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Former First Lady Michelle Obama claimed America was “struggling enough” to accept a Black first family, revealing earlier this month that she intentionally avoided wearing her hair in braids while in the White House to prevent political distraction.
Speaking at ESSENCE Festival in New Orleans July 3, Obama detailed the calculations behind her appearance, accusing the media and political rivals of weaponizing fashion coverage during the 2008 election cycle to “diminish” her status as a growing campaign threat.
“I started wearing my hair in braids in college, right? But as I went up the professional ranks, being a lawyer, they wanted, you know, I didn’t want my hair to be a part of the conversation,” Obama said in a clip released Wednesday on her YouTube channel.
OBAMA BLAMES SPLINTERED MEDIA FOR PREVENTING SUPERSTAR DEMOCRAT FROM RISING UP

Former first lady Michelle Obama spoke during the dedication ceremony for the Barack Obama Presidential Center in John Lewis Plaza on June 18, 2026, in Chicago, Illinois. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
“So I made the decision, you know, look, America is struggling enough to accept the first Black president and first lady. I’m not going to make my hair the issue,” she added.
Obama said that during her husband’s 2008 campaign, the political press purposefully tried to change the surrounding conversations to instead focus on her shoes or clothes. She recalled giving a speech in Iowa, noting she brought in larger crowds than her husband’s rivals, but that the more popular she got, the more articles focused on her appearance.
“The more popular I became, the more of a threat I became. It was interesting. That’s when the articles started coming out,” Obama said. “This is when I understood like, this is politics, oh, they’re coming after me because I’m useful. And they’re trying to beat my husband, so they’re trying to slow me down, right?”

Former first lady Michelle Obama spoke as former President Barack Obama listened during a stakeholders event at the Barack Obama Presidential Center on June 16, 2026, in Chicago, Illinois. The center officially opened to the public later that week. (Pablo Martinez Monsivais/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
“And some of those first articles, they would always start,’She was wearing a purple sheath, and she had on this pair of shoes.’ It wouldn’t matter what I said,” she added.
“The article would start with what I had on. And I realized, ‘Oh, this is how they do women in politics.’ This is how we treat women in public life. We diminish them to just what they look like, and not what I’m saying.”
This is not the first time the former first lady has said the press was hostile to her appearance. On the “Call Her Daddy” podcast in January, Obama similarly blasted media coverage of her looks.

Former U.S. President Barack Obama holds up a library card while reading to school children with former first lady Michelle Obama at the Barack Obama Presidential Center in John Lewis Plaza on June 19, 2026, in Chicago, Illinois. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
“And the first thing, after all this great conversation and connection, the top of the article would be, ‘She was wearing.’ You know, not my education, not my, you know, not my professional career, but it started with appearance, and it got worse as we got better,” she told host Alex Cooper.
“They weren’t doing that to my husband, right? They weren’t describing him physically, and he was out there more than I was. So, I was like, ‘OK, well, this is where it comes from.’ It’s like, ‘Wow, whoever is doing this, when it comes to how we put women in their place, it’s like, OK,'” Obama later added.
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In November 2025, Obama released her book “The Look,” which is described by the Obama Presidential Center shop as “a stunning journey through Michelle Obama’s style evolution, in her own words for the first time.”
Madison Colombo is a writer for Fox News Digital’s Flash, Media, and Culture team, covering daily breaking news and trending topics with an award-winning background in broadcast and digital journalism.


