News | Entertainment
8 Nov 2025 10:35
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Entertainment

    Lizzo broke down into floods of tears as she vented about "the real story not being told fully" amid the protests against racism

    Since the death of unarmed black man George Floyd in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, last week, protests have broken out across the globe


    Policeman Derek Chauvin was shown in footage kneeling on the 46-year-old man's neck, and the officer has since been arrested on charges of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter, and sacked from the force.

    And the 'Truth Hurts' hitmaker - who has lived in Minneapolis - is among many celebrities using their platform to call out the injustice and she has demanded the full picture to be told as she shared information from people actually living in the state of Minneapolis.

    On an Instagram Live, she began: "What they just told me is at this point all the violence, the majority of the violence that's happening in that city is coming from the KKK and the heavily militarised police.

    "There are people coming from the south, there are white supremacist terrorist groups coming from the south, patrolling the streets, shooting people.

    "Follow some people in Minneapolis.

    "'Cause the real story is not being told fully."

    The 'Scuse Me' singer insisted that all people of colour want is to be treated equally.

    In tears, she said: "It's never black people, it's always white people using the term 'race war' ... We don't want that s**t.

    "We want what we've always wanted from the beginning of being in this f***ing country, the same right that all these other people have. It's not this difficult."

    After taking a moment, she said: "I've been trying to stay composed this entire time. I'm really working on it this entire time. Let me just gather myself...

    "It's not that hard to see. The people that don't see it don't want to see it.

    "I don't have sympathy for people who don't see it anymore.

    "Black people are tired. We are so tired."

    The 32-year-old singer fumed that she is fed up of feeling her life is at "danger" because of "police who don't value" her and the "white supremacist groups" who are shooting at and ploughing at protesters with their cars.

    Lizzo also insisted that the problem lies in "racism running through the veins" of America.

    She continued: "I'm tired of putting myself in danger.

    "It's not danger from the protesters, [it's] danger from the police who don't value me.

    "Danger of the white supremacist groups who are shooting at people, who are running people over with their cars. How do we not see where the issue is?

    "Why is everyone being so -- in the media - political?

    "This isn't a political issue. The issue is in politics, but it's not a political issue. It's so much deeper than politics. It's in the veins of this country ... there is racism running through its veins."

    Elsewhere, Lizzo spoke out on the Black Lives Matter campaign and said anyone using the term "all lives matter" is part of the problem.

    She explained: "If you believe that 'all lives matter,' then where is your outrage for black lives?

    "To me, 'all lives matter' ... 'all lives matter' is fake equality and full-on anti-blackness.

    "I still love my blackness. I still love your blackness.

    "I still believe that everybody's life matters.

    "But until we start treating each life equally and respecting each life equally, we gotta say Black Lives Matter.

    "I hope that everybody can just really see this s**t for what it is.

    "Open your mind, open your heart, listen, believe ... When you see that vandalism, when you see that senseless violence, know that that ain't us."

    She ended the lengthy Live by warning those out on the streets partaking in mass protests to stay safe amid the coronavirus pandemic.

    She concluded: "Wear a mask, wear some gloves, wear some goggles. We're still in a pandemic."

    © 2025 Bang Showbiz, NZCity

     Other Entertainment News
     08 Nov: Seth Meyers has hit back at Donald Trump after the U.S. president attacked him on social media
     08 Nov: Macaulay Culkin has stepped back into his Kevin McCallister role for a new Christmas advertising campaign with a message about family and ageing
     08 Nov: Patti Smith has revealed how she discovered the man who raised her was not her biological father
     08 Nov: Sean 'Diddy' Combs has been photographed spending time with former NBA player Sebastian Telfair inside FCI Fort Dix
     08 Nov: Sir David Beckham paid tribute to his wife Victoria Beckham with his knighthood ceremony outfit
     08 Nov: Tori Spelling has formally concluded her marriage to Dean McDermott
     07 Nov: Guillermo del Toro says his long-awaited adaptation of Frankenstein feels deeply "autobiographical"
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    A former New Zealand-born, Scottish international believes Scotland's backline is the x-factor in tomorrow morning's test against the All Blacks at Murrayfield More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    A construction company will use repeatable designs to churn out new hospital wards across the country More...



     Today's News

    Business:
    A construction company will use repeatable designs to churn out new hospital wards across the country 10:27

    Living & Travel:
    Fog is continuing to cause major disruption at Auckland Airport this morning with 25 regional flights cancelled and others delayed 10:16

    Business:
    How colourism and social media abuse have roiled Pacific beauty pageants 10:06

    Living & Travel:
    History beckons at Riccarton Racecourse this afternoon as Cup Week begins in Christchurch 10:06

    Politics:
    One Piece defines gen Z protests from Madagascar to Indonesia 9:36

    Politics:
    Hundreds of US flights cancelled as government shutdown drags on 9:26

    Cricket:
    The ICC is heralding the success of the recent women's O.D.I Cricket World Cup in India and Sri Lanka 9:26

    Rugby:
    A former New Zealand-born, Scottish international believes Scotland's backline is the x-factor in tomorrow morning's test against the All Blacks at Murrayfield 9:16

    Entertainment:
    Seth Meyers has hit back at Donald Trump after the U.S. president attacked him on social media 8:37

    Politics:
    Auckland's mayor says he welcomes any law change to forcibly move homeless people out of the city centre 8:27


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd