The room exploded when Billie Eilish screamed “No one is illegal on stolen land.” But the land spoke back. Within days, the Tongva tribe –
the First Angelenos – answered her viral Grammys moment with a pointed reminder about who actually owns
Los Angeles, and whose names get erased when celebrities play activ… Continues…
Billie Eilish’s Grammy speech was designed to shock: a defiant “F** ICE” and the claim that “no one is illegal on stolen land” electrified the
Crypto.com Arena and social media. But away from the roar of the crowd, the people whose land she invoked stepped forward. The Tongva, Indigenous to the
Los Angeles Basin, publicly noted that
Eilish’s Southern California home sits on their ancestral territory—and that she has never contacted them about it.
Their response was measured but unmistakably sharp. They welcomed visibility for the “true history of this country,” yet urged that future statements name the
Gabrieleno Tongva directly, so the public understands LA is still their land. At the same time, they praised their close partnership with the Recording Academy, which worked with them on official
land acknowledgments during Grammy week. As politicians mocked Eilish’s stance and demanded she “forfeit” her mansion, the tribe simply asserted: “Ekwa Shem – We are here.”