If there’s one thing that annoys me…well, there are a lot of things that annoy me, but if there’s one thing that annoys me the most about media coverage as shown on Twitter, it’s the media’s insistence that we fall over ourselves for the likes of Gigi Hadid, Taylor Swift, Amy Schumer, and Jennifer Lawrence. I’m officially sick of it.
Why am I sick of it? Because every time these women move a muscle, it gets covered as if the Democrats and Republicans have finally come together in Congress. Some of the tweets are worthy of being tweeted, such as coverage about Jennifer Lawrence getting stiffed out of Hollywood money because she’s a woman or Amy Schumer making comedy about how tough it is for women to get birth control prescriptions filled. But a lot of it is just utter drivel. Like, why do we care about how many marshmallows Lawrence can stuff in her mouth? Why is it “cute” that Lawrence also has peed in sinks? (THAT’S DISGUSTING. NOT CUTE.)
Don’t believe me about the coverage? Just take a look at the small smattering of tweets I collected today about the media’s favorite It Girls:
Gigi Hadid:
Every look from @GiambattistaPR‘s stunning Spring 2016 show, featuring @GiGiHadid: http://t.co/NF7Twr76WE #PFW pic.twitter.com/pg5AvVb32v
— Who What Wear (@WhoWhatWear) October 8, 2015
.@GiGiHadid is making it known that a suede coat is fall’s best piece → http://t.co/j0kjgID5be pic.twitter.com/lxt48O8kwo — Who What Wear (@WhoWhatWear) October 8, 2015
Gigi Hadid has had one busy month http://t.co/jj0OB2o3ww pic.twitter.com/vbv57WzE0Q
— The New York Times (@nytimes) October 6, 2015
.@GiGiHadid just had a flawless moment at Paris Fashion Week: http://t.co/ImSQmNyNBn — Who What Wear (@WhoWhatWear) October 6, 2015
The Lovely @GigiHadid Shows Us How To Layer Like a Supermodel: http://t.co/juyulwOV9s pic.twitter.com/FceqEHTLQM
— Teen Vogue (@TeenVogue) October 5, 2015
Gigi Hadid’s Legs Could Not Possibly Look Any Longer Than They Did Last Night http://t.co/3K0D4XmToH pic.twitter.com/N4jGJWtkyJ — ELLE Magazine (US) (@ELLEmagazine) October 4, 2015
Gigi Hadid puts the body shamers to rest in a figure-hugging silhouette in Paris: http://t.co/OMvk24nkk3
— Vogue Magazine (@voguemagazine) October 4, 2015
We love you just the way you are, @GiGiHadid! ?? –> http://t.co/EjuFVMgnnp pic.twitter.com/yqnZYauv6z — VH1 (@VH1) October 3, 2015
Taylor Swift
Taylor Swift reveals what she learned from feud with @NickiMinaj http://t.co/sHUfUpWDtM pic.twitter.com/6ggpHAYEer
— TIME.com (@TIME) October 8, 2015
Even Taylor Swift has Taylor Swift fatigue: http://t.co/b8h6YF6N3E pic.twitter.com/Z8Dg6TT0M6 — ELLE Magazine (US) (@ELLEmagazine) October 8, 2015
Oh no! Taylor Swift suffered a makeup malfunction in NYC! http://t.co/xpHQRUuD8l pic.twitter.com/vKdvC19KRn
— HollywoodLife (@HollywoodLife) October 8, 2015
Hey, @TaylorSwift13 made you a playlist to help your life become a little more awesome! http://t.co/EbxRFuTu3y pic.twitter.com/npixzaYdSH — EntertainmentTonight (@etnow) October 8, 2015
This is not how Taylor Swift would welcome ANYONE to New York. #AHSHotel
— refinery29 (@Refinery29) October 8, 2015
Taylor Swift is all about #SquadGoals http://t.co/VcGl5kwIE1 — billboard (@billboard) October 7, 2015
See Taylor Swift’s Girl Squad Reimagined as Superheroes: Selena Gomez, Karlie Kloss, Gigi Hadid and More! http://t.co/tjDqofjiHT
— E! News (@ENews) October 5, 2015
Taylor Swift poses in a bikini for GQ cover, still doesn’t show her belly button http://t.co/BUcJ47L3HS pic.twitter.com/iimzLEeTU1 — Huffington Post (@HuffingtonPost) October 8, 2015
Why Taylor Swift is taking a break from music: http://t.co/ABIZhiqeUr pic.twitter.com/jd7sqEhIkz
— Us Weekly (@usweekly) October 8, 2015
Taylor Swift is taking her Twitter quarrels to text messages from now on: http://t.co/QHsEFqoCAs pic.twitter.com/EQOnvtWRw3 — New York Magazine (@NYMag) October 8, 2015
Amy Schumer
#ENews is on now! We’re talking Amy Schumer & Jennifer Lawrence’s weekend, Vicki Gunvalson’s detox and much more. pic.twitter.com/SiDDYIOhS3
— E! News (@ENews) October 5, 2015
Your BFFs @AmySchumer, Jennifer Lawrence, Chris Pratt and @AzizAnsari all hung out this weekend http://t.co/Pe8x2mcxhp — TIME.com (@TIME) October 5, 2015
How Amy Schumer negotiated herself a multimillion-dollar raise https://t.co/3Drf5DXmoa pic.twitter.com/XCYVJswQMD
— VANITY FAIR (@VanityFair) October 1, 2015
Kudos to @amyschumer for explaining how ridiculously hard it is for women to get Birth Control http://t.co/7kdOXAbt95 pic.twitter.com/maVPq7ylUW — PRJKT RUBY (@PRJKTRUBY) September 28, 2015
Jennifer Lawrence
Jennifer Lawrence got 7% of the profits for “American Hustle” – but Bradley Cooper & 2 other male actors each got 9% http://t.co/K3lhT70qz4
— Los Angeles Times (@latimes) October 8, 2015
Jennifer Lawrence Says She Felt “Dead Inside” When the #HungerGames Finished Shooting: http://t.co/tD9YgHA0hJ pic.twitter.com/s7Wijb69mi — Teen Vogue (@TeenVogue) October 6, 2015
You don’t know happiness until you watch Oscar-winner J-Law stuff marshmallows in her mouth: http://t.co/KoDnf8A9NQ pic.twitter.com/JuMwf4M5iH
— ELLE Magazine (US) (@ELLEmagazine) October 5, 2015
Jennifer Lawrence leads the Hollywood charge against @realDonaldTrump: http://t.co/NuhomNXlDc pic.twitter.com/AujJe2KV1T — The Daily Beast (@thedailybeast) October 5, 2015
Jennifer Lawrence admits to peeing in sinks (via @thesuperficial) http://t.co/Wp8aWdtjj5
— TMZ (@TMZ) October 4, 2015
Jennifer Lawrence explains what it feels like to be Jennifer Lawrence http://t.co/I2IRc4ptFb — VANITY FAIR (@VanityFair) October 2, 2015
“But so what, Monique?” you might be saying. “The media’s only covering these ladies because they are some of the hottest stars today! This is nothing new.” You’re right; it is nothing new. What’s not new is that the media has consistently showcased white (or white-adjacent, in the case of the Kardashians) stars this way. Every move they make or thing they say becomes something that adds to the white, Eurocentric beauty and social standards that affect how we see each other and ourselves. These standards are also how the media judge what’s popular and what to write on.
These standards are the reason there’s such a lack of coverage of non-white stars. When was the last time you heard about Gabrielle Union’s strange habits or what Nicole Beharie wore to the gym or Naomi Campbell’s squad? When was the last time you heard about Gina Rodriguez’s favorite snacks or Lucy Liu talking about what it’s like to be Lucy Liu? When was the last time you heard about Eva Longoria or Eva Mendes discussing their weekends or being told “we love you for being you” by the media? I can’t recall.
“But what about Rihanna or Nicki Minaj! You just mentioned Minaj yesterday; doesn’t that count as coverage?” Rihanna and Nicki Minaj do get covered a lot, but you know why? Because they have to play a game to even get the coverage they get. From Rihanna’s latest interview with Vanity Fair, she revealed that she’s not the Bad Gal she portrays herself as, which might make some wonder why she’s even acting like something she’s not. I’ll tell you why—it’s because the media only listens to black women in the media when they perceive that black women are the ones who are “wrong.” What that means is that black women are consistently portrayed as “bad” or “angry” or “provocative” (in the wrong way) or somehow “not welcomed.” Rihanna’s original image wasn’t as the Bad Gal Rih Rih. Originally, she was a pop princess with “Pon de Replay.” She only blew up after she came out with her edgy new look and edgy sound, beginning with “Umbrella.” And Minaj, for all the grief I’ve given her about leading with her butt in music videos, is also playing the game. She’s probably far from the exoticized, fetishized version of herself she has to portray to the public. But being exoticized is how she gets play from people in the media. For all the love it seems like these stars get, try running a “peeing in the sink” headline with them at the center. If it was ever revealed that Minaj or Rihanna peed in a sink, it wouldn’t be as blasé as the Lawrence headline was. The headline would probably run like this:
“Scandal! Nicki Minaj used sinks as toilets!”
“The Bad Gal turned Nasty Gal! Rihanna’s strange bathroom habit!”
It’s the same nasty story, but different wording puts the same story in a completely different (and judgmental) light.
This doesn’t just apply to pop culture stories; the news gets twisted as well. Take for instance the recent Daily Beast article about a woman dying from an overdose in a crack house, otherwise called in the article a “cocaine apartment.” First of all, ain’t no such thing as a “cocaine apartment.” If a black or Latino woman had died, it would have been called a crack house in a dingy part of town, not a “cocaine apartment” in the ritzy part of New York. Just because it’s ritzy (i.e. on the white side of town) that makes the tragic story better? As Luvvie Ajayi from Awesomely Luvvie wrote:
The first thing she [the article’s writer] is doing to paint the picture of this woman is to remind us that she is beautiful and has three kids. Plus, the company she was keeping was of an accomplished producer. LOOK, LYALL. She wasn’t just hanging with hoodrats! YAY. If she were Black, they would have used this opportunity to remind us that she abandoned her 3 kids to go party in NYC and it doesn’t matter who she was hanging with. That part would be left out unless the person was worth describing in some villainous way.”
Then we get told that she had a “night of blowing off steam.” You mean she had a night of who knows what types of shenanigans? Right. That’s what you meant. Because when white woman takes to the city to party, it’s self-care. Yup.
In spite of the fact that the headline of the piece says she “overdoses,” it takes 2 paragraphs into the article for this writer to even bring up the idea that she MIGHT have been POSSIBLY doing cocaine. Talk about burying the lede. They even had a source tell that it is rumored that she liked drugs. WORD? I wouldn’t have thought.
The victim also wouldn’t have been humanized as being a “beautiful dermatologist” and she “possibly” did cocaine if she weren’t white. Black or Latino victims are never humanized to such a degree. We hardly ever learn what made them tick, what their personalities were like, etc. I’m not being callous about this woman’s death; it’s a sad thing. But it needs to be reported as the hard news story it is, not something as gentle as the article makes the story out to be.
The media is just as much of a victim as it is a perpetrator, but one thing those in the media can do is call each other out on it when biased coverage rears its ugly head (which is all the time). Just when I was gearing up to write about this, I saw Bossip was on the same wavelength:
Hear ye, Hear ye, we have something we want to discuss…
— Bossip (@Bossip) October 8, 2015
Just like you, we’re sick and damn tired of seeing media outlets using coded language and racist rhetoric to talk about people of color — Bossip (@Bossip) October 8, 2015
We’re tired of people giving Taylor Swift credit for #SquadGoals. We’re tired of outlets saying the Kardashians invented “thick”…
— Bossip (@Bossip) October 8, 2015
And we’re tired of crack houses being called “cocaine apartments” just because White people are in them. — Bossip (@Bossip) October 8, 2015
We’ve always covered it when outlets belittle Black lives and the Black experience, but we’re taking it to another level.
— Bossip (@Bossip) October 8, 2015
We have a new pillar on our site called #WeSeeYou where we are going to call these people out for their coded headlines and articles — Bossip (@Bossip) October 8, 2015
So bookmark the tab now because we’re taking the media to task and nobody is getting spared: http://t.co/dkFoGLBQFR
— Bossip (@Bossip) October 8, 2015
And if you, the reader, see anything that you think needs to get pointed out hashtag #WeSeeYou and we’ll be there. — Bossip (@Bossip) October 8, 2015
This has been a Bossip PSA. Get ready.
— Bossip (@Bossip) October 8, 2015
I applaud Bossip for doing this, and I hope more outlets follow suit. There needs to be accountability in how the media portrays people. And, when we as consumers see outlets doing this, such as when Buzzfeed decided that right after Viola Davis won her historic Emmy that it was the right time to say that Amy Schumer and Amy Poehler were the “greatest people” of the night for being white women with the same name, we need to call them out on it. We need to tweet them back when something gets in our craw. If we let them know enough that we don’t like the biased coverage, they’ll hear us. There have been some steps toward progress, but progress is something that always needs to be tended to.
What do you think about this? Give your opinions below!