Sunday, March 26, 2023

Jonathan Majors Exits Courthouse Wearing Freedom Hat


Last night actor Jonathan Majors was arrested in New York after being accused of strangling and slapping his girlfriend in a dispute over text messages [click here if you missed that].

After his arrest Jonathan was seen leaving the courthouse wearing a hat with the word 'Freedom' emblazoned across the front...

He also has denied any wrongdoing. 

From Variety
A representative for Majors denied the allegations.
“He has done nothing wrong,” Majors’ spokesperson said in a statement to Variety. “We look forward to clearing his name and clearing this up.”

25 comments:

Anonymous said...

He may get off this one with a smack on the wrist, but this stigma is forever attached to his name. Side eye.

Anonymous said...

He'll be talked about for weeks.

Anonymous said...

Girl holding umbrella for him. Hmmmmmm.

Anonymous said...

Is he a SIZZZZZZZY

Anonymous said...

Shouldn't they both wear masks?

Anonymous said...

Is it a hard face white woman in yoja pants?
He did it!

Anonymous said...

Roid rage.

Anonymous said...

Sad. Another one bites the dust

Anonymous said...

I really liked him in LoveCraft and was so happy to see a Black man with Black features, but then he started doing effeminate pictures, and they alledge he said gender is fluid, and so I should've known a strong, sound minded, Black man would've never been allowed up there. I really liked him too but I do not cosign the destruction of masculinity. We need more than just Denzel. Anyway, two film directors just came out and drug Johnathan to filth and said he's a bad person etc; I was shocked because directors usually never say a word aloud. Wonder what happened? When it rain it pours. The girlfriend may be paying him back because she figures he wants to move on now that his star power is growing and she probably felt him moving on too. Even though his phone is not her business, men keep your hands to yourself. Girls remember if you are nit his wife, then you can't have loyalty expectations.

Kendall said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Kendall said...

Again.

What are BLACK features? Can someone explain why my nose has to look like this for it to be considered Black?

Anonymous said...

@kendall You seem triggered, bruh.....you know what black features are..Don't be ashamed. Them evil crakas shot off the noses of a lot of ancient statues because they had black features. They tried to erase our history....They want us to hate us.. Stand Strong & Proud💪🏾

Anonymous said...

@ 11:04, Don't pretend. You know good and damn well that men with Johnathan and Glenn Plummers noses have an extremely hard time getting work. Even John Amos spoke about what he endured having his nose shape. You know what I meant, you are trying to make a foolish point that doesn't exist. I didn't say what it means to be Black, I said features that we all know are Black. It's like you pretending not to know what Black women endure rocking Black styles but I guess that doesn't exist either. You missed the point. Smh

Kendall said...

I didnt miss anything. Your choice in words is just foolish. And I never said anything about not believing those "noses" have challenges getting work. When you learn to read, then you can try again.

Anonymous said...

10:48 i hear you mostly but what exactly is effeminate that you see in his depiction of fashion, and why can’t an arguably, straight and “a strong, sound minded, Black man” appear to be the opposite of anything you consider to be effeminate? This social construct is merely that. If only people within could think out of it…and still be strong, sound minded, and black

Anonymous said...

Sound like he's suffering from roid rage

R in NYC said...

Welp, he's already losing endorsements. Be careful of the company you keep.

Anonymous said...

@2:05PM I'm not 10:48 but the issue behind a straight Black man in America being depicted as effeminate is deeply rooted in the White man's attempt to erase or water down all manners of Black masculinity via the media and social conditioning. Black men on TV and in movies are buck broken intentionally to send a clear message to the masses that Black men aren't kings and will take on the role of a woman at will.

Don't you notice how over the years now a majority of Black male actors and performers who make it big have taken roles as either gay, feminine or cross dressing? I know it began well before Flip Wilson but he's the first one that comes to mind. And today you can add Will Smith, Eddie Murphy, Martin Lawrence, Jamie Foxx, Sister Tyler, etc, etc, etc to that list. I think even Forest Whitaker played a gay man in one of his early roles. Denzel is the only person I can think of who hasn't and he's even spoken out about it publicly. So that's why it's a problem. And I won't even get into the rappers who wear skirts and makeup and these new school athletes and their fruity wardrobes. Child please. It's an agenda and if you or anyone else can't see that then you're choosing to be blind.

Anonymous said...

White women are the most dangerous animals on the planet. When will y’all learn?

Unknown said...

I just want to say, Jonathan's girlfriend is yt. Blonde hair, blue-eyed woman from Sweden. I remember seeing a tik tok about Jonathan, and at the end, they showed a photo of his girlfriend. I can't remember if the tik tok was made for black women - as in, 'here's proof of why we should pull our support, cause he has a yt girlfriend' - that was months ago. And now here we are...now, that's a conspiracy worth looking into @5:02pm.

Also, to @5:02pm, toxic masculinity is also a problem in the black community. We need to raise our men to understand that there is a balance between feminity and masculinity; it's ok for our men to take on feminine emotions, likewise, it's ok for our women to take on masculine emotions - if the situation requires it. The problem is, black boys aren't being raised in two parent households, so the women raising them overcompensate for the missing daddies by being hyper masculine - or teaching their sons to become hyper masculine - and the end result is a bunch of emotionally stunted black boys pretending to be men by being hyper masculine and/or violent. And then we have folks, like you, who are hyper critical of black men being portrayed as anything other than 'masculine kings' - again, overcompensating for the fact that we have at least 3 generations of black boys being primarily raised by women who value toxic masculinity, because, their baby father's want nothing to do with them smh. It's a vicious cycle.

Anonymous said...

Unknown, First of all, I wasn't being hypercritical of anything. That's your assessment. I was merely stating a fact, which is that there's a push to depict Black men as anything other than Leaders and Helpmates of the Black household without adding a degrading element to it. Secondly, having a brother dress up in drag or kiss another man on screen for entertainment has absolutely nothing to do with them tapping into their feminine energy. It has everything to do with sending a clear and resounding message that successful Black men will do whatever it takes to please YT. Furthermore, quit conflating what I'm talking about with the social ills that have plagued our community for years because of YTs other successful agenda of tearing apart the Black family unit. I grew up in a two parent household with a strong Black man and my Black daddy never worn red lipstick or put on my mother's night gown. But I've definitely seen/heard him cry and love on all his kids. So if you wanna talk about feminine energy you tell me which one is Hollywood/all media portraying more often than not?

Anonymous said...

One day the black man will learn to stay away from Yt trash. It's like touching kryptonite.

Anonymous said...

5:15 say it louder for the people in the back!

Unknown said...

@5:31pm

Why do black men have to be portrayed as leaders and helpmates, when they are multifaceted individuals coming from all walks of life? As black folks we scream about how we're not a monolithic group and to judge us individually, but, when it comes time to represent black men on a smaller scale - cross dressers, gay, homosexuals, criminals, etc - there has to be a dissertation on the imagery and the affects on the youth? Not all ppl (blk men included) are heterosexual, upstanding men who support their community - we have a small segment of our population (like every other race) of gay, cross dressing, atheist, and criminal men - that's factual - and yes, or youth need to see that there is more than one way to be a black man - and I honestly think that's where a lot of the blockage (for support) comes from: black men thinking there's only one way to be black, or one way to be a man; I think there's so much negativity, in black communities, surrounding black men who don't adhere to the archetype of 'leaders' and 'helpmates'. I also think it's this mentality that pushes our black men to seek out love and understanding from non-black communities; because in these non blk spaces they feel seen, heard, and loved without the pressure of being something that they're not; or without feeling the responsibility of carrying on a culture that doesn't support them or their lifestyle. We have to broaden our views as to what it means to be black and a man living in America. Times have changed; maybe we need to start being more loving and supportive of who some of our men are.

Anonymous said...

6:50 is a sellout and a disgrace

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