That
was the basis of a recent "Saturday Night Live" skit that portrayed
white fans freaking out about her "blackness," as conveyed by her new
"Formation" music video and a Super Bowl halftime performance in which
her backup dancers dressed in Black Panther-esque outfits.Black girl magic' is more than a hashtag; it's a movement
The halftime show has prompted a number of discussions both pro- and anti-Beyoncé.
Nation
of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan backed the superstar during a sermon
Sunday. Fans rallied around the singer on social media, and a protest at
National Football League headquarters in New York ended up drawing
only Beyoncé supporters.
Louis Farrakhan offers Beyoncé concert security.However,
police have argued that the imagery in the music video is anti-law
enforcement, and her apparent tribute to the Black Panthers fell just as
flat, given that group's history of tensions with authorities.
Departments
across the country have been discussing symbolic stands against the
singer, whose video also featured imagery closely aligned with the
#BlackLivesMatters movement. One scene in the "Formation" video features
a young African-American boy in a hoodie dancing in front of a line of
police officers wearing riot gear; then, the words "Stop Shooting Us"
appear in graffiti on a wall.
A police union in Raleigh, North Carolina, voted unanimously Tuesday night not to boycott off-duty security work for her upcoming show there.
The superstar's stadium tour kicks off April 27 in Miami, and the Miami Fraternal Order of Police has urged a boycott there.Miami police union calls for cops to boycott Beyoncé In a statement posted on the group's website, Tampa
Police Benevolent Association President Vincent Gericitano said his
group's officers were "disgusted" with the Super Bowl show and Beyoncé's
new music video.
The Nashville Fraternal Order of Police asked its members to not voluntarily work the concert there.
"If
we volunteer to work her event, we're basically saying, 'you can say or
do anything you want to when it comes to police officers, and we're
just going to sit and take it,' " Sgt. Danny Hale, president of the Nashville Fraternal Order of Police, Andrew Jackson Lodge No. 5, told The Tennessean.
"We've been under attack for the past eight, 10, 12 months. Some things
that are done and said are just not fair, and it's not right."
Authorities
have been clear that they are not calling for officers to not do their
jobs, just to reconsider working security for her shows, as some
off-duty officers have done to make extra money."I
can guarantee that if Beyoncé needs help anywhere, police would
respond," said Sgt. Ed Mullins, president of the Sergeants Benevolent
Association in New York. "She made a statement, and now law enforcement
is making a statement.
What's clear is that no one in the country is
trying to resolve the issues between communities of color and the
distrust of law enforcement."Police union calls for law enforcement labor to boycott Beyoncé's world tour Not everyone is backing officers who have called for the Beyoncé boycott, however.
One
person tweeted, "The American police are bullying Beyoncé because she
asked for police not to murder black people, please and thank you."
The
National Sheriffs' Association linked Beyoncé's "anti-police
'entertainment' " performance to the "senseless killing of seven
deputies in the U.S. since the (Super Bowl halftime performance)
aired." A sheriff in Tennessee said after shots were fired outside his
home that Beyoncé's video may have provoked the incident.
But New York Daily News columnist Shaun King wrote Monday that the officers' killings were not about race."The
facts are seven of eight officers who've been killed this year in the
United States have been killed by angry, armed white men," King wrote.The controversy has not hurt Beyoncé's ticket sales, however.
Billboard reports
that the 39-date tour "has already taken in over $100 million in ticket
sales, with Beyoncé inevitably headed toward a sold-out run and one of
the hottest tours of 2016."
"Even
Taylor Swift, whose 1989 tour last year topped all artists at $250
million gross and 2.3 million attendance to 83 shows, according to
Boxscore, did not play stadiums exclusively. In fact, only one act, The
Rolling Stones, played all stadiums in 2016, and only Coldplay has
joined Beyoncé in rolling out a full-on stadium tour for 2016 -- so
far," Billboard said.
source: cnn
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