Browse links
US residents can opt out of "sales" of personal data.
Yes, there's a lot of work to be done, but this past year wasn't all bad.
During an early 2016 episode, called "Hope," Dre (Anthony Anderson) and his wife Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) got into a discussion about police brutality as the family waited to see if a police officer would be indicted for killing a black man who was unarmed. (By Michael Blackmon)
Beasts of No Nation star Abraham Attah won Best Male Lead, Beasts star Idris Elba won Best Supporting Male, and Tangerine star Mya Taylor won Best Supporting Female. Taylor also became the first transgender actor to win a major film award. “There is transgender talent,” she said in her acceptance speech. “You better get out there and put it in your movie.” (By Jarett Wieselman)
Judy (Ginnifer Goodwin), Nick (Jason Bateman), and the other Zootopia characters reference things — like how the mayor hired someone to secure “the sheep vote” — that signal the movie's aims unmissably to older viewers. Judy, for example, becomes the first rabbit to graduate from the police academy courtesy of a “mammal inclusion initiative.” And she firmly asserts that “a bunny can call another bunny ‘cute,’” but that it’s not OK for other animals to do it. Also, there's this scene about why you can't just touch a sheep's wool. (By Alison Willmore)
Lilly Wachowski, the filmmaker who rose to prominence with the 1999 film The Matrix, came out as transgender to Chicago's Windy City Times in March. In her statement, the writer, director, and producer — whose sister, Lana, came out as transgender in 2012 — said, "We need to elevate the dialogue beyond the simplicity of binary. Binary is a false idol." (By Ariane Lange)
“I’ve gotten letters from bisexual friends that have written to me, and said that actually, when I kissed White Josh, they were holding their breath because they were just waiting for me to go, ‘Nope! Not gay!’” Pete Gardner, who plays Darryl, told BuzzFeed News. Their sexual orientation, he said, is portrayed “like a joke. And that’s just not what it is [with Darryl].” (Reporting by Ariane Lange)
“I was like, ‘I want to be paid the same as Kevin [Spacey],’” the actor recalled during a conversation with the president of the Rockefeller Foundation, Judith Rodin. “It was the perfect paradigm. There are very few films or TV shows where the male, the patriarch, and the matriarch are equal. And they are in House of Cards. I was looking at the statistics and Claire Underwood’s character was more popular than [Frank’s] for a period of time. So I capitalized on it. I was like, ‘You better pay me or I’m going to go public.’ And they did.” (By Krystie Lee Yandoli)
Pee-wee Herman has long been something of a queer character, but his sexual identity has always been speculative. But when he returned with Pee-wee’s Big Holiday on Netflix, he brought with him a truly queer love story. The subtlety of Pee-wee and Joe Manganiello’s romance in Big Holiday was not repressive so much as subversive. The use of queer themes in what’s largely a kids movie introduced young audiences to the idea of bucking societal trends in a playful but powerful way.
And in the Gilmore Girls revival, also on Netflix, Stars Hollow finally got a little gayer. Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life doesn’t deserve too much credit for its minor uptick in gay representation, but Michel’s (Yanic Truesdale) casual coming-out is still something to be celebrated — it was both matter-of-fact and integral to his storyline, as we learned his husband wants to adopt a child and Michel isn’t exactly a kid person. (By Louis Peitzman)
Nearly half were female, and about two-fifths were people of color, including Idris Elba, Vivica A. Fox, Tessa Thompson, America Ferrera, Daniel Dae Kim, Ryan Coogler, Karyn Kusama, Lana and Lilly Wachowski, and Taika Waititi. And it was about damn time. (By Susan Cheng)
“We really were trying to make sure that no one thought it was something that happened that made him gay,” Star Trek Beyond co-writer and star Simon Pegg told BuzzFeed News. (Reporting by Adam B. Vary)
Gay and Harvey wrote a spinoff of Ta-Nehisi Coates’s Black Panther comics called Black Panther: World Of Wakanda. And it was long overdue. (By Alanna Bennett)
Also in 2016, Marvel announced that the new Iron Man would be a 15-year-old black girl and America Chavez, a young queer Latina character from another dimension, finally got her own Marvel solo title. (By Alanna Bennett)
For the first time in the 68-year history of the Emmys, actors of color were nominated in all six leading actor categories for the 2016 awards. They included Rami Malek (Mr. Robot) for Lead Actor in a Drama; Viola Davis (How to Get Away With Murder) and Taraji P. Henson (Empire) for Lead Actress in a Drama; Anthony Anderson (Black-ish) and Aziz Ansari (Master of None) for Lead Actor in a Comedy; Tracee Ellis Ross (Black-ish) for Lead Actress in a Comedy; Idris Elba (Luther), Cuba Gooding Jr. (The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story), and Courtney B. Vance (The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story) for Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie; and Audra McDonald (Lady Day at Emerson's Bar and Grill) and Kerry Washington (Confirmation) for Lead Actress in a Limited Series or Movie. Malek and Vance eventually took home the honors. (By Louis Peitzman)
In years past, a handful of South Asian actors have received Emmy nominations, but none have been for leading roles on a television series. In 2005, Naveen Andrews earned a nod for a supporting role on Lost, and Ben Kingsley was nominated on four separate occasions for his parts in four miniseries. Even though he didn't win, Ansari still made history. (By Susan Cheng)
In addition to Auli‘i Cravalho as Moana and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson as Maui, Moana's parents (above) were voiced by Temuera Morrison, who's of Māori descent, and Hawaii-born Nicole Scherzinger; Tamatoa was voiced by Jemaine Clement and Gramma Tala was voiced by Rachel House, both of whom are of Māori descent. (By Keely Flaherty)
“That was a deliberate attempt, partly inspired by wanting her to be different,” director John Musker told BuzzFeed News. “And then we wanted her to be an action hero, capable of action. ... Certainly some of the women involved in the film, our producer and some [others], were very supportive and more involved in that as well — pushing, ‘Let’s not have her be a wasp-thin woman. Let’s have her be a more realistic body shape and feel like she’s not going to be blown over by a strong wind.’” (Reporting by Keely Flaherty)
“I get messages every day from little trans girls and boys who say, ‘I’m not going to kill myself because I see you,’” Grey said at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival. “We’re doing something right if we’re putting this kind of program out and sharing that message.”
At the Emmys, Jeffrey Tambor, a cisgender male who won an award for his portrayal of the trans woman at the center of the show, said, "To you producers, you network owners, and you agents, and you creative sparks — please give transgender talent a chance. ... I would not be unhappy were I the last cisgender male to play a female transgender [character] on television." (Reporting by Katie Hasty and Krystie Lee Yandoli)
Barry Jenkins' Moonlight took the exploration of race and identity of Medicine for Melancholy and expanded it into this soaring and gorgeous work of cinematic maturity that was one of the best of 2016. (By Alison Willmore)
Welcome, Melissa Villaseñor. It's only been 41 seasons. (By Pablo Valdivia and Susan Cheng)
American Honey is an extreme example of a woman’s sexual awakening, but in Star’s (Sasha Lane) sometimes confident, sometimes self-defeating, maybe impossible attempt to claim her life and her body, it feels real. “There’s not a lot of female sexuality in films generally,” director and writer Andrea Arnold told BuzzFeed News. (Reporting by Ariane Lange)
Fowler — who has less pronounced cerebral palsy than JJ, his character on the ABC sitcom — is one of the only actors with a disability playing a character with a disability on primetime network TV. “I just really hope in the future that more disabled people will be on TV,” he told BuzzFeed News. (Reporting by Ariane Lange)
2016 introduced us to Fleabag and Crashing, two funny, foul-mouthed, and sexually frank shows from Phoebe Waller-Bridge that vaulted her into the treasured, slowly expanding, still predominantly white ranks of dramedy’s unladylike ladies — its Schumers, Dunhams, Raes, Blooms, and Wiigs. Waller-Bridge’s saltiness included plenty of gags about and scenes of sex, but it was as part of a larger interest in intimate awkwardness — she’s a more general connoisseur of the animal indignities of the human body, the way its fleshy unpredictability is always there, often in defiance of our attempts at respectability and reserve. If this is how far Waller-Bridge came in just one year, we should all brace ourselves for this next one. (By Alison Willmore)
And he brought with him a quietly groundbreaking Asian-American couple as well. (By Susan Cheng)
“That was the plan, from the beginning: Let’s tell a story about someone who knows this is right for her, has a supportive partner, but does kind of have to go through the process,” Joanna Calo, who wrote the BoJack Horseman episode in which Diane (Alison Brie) has an abortion, told BuzzFeed News. “We tried to make it — in our ridiculous cartoon world — very grounded.” And on Jane the Virgin, Xiomara (Andrea Navedo) also had an abortion in 2016, and she was confident in her choice. "In the writers room, we talked about how we didn’t want the drama of the episode to be about Xo’s choice — because we didn’t think she’d be conflicted," showrunner Jennie Snyder Urman told BuzzFeed News. You're the Worst and consistent groundbreaker Crazy Ex-Girlfriend featured similar guilt-free storylines. (Reporting by Ariane Lange and Alanna Bennett)
“I was like, well, there was never very much information or detail at the beginning of the story as to why Belle didn’t fit in, other than she liked books. ... So, we created a backstory for her, which was that she had invented a kind of washing machine, so that, instead of doing laundry, she could sit and use that time to read instead,” Watson told Entertainment Weekly. “So, yeah, we made Belle an inventor.” (By Keely Flaherty)