkland/Shutterstock

Kevin Hart

Chelsea Lauren/Shutterstock

Michael B. Jordan, Instagram

Instagram

“E! stands in solidarity with the black community against systemic racism and oppression experienced every day in America,” the network said in a statement on May 31. “We owe it to our black staff, talent, production partners and viewers to demand change and accountability. To be silent is to be complicit. #BlackLivesMatter.”

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