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Tag: TS Madison

  • HRC’s “American Dreams Tour” comes to Atlanta to sit down with Ts Madison 

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    Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice

    In response to the intense increase in anti-LBGTQ+ attacks on both a state and federal level, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) launched its American Dreams Tour: Equality Across America.

    HRC President Kelley Robinson is collaborating with local LBGTQ+ leadership and advocates to increase awareness of LGBTQ+ issues and raise the alarms for much needed organization and policy change in a wider effort to bring equality to every corner of the country.

    Through coordinated initiatives, the American Dreams tour looks to push back against the unprecedented wave of attacks against the LGBTQ+ community, from bans on gender-affirming care and curriculum censorship to anti-trans legislation and HIV funding cuts.

    The tour has made stops thus far in red-state cities where LGBTQ+ individuals are facing the most hostility, but where hope shines through the hate.

    This included an Atlanta stop which coincidentally coincides with the Atlanta Pride Festival weekend. Robinson joined alongside a pioneer in the Black Trans community, activist, and actress, TS Madison, sat down for an intimate kitchen table conversation about the importance of HIV prevention, care, and PrEP.

    Photo by Isaiag Singleton/The Atlanta Voice

    The kitchen table conversation was held at Ts Madison’s Starter House, a home for formerly incarcerated transgender women.

    Robinson said as the fight for equality marches forward, the American Dreams Tour aims to up light the important message that there isn’t just one American dream, but there are many.

    “The American dream has never belonged to just one kind of person. It has been built by people who dared to demand more, by women who marched, by workers who organized by Black folks who bled for Freedom, and by LGBTQ+ people who refused to disappear,” Robinson said. “Every time this country has tried to erase us, and we rebuilt something bigger with our stories, our truth, and our refusal to be silent.”

    Ts Madison says you have been on the wrong side of history, encouraging the erasure of Trans women.

    “Every time issues like this come up when you try to eliminate and erase people, they do it. They’re doing it to trans people now, they did it to people living with HIV and AIDS, they did it to gay people and black women,” she said. “We know we got on the right side, and that’s why what we do is important.”

    Also, the Fiscal Year 2026 budget released by the Trump administration, which maintains funding for existing domestic HIV care, treatment, and PrEP programs, cuts HIV prevention and surveillance at the CDC, housing, and other programs, amounting to cuts of over $1.5 billion.

    Some of the conversation between Robinson and Ts Madison centered on the Trump administration’s policies targeting HIV funding, trans identity, and the broader implications for marginalized communities.

    “They are only worried about power. They are not worried about anybody’s safety. They’re only worried about them being in power and their children’s children being in power,” TS Madison said.

    The tour also coincides with the launch of HRC’s “One Million Voices for Equality,” a nationwide campaign to engage one million LGBTQ+ people and allies. Among the planned stops, each stop features training by HRC Foundation’s Voices for Equality storytelling program to help people harness their private experiences as tools for change.

    Robinson reiterated that the Trump administration is taking the American people’s tax dollars and using them to bail out billionaires and the governments of other countries, taking away access to health care that people look for.

    “$3 billion has been cut from HIV prevention care, from mental health services, from the 988 hotlines,” she said. “We’ve got to see what’s happening and know that it’s not just about policies and numbers. It’s about the impacts that we’re starting to see right now and today in our communities, from Atlanta to Chicago, and everywhere in between, the real enemy is our government.”

    She also says the problem isn’t in your neighborhoods, and you can do something about the real problem by not putting certain people in power.

    Additionally, Ts Madison says the starter house is extremely important because the girls who step inside the house must be themselves and love themselves.

    “In this house, you must tell the girls that you are trans. We want you to live completely aloud because we want you to stand in resilience,” she said. “Do not fall into this place of you have to hide now, I need to be safe. You got to resist and the only way you’re going to get through anything is in numbers and resisting stuff by saying no, we’re not going to let that happen.”

    With the current climate and the attempted erasure of black successful transgender people like Ts Madison, she says the Trump administration and anyone who opposes basic human rights are going to have a fight on their hands.

    “They are going to have a fight on their hands because I am a girl who knows how to unify people, and I know how to unify by being real and by telling people to fight and not lay down because the only thing that’s laying down is the floor and you can walk all over the floor,” she said. “You got to be a thick wall.”

    “It’s our job to protect our people. They’re coming after Black women, especially black Trans women, and we must see it for what it is. They are attacking our power and our community,” Robinson said. “There is a place for healing and for accountability, but we must stand up and not allow the wrongdoings take place. We have a voice.”

    Madison and Robinson criticize the administration’s tactics, suggesting they aim to distract and divide people of color by scapegoating trans individuals.

    Also, Robinson emphasizes the importance of unity, resistance, and visibility for trans and Black individuals, advocating for active engagement and accountability from elected officials. The conversation concludes with a call to instill hope and strength in the community.

    Overall, this conversation about the importance of fighting back for LGBTQ+ rights are instilled in the hope of people, Ts Madison says.

    The importance of this conversation, she says, is for the LGBTQ+ community to fight back against hate and instill awareness that things and laws are changing.

    “If you watch TV long enough, you will be extremely afraid. I remember when he first got in office, and I was so afraid at first thinking I needed to get an SRS surgery so I could blend, but then I shook it and told myself I am who I am,” Madison said. “You don’t need to chop it off to get through because they’ll get you with a hole. What we need to do is stand in who we are and rally the truth and line the hands up to build a forceful wall against them.”

    She also says some people might be silent or “stealthy” but that might only be safe momentarily.

    “Being open, loud, and in color, and being strong brings numbers, builds walls, keeps things right, and that’s what matters,” she said.

    Ts Madison says she would like the Trans community to understand their importance and that their existence is a part of activism and ethics.

    “Do not be afraid to exist. Don’t let what you see on TV make you fearful. Do not fear. If you want to live in stealth, that’s great, but the more we speak out about us being trans, there’s power in immunity,” she said. “Go after your dreams. You are a gift to your families, and a prayer was answered.”

    In response to the intense increase in anti-LBGTQ+ attacks on both a state and federal level, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) launched its American Dreams Tour: Equality Across America.

    The American Dreams tour is a bold, nationwide initiative to spotlight LGBTQ+ resilience, resistance, and joy.

    HRC President Kelley Robinson is collaborating with local LBGTQ+ leadership and advocates to increase awareness of LGBTQ+ issues and raise the alarms for much needed organization and policy change in a wider effort to bring equality to every corner of the country.

    Through coordinated initiatives, the American Dreams tour looks to push back against the unprecedented wave of attacks against the LGBTQ+ community, from bans on gender-affirming care and curriculum censorship to anti-trans legislation and HIV funding cuts.

    The tour has made stops thus far in red-state cities where LGBTQ+ individuals are facing the most hostility, but where hope shines through the hate.

    This included an Atlanta stop which coincidentally co-inside with the Atlanta Pride Festival weekend. Robinson joined alongside a pioneer in the Black Trans community, activist, and actress, TS Madison, sat down for an intimate kitchen table conversation about the importance of HIV prevention, care, and PrEP.

    The kitchen table conversation was held at Ts Madison’s Starter House, a home for formerly incarcerated transgender women.

    Robinson said as the fight for equality marches forward, the American Dreams Tour aims to up light the important message that there isn’t just one American dream, but there are many.

    “The American dream has never belonged to just one kind of person. It has been built by people who dared to demand more, by women who marched, by workers who organized by Black folks who bled for Freedom, and by LGBTQ+ people who refused to disappear,” Robinson said. “Every time this country has tried to erase us, and we rebuilt something bigger with our stories, our truth, and our refusal to be silent.”

    Ts Madison says you have been on the wrong side of history, encouraging the erasure of Trans women.

    “Every time issues like this come up when you try to eliminate and erase people, they do it. They’re doing it to trans people now, they did it to people living with HIV and AIDS, they did it to gay people and black women,” she said. “We know we got on the right side, and that’s why what we do is important.”

    Also, the Fiscal Year 2026 budget released by the Trump administration, which maintains funding for existing domestic HIV care, treatment, and PrEP programs, cuts HIV prevention and surveillance at the CDC, housing, and other programs, amounting to cuts of over $1.5 billion.

    Some of the conversation between Robinson and Ts Madison centered on the Trump administration’s policies targeting HIV funding, trans identity, and the broader implications for marginalized communities.

    “They are only worried about power. They are not worried about anybody’s safety. They’re only worried about them being in power and their children’s children being in power,” TS Madison said.

    The tour also coincides with the launch of HRC’s “One Million Voices for Equality,” a nationwide campaign to engage one million LGBTQ+ people and allies. Among the planned stops, each stop features training by HRC Foundation’s Voices for Equality storytelling program to help people harness their private experiences as tools for change.

    Robinson reiterated that the Trump administration is taking the American people’s tax dollars and using them to bail out billionaires and the governments of other countries, taking away access to health care that people look for.

    “$3 billion has been cut from HIV prevention care, from mental health services, from the 988 hotlines,” she said. “We’ve got to see what’s happening and know that it’s not just about policies and numbers. It’s about the impacts that we’re starting to see right now and today in our communities, from Atlanta to Chicago, and everywhere in between, the real enemy is our government.”

    She also says the problem isn’t in your neighborhoods, and you can do something about the real problem by not putting certain people in power.

    Additionally, Ts Madison says the starter house is extremely important because the girls who step inside the house must be themselves and love themselves.

    “In this house, you must tell the girls that you are trans. We want you to live completely aloud because we want you to stand in resilience,” she said. “Do not fall into this place of you have to hide now, I need to be safe. You got to resist and the only way you’re going to get through anything is in numbers and resisting stuff by saying no, we’re not going to let that happen.”

    With the current climate and the attempted erasure of black successful transgender people like Ts Madison, she says the Trump administration and anyone who opposes basic human rights are going to have a fight on their hands.

    “They are going to have a fight on their hands because I am a girl who knows how to unify people, and I know how to unify by being real and by telling people to fight and not lay down because the only thing that’s laying down is the floor and you can walk all over the floor,” she said. “You got to be a thick wall.”

    “It’s our job to protect our people. They’re coming after Black women, especially black Trans women, and we must see it for what it is. They are attacking our power and our community,” Robinson said. “There is a place for healing and for accountability, but we must stand up and not allow the wrongdoings take place. We have a voice.”

    Madison and Robinson criticize the administration’s tactics, suggesting they aim to distract and divide people of color by scapegoating trans individuals.

    Also, Robinson emphasizes the importance of unity, resistance, and visibility for trans and Black individuals, advocating for active engagement and accountability from elected officials. The conversation concludes with a call to instill hope and strength in the community.

    Overall, this conversation about the importance of fighting back for LGBTQ+ rights are instilled in the hope of people, Ts Madison says.

    The importance of this conversation, she says, is for the LGBTQ+ community to fight back against hate and instill awareness that things and laws are changing.

    “If you watch TV long enough, you will be extremely afraid. I remember when he first got in office, and I was so afraid at first thinking I needed to get an SRS surgery so I could blend, but then I shook it and told myself I am who I am,” Madison said. “You don’t need to chop it off to get through because they’ll get you with a hole. What we need to do is stand in who we are and rally the truth and line the hands up to build a forceful wall against them.”

    She also says some people might be silent or “stealthy,” but that might only be safe momentarily.

    “Being open, loud, and in color, and being strong brings numbers, builds walls, keeps things right, and that’s what matters,” she said.

    Ts Madison says she would like the Trans community to understand their importance and that their existence is a part of activism and ethics.

    “Do not be afraid to exist. Don’t let what you see on TV make you fearful. Do not fear. If you want to live in stealth, that’s great, but the more we speak out about us being trans, there’s power in immunity,” she said. “Go after your dreams. You are a gift to your families, and a prayer was answered.”

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  • Until You Do Right By Me! Mo’Nique Might Finally End Her Sweet Baby Beef With Tyler Perry & Oprah If Madea Mediates

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    It’s still up and stuck for Mo’Nique’s multimillion-dollar beef with Oprah and Tyler Perry, but she thinks they might squash it if she has a meetup with Madea. “Madea’s a real b***h, and you get you the way,” she joked.

    Source: Steve Granitz/Gilbert Flores

    Mo’Nique sat down for a sisterly moment on Outlaws with TS Madison. Maddy dove into how The Parkers star handles fame, her marriage, and unfinished business with Tyler Perry and Oprah Winfrey. Mo’Nique clarified that she has love for both of her former collaborators. However, she vowed with the strength of Celie’s two fingers that she “will not stop” coming for them or her money anytime soon.

    The actress made that clear when she called out the hypocrisy in Perry’s speech about the music industry’s debt owed to Angie Stone. When Madion asked how Mo’Nique handles celebrity gossip and lies, she couldn’t help but bring up the longstanding beef. Although Mo’Nique recently made peace with Precious director Lee Daniels, the fallout from the film is far from finished for the actress.

    “One of the biggest entertainers in the world is Tyler Perry, and Tyler Perry told a lie on me. That lie cost me 12 years of my career,” she said. “Until he fixes it, I will not stop, because that’s how the monster is created. We’re too afraid, we’re too scared, we’re too fearful that you’re gonna take something from me, so I’m just not gonna say anything.”

    “As long as I can help it, I’m saying: ‘Tyler Perry you will not do this to another.’ As long as I can help it because you told a lie. And you feel like you have the God complex, so I ain’t gotta fix it. Either you’ll fix it in life or you’ll be dealt with in death… but I’m not going anywhere until you take accountability and fix it. Y’all messed with my livelihood, which messes with my family. So until they fix it, I’m not backing down.”

    Mo’Nique Wants Resolution & “Restitution” From Tyler Perry, Suggests Madea Can Help Because “She’s The Realest B***h!”

    Mo’Nique noted that the director called her with a Mea Culpa, which she recorded and released. That’s still not enough because she wants the apology to be as loud and expensive as the disrespect. She claimed no amount of charity makes up for the fact that Perry cost her “millions, and millions, and millions of dollars.”

    “You see what Lee Daniels did. That man walked out on that stage publicly. You publicly shamed me, so now you have to publicly fix it. Tyler Perry, you cost my family millions, and millions, and millions of dollars. And it’s a beautiful thing when you tip somebody $3,000, it’s a beautiful thing when you give somebody $400,000 because their house burned down,” she said.

    “Those are good deeds. However, you know what you did to a Black woman named Mo’Nique. So all of that, the universe is watching and saying, ‘We see what you’re trying to do, but you can’t fool us.’ And I don’t believe I’m the only one,” she continued.

    Mo’Nique claimed that publicly admitting fault will be a blow to the “God complex” she said Perry and Oprah share. Still, that’s not enough to balance the scales after all this time. She “unapologetically” claimed that hitting both the ego and the pockets for “restitution” will set a precedent that protects others.

    After Mo’Nique put more low-down drama on blast about Oprah “messing with” her family and her marriage, she brought it back to healing.

    “Would I love to talk to [Oprah]? Yes! Would I love to talk to Tyler Perry? Yes! Let’s have a public, open conversation… and hopefully, show our community what healing looks like,” Mo’Nique clarified.

    When The Deliverance star discussed encouraging Madison to work with Perry, she let him have some comedic clapbacks. If he’s not up for the reunion, Mo’Nique said she’d rather meet up with Madea.

    “Tyler, stop running! Stop the running! He’s a runner, he’s a track star,” she sang, busting out laughing. “I’m right here, baby! Now, listen, if you let us talk to Madea… Madea’s a real b***h, and you get you the way. Put your dress on and your wig and your makeup and let’s have lunch together because Madea gets the s**t! Tyler Perry, you know, thinks a lot of things of himself, but Madea? That’s the realest b***h in the market!”

    Watch the Mo’Nique’s full interview on Outlaws with TS Madison below.

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  • How ‘The Perfect Find’ on Netflix Compares to the Book

    How ‘The Perfect Find’ on Netflix Compares to the Book

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    Minor spoilers for The Perfect Find below.

    Written by Tia Williams (of Seven Days in June fame), The Perfect Find follows Jenna, a 40-year-old editor working and living in New York City. When she gets fired from her media job at Darling magazine, she begins working at StyleZine, an online fashion magazine run by her former rival Darcy. While on the job, Jenna starts collaborating with her crush, a young videographer named Eric, who also happens to be Darcy’s son. From there, chaos and romance ensue.

    Williams co-wrote the new Netflix film adaptation, which was released on June 23, with Leigh Davenport (Run the World). Numa Perrier (Jezebel) direcots, Gabrielle Union stars as Jenna, and Keith Powers plays Eric. Other notable names in the cast are Gina Torres, Janet Hubert, La La Anthony, and TS Madison. (The rapper Remy Ma even makes a cameo).

    It’s always tricky when a novel gets adapted for the screen. Something is always bound to be missing or slightly different, and the director is likely to take several creative liberties and infuse the source material with their own style and perspective. The Perfect Find is no different. Below, we break down some of the biggest differences between the book and the movie.

    Jenna and Eric’s Romantic Timeline

    In the book, Jenna and Eric’s romance is a slow burn. After they first meet at a party and later discover that they’ll be working together, the relationship turns into a strong case of love-hate. And they bicker constantly. The frenemies-to-lovers pipeline is slowly teased out over the course of the book. But in the movie, their romantic timeline picks up speed and they get to the “lovers” portion of their relationship much quicker.

    Darcy’s Backstory

    In the book, Jenna’s boss Darcy (played by Gina Torres in the movie) is given a very intricate, and heartbreaking, backstory. She describes her childhood as “gothic” as she tells Jenna all about her abusive father. At 14, when he caught her drinking, she was shipped off to a Catholic reform school. And when she got pregnant with Eric at 16, he attempted to give her an abortion by pouring mineral oil down her throat. But in the movie, we’re not given much in-depth context about Darcy as a character.

    the perfect find l to r gabrielle union as jenna and keith powers as eric in the perfect find cr alyssa longchamp netflix © 2023

    Gabrielle Union as Jenna and Keith Powers as Eric.

    Alyssa Longchamp//Netflix

    StyleZine Becomes DarcyZine

    In the book, the company that Jenna goes to work for is called StyleZine, but in the movie, the name is changed to DarcyZine after Gina Torres’ character.

    Jenna’s Mom

    In the movie, Jenna’s mom Monica (played by The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air’s Janet Hubert) makes a few key appearances. She’s present at the beginning of the movie when Jenna loses her job and comes back later on via a lengthy phone call. However, in the book, Monica doesn’t exist and Jenna’s mom doesn’t play a central role in the plot.

    the perfect find l to r keith powers as eric and gabrielle union as jenna in the perfect find cr alyssa longchampnetflix © 2023

    Alyssa Longchamp//Netflix

    Watch The Perfect Find on Netflix

    Headshot of Juliana Ukiomogbe

    Juliana Ukiomogbe is the Assistant Editor at ELLE. Her work has previously appeared in Interview, i-D, Teen Vogue, Nylon, and more.  

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