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TikTok Users In Support Of Mel B Calling Out Blackface Tradition

Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

An old clip from 1997 of the Spice Girls interview has resurfaced, where group member Melanie Brown spoke up to address a racially insensitive tradition, and fans are praising her for how she handled it. Melanie Brown, whose stage name is Mel B, is the only Black singer in the girl group.  

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The resurfaced video circulating on TikTok is a snippet from an interview with the popular singing group on “Laat de Leeuw,” a Dutch TV show.  

After seeing a group of performers dressed in blackface, Mel B responded, “I don’t like them,” before the people were escorted to the stage. 

Spice Girl member Geri Halliwell was heard yelling “No!” in the clip as the performers came out wearing blackface, minstrel garb, red lipstick, and gold hoop earrings, attire that was supposed to represent “Zwarte Piet” or “Black Pete,” a Dutch Christmas character.

 

According to NBC, those supporting Black Pete view him as a harmless holiday character for kids as the day is filled with songs, poems, and family time, owing to his skin being covered in soot from chimneys. However,

people who do not favor the Christmas character view it as a promotion of negative racial stereotypes that originate from a 19th-century children’s book that describes him as a servant of Saint Nicholas.

According to HuffPost, some people in the Netherlands view the tradition as an excuse to be racist.  

In the video, Mel B tells the TV show host that rather than having people paint their faces black, they should get Black People to do it. De Leeuw argues, “That’s culture, that’s tradition.”

“I think they should change it. I think you should change it,” Mel B says firmly. “You shouldn’t have their faces painted. This is the ’90s.”

“No, but it’s culture,” de Leeuw says, to which Mel B replies: “Update your culture. You should get proper ones — proper Black people.”

The comment section on TikTok showed users commending Mel B and the other members of the Spice Girls for denouncing the distasteful tradition. One user wrote, “They were so real for this, even by ’90s standards.”

Years later, after the interview with the Spice Girls, de Leeuw said his perspective on the issue changed. In 2014, he said he was in favor of the Dutch getting rid of the character. A realization came after he watched the film “12 Years a Slave.”

RELATED CONTENT: Blackface or Simply Paint? California Student Banned From Sports Over Blackface Incident; Family Claims Innocence

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