Before the 2018 Grammy nominations were announced Tuesday, many prognosticators thought the race for album of the year would boil down to two artists: British pop star Ed Sheeran for "÷ (Divide)" and rapper Kendrick Lamar for "DAMN."
Sure enough, Lamar's record made the list, along with Childish Gambino ("Awaken, My Love!"); Jay-Z ("4:44″); Lorde ("Melodrama"); and Bruno Mars ("24K Magic"). But Sheeran was nowhere to be found, much to the devastation of his fans - although "÷ (Divide)" did land a nod for best pop vocal album.
Soon, the absence of Sheeran's expected nomination led to a Twitter "moment," as the social media platform announced that the "Grammys album category has no white men for the first time in 19 years."
However, that depends on how you look at the alternative rock band Garbage: While Shirley Manson is the lead singer, the group also includes Butch Vig, Duke Erikson and Steve Marker. (In fact, Manson was the last member to join the band.) So if you count Garbage and search through every other album of the year category since the Grammys started in 1959, this actually marks the first time in history that no white men have been nominated for the night's biggest prize.
This is especially notable for the Grammys, which saw lots of criticism last year when Adele's "25" won over Beyoncé's "Lemonade." The year before that, Taylor Swift's "1989" beat Lamar's "To Pimp a Butterfly." And the year before that, Beyoncé's self-titled album lost to Beck's "Morning Phase."