By the evening of Jan. 6, after a day of breaking news coverage of unmasked and armed supporters of President Donald Trump storming the U.S. Capitol with little to no resistance from police or security, the phrase “Black Twitter” began trending with more than 1 million mentions amid an avalanche of jokes and clapbacks.
Black twitter replacing trauma with comedy: pic.twitter.com/EZRuW2DPaB
— Thee Bully (@Puff_Iya) January 7, 2021
These tweets stem from the longstanding legacy and tradition of Black people laughing to keep from crying while just trying to survive in a country unapologetically founded on their violation and dehumanization.
Law enforcement criminalizes Black grief and liberation and celebrates and supports white rage.
Kevin Cokley, a professor of psychology and African diaspora studies at the University of Texas at Austin and former editor-in-chief of the Journal of Black Psychology, explained this by pointing to the widely regarded “godfather” of Black psychology, Joseph White, who names “gallows humor,” or dark comedy, as one of the seven psychological strengths of Black Americans.
A 2020 article titled “Laughing While Black: Resistance, Coping and the Use of Humor as a Pandemic Pastime Among Blacks” details this expression against the current backdrop of Covid-19. “Many Blacks use social media to deliberately confront the systems of power by inciting radical thought and critical discourse through resistance-type laughter and making people uncomfortable,” said co-author Corliss Outley, a professor and director of the Race, Ethnicity, Youth and Social Equity Collaboratory at Clemson University. “Humor in this sense strives to entertain and persuade by infiltrating the mind subtly compared to face-to-face conversation that may raise defenses.”
Hate how good the jokes are rn but that’s like the only coping mechanism we have left
— Topshelf Tyson (@topshelftyson) January 6, 2021
Later on the night of the insurrection, as I tried to find the most concise and impactful words to articulate my reaction to the day’s events, my mind kept returning to a recent meme of Raven-Symoné.
Like most memes, the context is not key (though here’s an explainer if you’re interested). Just know that the short video clip originated from a larger Instagram Live last April, during which the actress, singer and former Disney Channel legend of “That’s So Raven” and “Cheetah Girls” fame reunited with her former “Cheetah Girls” co-star and group member Kiely Williams to hash out their childhood beef.
The viral moment happens not during but immediately after the juicy exchange. We see Raven munching on the last of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich in solitude, her facial expression and body language suggesting a careful, measured reflection on what just occurred. Then a hearty staccato chuckle tumbles out, breaking the silence and her composure before reaching a crescendo of pure unbridled cackling mirth. “Wow,” she manages to say before losing it again.
NOT @ HER CACKLING LIKE THIS RIGHT WHEN KIELY HUNG UP LMFAOOOOOO pic.twitter.com/gz7UMQXILd
— miss fancy fingernail shimmyshimmy lipgloss barbie (@EmeeJadee) April 9, 2020
This clip, which has since gained 3 million views on Twitter, best illustrates the various stages I cycled through that day.
The gag is, this most certainly is America and white supremacy and all of its destructive trappings are the makers of its own tragic undoing.
Because I just think it’s funny how the officers’ response (or lack thereof) to the attack compares to law enforcement officers’ response to Black Lives Matter protestors months earlier; how people who are not Black, especially news reporters, continue to voice disbelief, surprise and shock about how it all went down; how political leaders insist that this is not who we are (partially correct), that this is not America.
Because the gag is, this most certainly is America and white supremacy and all of its destructive trappings are the makers of its own tragic, ironic undoing.
What’s even more revealing and empowering about the jokes circulating Black Twitter in this particular historic reckoning is the unapologetic Black schadenfreude.
yt people: i cannot believe this is happening!
— luna (@coatlicue_11) January 7, 2021
black twitter:
pic.twitter.com/DL6s1emLvL
Translating to damage (schaden) and joy (freude), the German word defines the experience of pleasure, satisfaction, or joy derived from another person’s misfortune, humiliation, or failings. (For context, Merriam-Webster reported a 30,500 percent spike in searches for the word when Trump revealed he had tested positive for Covid-19 after months of downplaying the deadly virus.)
Black schadenfreude is not petty or cruel or even shallow, but rather a valid psychological act of self-preservation and validation.
Tiffany Watt Smith offers an excellent example in her book “Schadefreude: The Joy of Another’s Misfortune” when she wrote, “The Hollywood villain gloating when Bond is caught by his dastardly plot is not experiencing Schadenfreude, but sadistic pleasure. By contrast, the sidekick who sniggers as a Hollywood villain is accidentally foiled by his own dastardly plot when he trips and presses the self-destruct button is enjoying Schadenfreude.”
Black twitter watching all this chaos unfold on the final episodes of Make America Great Again. pic.twitter.com/a5Iu0tZIGA
— Br⊕ηxB⊕⊕κNεrd🇵🇷✊🏾✊🏽✊🏿 (@RedWritingHoood) January 7, 2021
Of course, neither coping through comedy nor schadenfreude are unique to Black people. Yet, as Cokley notes, the schadenfreude propagated on Black Twitter is unique in its intent to combat racial injustice and excoriate white supremacists from a relatively safe space. “This humor should not be misconstrued as callousness to human suffering, but rather a psychological strategy that Black people employ to cope with racism,” he said.
Similar instances of Black schadenfreude emerged earlier in the pandemic when Black Twitter users celebrated the fact that amid a history of racial health inequities caused by anti-Black systemic racism, Black people seemed to be immune to the coronavirus, with reports of cases and deaths focused solely on white people. But the inequity quickly appeared, in disproportionate rates of Covid-19 cases and deaths among the Black community that continue to this day.
So tired of this ‘Blacks are immune from #COVID19’ narrative. It’s not true and it’s dangerous.
— Rebecca Enonchong (@africatechie) March 12, 2020
Please protect yourself!!
To be clear, the humor lies in the comeuppance. This is not karmic payback, or anything based on deserved bad luck or some other force out of our control. What happened at the Capitol was a direct result of the values of white American supremacy that have forever reigned king.
A series of well-documented actions, particularly the silencing, criminalizing and erasure of anti-Black racism and pro-Black liberation, the transatlantic slave trade, the Jim Crow era, the civil rights movement, the war on drugs and even events as recent as the Black Lives Matter movement led right to this moment. Y’all have just clearly refused to ever listen to or believe Black people, too preoccupied with coddling (white) working-class voter bases threatened by social change and championing the figment that is both-sidesism.









