The first Latina queen at a historically Black university drew online backlash. But she didn’t back down.

Keylin Perez, Miss Coppin State University. The 22-year-old is the first Latina to hold the crown in the school’s history.

By Edwin Flores

When Keylin Perez became the first Latina to be crowned Miss Coppin State University in Baltimore, she was thrilled. She had been named the university’s Miss Sophomore and Miss Junior previously and was eager to continue representing the school with pride as the 91st Miss Coppin State University queen.

But after a TikTok video she posted went viral, she received backlash, including harassment, from online critics who said the role should be given to a Black woman, since Coppin State University is a historically Black university, known as an HBCU.

“I never considered stepping down,” Perez told NBC News. She applied for the high-profile role knowing she might face some backlash, but ran unopposed and was officially crowned in October. “I stayed firm in my decision of continuing to serve my institution that has poured so much into me the past four years,” she said.

The original TikTok video featured Perez and Mister Coppin State and their Royal Court counterparts at Morgan State University, another HBCU in Baltimore, recreating a scene from the Zoolander movie, which was a trending meme at the time on the platform. The group recorded the lighthearted video while at Mister HBCU Kings’ Leadership Conference and Competition, Inc., held in St. Louis.

The video has since gathered more than 430,000 views, more than 78,000 likes and had more than 2,700 comments before Perez turned off the comment section because of the barrage of hateful messages.

Dozens of videos and posts on other platforms such as Instagram and Twitter also surfaced, raising larger questions of representation, race and legacy, and debating whether a non-Black person being crowned contradicts HBCU culture.

Perez, who turns 23 on Saturday, said the backlash online escalated as some of the comments turned vulgar, with some even suggesting she harms herself.

Perez took to Instagram to address the controversy and issued a statement. The post received more than 1,000 comments with divided opinions.

“They’re going to have to start removing ‘Black’ in titles now,” one commenter said, while another said, “The majority supports and stands with you. You’re doing amazing sweetheart. Continue serving your campus with grace.”

Kelaina Slaughter, 20, a junior majoring in English at the University of Louisville in Kentucky, first learned about the controversy surrounding Perez from a different TikTok video.

Slaughter explained why she thinks a role like Miss Coppin State University should go to a Black person.

She said roles like the Royal Court positions at HBCUs are crucial in representing students who have been historically underserved at predominantly white institutions.

“The reason why these people are so important for them to be Black is so that they can have Black voices in spaces where they were historically not allowed. They’re trying to show that we are educated, that we can hold these positions, that we can have the same thing as white people — anybody else,” Slaughter said.

“When you take those spaces away, you are taking away an additional voice for our community that you can have on a national space and allow to represent our community as a whole,” Slaughter continued.

Yet Perez says she’s received support from peers, professors and university administrators.

Perez noted that the controversy is a stark contrast from her time as Miss Sophomore and Miss Junior. She didn’t receive any backlash then, she said.

Justin Evans, 23, president of Coppin’s student government association, said Perez “has our full support.”

“I feel like it’s bonded us together even more than before, because we’re already a small institution, so all this backlash,” he said, “just helps us realize how we’re all we got in a sense. The campus life has actually been up.”