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Showing results for: Latinx (page 11)

Can an ambitious black woman “have it all”? “Being Mary Jane” finds the answer in the end

Melanie McFarland
The BET drama ends in a different TV landscape from where it began, earns the title character's happily ever after

Please keep your #MyWhitePrivilege confessions to yourself, thanks

Chauncey DeVega
"White guilt" and "wokeness" are narcissistic distractions. The real work of social change isn't a hashtag

No, Cardi B is not like Bill Cosby: Controversy over resurfaced video is fueled by bad faith outrage

Rachel Leah
A resurfaced video from Cardi B has a lot of people seeing double standards where there are none

The entrenched segregation of New York City’s public high schools

Rachel Leah
Amid the nationwide conversation about inequity in higher ed, elite schools like Stuyvesant High are under scrutiny

How do you define the “best sex ever”?

Arielle Egozi
Welcome to Salon's new advice column on sex, love and relationships. Questions? Ask Arielle@Salon.com

Who “belongs” at elite universities? The raging hypocrisy of higher ed gatekeeping

Rachel Leah
What the elite college admissions scam reveals about race, privilege and the fight against affirmative action

Wayétu Moore on writing the immortal heroine of “She Would Be King”: “She grew as I grew”

D. Watkins
Salon talks to the novelist about fantasy in her storytelling and how U.S. and Liberian readers are different

2019 Oscars: Cringe-worthy “Green Book” Best Picture win marred an otherwise successful night

Melanie McFarland
Turns out the no-host option worked just fine. But the voters still can't resist making lazy choices at the top

Fresno’s Freedom School is changing the narrative on farming for black youth

The year-round vegetable farm and job-skills program is an investment in the city's African-American youth

7 family-friendly, totally Oscar-worthy Latino films

Rocio Lopez
We're looking back at exceptional Latino films with strong, culturally relevant characters

Zombie apocalypse is a bipartisan issue — on TVs across the U.S., at least

Melanie McFarland
Democrats and Republicans don't agree on much these days. "The Walking Dead" and "Stranger Things" are exceptions

What if TV told the truth about Chicago?

Melanie McFarland
Hate crime in Chicago isn't surprising, except to those who only know the place as seen on prime time

L.A. teachers on what was won — and which battles are next

Julianne Tveten
Teachers agree much more work remains on the local, state and national levels

Gina Rodriguez breaks down while defending herself against anti-black accusations

Zack Sharf
“If I have hurt you, I am sorry, and I will always be sorry,” Rodriguez said during a SiriusXM radio interview

The good cops of “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” are a scathing critique of destructive policing

Melanie McFarland
In the sixth season, the NBC comedy embarks upon a subplot that critiques stop and frisk and the super-cop myths

Why the CBS digital team needs black reporters covering the 2020 election

Melanie McFarland
CBS News’s failure to include a black reporter on its political embed unit is a grave miss on many fronts

Sandra Oh saved the Golden Globes: The good, bad and ugly of the 2019 awards

Melanie McFarland
The 76th annual Golden Globes was largely pointless and lacked an Oprah Moment. But at least we had Sandra Oh

Human rights group decries Twitter for its capacity to oppress women

Nicole Karlis
Social media's ills go beyond individual harassment and have become a global humanitarian issue

Natalie Portman on current aims of Time’s Up: “There is a resistance” to inclusion riders

Jude Dry
The "Vox Lux" actress is a founding member of Hollywood's anti-harassment initiative

“We’re one union”: Why Chicago teachers are out on the first charter school strike in the country

Rebecca Burns
Charter teachers' demands include equal pay for equal work

Urban communities of color increasingly reject charter schools

Jeff Bryant
Parents and grassroots organizations are pushing for elections as the only way to hold schools accountable

LGBTQ caravan migrants may have to “prove” their gender or sexual identity at U.S. border

Stefan Vogler
LGBTQ asylum-seekers have historically had to face bias and ignorance about gender identity and sexuality

For a new generation of farmers, accessing land is the first step toward tackling consolidation

Tom Perkins
Young farmers are staking out the space to change the face of America’s farmland
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