Outrage over the Bill Cosby mural at Ben’s Chili Bowl isn’t going away. Last week, the street artist Smear Leader defaced the rendering with a sticker of Kim Jong-un, and now there’s a petition to help get the Cosby mural replaced “with one that celebrates women and their accomplishments.”
So far the online petition, co-created by DC resident Devin Boyle, has only 94 signatures. Her campaign is reaching people far beyond the District—she’s snagged signers from places like Canada and Australia. Still, she hopes to gain more local support for the cause.
“I don’t want us as Washingtonians to be complacent and let this pass as another thing that one person was passionate about and everybody else let it go in the ether,” says Boyle, who plans to put Kickstarter funds toward hiring a celebrated artist to repaint the mural.
Boyle, who says that at one point she’d purchased supplies with the intent of vandalizing the mural herself, clarified that while she admires Smear Leader’s sentiment and bold intentions, she is more interested in going the diplomatic route: drumming up public interest for painting over Cosby’s face and then working directly with restaurant owners’ the Ali family to get it done.
“I know that a lot of people have had trouble connecting with them because they have generations of respect for Bill Cosby,” says Boyle regarding the Ali family, who have not yet responded to a request for comment. “They probably feel attacked, and I don’t want them to feel that way.”
Petition asks Ben’s Chili Bowl to Replace Bill Cosby Mural
Outrage over the Bill Cosby mural at Ben’s Chili Bowl isn’t going away. Last week, the street artist Smear Leader defaced the rendering with a sticker of Kim Jong-un, and now there’s a petition to help get the Cosby mural replaced “with one that celebrates women and their accomplishments.”
So far the online petition, co-created by DC resident Devin Boyle, has only 94 signatures. Her campaign is reaching people far beyond the District—she’s snagged signers from places like Canada and Australia. Still, she hopes to gain more local support for the cause.
“I don’t want us as Washingtonians to be complacent and let this pass as another thing that one person was passionate about and everybody else let it go in the ether,” says Boyle, who plans to put Kickstarter funds toward hiring a celebrated artist to repaint the mural.
Boyle has also written two recent editorials in the Washington Post, including one that says “we can do better” than Smear Leader’s response. “The Kim Jong-un sticker will not soothe the feelings evoked by the mural,” she writes.
Boyle, who says that at one point she’d purchased supplies with the intent of vandalizing the mural herself, clarified that while she admires Smear Leader’s sentiment and bold intentions, she is more interested in going the diplomatic route: drumming up public interest for painting over Cosby’s face and then working directly with restaurant owners’ the Ali family to get it done.
“I know that a lot of people have had trouble connecting with them because they have generations of respect for Bill Cosby,” says Boyle regarding the Ali family, who have not yet responded to a request for comment. “They probably feel attacked, and I don’t want them to feel that way.”
Most Popular in News & Politics
Most Powerful Women in Washington 2025
Abigail Spanberger and the Virginia Governor Race: Can “Boring” Politics Win?
Trump’s Shutdown Antics Vex Republicans, Ireland Hopes to Sell Its DC Embassy, and Renaissance Festival Sues Most Foul Varlets
How Much Worse Can This Government Shutdown Make Federal Workers Feel?
Washington DC’s 500 Most Influential People of 2025
Washingtonian Magazine
October Issue: Most Powerful Women
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
Want to Live in a DC Firehouse?
DC Punk Explored in Three New History Books
The Local Group Fighting to Keep Virginia’s Space Shuttle
Alexandria’s “Fancy Pigeon” Has a New Home
More from News & Politics
White House Signals Very Long Shutdown, Commanders Game Ends in Heartbreak, and Betting Markets Sour on Jay Jones
DC Singer Kenny Iko Is Turning Heads on “The Voice”
Trump Lays Off Thousands, Blames Shutdown; Ed Martin Spitter Won’t Go to Prison; Jimmy Kimmel Sponsors Georgetown Player
New Anacostia Market Is a Dream Come True for Community
Photos: The Caps’ “Red Carpet” Start to the Season
Senators Vamoose as Shutdown Pain Increases, Trump’s Campaign for Nobel Peace Prize Foiled, and the DC Streetcar Is Toast
Guest List: 5 People We’d Love to Hang Out With This October
IRS Tells Furloughed Feds They’ll Get Back Pay After Trump Says They Might Not, Trump Lands a Big Peace Deal, and Publix Is Coming to NoVa