
Unmasking, One Post at a Time
This weekend, I found myself back down in the Deep SouthâPensacola, Florida to Gulf Shores, Alabama. Back in my old stomping grounds. The air was thick with salt and humidity, the kind that settles in your lungs and reminds you where you are. It was Hangout Weekendâaka the Sand in My Boots Festivalâthanks to Morgan Wallen, who basically made Gulf Shores his little yeehaw kingdom for the week.
Now, Iâm not sure if Iâve said this before (Iâm sure I have said this before), but I hate Morgan Wallen. Hate might even be too soft. Itâs a full-body, sensory-based rejection. Like opening a trash can that someone left raw shrimp in. Like finding a crusty plate someone abandoned in the sink days ago. Heâs that kind of bad. My nervous system physically reacts. Itâs just not safe for me to be exposed.
Of course, my boyfriend loves him. Go figure. White boy who loves bro country. (Not to be bitchy. Okay, maybe a little bitchy. But also, honest.) I do respect his right to like what he likes⌠in theory. Itâs just hard to respect things that arenât exactly deserving of respect. I’m working on it.
Despite the unfortunate headliner (Morgan Wallen himself), I did not go to that show. My boyfriend and his friend wentâhe’s a fan, and thatâs his thing. I dipped out, respectfully and with grace (and with permissionânot that I needed it, but I still like to be considerate). I knew I wouldnât have a good time, and honestly, Iâm glad I trusted my gut on that one. It just wasnât for meâand thatâs okay. We like different things sometimes. Thatâs part of life and relationships.
BUT, we did get to see something really incredible: Wiz Khalifa, 2 Chainz, and Three 6 Mafia. And let me just sayâthey delivered. I mean delivered. They didnât coast, they didnât half-ass it, they gave full energy, presence, and artistry in their sets. Honestly? I was proud of them. Not because I expected anything less, but because they exceeded everything. They made me feel joy. And gratitude. And awe.
And also, something else.
During every single one of those showsâsurrounded by lights and beats and sweatâI kept looking around. And I couldnât help but notice:
There were no Black people around me.
Not in the crowd.
Not enjoying the show.
Not vibing alongside me.
Exceptâof courseâfor the staff. The people scanning wristbands, wearing âEvent Crewâ t-shirts, working security. There were Black people working the festival. But not celebrating. Not dancing. Not being part of the crowd.
The audience? White. Nearly entirely.
The performers? Black. Legendary.
The power dynamic? Glaring.
And it hit meâagain, because this is not newâthat this is segregation. Not by law, but by design. By cost. By culture. By centuries of gatekeeping and coded messaging about who belongs where. This isnât just a southern thing. But itâs especially sharp down here.
If I were Black, I wouldnât want to go to this festival either. Itâs expensive. Itâs overwhelmingly country-coded. It probably doesnât feel safe or welcoming. Thatâs not paranoia. Thatâs lived experience.
But damn, itâs wild to see some of the most talented Black artists pour their hearts into performances, giving everything, while standing in a sea of almost exclusively white faces. Itâs a gut punch. Itâs an unspoken truth humming underneath every bass drop and light show:
We love the music, but weâre still failing the people who created it.
This weekend was fun, yeah. It was sweaty and chaotic and full of that Southern mix of fried food, beach salt, and bad decisions. But it was also real.
It was complicated.
And it reminded meâagainâhow far we still have to go.
