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About

Black Twitter is an online social movement made of people of African American descent using the microblogging and social networking site Twitter.

Origin

The earliest known use of the term "Black Twitter" was in the title of an article titled "Black Twitter: A Starter Kit," which was published on the African American culture online magazine The Root[3] on February 4th, 2010. The article contained useful tips for using Twitter, arguing that the black community is a "powerful force" on the microblogging site.

Brown Twitter Bird

Brown Twitter Bird is a cartoon character and Twitter hashtag inspired by a controversial Slate article published on August 10th, 2010. The article featured an illustration of a Twitter bird with brown feather and a blue baseball cap with a hashtag printed on it (shown below, left), which many regarded as stereotypical and offensive. In response, many Twitter users made parody versions of the image, dressing the bird in a variety of different costumes (shown below, middle, right).

Spread

On January 18th, 2011, The Root[6] published an article titled "Black Twitter: Trending Topics Paint the Wrong Picture," reporting that black people make up 25% of all Twitter users. On December 13th, the African American news site News One[5] published a "Black Twitter History" infographic (shown below).

In March of 2012, writer Kimberly Ellis (a.k.a. "Dr. Goddess") held a presentation at the South by Southwest (SXSW)[7] conference in Austin, Texas titled "The Bombastic Brilliance of 'Black Twitter'." On December 20th, the men's interest blog Complex[8] published an article about negative misconceptions associated with Black Twitter. On February 18th, 2013, the black men's interest blog Single Black Male[4] published an article about the different types of Black Twitter users. On May 31st, the viral content site BuzzFeed[2] published a list titled "8 Things You'll Find on Black Twitter," which provided examples of tweets from Black Twitter. On the same day, The Huffington Post Live aired a segment on Black Twitter. On July 16th, BuzzFeed[1] published an article about the role Black Twitter played in killing the book deal for one of the jurors in George Zimmerman's trial. On the following day, CNN aired a segment on "The Influence of 'Black Twitter'," citing its involvement in the Trayvon Martin trial.

#WhitePeopleBoycottingEBONY

On August 7th, 2013, Ebony Magazine posted a tweet[9] mocking rumors that Tea Party activists would be boycotting the magazine for their September cover dedicated to the memory of Trayvon Martin (shown below). The same day, News One[10] reported that jokes about the rumored boycott subsequently circulated on the microblogging site under the hashtag "#WhitePeopleBoycottingEBONY."[11]

April Fools Subreddit Prank

On April 1st, 2019, the BlackPeopleTwitter subreddit announced that the subreddit is now lock and only for black people who verify their race through picture.[15] Redditor SomeoneStopMePlease posted a screenshot of the announcement to r/WatchRedditDie[13] with the caption, "cool Reddit is becoming segregated" which gained 1,900 points (92% upvoted) in two days (shown below, left). On April 2nd, Redditor 6ikz uploaded an Eric Andre "Let Me In" edit to r/BlackPeopleTwitter[14] with the caption "White people on Reddit finna riot cause they can't get into the Black People Twitter subreddit to talk shit" (shown below, right). The post accumulated 4,800 points (82% upvoted) in two days.

On April 3rd, The BlackPeopleTwitter[12] subreddit moderators announced in a post that the subreddit was open again (shown below). They announced, "We recently made a change to our BPT that it would be for 'black people only.' While this was done as an April Fool’s joke, there was a very real reason behind it more than just some laughs." They also went on to explain their reasoning: "We wanted to bring to the forefront that this subreddit should never make people of color feel out of place here or that they do not belong and wanted to rebuild a sense of community." The post gained 9,600 points (65% upvoted) in two days.

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