Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Kentucky Derby Tweets Video Of Black Men Carrying White Rapper Over Muddy Track—And People Are Uncomfortable

Kentucky Derby Tweets Video Of Black Men Carrying White Rapper Over Muddy Track—And People Are Uncomfortable
@kentuckyderby/TikTok

The 148th annual Kentucky Derby, the yearly horse race that attracts the who's who of American society and culture, was held this past weekend. And like always, several stars got dolled up in their most elegant Sunday best to make a splash at the annual event.

Among them was rapper Jack Harlow, still riding the wave of his fittingly titled smash hit "First Class," who took to the Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky looking dapper as ever in a slim white suit and immaculate black shoes.


But the outfit was quickly overshadowed by the efforts to maintain those shoes' cleanliness. A video showing a group of Black men carrying Harlow over the venue's dirt to keep his shoes clean left many people uncomfortable over its very awkward optics.

See the video the Kentucky Derby posted to Twitter and TikTok below.

@kentuckyderby

Shoes first. #KentuckyDerby #jackharlow #shoes @Jack Harlow

The men who carried Harlow are reportedly part of his security team, and they appear to have been smiling and jovial while helping their boss keep his shoes clean.

Nonetheless, the optics of the official Kentucky Derby accounts sharing the video are... well, a bit cringe, depending on how you think about it.

This is, of course, the American South, which comes with a history of racial segregation and slavery from which the Kentucky Derby and the horse-racing sport and industry in general is not exempt.

While audiences of events like the Kentucky Derby were almost exclusively White at their post-Civil War inception, horse-racing in the United States was mostly a Black sport until Jim Crow laws pushed Black people out.

They still remain underrepresented in the sport to this day.

Roll it all together and the video of a rich, privileged White rapper being carried over the mud by a retinue of Black employees at a Southern event with a history of racist oppression being shared by that venue's official social media accounts conjured up some truly uncomfortable and retrograde images for many people.

And they took to social media to voice their discomfort and frustration.




On Instagram, Harlow's flex was no better received.

@consequences/Instagram

@consequences/Instagram

@consequences/Instagram

@consequences/Instagram

@consequences/Instagram

@consequences/Instagram

@consequences/Instagram

The Kentucky Derby and Harlow's PR teams should probably be in a bit of a scramble at the moment.

Perhaps they could start by checking out some history to appreciate why this look wasn't it for many people.

More from Trending

Kari Lake; Charlie Kirk
Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images; Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Kari Lake Slammed After Warning Parents Not To Send Their Kids To College After Charlie Kirk Murder

Speaking during a memorial service for far-right activist Charlie Kirk at the Kennedy Center, failed Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake—now the Trump administration's Senior Advisor for the U.S. Agency for Global Media—called U.S. colleges “indoctrination camps” and urged parents not to send their children.

Lake ignored the fact that Kirk was killed while speaking at a college, in this case Utah Valley University (UVU), the largest university by enrollment in Utah.

Keep ReadingShow less
JD Vance; Charlie Kirk
Real America's Voice

Vance Claims Kirk Never Insulted Black Women's 'Brain Processing Power'—And Here Come The Receipts

Vice President JD Vance served as host of the late far-right activist Charlie Kirk's podcast this week and was called out after claiming Kirk "never uttered" words about the "brain processing power" of Black women—even though Kirk said as much in 2023.

Vance made the claim after Washington Post columnist Karen Attiah—a Black woman—said she was dismissed from the paper following social media posts on gun control and race after Kirk’s assassination.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Donald Trump
Fox News

Trump Swiftly Fact-Checked After Making Bonkers Claim About How Many Americans Died From Drugs Last Year

President Donald Trump was criticized after attempting to justify the bombing of a suspected Venezuelan drug boat by asserting that 300 million people died from drugs last year.

Speaking to reporters on Sunday, Trump was asked about the order he gave earlier this month to destroy a boat he suspected of transporting drugs off the coast of Venezuela, rather than simply intercepting it. All 11 people on board the boat were killed.

Keep ReadingShow less
A woman's hand hold up a pink paper constructed heart that is on fire.
Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

People Reveal The Pettiest Reasons They Stopped Hooking Up With Someone

Sex is a powerful weapon and a natural part of life.

But it can bamboozle and surprise you.

Keep ReadingShow less
Owen Cooper made history as the youngest Emmy winner, with a golden “Lucky Duck” gift from his idol Jake Gyllenhaal.
@netflix/Twitter

Jake Gyllenhaal Surprises Fan

Jake Gyllenhaal might have lost Best Supporting Actor back in 2006, but he can officially say he passed on a little Emmy magic.

Fifteen-year-old Owen Cooper, who just became the youngest Emmy winner in history, walked into last night’s ceremony with a pocket-sized good luck charm from his hero: a tiny golden duck from Gyllenhaal himself.

Keep ReadingShow less