BET Awards accidentally include San Francisco mayor Willie Brown Jr. during in memoriam segment

The show confused the mayor for the NFL Hall of Fame cornerback, Willie Brown, died in October of last year

During BET's annual in memoriam segment, the network misidentified one of the deceased as former San Francisco mayor, Willie Brown, Jr.

The 2020 BET Awards premiered last night on the network in a virtual presentation amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. However, during the annual in memoriam segment, the network misidentified one of the deceased as former San Francisco mayor, Willie Brown, Jr.

The legendary politician is still alive at 86.

READ MORE: Hall of Fame cornerback Willie Brown dies at age 78

Former NFL star, Willie Brown, died in October of last year. He was a Hall of Fame cornerback who played with both the Denver Broncos and the Oakland Raiders before going on to coach at California State University-Long Beach.

Will Brown, Jr. served in California’s State Assembly for 30 years, including 15 as speaker of the statehouse. He then ran for mayor and was elected the first African American mayor of San Francisco. Brown was succeeded by Gavin Newsom who is currently Governor of the state of California.

London Breed is the current mayor of San Francisco where she is the first Black woman and, after Brown, the second Black mayor of the city.

Hosted by Amanda Seales, the event made its national debut airing on CBS for the first time in its history.

Beyonce is pictured at the 2020 BET Awards. (Credit: Twitter/BET)

The annual awards show celebrates creative expression and Black excellence across music, film, television, sports, and philanthropy. The event featured a number of performances and speeches dedicated to police brutality and the coronavirus pandemic.

Beyoncé was recognized with the show’s Humanitarian Award. During her speech, she thanked Black Lives Matter protestors.

“Your voices are being heard and you’re proving to our ancestors that their struggles were not in vain,” she said in her speech.

READ MORE: BET Awards to air on network TV for the first time in history, nominations announced

BET has yet to issue a statement about the mixup.

KQED reporter Joe Fitzgerald Rodriguez tweeted that he called Brown and that he responded with his trademark wit: “I’m not gonna correct them. Why correct them? I’m gonna make sure all my creditors take notice. The debt is canceled.”

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