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‘What did they get besides a generational curse?’: TikToker slammed for taking and selling shoes slung over power lines

Twitter users said the shoes on power lines are symbols of a memorial—not trash.

Photo of Siobhan Ball

Siobhan Ball

Kids taking shoes off power lines (l), a neon sign (c), and kids running with cardboard box(r).

TikToker Blake Messik is under fire over a video showing him and a friend taking shoes hanging from a power line and selling them to a thrift shop.

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The video shows Messik and his friend purchasing hard hats, orange vests, and a ladder from Home Depot to pretend that they’re electricians while grabbing the shoes. “If anyone asks, we’re with a random power company that told us to take the shoes down,” Messik says.

Though many white people think these shoes represent drug dealers or gang activity in an area, something Messik refers to during his intro when he says the shoes are “good are trash,” it’s almost certainly an urban legend.

https://www.tiktok.com/@messickblake/video/6935211322451823878?lang=en&is_copy_url=1&is_from_webapp=v2
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The more common reason to hang shoes on electrical wires—and the reason so many people are upset by Messik’s video—is to memorialize the dead. A tradition in many Black American communities, shoe memorials are often made by families and friends of the deceased who can’t afford a more permanent, and therefore expensive, way to commemorate their loved ones.

“Y’all can believe what you want, where I’m from where my parents are from, shoes hanging means death,” Twitter user @MorbiusMistress said.

Y'all can believe what you want, where I'm from where my parents are from, shoes hanging means death. I have never in my whole ass life of living in the hood heard the connection to drugs. So I say they wrong for doing that, as I am sure most belong to someone who was killed.
@MorbiusMistresss/Twitter
Stealing from a memorial? This is disgraceful as hell. Do they also visit cemeteries and steal all the flowers?
@MorbiusMistresss/Twitter
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This tradition seems surprisingly little known outside of their communities, with few articles about the origins of shoe tossing having much to say about it. Many white people appear to think shoes on power lines represent drug dealing and gangs, instead.

“I, as a little white girl at my school of 95% white kids, was taught that shoes on a power line meant drugs,” one Twitter user wrote. “I learned TODAY that they were memorials.”

I, as a little white girl at my school of 95% white kids, was taught that shoes on a power line meant drugs. I learned TODAY that they were memorials. (NOT defending these actions at all just pointing out how fucked up it is that this is what we were taught)
@celestielle7/Twitter
There’s no source because it’s something we do within our community. Everything we do does not need to be documented or understood by anyone that is not us.
@celestielle7/Twitter
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However, Black people all across Twitter and TikTok set the record straight and called out the disrespect of Messik’s actions. “Whiteness constantly desecrates black graves and interrupts mourning,” one user wrote.

Whiteness constantly desecrates black graves and interrupts mourning
@MyHandsRatedE/Twitter

In the video, Messik gets $20 for a box of shoes he took down from the power line. But people also pointed out that the prank likely cost much more than that, given the need to buy a ladder, electrician costumes, and gas—not to mention the time costs.

“Prop spent more on gas + Hope Depot supplies and what did they get besides a generational curse??” one user wrote.

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Nah they really paid $180 to disrespect dead Black people. Something is wrong with them fr.
@imaniloves_you/Twitter
Prob spent more on gas + Home Depot supplies and what did they get besides a generational curse??
@imaniloves_you/Twitter

But the shoes in the video may not have been part of a memorial. People who recognized the Houston street in the video said that there’s a prominent skate shop nearby, and customers often throw their used shoes up there when buying new ones.

In Body Image
@_juliejulez_/Twitter
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I've been there many times it's a skate shop in Houston with thrift shops near people have been throwing they're old skate shoes there for years
@_juliejulez_/Twitter
Fam. This is in Houston. These shoes are all from skaters who beat they shoes into the ground via the skate shop
@christeankareem/Twitter

However, even if those commenters are correct, Messik’s failure to mention it and his casual comment about gang associations suggest he didn’t know that, either. One person pointed out that even if he was aware that these particular sneakers were not part of a memorial, his video might encourage others to do the same thing—likely in areas where the shoes are memorials.

And they’re are encouraging people to do this in areas that are not any of the things you mentioned while spreading anti-blackness
@christeankareem/Twitter
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This isn’t the first time Messik has been accused of carrying out a petty prank just for clout. In November 2020, he created elaborate fake menus for Tex-Mex chain Chuy’s in order to shave a few dollars off the bill.

https://twitter.com/zukosctrl/status/1367590537889341451

For many commenters, his latest video is just one more example of the things white men can get away with in America.

Clearly, this WAS NOT about profit if money was spent on a ladder, hard hats, and construction vests - when you only sold the shoes for $20-$30. This was about being yt men enjoying the freedom to do whatever they want in this country
@TwistF8/Twitter
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Of course TikTok didn’t do anything about them literally stealing other than add a safety banner at the bottom. But let a black content creator breathe too hard and their vids get taken down. Werent we supposed to be boycotting TikTok anyway?
@aint_she_somethn/Twitter

The Daily Dot has reached out to Messik for comment and will update if he responds.


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