Aretha Franklin Was the True Originator of Shade
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Bianca BetancourtWed, March 25, 2026 at 4:22 PM UTC
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Welcome to Diva Week, a magical 7-day period on the calendar where we celebrate the birthdays of Chaka Khan, Aretha Franklin, Diana Ross, Mariah Carey, and Lady Gaga. Every day we will be sharing stories on our favorite divasâand what makes them tickâso make sure to check back in with us daily.
When you look up âAretha Franklin shady momentsâ on YouTube, a nine-minute long video will pop up. Consider it a Greatest Hits of some of the most biting, sassy, and unintentionally hilarious quips from the late Queen of Soul, zipped into a petite package, prime for pop culture consumption.
Letâs be clear: Franklinâs lethal execution of shadeâand our celebration of itâis by no means a way to overshadow the musical genius she brought to the world. From feminist anthems like âRespectâ to swooning sermons like âYou Make Me Feel Like a Natural Woman,â the iconic singerâs shady prowess stemmed from her overall confident sense of selfâand her unapologetic embrace of fabulosity. Who wouldnât feel as if they could be as boldly direct and assertive as she was when draped in a floor-length fur coat and a quilted Chanel purse in tow?
It helps that Aretha Franklin was acutely aware of who she was and how she maneuvered through the world. You canât become one of the greatest vocalists of all time without really, truly, believing it for yourself. Itâs why Franklinâmore than onceâfound herself in on-stage riff-offs to remind not just the audience but those she shared the stage with that collaborating with the queen was never a game and you must always bestow respect.
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Aretha Franklin being fabulous.Ron Galella, Ltd. - Getty Images
One of Franklinâs most memorable onstage moments was the closing number of VH1âs inaugural Divas Live! special where she performed âYou Make Me Feel Like a Natural Womanâ and the gospel song âTestimony,â alongside Mariah Carey, Shania Twain, Gloria Estefan, Carole King, and Celine Dion. Celine wanted to remind the world that she was on that stage for a reason and began to playfully belt in front of the queen. Aretha quickly caught wind of the gesture, and reminded dear Celine that they were on her stage, singing her songâand did what Aretha did best in response. She sang. The moment was so memorable that years later, Mariah even wrote about in her memoir, The Meaning of Mariah Carey:
âI couldn't believe that someone was trying to outshine Aretha Franklin in his honor while singing about Jesus. Maybe it was a big cultural gap, but it seemed crazy to me, and I didn't want to participate in that. As this happened, my body started involuntarily to retreat out of the Divas line and I started to join the support singers, most of whom I knew. It seemed like blasphemy to me, and I wanted to be out of reach if the lightning came.â
Franklinâs signature sass expanded to her off-stage persona too, though. One of her most famous one-liners came courtesy of a now eternally-referenced Wall Street Journal interview where she was asked to share her opinion on the latest crop of pop stars. Adele? Good singer. Alicia Keys? Good songwriter. Whitney Houston? Gifted. Taylor Swift, however? Great gownsâŠbeautiful gowns. Whatâs worth noting is that Franklin was clearly aiming to still be polite with what she had to sayâespecially since this was a televised interview. It wasnât about being disrespectful or dismissive of Swiftâs impact as much as it was her sayingâlike a beloved aunt or grandmotherâthat she simply isnât her cup of musical tea. Thus, great gowns, beautiful gowns was born. (The delivery still makes me shriek every time I watch it.)
The moments go on and on. There was the time she released an official press release statement when BeyoncĂ© referred to Tina Turner as simply âThe Queenâ at the 2008 Grammy Awards, reminding the world that there was only one Queen of Soul. (Her statement read: âI am not sure of whose toes I may have stepped on or whose ego I may have bruised between the Grammy writers and BeyoncĂ©, however, I dismissed it as a cheap shot for controversy. In addition to that, I thank the Grammys and the voting academy for my 20th Grammy and love to BeyoncĂ© anyway.â) There was the 2014 Women of Soul celebration at The White House where she silently dismissed her rumored musical frenemy Patti Labelle, while strutting through the crowd ahead of a performance. She even not-so-subtly suggested she should have been a judge on American Idol during itâs heyday when Jennifer Lopez exited the seriesâhinting at the fact maybe it was time to let a real vocalist join the judging panel. I like to also think that her affinity for carrying around a camcorderâat events, red carpets, and just during a routine brunchâwas a way of her always having receipts for any chaos that might have ensued around her. Youâll rarely catch an Aries like Aretha in any sort of messy situation they didnât ask to be in.
Witty banter aside, I often think of Aretha Franklin when Iâm working to be a more confidentâmore assuredâversion of myself. She was someone who said what she said and truly meant it, while never feeling the need to banter for banterâs sake. She didnât say things for the hope of creating a next-day headlineâshe simply just evoked that power by being her own, unfiltered self. If thereâs one thing she proved throughout her five-decade long career, itâs that you canât rise to the top by being anyone other than who you already areâsassy, saucy, smart, and all.
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Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ