This site uses cookies to improve your experience and to provide services and advertising.
By continuing to browse, you agree to the use of cookies described in our Cookies Policy.
You may change your settings at any time but this may impact on the functionality of the site.
To learn more see our
Cookies Policy.
Download our app
It's that time of year again: Halloween isn't a valid excuse for wearing blackface
Michael Klimentyev Michael Klimentyev
SOMEHOW, IT’S 2018 and there are still people out there who believe that blackface is up for debate.
Former Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly was the latest (and hopefully the last) public figure who attempted to make excuses for the practice of wearing blackface. On yesterday’s episode of the NBC show ‘Megyn Kelly Today’, the 47-year-old asked, “What is racist?”
CNN responded to the segment by pointing out the fact that in the 47 years that Megyn Kelly has been alive, there was never a time in the United States when blackface was deemed acceptable.
Comedian Patton Oswalt also added that there’s no reason why she should have nostalgia for the simple old days, before PC culture “destroyed” blackface. He wrote on Twitter, “Dear Megyn Kelly — you and I are approximately the same age. Blackface was NOT okay when we were kids. Take it from a big-hearted boy who just wanted to show his love for Nispey Russell on the worst Halloween of my life.”
Even a 1984 episode of the American sitcom Gimme a Break! managed to take a very clear stance on the issue of blackface. Pop culture towards the end of the 20th century was not completely ignorant of the fact that blackface was (and is) offensive. In Gimme a Break!, Nell Harper compared it to using the N-word.
After all of the backlash, Megyn Kelly decided to apologise for her comments.
She emailed her colleagues:
“Those” kind of days shouldn’t really be a rare occurrence…
When Megyn Kelly returned to her TV show this morning, she apologised once again:
Incredibly, this was met with a standing ovation…
Needless to say, viewers were very surprised at the way the audience reacted to Megyn’s apology. One person tweeted, “She is an extremely well-educated woman who worked at Fox News for many years, where they covered the issue repeatedly (to gin up outrage over “PC culture”). There’s no way she was ignorant of the reasons why blackface is upsetting.”
If, after sitting through decades of public discussion on the topic of why blackface is racist, you are still unsure what the big deal is then you’re probably willfully ignorant. If you are sincerely interested in trying to understand why blackface is wrong, there are literally hundreds of explanations online.
In fact, blackface isn’t the only costume idea that you might have that’s off limits.
This year, people with disabilities have been speaking out on social media about the harm and stigma that is caused by individuals who dress up as disabled people for Halloween. Teen Vogue spoke to Youtuber Annie Segarra, who said that “Disability is not something we can just take on and off. Attempting to use it as a prop is a mockery of the privilege one has in order to do such a thing.”
DailyEdge is on Instagram!
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site
blackface Halloween