Twitter Reactions To Lifetime's 'Surviving R. Kelly'
Is This The End Of The Pied Piper? Twitter Reacts To ‘Surviving R. Kelly’ - Page 5
Share the post
Share this link via
Or copy link
“Surviving R. Kelly” premiered Thursday night on the Lifetime channel and all aspects of the explosive docuseries was trending all over social media. The first of three installments examined more than two decades of R. Kelly allegedly sexually assaulting children and women. The other two episodes were scheduled to air Friday and Saturday.
See Also: Lifetime Blames R Kelly For Gun Threats That Stopped Docuseries Screening
Several survivors spoke out during the first episode to provide firsthand accounts of Kelly’s relationship with the late, great Aaliyah. However, Aaliyah’s mother, Diane Haughton, said in a statement, “Shame on all those involved in this project who thought it kosher to drag Aaliyah’s name into a situation that has nothing to do with her today. Once again, this will not be tolerated.” Haughton also called the candid accounts “lies and fabrications” that “can not be tolerated and allowed to be spewed from the forked tongues of saboteurs of Aaliyah’s legacy.”
Nonetheless, the stories from people close in Kelly’s circle — including but not limited to the singer’s brother, Bruce, ex-wife Andrea and singer Sparkle — were powerful and important. They just might be the final blow to his career, which he may be bracing for considering his lawyer threatened Thursday to file a federal lawsuit to prevent Lifetime from airing the docuseries.
Obviously, “Surviving R. Kelly” still aired and Twitter was sounding off, nearly universally slamming the singer. See the reactions below.
3.
4.
5.
6.
8.
9.
10. And Even John Legend…
Stories From Our Partners
-
NYPD Leadership Has Allowed Racist, Unconstitutional 'Stop & Frisk' Policy To Continue, A New Report Finds
-
The Boy Is Still Ours: Brandy And Monica Gave Us Hope When America Couldn’t
-
Texas Democrats Will Return To State After Special Session Ends
-
The African American Policy Forum’s 5th Annual CRT Summer School Series Was A Call To Action For Social Justice