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Black NASA Employees Go Viral After Sharing Headshots On Social Media

Photo: Getty Images A Black engineer sparked a viral trend after sharing his professional headshot for NASA. On Thursday (March 14), Tyrone Jacobs Jr., a component engineer for NASA, shared his official work photo on X, formerly Twitter. The post has since garnered 35 million views and over 200,000 likes with social media users applauding … Continued Tyrone Jacobs Jr., a component engineer for NASA, sparked a viral trend after sharing his professional headshot for the company on social media. The post on X, formerly Twitter, has been viewed 35 million times and over 200,000 likes. Other Black NASA employees also posted their professional headshots using the hashtag #BlackAtNasa. Jacobs, who works on hardware for space and satellite apparatus, expressed his gratitude for the support he received and recognition of representation in his field.

Black NASA Employees Go Viral After Sharing Headshots On Social Media

Publicados : 2 meses atrás por no Science

A Black engineer sparked a viral trend after sharing his professional headshot for NASA.

On Thursday (March 14), Tyrone Jacobs Jr., a component engineer for NASA, shared his official work photo on X, formerly Twitter.

The post has since garnered 35 million views and over 200,000 likes with social media users applauding Jacobs for making a space for himself in STEM as a Black man with locs.

Other Black NASA employees followed suit, posting their own professional headshots using the hashtag #BlackAtNasa.

Jacobs, who works on hardware for space and satellite apparatus, said he was overwhelmed by the amount of support he received after sharing his work photo.

“When I posted it, I thought I would get a little bit of love, you know, some congratulations, ‘This is a nice picture,’ ‘You look nice’… But to see it going and where it went now in [the] present day, like, I totally did not expect it. And it’s a very overwhelming feeling… There’s no words to process what I feel on the inside,” Jacobs told FOX 26.

The engineer recognized the importance of representation in his field.

That’s a big part of my life’s story; the theme of my life story is being yourself, being who you are, being authentic, being true to you, and don’t compromise who you are for anybody or anything… I just wanted to show people, ‘Hey, you can be yourself, you can be tall, you can be Black, you can have locs,’” Jacobs said.

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Tópicos: Space, NASA, Media, Social Media

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