Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Tyler Perry Shares Emotional Moment He Had With Barack Obama Sitting In Abraham Lincoln's Chairs

Tyler Perry Shares Emotional Moment He Had With Barack Obama Sitting In Abraham Lincoln's Chairs
Mike Coppola/VF19/Getty Images for VF, Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights

Actor and filmmaker Tyler Perry said a photo he took with then-President Barack Obama back in 2015 was a "very emotional" day for Obama.

Perry sat down with The View on Thursday and discussed the grief behind the smiles in the photo taken on June 17, 2015 – the same day of the racially motivated Charleston church shooting in South Carolina.


In observance of Black History Month, Perry posted the photo of the two gentlemen taken inside the comedian's Los Angeles home library on Instagram.

He wrote of the elegant furniture:

"I bought these chairs at auction."
"They were once owned by Abraham Lincoln."
"We sat in them and had an incredible conversation."

"This post is to celebrate Black History Month while marking a moment in American history," he said, tagging the former POTUS.



"We both had an opportunity to sit in those chairs and have a conversation."

He went on to describe the powerful moment of being in the presence of:

"A sitting President [Obama]. A President [Lincoln] in the past who freed the slaves. Two African-American men sitting in the chairs having a conversation."


There was renewed adoration for the nostalgic photograph.


@tylerperry/Instagram


@tylerperry/Instagram


@tylerperry/Instagram


@tylerperry/Instagram


@tylerperry/Instagram


@tylerperry/Instagram



Can we talk about the impressive book collection?


@tylerperry/Instagram


@tylerperry/Instagram


@tylerperry/Instagram

Never one to mince words, The View co-host Joy Behar chimed in with her own timeline of events.

"When I saw this picture when I knew the story, I said 'we had Abraham Lincoln, Barack Obama, and we have a thug in the White House."

Perry had invited Obama over to his house for a fundraiser in Los Angeles and explained:

"this was a very emotional day for him because it was the day that the shooting happened in South Carolina."

Eight people were killed when a gunman opened fire inside the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church during a prayer service, predominantly attended by black church goers, around 9 p.m.

The church pastor and a South Carolina state senator were identified among those who lost their lives in the church that night. Two other people were rushed to the hospital, one of whom died.

The tragic incident was a hate crime deliberately targeting African-Americans.

The massacre was particularly devastating for Perry, who grew up as a member of the AME Church.

He posted a message on Facebook following the tragedy.

"I grew up in the AME Church. My aunt and uncle are pastors and a bishop in the church. I know these kinds of prayer meetings well and I've been in a lot of them! It could have been any of us!"
"The AME church, so close to home for me, so personal. What do you do when you think prayer is not enough? You pray some more. My heart and soul go out to the families of Emmanuel AME church!!"


You can watch the whole interview of Tyler Perry on The View in the YouTube clip, below.


Tyler Perry On Final Madea Movie And 25 Years In Hollywood I The Viewwww.youtube.com

More from Trending/best-of-reddit

Kyra Sedgwick and Kevin Bacon on accoustic guitar
@kevinbacon/TikTok

Kevin Bacon And Kyra Sedgwick Hilariously Admit Secrets To Each Other In Viral 'We Don't Judge' Video

Successful communication between spouses is when one listens first while the other shares a revelation.

Actors Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick, who've been married since 1988, demonstrated they had this in the bag while participating in the viral TikTok challenge, "We listen and we don't judge."

Keep ReadingShow less
Blue Ivy Carter
Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/GettyImages

Fans Defend Blue Ivy After People Call Her Dress At 'Mufasa' Premiere 'Wildly Inappropriate'

Beyoncé and Jay-Z's 12-year-old daughter Blue Ivy drew backlash at the Mufasa premiere because she was attired in a "wildly inappropriate" dress for a pre-teen. But, fans quickly came to the young actor's defense.

In Mufasa, the sequel and prequel to the live-action 2019 remake of The Lion King, Ivy voiced Kiara, the granddaughter of Mufasa and daughter of Simba and Nala.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kyrsten Sinema; Joe Manchin
Mandel Ngan-Pool/Getty Images; Samuel Corum/Getty Images

Kyrsten Sinema And Joe Manchin Give Dems And Labor Unions The Middle Finger With Vote

Outgoing Independent senators Kyrsten Sinema (Arizona) and Joe Manchin (West Virginia) gave Democrats and labor unions the middle finger by siding with Republicans to oppose confirming President Joe Biden's renomination of Lauren McFerran for the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), which will let President-elect Donald Trump seize control of the board next year.

NLRB is the federal agency responsible for safeguarding employees’ workplace rights. Sinema and Manchin's decisive “no” votes doomed the nomination, as all Senate Republicans also opposed it. Only one of their votes was needed to secure McFerran’s confirmation.

Keep ReadingShow less
Vivek Ramaswamy
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Vivek Dragged After Claiming Federal Worker Told Him She'd Be Fine Being Fired

Billionaire Vivek Ramaswamy—fresh off being named the co-head of the new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)—was dragged after claiming on X that a federal worker came up to him praising DOGE and told him she'd be "OK" with being fired.

Ramaswamy claimed:

Keep ReadingShow less
United States of America flag in window behind wooden pane
Max Sulik on Unsplash

Culture Shocks Americans Faced Moving Home From Abroad

Culture shock is defined as "the feeling of disorientation experienced by someone who is suddenly subjected to an unfamiliar culture, way of life, or set of attitudes."

But what if the culture is the one you were born and raised in?

Keep ReadingShow less