Categories
Uncategorized

Who is Iyanna Dior? The Black Trans Woman Was Attacked This Week In Minnesota

Categories
Uncategorized

President Obama Discusses Policing and Protests in Town Hall: Change Will ‘Require Everyone’s Participation’

Categories
Uncategorized

How To Find A Pro Bono Lawyer If You’re Arrested During a Protest

Lawyers are stepping up to provide free legal services to protestors. Here’s how to locate one in your area.

Categories
Uncategorized

Dirty John Season 2: Where Is Betty Broderick Now?

As chronicled in season 2 of ‘Dirty John,’ Broderick was jailed in 1991 for murdering her ex-husband.

Categories
Uncategorized

How to Watch Dirty John: The Betty Broderick Story Tonight

Amanda Peet and Christian Slater star as a divorced couple in the twisty true-crime story.

Categories
Uncategorized

Waking Up With Kiana Ledé

Categories
Uncategorized

Dirty John Season 2: Everything We Know About The Betty Broderick Story

Categories
Uncategorized

Rihanna Shuts Down Sales on All Three of Her Fenty Brands in Honor of Blackout Tuesday

Fenty Beauty, Savage x Fenty, and Fenty have all paused production to support the Black Lives Matter movement.

Categories
Accessories

Hopeful Colorful Window Displays – Louis Vuitton Launches the Rainbow Project at it’s Toronto Store (TrendHunter.com)


(TrendHunter.com) Luxury fashion house Louis Vuitton unveils the exclusive Rainbow Project that celebrates hope and the welcoming of Summer. It is a series of collaborative window displays that starts off with Toronto&…

Categories
Accessories

#AmplifyMelanatedVoicesChallenge Gains Traction on Instagram

A new social media campaign is calling on Instagram users to spotlight a diversity of voices surrounding social justice work.
The #AmplifyMelanatedVoicesChallenge calls on social media users to focus on the social justice work of BIPOC (black, indigenous and people of color) amid the national protests surrounding racial injustice and police brutality in order to give a platform to those who are historically silenced or looked over.
“The social justice movement on social media is just another movement that has become whitewashed and appropriated,” wrote mental health therapist Alishia McCullough, who launched the challenge with dietitian and activist, Jessica Wilson. “It is another outlet that centers white narratives while making white people feel like the ‘good white person’ or ‘the woke white person.’ A lot of their content and offerings have been co-opted and appropriated from the lived experiences of people in black and brown bodies, which they have used to make a profit and increase their social capital. Often the original black and brown creators are not given credit and are pushed further into the margins of social justice work as white people continue to center themselves.”

View this post on Instagram

The social justice movement on social

Follow WWD on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.