Sentences with phrase «women portraying women»

Come on, the lead actress could've been a multicultural set of nominees with both Constance Wu and Tracee Ellis Ross in the mix besides Rodriguez, just as Randall Park and Anthony Anderson in lead actor, because there's no way that's happening at the Emmys, Also, instead of Niecy Nash in supporting you've got a white woman portraying a woman of color in whiteface.

Not exact matches

SXSW screwed up last October when it canceled two panels that revolved around Gamergate, an ongoing debate in the video game community about the way women are portrayed in the gaming culture.
It is an online community of gamers that are upset that people are speaking out against the objectified way women are portrayed in gaming culture on - screen, and the community has also provided some resistance to the growing number of female gamers.
Contrary to what is often portrayed in the media, being a woman entrepreneur in the tech community has its perks.
Unilever, the parent company of dozens of household brands such as Dove, stopped producing ads featuring gender stereotypes in 2016 upon determining that a mere 2 percent of all ads feature intelligent women, 3 percent show women in positions of power and 1 percent portray women with a sense of humor, Fortune reports.
It's the first time in U.S. history that Lady Liberty will be portrayed as a woman of color, and she is beautiful.
«People are trusting us with plans that revolve around personal safety, so we have to portray ourselves as the businessmen and - women that we are,» he says.
Was this particular way of portraying a successful business woman exploitative, as one letter - writer suggested?
While the previous man, portrayed by Goldsmith, was seen reflecting on past experiences from the corners of a dark bar with a bevy of beautiful women on his arms, Legrand will be more of an action hero — whether it's chopping a coconut in half with his bare hand, running down a street clutching a pig or retrieving a soccer ball from inside a well.
For example, why women were portrayed (in modern TV anyways) as being as interested in sex as men.
Not pure pornographic sex, but the use of sexually attractive models for ads, men and women wearing provocative clothing who sing (or who can't sing, but no one cares), Songs and movies that portray sexual issues without the love that should be the focus, and so on.
This woman has been preparing for this moment for some time and is far from the young vulnerable college student she attempts to portray.
When we realize that Marilla had loved John Blythe once upon a time, the series portrays our Marilla as a woman — not the caricature of a cold spinster.
With honor and high regard for men and women alike, it beautifully portrays the wonder of what can happen when we take our places together and walk out the gifts and callings that God has placed within us as His Church.
Mary is portrayed in the series as a young woman at the Nativity, then later in life.
For what other novel has so successfully portrayed the operation of invisible grace through such lyrical descriptions of the visible actions of sinful men and women?
From Heretic Husband: I'm interested in your thoughts on how women are portrayed on TV and in movies.
His Gospel is known for its attention to women, but they are portrayed in accord with his strong emphasis on piety and filial obedience.
For instance I hear a lot of egalitarian woman say that it bothers them when women are portrayed as needing to be rescued and protected but I like it when my husband protects me and stands guard in our home.
This story is not up to date and isn't entirely accurate to portraying the fact that the opponents are traditional Jews (both men and women) who do not want there to be egalitarian space for the women to pray as they wish.
That's good news for women who want to portray multidimensional characters and right now, Plaza is playing one of the most bonkers on television.
Often, we see women, particularly mothers, portrayed in extremes that are aspirational, but just a few steps outside of reality.
Is it more urgent - with the Me Too and Time's Up movements currently waging a war on Hollywood - to portray women in that way?
The Muslim lady tries to portray Islam as harmless and benign, while stating that Muslims treat women «equally.»
Set in the Holy Land in the first century, it tells the story of a young woman joining a new social movement led by Jesus of Nazareth - and the 43 - year - old portrays the Messiah himself.
(One partial exception to the commission's study results may be the popular program «Golden Girls,» in which the major characters are all women — who are generally portrayed with less egregious exaggeration than some other shows» characters.)
For instance, feminists disagree on the interpretation of Swept Away, a Lina Wertmuller film that portrays an upper - class woman who is sexually dominated by her servant and who eventually begins to enjoy the domination.
It argues that an author could portray, for example, a rape scene — even a scene in which a woman enjoys rape — in constructing a story that is ultimately and thoroughly feminist.
(besides, a wisdom - seeker as a woman makes plenty of sense seeing that is how wisdom is portrayed as a woman - character in multiple religious literature, including but not limited to the Old Testament...)
11:3 is probably not meant to designate a hierarchy but to suggest woman's «source» or «origin» as portrayed in Gen. 2).
All I am offering is that perhaps thinking of these in the light of Joseph being portrayed as inconsiderate in focussing on his feeling in the context of your cartoon with the differing status awarded to women being virgins in that particular culture might be worth considering.
I don't buy the narrative and I think it detrimental to women to be portrayed as victims in that.
Just imagine what a painful experience that must have been for young women who had been socialized for domesticity, girls who had grown up in the 1950s to expect life as it was portrayed in the Ladies Home Journal and Good Housekeeping.
But for those who want to long for the good old AMC - portrayed America before liberals messed everything up, when men were men, women women, and everyone dressed so proper, it does not really compute that Grant became an acid - apostle.
Apparently, teenage pregnancy is on the rise this year, and some sociologists believe it may have something to do with the movies «Knocked Up» and «Juno» which portrayed two young women who became pregnant and decided not to abort.
Sometimes it is by a revealing incident, commonly, however, by a telling analysis of what the subject of the story «thought in his heart» — but, by whatever means, the writers succeed in portraying the inmost nature of the men and women who under their hands move across the scene before us.
But he also quotes another expert who complains that the middle - class white women are portrayed in such a cartoonish way that they don't really challenge the audience.
Since, in the initial act of distancing, the gods were portrayed as idealized men and women, the beauty celebrated by the Greeks was ever the beauty of the human body.
In the 1950s a whole gender of literature known as «The Onitsha market Literature of Nigeria» focused on the economic activities of Ibo women describing them as viragoes, witches and prostitutes or else portraying them as money - loving, adulterous killers.
We tend to think of men as less nurturing than women, thanks in no small part to images in pop culture and the media as portraying men as lovable buffoons who mean well and try to do well but ultimately don't have the common sense to find their own behinds with both hands and a compass... unless, of course, we have an understanding and vastly more mature wife to help us along.
The letters showed a different woman than the symbol of Christian love and unwavering faith that much of the media portrayed her as.
The «power of words» jumped up a few places on the chart and peaked as the fourth most - popular topic (behind voting, marriage, and forgiveness) following the release of the Access Hollywood clip portraying Trump's crude remarks on women last month.
The ideal woman was not a flesh and blood woman, she was portrayed as sweet, passive, docile, compliant, obedient, virginal, and unreal, hardly the qualities that would empower younger females today to break out of their stereotypical expectations.
Though the HHS mandate represents an expansion of government power into the heart of many religious institutions, efforts to resist this expansion were portrayed by HHS Secretary Sebelius as a «war against women,» a label that has stuck and a narrative that the Democratic party during its Convention sought to make a dominant theme of the campaign» it would seem, with considerable success.
When John presents most of the male disciples as passive observers of Jesus» deeds, the women are portrayed as active respondents to Jesus» words and deeds.49 They did virtuous deeds such as hosting dinner, serving at the table, overseeing the feast, and anointing Jesus» feet — all challenging works that no other persons took initiative to do.
From time immemorial, women are portrayed as «powerless» beings.
Women as strong leaders are portrayed in the Hellenistic Jewish story of Judith and in the rule of Salome Alexandra as queen in Judea (approximately 76 - 67 BCE).
Besides the conditions of society itself, under which family and friends had primary responsibility for the care of the dying and the dead, memento mon were spread throughout culture: in the church's art, in morality plays like Everyman, in drinking songs, in the ordinary artifacts of everyday life (e.g., in Austria a towel hanger portraying a human form split down the middle: one half a beautiful young woman, the other a skeleton) To be sure, the specter of death (and judgment) has been used as a form of social control.
The Ruth I had come to know was not a passive woman as traditionally portrayed, but a gutsy risk taker who embraces the gospel by breaking all the conventional rules.
These stories by Luke (who is fairest to women of all the evangelists) portray Mary as the first disciple.
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