10.21237/BRSZ-4N75
Jules, Bergis
UC Riverside
#BlackWomenAtWork
UC Riverside
2017
en
5396228 bytes
1
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
The hashtag #BlackWomenAtWork began trending following Fox News host Bill
O'Reilly's sexist and racist comment about California
Congresswoman's Maxine Water's hair on March 28th, 2017and White
House Press Secretary Sean Spicer's remarks to journalist April Ryan
during press briefing on the same day. The hashtag began trending after
Brittany Packnett used it in this set of tweets where she asked black
women to tweet about their experiences:
https://twitter.com/mspackyetti/status/846811002670854145
These tweet ids were collected on four separate occasions using the DocNow
prototype twitter collection tool. You can find it here at
http://app.docnow.io/ bwaw1 (10,000 tweets), bwaw2 (41,256 tweets), bwaw3
(92,756 tweets) were collected on March 28th, the day the hashtag began
trending. bwaw4 (140,000 tweets) was collected on March 29th.
To recreate the original tweets from these tweet ids, download the DocNow
Hydrator application found here https://github.com/DocNow/hydrator and run
the ids through it.