The Grammy-award-winning musician Lizzo, who has recorded two No. 1 hits and four Top 10 hits and created a fashion brand and a plus-size dancing competition for Amazon Prime Video, is once again being targeted for being an unashamedly fat Black woman. Over the weekend a video surfaced of a certain comedian denigrating Lizzo’s size and likening the shape of her body to the excrement emoji.
That comedian said Lizzo has a “pretty face,” a backhanded compliment fat women are all too familiar with.
That comedian, who doesn’t warrant being named, said that Lizzo has a “pretty face,” a backhanded compliment fat women are all too familiar with, but that she’s “built like a plate of mashed potatoes” and that real sisterhood looks like policing what she and other fat women like us eat.
“That’s the real love!” he said. “Y’all jump on me for making jokes, but y’all won’t be f—ing real and go: ‘Sister, put the eclair down. This ain’t it. It’s treadmill time.’”
He isn’t the first to disparage Lizzo’s body. Insults about her body trend on social media nearly every time she wears a swimsuit or other clothing deemed “inappropriate” because she’s a fat person wearing it. We’re just a few weeks removed from “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” star Kathy Hilton on “Watch What Happens Live” referring to Lizzo as Precious, a character portrayed in the 2009 film “Precious” by the Oscar-nominated actor Gabourey Sidibe. Everyone on the set laughed, and the audience did, too — making Lizzo, Sidibe and fat women into a punch line without their consent.
That name, Precious, has become a catch-all for fat Black women in general. It’s a moral judgment: Since we’re fat, we’re therefore the cause of any ill that befalls us, whether that’s illiteracy, incest, HIV, abuse or any of the other pitfalls Precious faces. The character gets her GED after surviving physical, sexual and verbal abuse, but rather than recognize how triumphantly resilient that character is, the public uses it as shorthand that equates being fat with a traumatic existence.
Lizzo is so far removed from that character, but she’s still measured against it the same way other fat women are. The put-downs are omnipresent, and they are meant to punish us for embracing who we are instead of trying to hide or push ourselves to the dieting limits to conform.
While there isn’t the same level of expectation for white reality stars to understand how layered this conversation is, there’s a level of betrayal when a Black male comedian — one who is also fat — perpetuates fatphobia at the expense of a Black woman. All fat people are subjected to anti-fatness, but women and femmes tend to experience it differently from male-identified people. The comedian highlighted this disparity in his rant, noting that he can still attract sexual partners. That boast didn’t come with any self-reflection about why that is.
There’s a level of betrayal when a Black male comedian — one who is also fat — perpetuates fatphobia at the expense of a Black woman.
“I’m sorry. Listen, I ain’t the most in-shape n—a in the world but … when you funny and you got swagger and confidence and you decent-looking — I think I’m at least handsome — you get p—y,” he said. He doesn’t acknowledge that he benefits because of the differences in how fat women and fat men are treated.
Women are already held to an impossible beauty standard, but because our culture values thinness the way it does, fat women are subjected to even more scrutiny. This isn’t a revelation; at this point in the body positivity movement, we know this to be true. And yet, Lizzo continues to be harangued for embracing her fatness instead of hiding it.









