Slay at you for actually responding unlike the illiterate unopionated @Baby V Alex! This is a lot to respond to tho so I'm gonna do it in dot points:
The entire article is about race and gender so I don't see why it's a bad thing if it's "racially motivated"? I was trying to explore why certain celebrities are villified while others and their transgressions go undiscussed. If anything I can agree that maybe it has more to do with gender than it does with race (i.e. Eminem being criticised for his lyrics about violence against women while Lana's lyrics go unnoticed), but I don't think it's untrue that black people (especially rappers) get "street cred" when they commit acts of violence (i.e., Tupac, Biggie, etc.) while white celebrities are often derided much more minor things than that (like that Fashion Police woman saying Zendaya smelt like patrouli oil).
The Moonlight point was to reflect the culture of outrage that exists in the media at the moment, but only as it's targetted towards white people. I actually wasn't talking about the merits of each movie as we both know they're completely subjective, but about media reactions to each. I guarantee you that if it had been a white person directing or starring in that film it would have been called a cultural appropriation, a white saviour narrative or would have been related to white people being obsessed with black tragedy. I won't debate with you too much about Moonlight because it's clear that you enjoyed it while I didn't find it particularly interesting at all. Weirdly, I actually found La La Land with all it's references a lot less redundant than Moonlight which just played out like yet another Precious narrative to me, with the addition of homosexuality. It was definitely brave for the writers to work autobiographically and the acting was good, but the movie itself was average to me.
I'm not going to believe the words of an unsourced "Ferguson protester" given that half of Beyonce's fans seem to think she created the universe. I disagree with your characterisation of her as "notoriously private" as it seems to me she takes any opportunity given to make some sensationalist Instagram post. And as far as I know she hasn't explicitly said anything about racial inequality in her music other than "okay ladies, now let's get in formation"? Willing to be proved wrong on that one tho. I could go on and counter your points about Taylor as well, but I actually don't care enough about her to bother. Again tho, we're debating specifics when I'm talking more about the media representation of each woman. You can't tell me that if Beyonce had donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Kesha in a public way the media wouldn't have been all over it praising her.
Remy has very little notoriety tho...the only reason she's famous is because she attempted to kill someone and had a #27 collaborative hit with someone called Fat Joe. Unless you're again talking about her underground "street cred" but let's not pretend the charts or media care about what's happening in the Brooklyn rap scene.
Casey Affleck's accusations are neither recent or ongoing. They happened seven years ago (almost as long ago as Remy's) and were settled out of court shortly after, which to me closes the case. The only reason they were brought back up again was because he was a hot topic and certain websites thought it would be good clickbait.
I agree with your sentiment at the end and thank you for your thoughts! The reason I get annoyed making posts like this is because certain people just blindly dislike them but don't actually give reasons as to why they think I'm incorrect. @Hawks has made negative posts on around four of my articles now saying things like "Countess...sis...this is a mes......." but when I actually ask them why they dislike it they have nothing to give. Thanks for your interesting points!