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Media & EntertainmentMonday, June 29, 2026

Teyana Taylor’s Tears and Lauryn Hill’s Legacy Steal the BET Awards

A tearful Icon of the Year, a star-studded Hill tribute, and a shutout for Afrobeats defined the ceremony in Los Angeles.

Teyana Taylor removed her glasses to wipe the steam from the lenses, sobbing as Janet Jackson introduced her as the Icon of the Year. “Oh my God… I’m gagging, they did not tell me Janet was coming,” the 35-year-old actress and musician exclaimed, before telling the crowd at the Peacock Theater that she had “worked my ass off [for] 20 years for this.” The moment, part confessional and part coronation, set the tone for a ceremony that doubled as a family reunion and a roll call of Black creative endurance.

The 2026 BET Awards, hosted by comedian Druski, saw Taylor collect three competitive trophies — Best Actress, Video Director of the Year, and the new Fashion Vanguard Award — while hip-hop duo Clipse matched her tally with Album of the Year, Best Group, and Best Collaboration for “Chains & Whips” with Kendrick Lamar. Lamar himself extended his record as the most decorated artist in the Best Male Hip-Hop Artist category with a ninth win. Yet the night’s most resonant honour was the inaugural Living Legend Icon Award, presented to Lauryn Hill. In a tribute that brought Nas, SZA, Doechii, Lizzo, and Queen Latifah to the stage, three of Hill’s children sang her music before the artist herself performed and addressed the audience. “I do this because I love y’all,” she said, framing her work as a duty to share the protection and love she received from her parents.

Viewed from Lagos, the ceremony carried a sharper edge. Nigerian stars Wizkid, Burna Boy, Tems, and Asake all left empty-handed despite multiple nominations, a result that analysts in the region read as a reminder of the stiff competition on one of Black entertainment’s biggest stages. Tems, shortlisted in three categories including Best Female R&B/Pop Artist, lost to Kehlani, while Burna Boy’s feature on Gunna’s “wgft” was beaten in the Best Collaboration field. The shutout, following Ayra Starr’s win in the Best International Act category the previous year, underscored both the growing global footprint of Afrobeats and the unpredictable currents of industry recognition.

Fashion provided its own narrative thread. Taylor’s arrival on the red carpet in a dramatic burgundy Stéphane Rolland haute couture gown — a corseted bodice giving way to a vast balloon-shaped skirt and a jewelled headpiece — was widely noted by style commentators as a statement of regal modernity. Across the Atlantic, another American star was turning premieres into fashion theatre: Zendaya continued her promotional tour for Spider-Man: Brand New Day in a series of archival pieces, including a John Galliano spring 1997 galaxy-print dress with a diamond spider at the back, and a Giorgio Armani spring 1990 gown embroidered with a web motif. The parallel displays of sartorial storytelling, one on an awards stage and the other on a global press circuit, illustrated how Black women in entertainment are using clothing to write their own mythologies.

Hill closed her acceptance with a quiet instruction that lingered after the broadcast ended. “Somebody out there needs your gift,” she told the room. “So don’t sell your gift short.” It was a line that could have been addressed as much to the absent Afrobeats nominees as to the multi-hyphenate Taylor, who had earlier reminded the audience that she was now also a trained chef. In a ceremony built on legacy and lineage, the most enduring image was not a trophy but a woman wiping steam from her glasses, insisting that greatness is measured by how many people stand beside you.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

48%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Sub-Saharan African pressArab Gulf press
Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
SkepticismVictimhoodIrony

Despite multiple nominations, Nigerian stars left the 2026 BET Awards empty-handed as American artists swept the top prizes. A burgundy wave rolled down the red carpet, but the silence of the Nigerian nominees spoke louder than any acceptance speech.

Arab Gulf press
DetachmentPragmatism

The BET Awards 2026 red carpet was a showcase of high fashion, with Teyana Taylor's dramatic burgundy gown and Zendaya's spider-inspired archival looks stealing the spotlight. The focus remained firmly on sartorial details and style statements, leaving the award results in the background.

Broaden your view

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Upd. 01:04 PM2 languages · 4 outlets
PreviousMedia & EntertainmentNext
4 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Monday, June 29, 2026

Teyana Taylor’s Tears and Lauryn Hill’s Legacy Steal the BET Awards

A tearful Icon of the Year, a star-studded Hill tribute, and a shutout for Afrobeats defined the ceremony in Los Angeles.

Teyana Taylor removed her glasses to wipe the steam from the lenses, sobbing as Janet Jackson introduced her as the Icon of the Year. “Oh my God… I’m gagging, they did not tell me Janet was coming,” the 35-year-old actress and musician exclaimed, before telling the crowd at the Peacock Theater that she had “worked my ass off [for] 20 years for this.” The moment, part confessional and part coronation, set the tone for a ceremony that doubled as a family reunion and a roll call of Black creative endurance.

The 2026 BET Awards, hosted by comedian Druski, saw Taylor collect three competitive trophies — Best Actress, Video Director of the Year, and the new Fashion Vanguard Award — while hip-hop duo Clipse matched her tally with Album of the Year, Best Group, and Best Collaboration for “Chains & Whips” with Kendrick Lamar. Lamar himself extended his record as the most decorated artist in the Best Male Hip-Hop Artist category with a ninth win. Yet the night’s most resonant honour was the inaugural Living Legend Icon Award, presented to Lauryn Hill. In a tribute that brought Nas, SZA, Doechii, Lizzo, and Queen Latifah to the stage, three of Hill’s children sang her music before the artist herself performed and addressed the audience. “I do this because I love y’all,” she said, framing her work as a duty to share the protection and love she received from her parents.

Viewed from Lagos, the ceremony carried a sharper edge. Nigerian stars Wizkid, Burna Boy, Tems, and Asake all left empty-handed despite multiple nominations, a result that analysts in the region read as a reminder of the stiff competition on one of Black entertainment’s biggest stages. Tems, shortlisted in three categories including Best Female R&B/Pop Artist, lost to Kehlani, while Burna Boy’s feature on Gunna’s “wgft” was beaten in the Best Collaboration field. The shutout, following Ayra Starr’s win in the Best International Act category the previous year, underscored both the growing global footprint of Afrobeats and the unpredictable currents of industry recognition.

Fashion provided its own narrative thread. Taylor’s arrival on the red carpet in a dramatic burgundy Stéphane Rolland haute couture gown — a corseted bodice giving way to a vast balloon-shaped skirt and a jewelled headpiece — was widely noted by style commentators as a statement of regal modernity. Across the Atlantic, another American star was turning premieres into fashion theatre: Zendaya continued her promotional tour for Spider-Man: Brand New Day in a series of archival pieces, including a John Galliano spring 1997 galaxy-print dress with a diamond spider at the back, and a Giorgio Armani spring 1990 gown embroidered with a web motif. The parallel displays of sartorial storytelling, one on an awards stage and the other on a global press circuit, illustrated how Black women in entertainment are using clothing to write their own mythologies.

Hill closed her acceptance with a quiet instruction that lingered after the broadcast ended. “Somebody out there needs your gift,” she told the room. “So don’t sell your gift short.” It was a line that could have been addressed as much to the absent Afrobeats nominees as to the multi-hyphenate Taylor, who had earlier reminded the audience that she was now also a trained chef. In a ceremony built on legacy and lineage, the most enduring image was not a trophy but a woman wiping steam from her glasses, insisting that greatness is measured by how many people stand beside you.

Source divergence

Media & Entertainment · 4 outlets · 2 languages

48%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral40%
Critical60%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Sub-Saharan African pressArab Gulf press
Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
SkepticismVictimhoodIrony

Despite multiple nominations, Nigerian stars left the 2026 BET Awards empty-handed as American artists swept the top prizes. A burgundy wave rolled down the red carpet, but the silence of the Nigerian nominees spoke louder than any acceptance speech.

Arab Gulf press
DetachmentPragmatism

The BET Awards 2026 red carpet was a showcase of high fashion, with Teyana Taylor's dramatic burgundy gown and Zendaya's spider-inspired archival looks stealing the spotlight. The focus remained firmly on sartorial details and style statements, leaving the award results in the background.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 2 languages

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