Share.

7 Comments

  1. elloitsmeadele on

    isn’t this the publication that constantly writes negatively about poc?

  2. fairygrl222 on

    Mind you, it’s the Billboard *Women* of the Year award at the Billboard *Women* in Music Event. It would be weird to not talk about misogyny in the industry.

  3. hanisherehello on

    Just read what they said they don’t even come across as “salty” or bitter or wtv angle Variety is trying to push here. Just Korean-American women sharing their experiences of trying to make it in the industry as WOC… how dare they

  4. holyflurkingsnit on

    Variety is a racist, Zionist rag. I’m not surprised that it’s also misogynistic. Those all tend to go hand-in-hand.

  5. demimonde9 on

    > The calmer **Ejai** spoke first, before Nuna and Ami stepped up with some slightly saltier talk.

    > Rei Ami got blunt straight away: “Being a woman in this male-dominated industry is honestly ass. Sometimes we have to work twice as hard with a smile on our faces as the world nitpicks every part of our being. First, we’re too skinny and then we’re too fat. It goes from, ‘Oh, she’s giving nothing’ to ‘Why is she being so extra?’ It seems utterly impossible to exist. Oh, and God forbid you’re confident, they’ll crucify you for that. But I think that’s why they’re so obsessed, because, well, there’s nothing more intimidating than a confident woman who knows what she wants. Our ability to persevere and show up is an absolute superpower. So thank you to all the women in this room for using their superpowers to inspire, lead and protect. We are not too much; we are not too loud. We are exactly who the fuck we think we are.”

    ugh she talked about how hard it is being a woman. so salty….

    >host **Kiki** Palmer

    getting everyone’s names wrong.

Leave A Reply