From Scandal to social justice, Black Twitter has dominated digital discourse, a phenomenon Prentice Penny explores in his new docuseries on Hulu, Black Twitter: A Peopleâs History, based on Jason Parhamâs 2021 feature for Wired. Penny and Parham, along with J Wortham of The New York Times Magazine, join host Brian Stelter to discuss Black Twitterâs cultural impact, and its future.
âBlack Twitter gave the internet its own language in many ways,â says Parham. âIt is in part the slang that we use online,â he adds. âThis idea of, you know, shade and calling for receipts. But itâs also meme and GIF culture, the way we talk visually, the way we communicate digitally now.â Black Twitter has been the place for âeverything,â says Wortham, from âup-to-the-minute commentary, cultural criticism, processing, working through the highs and lows of modern life with images and video culture. Itâs sort of like a running soundtrack to trying to process the extreme amount of information that weâre all digesting all the time.â
Wortham likens Black Twitterâs presence on the social media platform to âbeing at a really glamorous party, and then all of a sudden realizing that the best conversations are happening in a room that you didnât even know existed.â And Black Twitter hasnât disappeared under Elon Muskâs ownership and rebranding of the platform as X, though Wortham acknowledges there has been âthis sort of feeling of a white flight or migration away from Twitter.â Black people, she says, âare used to having their sacred spaces taken over and people buying them up and people encroachingâand we donât leave.â
âBlack people have to always find a way to work,â says Penny. âSo if we left a place every time someone took it over that we disagreed with, weâd never be able to do anything or have anything or be a part of anything in this country.⦠Weâre just kind of doing our own thing over here, in the way that you use the party as the reference point, whether or not he owns it or whoever owns itâitâs like, well, weâre just doing our thing anyway.â
âI think a lot of Black users are hesitant to let that go,â says Parham. âThey donât want to give up the space that they made the center of online conversation in the last decade.â
âWeâre still showing up,â says Parham, noting that the recent Kendrick LamarâDrake beef was âBlack Twitter at its height. So, you know, weâre still there when we need to be.â
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