A racial slur was shouted during the BAFTA Awards presentation by Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo, prompting discussions on the need for safe spaces in entertainment. Guest columnist Jeff Friday highlights institutions like the NAACP Image Awards and BET Awards as essential for Black talent. These spaces ensure dignity and cultural grounding beyond mainstream events.
The incident occurred at the BAFTA Awards when an audience member shouted the n-word as Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo presented. Subsequent reporting identified the individual as a Tourette’s activist, with a warning given to attendees beforehand. The ceremony was not broadcast live, featuring a delay window, yet the moment aired intact. BAFTA issued a response, which some viewed as restrained and procedural.
Jeff Friday, CEO of Nice Crowd and founder of the American Black Film Festival (ABFF) and ABFF Honors, addresses this in a guest column. He argues that such events underscore the vulnerability of Black people in public cultural spaces. "Safe spaces are not about retreat, they are about dignity," Friday writes.
Friday emphasizes institutions like the ABFF, ABFF Honors, NAACP Image Awards, Essence Black Women in Hollywood Awards luncheon, AAFCA Awards, and BET Awards. These provide environments where Black achievements are contextualized with cultural nuance and intentional affirmation. They are not for withdrawal but to complement mainstream awards like Oscars and BAFTAs, ensuring representation does not equate to protection.
The column stresses supporting these spaces to nurture emerging talent and sustain pipelines for future success. The BAFTA moment, Friday notes, clarifies the need for institutions to examine responses to harm and for audiences to distinguish context from consequence.
Pictured in the article are Wunmi Mosaku at the NAACP Creative Honors ceremony, Ryan Coogler at the AAFCA Awards, Angela Bassett at ABFF Honors, and Kendrick Lamar at the BET Awards.