Advertisement

J Balvin Wins Afro Latino Award After Portraying Black Women as Dogs

Reggaeton continues to be whitewashed and artists like J Balvin continue to exploit Black culture without acknowledging the influence actual Black Latinos have had on the genre.

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

After his history of leaning into Black stereotypes and actively dismissing Black heritage in the Latino Community, J Balvin won the African Entertainment Music Awards award for Afro Latino Artist of the Year on December 26th.


He’s not only exploited the Black culture but also recently demonstrated misogyny through a hideous representation of Black women in his music video Perra.

You’d think at this point he’d learned the lesson.

Advertisement

We don’t know what’s more unsettling, the fact that he’s a white Latino being recognized as an Afro-Latino artist, or the constant denial of his leverage of Black culture that he built his successful career on. Mabiland, a Black Colombian musician, expressed her disapproval in watching white Latino men take up space they didn’t entirely earn.

Of course, we’ve got to recognize that the committee that chose Balvin shares just as much blame as Balvin does in accepting it. Even though they’ve stated that nominations aren’t based on color, awarding a white Latino with a history of disparaging the Black community shouldn’t be an award candidate. Their explanation:

Many aren’t okay with this, understandably so. They’ve stated that he has the power to decline the award and instead redirect attention on talented Latino artists.

Advertisement

Even though Balvin continues to apologize after every single terrible choice he makes, those apologies always come after facing severe backlash and they obviously don’t stop him from making even more terrible choices.

Reggaeton continues to be whitewashed and artists like Balvin continue to exploit Black culture without acknowledging the influence actual Black Latinos have had on the genre. Will he ever learn the lesson? Will this go on? At what point does the community stop supporting him as an artist?