Cheat Code for Women:
Use your Pretty Power aka Pretty Privilege to get what you want
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Cheat Code for Women:
Use your Pretty Power aka Pretty Privilege to get what you want

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the only difference between the weepy wendsday club and myself is that I've been fucked by the system longer than they have (D or R, both parties fuckin' šš šš„šš the disabled), and now they're sad because there's a chance they might have to experience it themselves.
These were done for an assignment about social equality that I got as an art student. In preparation for the assignment I ended up becoming particularly interested in som research done on how people's environments and backgrounds impede and hold them back throughout their life. The trees and what is in and among them are supposed to represent this. The healthy looking tree is meant to represent a privileged background/environment.
So Iām going to preface this by saying that I love Jeanine, Tyler, Vlamis, Heather, Trevenio⦠the entire cast. I love this cast, but they are human and like most of us, they make mistakes at times. None of them are perfect.
Still, itās okay to hold people accountable for their mistakes. We donāt have to cancel somebody over them, but it doesnāt make you an anti-fan to question an actors questionable actions and ask them to do better next time. And herein lies the reason for why Iāve been so uncomfortable lately in fandom spaces (fandom spaces in general, but for today, Iām talking about RNM). Fandom has this unhealthy culture where you either stan somebody so hard they can do no wrong and excuse every mistake, or we cancel somebody over a single mistake. We donāt allow actors, writers, anyone in the business to be human⦠and because of that, I donāt think we leave much room to grow.
2020 has been a year many deeply seeded issues in our country have finally started to receive the spotlight they deserve - racism being one of them. And in that, Iāve been doing a lot of reading about the importance of calling people in rather than calling people out. But Iāve also been reading about how we as a society have to do better about calling out racism wherever we see it.
Itās alright to question your favorite show and still watch it. It is not out of line to question things like why the show allowed themselves to write a storyline that put a black woman in the middle of a queer endgame ship as if nobody could have guessed that it would pit the queer community (another oppressed group) against the only black woman on the show. I donāt think itās out of line for a fandom to question why the show was allowing so much torture porn for their queer characters. Or ask if the show considered casting a disabled actor to play a disabled character.
If we donāt ask these questions, how is change ever going to happen? It doesnāt mean we have to stop watching (though itās valid if you do). It doesnāt mean that we harass the showās cast and crew to the point of being mean. We can criticize actions without criticizing people.
So that brings me to the point Iām trying to make⦠Or perhaps the question Iām trying to ask.
This past month, we learned from Tyler Blackburn himself that he is not Native. Now, before everyone jumps down my throat about DNA testing, letās look at the facts Tyler himself gave us. On the Pretty Little Wine Moms podcast, Tyler informed us that he took a DNA test during S1 of RNM and discovered he has no native blood. One of the moms was quick to point out that those tests arenāt always accurate especially if they donāt have much native DNA to test you against. Iām not here to argue that fact or argue the accuracy of DNA testing that tribes themselves rarely use for determining membership. Iām here to discuss what he explained afterwards.
Way back when PLL was casting for Caleb, the casting called for an ethnic actor. Tyler went up for the part. He didnāt get it originally because he wasnāt ethnic and the show was looking to expand itās diversity. Now, things should have ended there. The show should have been able to find a POC to play Caleb. The casting team should have held to their promise to bring in a more diverse cast and regardless of Tylerās background, cast a POC, specifically a non-white passing actor. Nobody can tell me that there wasnāt a single POC talented enough to play that part. If they couldnāt find one, they werenāt looking hard enough. And thatās a big red flag on that PLL team and to Hollywood as a whole because these stories are so common and why Hollywood has such a deep problem with race.
The fact that Tyler was cast instead of a POC is a problem with the PLL casting team. But back to Tyler. The PLL team came back to him after they couldnāt find anyone to play Caleb and asked him if he was ethnic. Tyler, not knowing if he was ethnic (pointing to the fact that he had no connection to any non-white culture) went to his grandmother. And his grandmother told him a story. A story many of us have heard⦠A story of his native american heritage. A heritage that he didnāt know of or have a connection to until he suddenly was up for a job. And a heritage he claimed in order to get a job intended for an āethnicā actor.
Does Tyler really have native heritage? He claims no. In his own words he says that heās not native. Even if his grandmother was right, heās at most 1/32 native with no tribal or cultural connection. But even that seemed like a giant question mark since the people he would need to ask to verify have all passed.
Tyler was cast as Caleb, and later cast as Alex, based in part to a native background he claimed for himself that he now says is not part of his culture or heritage.
This isnāt a stain on Tyler. Itās questionable behavior of a white boy raised in a society that has been racist since itās founding. We are all guilty of committing racist acts because of this upbringing. Itās not mean to say that Tylerās actions were questionable and racist. Itās fact. Doesnāt mean I canāt love and forgive him, but it does mean Iām no longer going to allow myself to use āBut Tyler is nativeā as a defense against my own racist comments towards other cast members. And I would hope the same would hold true for the rest of this fandom as well. Itās simply not true and unfair to anyone that actually is indigenous to allow ourselves to defend Tyler as a POC. Especially when we have other cast members of the show who are native with tribal connections. And cast members of color who are repeated cast as villains on the show or otherwise put into very difficult positions that invite racial hate.
I hold the show accountable for casting a white-passing boy as a native. When they decided to cast Tyler, they should have changed his heritage and his disability. Or they should have cast somebody more diverse. Thatās on the casting team.Ā
Iām hoping that Tylerās admission on this podcast means that he will no longer allow himself to be cast as a POC, taking jobs away from POC who still struggle in Hollywood cause of racism. I hope he learns and grows from this cause I think heās a great person and a great role model and has the platform to push others to do better.
My frustration with fandom comes in the fact that this podcast and admission has gone ignored. Even those that heard the admission, continue to make excuses for him and defend their right to call Tyler (Not Alex, TYLER) a POC. Yet, other actors continue to not get the same freedom to be human to make mistakes. Vlamis is dragged over the coals for profiting off of the LGBTQ community. I donāt even know if I can go into how badly Heather is treated. I guess Iām just confused why we can forgive some of our cast and not others for very questionable decisions?
Iām not here to drag Tyler. I love the guy. Heās a good Alex. Iām just tired of the double standard and the racism I constantly see in this community. I love this show and I love this cast. Iām not trying to call anyone out, Iām just hoping to call us in and ask our show, cast, crew, and fandom to do better.

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LAPD says he was "absentee booked" at the hospital, he was never actually taken to a jail.
Was he really arrested? Or are they just trying to cover their asses?
Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascon still has not filed charges against the teen who killed Muñoz.
#justiceformoniquemunoz #MoniqueMunĢoz
āMarischaā by Artist Angelo Sannasardo
A good lesson for this show at this point would be that Dal Mi paid the consequences for her actions and Do San didnāt. Thatās why he can talk like that.Ā It worked out for him.Ā She lost everything. She had to rebuild herself from scratch because of that move. That move worked out for him. For her it was a mistake. For him, it was marvelous. I donāt think thatās where this is going but... fuck it it should be?