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  • 2020-06-16 (xsd:date)
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  • Did L'Oréal Release a Statement Critiquing the 'Violent' White Race? (en)
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  • In June 2020, screenshots from a clip highlighting a L’Oréal Paris adviser’s alleged message to white people went viral, prompting the hashtag #boycottloreal to trend after social media users considered the comments to be racist. The screenshot appeared to spread after L’Oréal hired Munroe Bergdorf, a Black British transgender model, as a consultant on their U.K. Diversity and Inclusion Advisory Board. Snopes readers also asked us if the following were official statements from L'Oréal: But Snopes found no evidence that L’Oréal shared these comments on their social media accounts or any other medium. The controversy began in August 2017, when Bergdorf was hired with much fanfare as the face of the company’s diversity initiative and its first transgender model in a campaign. But her contract was terminated just days later when the The Daily Mail tabloid published sections of a Facebook post reportedly written by Bergdorf. Bergdorf said she made the comments as a reaction to the August 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. L’Oréal said Bergdorf's words were at odds with their support of diversity and tolerance towards all people. In early June 2020, L’Oréal posted statements supporting Black people in the wake of the May 25, 2020, police-custody death of George Floyd, a Black man in Minneapolis died while being forcibly restrained by a white police officer. Soon after, Bergdorf called the cosmetic company out as hypocrites on her Instagram account, recalling that she was fired three years prior for speaking out against white supremacy. On June 9, Bergdorf revealed that L’Oréal’s new president, Delphine Viguier had since reached out to her. Viguier expressed regret for how the 2017 controversy was handled, and Bergdorf accepted Viguier’s invitation to be a consultant on their U.K. diversity board. From L’Oréal’s Twitter account: https://twitter.com/LOrealParisUSA/status/1270304852053295110/photo/2 Select quotes from Bergdorf’s 2017 Facebook post were misrepresented by social media users as official statements from L’Oréal and/or as comments made by her as an adviser to the company. Because Bergdorf admitted to making these comments, but not while as an adviser to L’Oréal, we rate this claim as a Mixture. (en)
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