Protests The Mute R. Kelly movement impact sparked many actions after being founded. The movement saw a number of public protests in
Chicago,
Atlanta,
Memphis,
New York City,
North Carolina, and more. Despite the protests, in some cities, Kelly still performed. However, Kelly's scheduled performance was cancelled at the "Pre-Mother's Day Love Jam" at the
University of Illinois at Chicago on May 5, 2018. A women's group at the university created a petition that secured 1300 signatures. Kelly then posted a video on
Twitter stating: "First of all, I want to apologize to all of my fans in Chicago, and basically all around the world wherever I'm performing at and they
cancelled me." He then went on to say, "I don't know why they cancelled the show. I never heard of a show being cancelled because of rumors, but I guess there's a first time for everything. So, I apologize to you guys and in the meantime, I'm going to try to get to the bottom line of it, you know, as far as my lawyers are concerned, and see exactly what happened and why I was cancelled."
Celebrity attention The movement sparked some celebrity attention. Some of
R. Kelly's music collaborations received backlash and were removed from streaming services as the
Surviving R. Kelly documentary series aired on
Lifetime in January 2019 and the #MuteRKelly movement grew. Artists such as
Lady Gaga,
Celine Dion and
the Pussycat Dolls apologized and took down their respective collaborations with Kelly from streaming services. Despite this, Kelly later worked with
Bryson Tiller,
Chance the Rapper,
Justin Bieber,
Erykah Badu and
Mary J. Blige. The
Time's Up movement released an open letter calling out
Apple,
Spotify,
Ticketmaster,
Sony Music and other companies to end their financial relationship with R. Kelly. The campaign was cited and addressed online by celebrities including
Ava DuVernay,
Lena Waithe,
Lupita Nyong'o,
Ne-Yo, and
Tarana Burke.
Deplatforming from social media and loss of record contract Following the airing of the first season of
Surviving R. Kelly, RCA Records terminated their long-running contract with him. Following his conviction,
YouTube removed his two channels RKellyVEVO and RKellyTV. == See also ==