For the
Journal of the American Musicological Society, Matthew D. Morrison wrote that the stereotypical dialect used in
Thomas D. Rice's 19th-century
blackface performances of the song "
Jump Jim Crow" as the character
Jim Crow served as a precursor to the blaccent. Blaccents have been popular in American entertainment since the 1920s according to Bainbridge, who has pointed to the radio series ''
Amos 'n' Andy'', which featured white actors playing black characters, and
Elvis Presley's success after his 1956 recording of the song "
Hound Dog" as early examples of blaccents in American media. For
Vulture,
Lauren Michele Jackson also wrote that blaccents "apart from the actual speech patterns of black people" have been used "since America had a theater tradition to call its own". The term "blaccent" was later used frequently to describe and criticize Azalea's rapping style. A 2015 assessment of
Azalea's discography by linguists Maeve Eberhardt and Kara Freeman published in the
Journal of Sociolinguistics concluded that Azalea's success due to the "overzealous" use of AAVE in her music, including through a more frequent lack of
copula in her music than other black rappers and her use of the
monophthongal ai, was reliant on appropriation and
white privilege. Kristen S. He of
Vice wrote in 2017 that Azalea had "conditioned us to hear blaccents as both inauthentic and offensive". A 2016
MTV.com op-ed by Wallace accused
Meghan Trainor of using a blaccent on her song "
No", with Sean L. Maloney writing for
Nashville Scene the year prior that she "loves slathering her faux-Southern blaccent all over every song". Trainor later stated that her voice was derived from her father being "very soulful" and "think[ing] he's
James Brown sometimes". Social media users accused
Ariana Grande of using a blaccent in a 2018 interview for
Billboard, in which she described a photo of herself as a baby by saying, "Bitch, that's my cookie, that's my juice, okay? Carry on. Thank you, next." YouTuber
Lilly Singh faced criticisms of cultural appropriation, partially based on her alleged use of a blaccent, in 2019. For
The Cut, Lauren Levy wrote in 2019 that a crop of
influencers, including
Lil Tay, Bhad Bhabie, and Woah Vicky, had become known for being "white but speak[ing] in blaccent", among other attributes, in order to become "living, breathing memes". (
pictured) became a prominent subject of blaccent accusations in the early 2020s on social media due to her roles in the 2018 films
Crazy Rich Asians and ''
Ocean's 8'' According to Jackson, Awkwafina's use of a blaccent in
Crazy Rich Asians revitalized the use of the term itself in 2018, which had "hardly [been] seen since Iggy Azalea could claim song of the summer". In a 2021 interview with
Reuters about her blaccent, she stated that she was "open to the conversation" and that it was "a little bit multi-faceted and layered". She also faced backlash that year due to a resurfaced interview with
Vice about her refusal to do accents for a role, which Twitter users criticized as antithetical to her use of a blaccent. She tweeted an apology in 2022, attributing her "American identity" to her schoolmates as a child, the films and television shows she watched growing up, and her love of
hip hop music. Critics and social media users criticized her statement as a
non-apology apology for the blaccent and she soon announced her departure from Twitter. In 2023, Nardos Haile of
Salon wrote that her blaccent was "thick" and "infamous" and jokingly called her a "blaccent queen". Other non-black celebrities also courted controversy for using blaccents in the early 2020s, including singer
Olivia Rodrigo, actor
Chet Hanks, and YouTuber
Bretman Rock. The 2020 film
Zola stars
Riley Keough as Stefani, a stripper who speaks in a blaccent. In
Britney Spears's 2023 memoir
The Woman in Me, she described an instance in which her ex-boyfriend,
Justin Timberlake, spoke in a blaccent to singer
Ginuwine by saying "fo shiz" and calling him his "homie". A clip of
Michelle Williams reading the passage for the
audiobook version of the memoir went viral online soon after its release and sparked discussions online about the use of blaccents for commercial gain. ==In politics==