Aziz Ansari Dropped Some Major Truth About Television’s Diversity Problem Over The Weekend. Speaking

Aziz Ansari Dropped Some Major Truth About Television’s Diversity Problem Over The Weekend. Speaking
Aziz Ansari Dropped Some Major Truth About Television’s Diversity Problem Over The Weekend. Speaking
Aziz Ansari Dropped Some Major Truth About Television’s Diversity Problem Over The Weekend. Speaking
Aziz Ansari Dropped Some Major Truth About Television’s Diversity Problem Over The Weekend. Speaking

Aziz Ansari dropped some major truth about television’s diversity problem over the weekend. Speaking at EW Fest, he discussed how Empire, while progress, does not miraculously solve representation on screen. He also shared how he wasn’t in Transformers because of his stance on accents. 

More Posts from Soulsharingsistas and Others

4 years ago

Having the Black girl be the most competent character in the show but only have her use her skills to babysit the White characters is not “girl power” actually

It’s just racist writing

9 years ago
“Star Trigger” By Vincent Patrick

“Star Trigger” by Vincent Patrick

“Star Trigger is basically a superhero story, laced with western undertones, geekyness and alien symbiotes! Helena, is a fearful girl living in a semi-futuristic Denver, CO. Her life takes an interesting turn when she comes into contact with an alien named Ocho (also pictured above). I’ve been fleshing this thing out for awhile and I’m really excited to share this with everyone! There’s a few pages up already, some of which I really had fun with! Feel free to check it out at startriggercomic.com it updates on Wednesdays!”

Submitted by kingkaijuice

[ Follow SuperheroesInColor on facebook / instagram / twitter / tumblr ]

4 years ago
Artist:  Nessa_ninona instagram 
Artist:  Nessa_ninona instagram 

Artist:  nessa_ninona instagram 

8 years ago

This is so beautiful!

The Unforgettables By GL Tomas

The Unforgettables by GL Tomas

“With that kiss, I was free to finally be myself instead of the person I pretended so long that I was. I wasn’t the perfect person and I wasn’t the perfect daughter, and now I understood that that was okay. I had to start letting my heart guide me in the right direction, otherwise, I’d never find the bravery to do something like that again.”

4 years ago

I was wondering what kind of female black characters do people want to see more of? Like, them being soft or selfish?

image

Black Girls & Women: Representation We Want

As a Black woman reader, I definitely want to see more soft Black girls and women in literature. Girls with their own self-interests (caring about oneself isn’t necessarily selfish) and not always someone else’s caregiver is great too.

Here’s my list!

More Black girls...

In love

With close family bonds and healthy relationships and support systems (that don’t require enduring abuse, fixing their partner, or overall emotional labor to earn domestic happiness)

Being protected

As main characters, heroines and anti-heroes

On adventures

In fantasy and magical settings

In historical settings as peasants, upper-class society, and royalty

Descriptions of Black Afro hair, skin, features as a normal thing in books (see this compilation) and not in an Othering way

On the other hand, vibrant, sometimes hyped up descriptions that allude to their beauty (see this ask. Or this one). Not Othering, just appreciating! 

Put us in fancy dresses and give us a sword and let us dance at the balls and have admirers!

Experiencing complex emotions not necessarily in reaction to racism or racist violence

On the book cover! And with an accurate, not light or white-washed model

~Mod Colette

Responses:

@madamef-er

Soft black girls and nerd girls who like cute things. 

Shy black girls not just in situations with boys. 

More lgbtqia+ black girls. Studs! Femmes! 

Gender fluid and non conforming constantly changing their style because they like it!

Spies and not just as the 'sexy bait' or 'weapons master' let us sit behind the computer for once and be hackers and stuff

@tanlefan

Black girls who are just...people.

I want a fantasy escapism adventure that isn't a thinly veiled discussion on slavery or racism or any other aspect of The Struggle. I am tired. 

Can I just have a happy Black girl who believes in fairies or something?

@esmeraldanacho-1776 More autistic Black women/girls! I don't care what genre really; just have them in there!

@briarsthicket And enby black people!

@mattiekins

Def soft black girls. 

Energetic and playful. 

Or shy and quiet.

I want to see more black girls who are nerds and not just mommy mommying or nanny nannying everyone. 

I want black girls who want to be a ballerina, or a talk show host, or a game designer etc. 

I want a black girl who gets to be happy. 

Who doesn't have to act older than she is and be the shoulder for everyone, always.

@xiiishadesofgrey

I want more black lady nerds, if we’re talking modern settings!  

More black ladies who have a sporty/playful nature! 

Who aren’t afraid to get dirty and make chaos, without being dirty or frowned upon!

Strange as it sounds coming from me, more black princesses! Brandy as Cinderella in the 90s was my first Cinderella, and I LOVE that.

Please, god, more black wlws.

@daintythoughtswritersblock

I want to see tropes exercised 

Black women of all shades and tones

@hazelnut4370

Tbh just fellow black people being happy, like I rarely see that,

Or enjoying hobbies

rivergoddessdream

Happily childless black women

Black women traveling the world

Fat black women in happy, healthy, poly relationships

Black cis and trans women having a true sisterhood

Autistic black women

Black women in period pieces that aren't about slavery and don't take place in the US

Black women thespians

Black women painters

Black women revolutionaries

Black women front and center in the narrative

Black women healers and storytellers

Non christian Black women stories

Black women rockers

#complicated black women characters #tell those stories

@missnancywrites

More Black Girls...

With diverse cultural and social backgrounds!

That are nerdy, girly, intelligent, ditzy, all the personality types that white girls in literature get!

That are fragile, shy or anxious. Almost every single black woman I’ve seen in media or otherwise are wise and adult. Let us be an absolute wreck, or an anxious mess!

In science! Characters like Shuri, Moon Girl and Iron Heart in Marvel revitalized me, cuz young black girls only get two types. Both these girls are in intellectual and in science, but have bery different personalities.

In interracial relationships, and not because they hate black men or something along those lines. They just happen to be dating outside their race, black women get hate for that in real life and it’s unfair. Let us have relationships outside our race! That said...

In platonic relationships with black men! I think that’s important, cuz I don’t often seen black solidarity unless it’s for the purpose of showing how diverse the writing is. Let them share interests, daily frustrations that they would only understand, but don’t force a romance.

In solid friendships with other black girls! For some reason, we’re pitted against in each other inside and outside of writing! Write some sweet wholesome friendship!

With different sexualities! Let there be some that are ace, others are gay, bi or pan! Just be sure you don’t sexualize them, or turn em into a robot.

•Who are dark-skinned! This can be seen a lot in tv or movies, but when you want a black girl in your stuff don’t just hire a light-skinned black girl or a biracial black girl. It’s not the same.

Who get to act their age! Black women have a long standing history of being adultified, starting from a very young age, and it’s extremely harmful. Little black girls can wear what they please, the problem is people sexualizing them. Let the teen black girl be a teenager, she can look out for her siblings but she isn’t the keepern the house or their lives. Young adult black girls are not ideal housewives or capable working machines, they mess up and mess around just as much as any young adult.

With mental/physical disabilities or illnesses. Alongside with being forced to be more mature than they are, disabilities/illnesses are never taken seriously and we’re forced to just deal with it. Having black girls who happen to have these issues, but also have a healthy support group is always good!

@ink-and-roses

Seen as beautiful and desirable and NOT in a hypersexualized way

Interracial relationships are wonderful because black girls are beautiful and lbr everybody sees it

Sensitive and allowed to feel something other than righteous anger

Some black girls are skinny! Some are big! Some are slim and some are curvy! There’s no mold!

Dark skinned!

A YA protagonist out to save the world from something other than racism

Superpowers or magic that doesn’t come from generational trauma or slavery

Black characters who support other black characters. None of this token crabs in a barrel business.

Black girl nerds and punks and goths exist. I promise.

And this may be a personal preference but I’m not against the idea of a damsel in distress. We are always being strong. Let her be soft and delicate and cared for. Let her be princess carried and rescued from the tower and the dragon.

[Note from Mod: It’s not just you! I love a Black damsel being saved and protected. What is progressive for one woman varies due to historical and present depictions and is why intersectionality in feminism is so important! -Colette]

@nightlyswordswoman

As a writer, I write a lot of my black female characters like this because I rarely ever see black women being represented in these ways! ESPECIALLY on the covers of books, unless the author themselves is a black woman and even then its rare. 

Too often black women are stereotyped as strong protector types that are always rough, tough, and don’t need anybody in books (and real life), when that’s honestly just dumb and inaccurate--black women are as vulnerable as anyone else (in some cases, even more vulnerable, but that’s another topic). 

So yeah, this list is 100% accurate and I encourage those who are interested in writing black female characters (whether you’re a black woman or not) to consider writing them like this, because the stereotype needs to die lol.

9 years ago
Trying To Figure Out How You Misspell #Libby 😐😐😐 Isnt There Only One Way To Spell It? And Don't

Trying to figure out how you misspell #Libby 😐😐😐 Isnt there only one way to spell it? And don't we see it all the time on the label😂😂😂 Imma just start telling folks at Starbucks my real name #Libertad and watch them struggle as they ask to spell it😂 Shout out to all the folks who have unique names😎


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9 years ago

The Color of Love Blog Hop

The Color of Love Blog Hop

Oh how excited we are to participate in our first Color of Love Blog Hop. We’ve been following it for a few years now(Libertad even one a grand prize one year, talk about luck) and it was an exciting moment to finally be an author on the roster of such seasoned writers as well as some of our favorite Romance bloggers.

Look of that list of people below and would you look at the prizes being…

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8 years ago

Why Book Reviews Matter! Part One-The Creative Side

Why Book Reviews Matter! Part One-The Creative Side

I’m sure everyone is tired of hearing about the conversation about reviews. As an author they’re helpful, as a reader they’re helper, but I know some folk think reviews aren’t important. I was actually inspired by an author friend M. Hollis, who recently wrote a twitter thread about how helpful reviews are to marginalized writers, who have the hardest time getting their books in front of the…

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9 years ago

Huhhhh just why

‘The Ellen Show’ Seems To Think Black Women’s Bodies Are Hilarious 
‘The Ellen Show’ Seems To Think Black Women’s Bodies Are Hilarious 
‘The Ellen Show’ Seems To Think Black Women’s Bodies Are Hilarious 
‘The Ellen Show’ Seems To Think Black Women’s Bodies Are Hilarious 
‘The Ellen Show’ Seems To Think Black Women’s Bodies Are Hilarious 
‘The Ellen Show’ Seems To Think Black Women’s Bodies Are Hilarious 

‘The Ellen Show’ seems to think black women’s bodies are hilarious 

On Monday’s Ellen DeGeneres Show, Ellen introduced what she called a “very exclusive sneak peek” of Nicki Minaj’s upcoming ABC Family sitcom based on her childhood. As the clip concluded, DeGeneres said, “They have big butts. That’s the joke.“ The entire affair, which veers into minstrel territory, played into the belittling many have tried before.

4 years ago
MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) Dev. Insomniac Games
MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) Dev. Insomniac Games
MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) Dev. Insomniac Games
MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) Dev. Insomniac Games
MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) Dev. Insomniac Games
MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) Dev. Insomniac Games
MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) Dev. Insomniac Games
MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) Dev. Insomniac Games
MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) Dev. Insomniac Games
MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) Dev. Insomniac Games

MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN: MILES MORALES (2020) dev. Insomniac Games

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