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Alicia Kenworthy's avatar

I've watched that performance at least a dozen times now -- it still makes me tear up! I'm from Washington DC, but when I was a kid, we moved down to Dallas, GA (now Marjorie Taylor Green country) for a couple years. My best friends down there belonged to the group of humans so many affectionately call "white trash" and everyone listened to country music. I had a big crush on Billy Ray Cyrus but I digress.

As an adult, I've maintained a lot of those friendships but also run in vastly different circles as a liberal college grad who hangs out with a bunch of lawyers.

I think what's so emotional for me personally -- the debate over Luke's cover, that fell along identity politics lines on the internet, broke my heart. Obviously there's a lot to be said re: country music's history of inclusion and appropriation, but some commentators, at the heat of the argument, seemed to imply that a straight white man and his brand of listeners couldn't possibly relate to this song, that those groups are too different. But so many of us are fighting our own battles and living under similar forms of oppression and can relate to the hope and desperation in those lyrics. So many of us are united by the inherent struggle of trying to make it in this country. Isn't that how systems of slavery and racial oppression were upheld for so long, by pushing narratives that kept poor white folk and black folk apart?

I still remember my first day of second grade. The teacher told us we could all bring our own snacks for snack time, but there were certain rules -- not too much sugar or junk, etc. She had us raise our hands and give examples of what we liked to eat and what an appropriate snack might be. The white boy next to me, in dirty clothes, raised his hand and said he couldn't bring anything this week but his mama was saving up for a jar of peanut butter. I have no idea where he's at now. Maybe working at the convenience store.

Anyway, seeing Chapman and Combs together on that stage... lord, both their smiles, their pure happiness. I liked this line in the NYT Op-Ed: "The song, during Chapman and Combs’s five-minute performance, felt incredibly spacious — larger than the limitations of genre, welcoming and expansive enough to hold every single person it had ever touched, regardless of the markers of identity that so often divide us."

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Colleen's avatar

Watching that performance Sunday night healed me in ways I didn't even realize I needed it. Like Kelly, this song had such an impact on me as a young confused queer woman - seeing Tracy at peace and smiling like that made me see we all made it to the other side and got there.

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