Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Trial in rapper’s shooting exposes misogynoir

Megan Thee Stallion faced criticism that’s part of Black female experience in nation

- By Nardos Haile and Karena Phan

Megan Thee Stallion is a three-time Grammy winner and hip-hop superstar, but her success wasn’t enough to shield the 27-year-old artist from the power of widespread misinforma­tion and social media vitriol leveled against her after she was shot in 2020.

The Houston-born rapper, whose legal name is Megan Pete, was shot multiple times in both feet after leaving a Los Angeles party in 2020 with rapper Tory Lanez, whose legal name is Daystar Peterson, and former assistant Kelsey Harris. Megan needed surgery to remove the bullet fragments from her feet. A jury recently found Lanez guilty of all three felonies with which he was charged, which could lead to up to 22 years in prison.

Three months after the shooting, Megan accused Lanez of wielding the gun. The ensuing onslaught of criticism reached a fever pitch during Lanez’s recent assault trial. Experts say it stems from misogynoir, a specific type of misogyny experience­d by Black women.

Tia Tyree, a professor at Howard University, described misogynoir as “contempt, dislike” or mistreatme­nt of Black women. Tyree, whose research focuses on representa­tions of Black women in mass media, social media and hip-hop culture, emphasized that misogynoir has been part of the Black female experience in the U.S. for centuries, dating back to the beginnings of American slavery.

“Many people see the term, and they’re intrigued by it. They think, ‘Wow, what is this new thing happening to Black women?’ ” she said. “And

that’s the most disappoint­ing part of the narrative about misogynoir. There’s nothing new about the mistreatme­nt and disrespect of Black women in the United States.”

Megan said she did not tell Los Angeles police responding to the scene until three months after the shooting because she was afraid for her safety. The shooting happened on July 12, 2020, less than two months after George Floyd died at the hands of Minneapoli­s police.

Fear of police violence could have played a role in her reluctance to share specifics with officers, Tyree said, adding that Black women are expected to protect Black men in society.

A cycle of silence prevents many Black women from sharing their experience­s, said Melvin

L. Williams, a professor at Pace University who studies hip-hop feminism, Black male rappers and hip-hop culture. “They face industry blackballi­ng and fewer profession­al opportunit­ies when they speak out,” Williams said.

Megan alleged that Lanez and his team spread misinforma­tion about the shooting. Social media users have claimed that Lanez never shot her and have posted about her sexual history to discredit her.

Lanez, who now awaits sentencing, has maintained his innocence. In closing arguments, his lawyers argued that Harris was the shooter and that Megan tried to create a more sympatheti­c narrative by blaming Lanez.

Harris’ attorney has declined to comment on her involvemen­t.

“Tory came out and told so many different lies — about me not being shot, about him not being the shooter and making this all about a sex scandal,” Megan testified at the trial.

When jury deliberati­ons began, misinforma­tion claiming that Lanez had already been acquitted abounded. Social media platforms have also played host to intense scrutiny of Megan’s story — specifical­ly her credibilit­y.

Rappers Drake and 21 Savage mentioned her in their joint album with specific lyrics that attempted to discredit her allegation­s. 50 Cent posted memes mocking her interview with Gayle King as well.

Megan is “infiltrati­ng what is a very hypermascu­line space,” Tyree said, referring to hip-hop culture. “And just as any other hypermascu­line space, there are bro codes that exist, and she is at the point bumping up against them, and you see the response for it.”

Social media attacks against Megan have drawn comparison­s to television coverage in the 1990s of Anita Hill’s congressio­nal testimony and, more recently, to online racist hate targeting Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and the wife of Prince Harry. Another recent example was Johnny Depp’s defamation lawsuit against Amber Heard, which drew many social media posts that spread misinforma­tion and cast doubts on Heard’s credibilit­y.

Northweste­rn University law professor Deborah Tuerkheime­r, the author of “Credible: Why We Doubt Accusers and Protect Abusers,” noted that these trials came five years after the #MeToo movement sparked a global social reckoning, followed by a backlash.

“We can look at this outpouring of stories as being really significan­t and meaningful, and it is, but until we can have figured out how to fairly judge credibilit­y, and how to hold perpetrato­rs to account in a meaningful way, then I think there’s just a lot of work left to be done,” Tuerkheime­r said.

Race is a key difference in the treatment of accusers, said Izzi Grasso, a doctoral candidate at the University of Washington who studied misinforma­tion around the Depp-Heard trial.

Grasso’s research concluded that people with marginaliz­ed identities are disproport­ionately targeted for harassment, online misinforma­tion campaigns and discrimina­tory content moderation. The online world reflects the “systems of power and domination that we see in the real world,” Grasso said.

Moya Bailey, a Northweste­rn University professor who coined the term misogynoir, found that social media platforms such as TikTok and Twitter perpetuate harmful stereotype­s about Black women because it’s profitable.

Algorithms normalize the dehumaniza­tion and objectific­ation of Black women for other people’s pleasure or ambivalenc­e, Washington University in St. Louis professor Raven Maragh-Lloyd said.

Lanez has claimed that Harris and Megan were fighting over him. People are more likely to see content about Megan’s sexual history as “some sort of justificat­ion” for not believing her — or for blaming her for getting shot, Maragh-Lloyd said.

She said it comes down to what sells — and misogynoir provides the fuel: “To perpetuate misinforma­tion about Black women’s bodies or Black women’s desires, it’s going to garner clicks and eyeballs.”

 ?? JASON ARMOND/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Megan Thee Stallion heads to an LA courthouse Dec. 13 to testify in the trial of Tory Lanez.
JASON ARMOND/LOS ANGELES TIMES Megan Thee Stallion heads to an LA courthouse Dec. 13 to testify in the trial of Tory Lanez.

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