Bad Bunny and Lizzo break new ground not only at the VMAs, but for the next generation of artists of color | Fortune

2022-09-03 02:38:43 By : Mr. Frank Zhang

The MTV Video Music Awards is always a romp of an awards show, filled with music, fashion, and brimming with poppy—and sometimes pointless—drama. This year’s event was no exception.

But let’s talk about two of the big winners.

Puerto Rican rapper and singer Bad Bunny became the first non-English-language artist to win the coveted Artist of the Year. He also upstaged the iconic Madonna and Britney Spears kiss during the 2003 VMAs by kissing both a female and male backup dancer during his onstage performance of his hit song “Tití Me Preguntó”.

Everyone wants to kiss Bad Bunny these days. The megastar has been playing sold-out arena shows, enjoying megastar collaborations, topping power rankings and music charts, and delivering the best-selling record of the summer. He even has an upcoming role as El Muerto, the first Latino character to lead a Marvel live-action film.

“No one even comes close to Bad Bunny’s stardom right now,” declared a breathless Bloomberg in July.

He’s definitely having a moment, and it matters. “His music videos and style defy gender norms and pave the way for further inclusivity and acceptance for all,” notes PopSugar writer Alex Dvorak. “Bad Bunny is a part of the movement of today’s youth to speak up and speak out. His uniqueness emulates this generation’s custom-made individuality and Latin pride.”

“I always knew that I could become a huge artist without changing my culture, my slang, and my language,” Bad Bunny said, accepting his Moon Person in Spanish. “I am Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, from Puerto Rico to the world.”

But for sheer drama, nobody delivered like Lizzo, who brought the couture and the perspective. She was nominated for four awards and won in an unusual category: Video for Good. Bebe Rexha explained the award by saying music “has always been the soundtrack to change…The nominees push us to be better to ourselves and nicer to each other.”

Lizzo lived up to the message.

“I don’t know what ‘music videos for good means,’” she said. “But I do know what your vote means, and that’s a fucking lot. Your vote means everything to me.” She quickly switched gears. “[Your vote] means everything to make a change in this country,” she added. “So, remember when you’re voting for your favorite artists, vote to change some of these laws that are oppressing us.”

Lizzo pays a high price for the good she does.

She has been candid about the consistent fat shaming, insults, and racist abuse she receives online, making headlines for clapping back at trolls and using social media to affirm the broader message of love, self-acceptance, and beauty in all forms.

She arrived at the event, resplendent in a gorgeous black Jean Paul Gaultier Couture spring/summer 2022 gown, but under a familiar dark cloud.

Last week, former Madtv cast member Aries Spears—who is now world-famous for pissing off Lizzo fans—made horrific comments about Lizzo’s body during an Art of Dialogue interview on YouTube. It quickly trended on Twitter. “I can’t get past the fact that she looks like the shit emoji,” he said. Then he made fun of her adoring, body-positive fans. “Y’all jump on me for making jokes, but y’all won’t be fucking real and go, ‘Sister, put the eclair down. This ain’t it. It’s treadmill time.’”

Lizzo, unapologetic as always, processed the moment in real-time. “Crying myself to sleep was so fun last night that I think I’ll do it again,” she tweeted in response to the online firestorm.

But she ended her acceptance speech on a very different note.

“And now, to the bitches that got something to say about me in the press…Aries, what’s good?” she said, referencing another epic VMA moment between Nicki Minaj and Miley Cyrus. “You know what, I ain’t gonna say nothing. They be like, ‘Lizzo, why don’t you clap back? Why don’t you clap back?’ ‘Cause bitch, I’m winning, ho.”

Lizzo labored in entertainment for ten years before she became an overnight sensation, and I shudder to think about the kind of abuse—including well-meaning “advice”—she had to brush off to keep going.

And now, she’s winning.

The opportunity cost of exclusion, racism, and misogyny is greatness in the world. Of course, a person doesn’t have to be an award-winning megastar to express their greatness, but it does mean that Lizzo’s visibility sends an enduring message to anyone who is still brushing off a cruel and unwelcoming world: You are beautiful; you are loved, keep going. You can win, too.

It’s about damn time.

You can find all the VMA winners here.

Ellen McGirt @ellmcgirt Ellen.McGirt@fortune.com

This edition of raceAhead was edited by Ashley Sylla.

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— Lizzo, to CBS Good Morning, 2019

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