Chris Brown Joins Blackout Tuesday Movement To Honor The Life Of George Floyd

As many celebs blacked out their social media in protest of George Floyd’s death, Chris Brown joined in the demonstration, saying his ‘heart’ was with those demanding justice.

View galleryA person walks past a graffito showing late George Floyd, in Berlin, Germany, 30 May 2020. A bystander's video posted online on 25 May, appeared to show George Floyd, 46, pleading with arresting officers that he couldn't breathe as an officer knelt on his neck in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The unarmed black man later died in police custody. A series of demonstrations throughout the German capital, calling for ending of the social and economical restrictions imposed due to the coronavirus pandemic. The events are organised by groups of various motives, right wing activists, conspiracy theory believers and more, several counter demonstrations by left leaning organisations were also taking place.
Anti-restrictions protests and counter demos in Berlin, Germany - 30 May 2020Mayor Bill de Blasio, third from left, participates in painting Black Lives Matter on Fifth Avenue in front of Trump Tower, in New York. The mayor's wife, Chirlane McCray, is fourth from left and Rev. Al Sharpton is second from left
Racial Injustice , New York, United States - 09 Jul 2020People pose with a new Black Lives Matter mural outside of Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue in New York.
Black Lives Matter mural, New York, USA - 09 Jul 2020
Image Credit: John Shearer/Invision/AP/Shutterstock

Chris Brown, 31, didn’t write a lot when captioning his June 2 Instagram post, but he didn’t really need to. Since “a picture’s worth a thousand words,” the black square Breezy uploaded – along with the black “heart” emoji — said it all. The “Loyal” singer was participating in Blackout Tuesday, a demonstration meant to disrupt “business as usual” within the music industry following the death of George Floyd. Chris’s involvement in Blackout Tuesday came days after he shared a video of Black Lives Matter protests (soundtracked by his song, “Die Young). On May 31, he shared a video of protesters kneeling with their fists raised, each one repeating George Floyd’s name over and over again.

In addition to this #TheShowMustBePaused / Black Out Tuesday post, Chris shared a clip of what appears to be a Black Lives Matter protest to his Instagram Story. In the videos, protesters gathered around and sing along to “Changes” by 2Pac. “I see no changes, wake up in the morning and I ask myself / Is life worth living, should I blast myself? I’m tired of bein’ poor and even worse I’m black / My stomach hurts, so I’m lookin’ for a purse to snatch / Cops give a damn about a negro / Pull the trigger, kill a n—-a, he’s a hero / Give the crack to the kids, who the hell cares / One less hungry mouth on the welfare,” rapped Tupac Shakur in 1998, and two decades later, the song still resonates.

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🖤

A post shared by CHRIS BROWN (@chrisbrownofficial) on

Chris is the latest but likely the last celebrity to participate in Blackout Tuesday. Cardi B, Rihanna, Drake, LeBron James, Travis Scott, Steph, and Ayesha Curry were some of the stars posting black squares to their Instagram profiles on June 2. The demonstration, created by two black female music executives, is about business and celebrities taking a pause to stand against the “racism and inequality that exists from the boardroom to the boulevard.”

Blackout Tuesday “is meant to intentionally disrupt the work week,” the organizers said via their official Instagram. “It is a day to take a beat for an honest, reflective, and productive conversations bout what actions we need to collectively take to support the Black community.” The protest initially targeted the music industry because it is a “multi-billion dollar industry…that has profited predominantly from Black art. Our mission to hold the industry at large [accountable.] To that end, it is the obligation of these entities to protect and empower the Black communities that have made them disproportionately wealthy in ways that are measurable and transparent.”

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