
Adweek reported on an April Fools’ Day stunt from
the creators of Blackweek, whereby the group changed its name to
Blankweek as a response to the anti-DEIBA+ vibe in Adland and the USA.
Can’t help
but wonder how Blackweek and its crew will ultimately fare while
Adland continues to abandon DEIBA+—along with associated performative PR and heat shields.
When White
advertising agencies and White adpeople are probed on their awareness of
Blackweek, will they draw a blank? Do they already?
Blackweek
April Fools Stunt Puts a Spotlight on DEI Rollbacks
Conference
organizers changed the name of the event to ‘Blankweek’ yesterday to spark
industry conversation
By Cydney Lee
Ad industry
observers may have noticed yesterday that Blackweek, the industry conference
dedicated to unlocking the spending power, influence, and potential of diverse
consumers, changed its name to “Blankweek” in response to ongoing diversity,
equity, and inclusion (DEI) rollbacks imposed by the government.
ADWEEK can
confirm that the name change was an April Fools prank meant to drive awareness
to the erasure of DEI progress across U.S. companies and culture.
“In this
environment, [descriptors] like ‘Black,’ ‘female,’ ‘LGBTQ,’ and ‘diverse’ are
being erased,” explained Walter T. Geer III, Blackweek co-founder and chief
creative officer of innovation at VML North America. “We’re poking fun at that
and the fact that so many brands and agencies are cowering down on [DEI].”
On Monday,
March 31, Geer shared a seemingly truthful LinkedIn post announcing Blackweek
had changed its name: “After careful deliberation and conversations with our
team and families, and looking at the current climate and movement to erase
certain words from the business world, we have made the tough decision to
change our name to Blankweek,” he wrote.
In the post, he
also shared a link to a new Instagram page for Blankweek, which included
another link to the conference’s website complete with the new Blankweek name
and logo.
Other Blackweek
founders posted about the alleged name change, including Andre Gray, chief
activation officer and head of culture and entertainment at Havas Lynx New
York; Adan Romero, evp and executive creative director at Razorfish; and Joe
Anthony, CEO and founder of Hero Collective.
The war on
DEI
Recently, in
response to a changing political climate, brands including Target, Lowe’s,
Molson Coors, and Walmart have reversed their DEI efforts in various ways, from
ditching hiring quotas to ending programs and surveys meant to support diverse
employees.
This war on DEI
reached the highest levels of the federal government earlier this year as
President Donald Trump took office. In January, on inauguration day, he signed
an executive order “ending radical and wasteful government DEI programs and
preferencing.”
Since then,
Trump has signed a series of orders clamping down on DEI programs, most
recently urging Vice President JD Vance to remove “divisive, race-centered
ideology” from the Smithsonian Institution and its museums, education and
research centers, and the National Zoo.
These mandates
have forced brands and agencies, which made bold promises and set aggressive
goals around DEI in the wake of 2020’s Black Lives Matter movement, to
re-strategize.
For Blackweek’s
founders, April Fools presented an opportunity to raise awareness of these
reversals by showing “how ridiculous it is to issue these mandates,” said
Anthony.
“What we’re
seeing is a compounding attack on nomenclature, words, and terminology in an
attempt to try to make America this homogenous place, which we know is not the
foundational principle of what [leads to] great creative ideas,” he continued.
While the
founders were hopeful that the stunt would not just drive awareness but outrage
among diverse pockets of the industry, reactions to Geer’s LinkedIn post were
somewhat muted, with many commenters offering their understanding and support
of the “tough decision.”
However, Geer
said that out of the public eye, others reached out to him directly to
reprimand him for the name change and accusing him of “bending the knee.”
“I think people
would never in a million years expect this,” said Geer. “Never in a million
years would they expect us to essentially fold in the moment like what many
companies are doing.”
Blackweek is
here to stay
Despite the
ongoing retreat from DEI—and the April Fool’s prank—Blackweek is here to stay,
and it’s preparing for a strong second year.
Blackweek held
its inaugural conference in New York City in October 2024. The event was
self-financed with support from sponsors like WPP, Dentsu, IPG, and TikTok.
In 2025,
Blackweek’s founders are looking to expand the event to “an economic forum and
festival,” said Gray. The conference will act as a “content accelerator,”
highlighting artists and creatives more through programming like showcases,
film screenings, and performances.
“We’re doubling
down on culture, and we need the community to double down with us,” said
Anthony.
Anthony said
that the conference is on track to retain nearly 80% of its sponsors this year,
but shared that some prospective sponsors (which he declined to name) have
expressed concern around Blackweek’s name “and how that aligns with the current
climate.”
“The reason why
we chose the term ‘Black’ was not necessarily to exclude other communities, but
to highlight the cultural contributions and the license that Black culture
gives other marginalized and oppressed communities to speak up for themselves,”
Anthony said.
Update April
1 8:25am ET: This story was updated to clarify that Blackweek aims to reach
diverse audiences, not just Black audiences.