If money is power and more women acquire money, then relationships should be more equitable, right? Sadly, no. Patriarchy is moldable, ever-shifting and ever-moving, ensnaring even women as successful as actor, musician and social media maven Keke Palmer, whose boyfriend and father of her child took to social media Wednesday to publicly shame her about an outfit she wore to Las Vegas.
Patriarchy is moldable, ever-shifting and ever-moving, ensnaring even women as successful as actor, musician and social media maven Keke Palmer.
This week, Palmer became one of the many regular people and celebrities alike who’ve journeyed to Vegas to see Usher in residency. If you’ve been fortunate enough to attend his performance, then you’ll remember Usher traversing the crowd with a spotlight trailing him as he stops to greet fellow celebrities who’ve come to see him. He also serenades audience members. Trust me, it’s an experience!
When Usher saw Palmer, she screamed, they hugged and then they began crooning Usher’s song “There Goes My Baby” together, their lips mere inches apart. As a video of their moment spread across social media, there was one person who wasn’t fond of the interaction: Darius Jackson, Palmer’s boyfriend, with whom she shares a 5-month-old.
“It’s the outfit tho,” Jackson tweeted about Palmer’s black see-through dress, which was overlaid on a black bodysuit. “You a mom.”
Usher serenades Keke Palmer 😍✨ pic.twitter.com/xbMFlXu7FF
— RNB RADAR (@RNB_RADAR) July 5, 2023
At first, it seemed to maybe be an inside joke between the couple, but when people objected to his criticism, Jackson doubled down. “We live in a generation where a man of the family doesn’t want the wife and mother to his kids to showcase booty cheeks to please others and he gets told how much of a hater he is,” he tweeted, before adding, “This is my family and my representation. I have standards and morals to what I believe. I rest my case.”
Though Twitter seems to be tottling on its last legs, Black Twitter revived itself to toss as many verbal blows at Jackson as humanly possible. There was incisive commentary about patriarchy mixed with hilarious jokes and memes, mixed with dragging up and ragging on Jackson’s previous internet indiscretions. Taken together, it was Black Twitter at its absolute finest hour, and given the rush of people looking for other social media platforms, it may have been Black Twitter’s last hurrah.
Initially, Jackson engaged with the tweets coming his way. Then he seemingly deactivated his account for about 12 hours. Then he resurfaced Thursday evening.
One tweet, in particular, captured the overall sentiment: “Instead of being dope and gassing new mama having fun, you chose to try and check her with a gossip blog quote, in front of the world?” user @RevereRomance tweeted. “Why did you feel compelled to do such a thing?”
As of Thursday evening, Palmer hadn’t responded to the backlash her boyfriend received, but it should go without saying that she belongs to herself and herself alone.
As of Thursday evening, Palmer hadn’t responded to the backlash her boyfriend received, but it should go without saying that she belongs to herself and herself alone. It doesn’t matter that she’s in a relationship or that she has a child; her body is hers. A person she’s in a relationship with shouldn’t feel entitled to tell her how to adorn it — not even in private. But that person especially shouldn’t feel entitled to do so publicly.
Interestingly, this isn’t the first time Palmer has been photographed in outfits that could be considered “provocative,” with Jackson himself even sharing a video of her in an outfit that accentuated her body while bragging about what giving birth has done to it. So, then, why would Jackson choose this specific moment to call her out, publicly at that? Maybe it was her proximity to Usher and not her outfit that bothered him the most?
We’re all indoctrinated into a patriarchal system that tells men and those who identify as male that women and femmes aren’t their equals, especially once they’ve had a child. Instead, women are property, and in this arrangement, property needs to be protected and hoarded over, rather than loved and cared for. It’s an age-old problem that feminists have been attempting to solve for centuries. Progress seemed to have been made when women were able to enter the workforce and sometimes, as in Palmer’s case, become the breadwinners of their households.









