How finding your voice creates change.

when i walked into this room

some of you saw me as a model some of

you saw me as an entrepreneur

maybe someone that you follow on social

media and some of you have no clue who i

am and that’s cool too because you’re

going to find out

but to me when i walk into a room

i’m all of those things but i’m first

and foremost

a black woman now i had to start today

like this because

i felt like i could speak to you about

creativity within crisis

social media the modeling industry or

anything really about my experiences

being shaped to an extent

by the colour of my skin

now i was thrust into this crazy

industry when i was 14 years old

when i was scattered coming home from

school i was an academic school girl

whose main concerns were

getting good grades and being on the

netball team

and i guess you could say that i was

super naive

although i was aware of race i wasn’t

truly exposed

to the ignorance of racism until i

entered into the modelling industry

at this age i was very into fashion i

actually wanted to be a fashion

journalist

but i guess you could say i never

noticed the lack of representation

within the fashion industry because

it was never questioned before it was

normal for me to walk into a store

and look at all the campaign imagery and

see nobody who looked like me

or go to a makeup counter and not see

any brown faces of beauty

but i guess that kind of made sense

because back then there wasn’t even any

foundations in my shades so

and also remember i was only 14

so the only magazine that i was

collecting was the argos catalogue to

circle my christmas presents

so you can imagine that when i entered

into this industry i thought it was

going to be some sort of like

america’s next top model diverse fantasy

land like

i didn’t think that my race was going to

play such a big part of my experiences

within the industry

but one thing that i do remember though

was the first time

that i saw our lenno’s lancome campaign

it was very poignant to me because i’d

just been signed maybe a few months or

so

and i was coming home from some of my

first castings and i looked up on the

side of a building in old street and i

saw her face

it was huge a huge billboard

the first time that i’d ever seen a

black model’s face alone

so big in london before it was a warm

feeling

i felt seen and represented and i could

achieve big things in this crazy

industry that i just stumbled into

but as i became more acquainted with my

surroundings

it became very weird to me for an

industry that felt almost purposely void

of black people that it was white people

who made me feel so hyper aware that i

wasn’t

like them that my experiences were going

to differ greatly to that of a white

models

and i learned at a very young age that i

was going to be put in scenarios where

i’d be treated differently

simply because i was black now let me

just

paint a little picture for you i was

given the amazing advice

by an agent to never go into a casting

after another black girl

just in case the casting director got us

confused and it made it even harder to

get that one spot out of 50 that was

reserved for a black model

but this same casting director didn’t

seem to have a problem differentiating

between the

10 to 15 blond-haired blue-eyed white

girls who are gonna walk the same show

but it’s me and my bald-headed friend

grace bowl who couldn’t be seen next to

each other

all right that’s me and my friends going

into the castle by the way like what

wait what

i was basically told to lower my

expectations

of what i could achieve within the

industry simply because i was black

and that anybody who was even close to

my complexion

should be considered my competition but

i knew that white models didn’t have to

feel that way

maybe because they had the same hair

color as another girl or eye color or

maybe because they actually

looked like somebody else but never

because of their race

but these were some of the things that

every single black model experienced

in one way shape or form when entering

into the industry

and we accepted it because we didn’t

know any better

we were young we were impressionable and

we were actually made to feel that we

should even be

grateful to be part of such an amazing

industry

it was normalized and we often felt like

we didn’t have

a voice or a safe space to communicate

because whenever you as a black model

did decide to speak up you were given

the fierce diva or the

angry black girl tag there was even a

time when i was verbally attacked by a

male hairdresser for simply stating that

putting a water-based product in my hair

would make it frizz and the look was

meant to be straight and shiny

and when i tried to voice these concerns

to my agents

of course they were appalled but the

general consensus was

sorry babe you know that’s just like the

way of the world like i’m sorry that’s

happening to you but can you just like

be professional and uh take it on the

chin

is my name floyd mayweather to be taking

verbal abuse from a white man on the

chin

is this a boxing ring or is this

backstage at a fashion show

let me know

i was genuinely at a loss as to where i

stood because

remember i’m a teenage girl so i already

had the usual

teenage issues of insecurities

bullying you know not knowing yourself

and then all of a sudden i was a model

and everybody was telling me that you

know you have pretty privilege right

and that i’m technically at an advantage

in the world

but then facts are in being black and

all of a sudden it was like

you’re pretty for a black girl and also

don’t be seen in the same room as

another black girl because you kind of

look the same

and your hair really difficult to work

with and your skin

won’t even make products for that and

generally speaking you’re going to be

paid less work less and treated less

than

simply because you were black it was a

confusing and exhausting time to be a

black girl within the industry

and these experiences extended online

too

as a young girl i would go online and i

would see endless

banter at the expense of black women

there would be jokes about being able to

physically abuse us with more ease due

to our skin tone

some of your now favorite celebrities

back in the day

jumped on the black girl as banter

bandwagon as well because it was simply

an easy way to get the whole timeline

laughing

with minimal retaliation and whenever

you as a black girl did try and defend

yourself online

everyone would say that it was just a

joke or that it was just a phase that

that person was going through

these were just some of the experiences

of black girls and

these existed online and offline for us

before this happened actually

i did feel kind of alone and i did feel

like

the only thing that i could do was put

my head down

and push through and hope that one day i

would be successful enough to not be

treated this way

and it’s crazy to think that at such a

young age i equated being successful

with the only way that i could be

treated with basic human respect

but but

there was only so much that these

situations and people could do

to try and crush my spirit and

determination after i finished school

i began working more and traveling and

meeting more and more black girls and we

back we began speaking and

sharing our stories and perspectives and

i realized that

i wasn’t as alone as i thought i met

people like

zuri tibby adesawa

grace bowl and jordan dunn and i began

to feel

hopeful i began to feel less alone and

that change was afoot

but i just didn’t know how to become a

part of it other than merely just

existing within the industry

and i guess we all kind of felt that

same way because we were still so young

and we were still in the process of

learning how truly powerful we as black

women were

but after years of upsetting situations

i realized that

my silence hadn’t gotten me a damn thing

those same hairdressers still had their

jobs those same racist fashion brands

were showing

every fashion week i was still going to

the toilets crying

every season and i was still meeting new

black girls who were echoing the exact

same experiences that i had had

and feeling like they had no voice and

that’s when i realized that my silence

made me complicit

in the mistreatment of the next

generation of black models

and that alone made me want to speak up

i stopped trying to toe the line because

i realized that my silence hadn’t gotten

me and my friends

anything social media played a huge part

in giving black women a platform to

share their stories and perspectives

and i guess i was subconsciously

inspired and thought why not me

one day i was backstage at a show during

new york fashion week

they asked who was available to do my

makeup and a hair a makeup artist put up

their hand

i sat in her chair and i realized that

she didn’t have any foundations that

were

in my skin tone at all she had 30

foundations for

white models and there was one brown

foundation which she was trying to make

work for me

instead of getting angry at that

situation though i use it as an

opportunity to kind of educate her and i

always carried my own makeup kit with me

this was an experience that i documented

online and i just kept it real about the

experiences of black models within the

industry

and it went viral i was so surprised and

shocked

not just because people were sharing

what i was saying but because they were

listening

and supporting me i was able to write

articles

and do interviews speaking about

diversity the lack of representation

within the fashion industry

and the experiences of black models

it was just such a crazy time for me i

realized that

finally after years within the industry

i had finally found my voice

and this was a feeling that i wanted to

extend to others

not just women within my industry a few

years later

i founded lap the brand which stands for

leo me anderson

the project the purpose the brand which

is both

an online clothing brand and

a platform and with the online platform

women can write about anything

be it sex mental health relationships

politics race whatever as long as you’re

a self-identifying woman

i guess you could say that if i hadn’t

gone on on that journey within the

modeling industry

and gone through those hardships and

found my voice

i wouldn’t have been even half as

inspired to start my own platform

because

i wouldn’t have seen the true power of

sharing your stories and having a voice

first

hand and this is something that i want

to encourage

everybody in this room to do today i

want all of you guys to think about ways

that you can help those

who go unseen or unheard be seen by

everybody

you don’t have to be a model with a big

social media following

or years of hardship anybody who’s in a

position of privilege

can help those who go unseen and looking

around this room

i’m seeing hell of privilege because

i wish that more people had stopped

acting legally blind to the experiences

of black models within the industry

and spoken up when they saw what was

happening to me and others like me

i wish that somebody had spoken up and

seen what i was going through

and gave me the confidence to speak up

on it as well

everybody’s story has the ability to

ignite

change but it can never be heard if it

is never told

what will you decide to do today and

thank you for coming to my ted talk

thank you

thank you

you

当我走进这个房间时

,你们中的一些人将我视为模特,

你们中的一些人将我视为企业家,

也许是您在社交媒体上关注的人,而你们中的

一些人不知道

我是谁,这也很酷,因为您

将 发现

但对我来说,当我走进一个房间时,

我就是所有这些东西,但我

首先是

一个黑人女性,现在我今天必须这样开始,

因为

我觉得我可以和你谈谈

危机

社交中的创造力 媒体模特行业或

任何与我的经历有关

的事情都在一定程度上

受到我的肤色的影响

现在我在 14 岁时被推入了这个疯狂的

行业,

那时我从学校回家时四散奔逃。

主要问题是

取得好成绩和加入

无挡板篮球队

,我想你可以说我

非常天真,

尽管我知道种族我并没有

真正接触

到种族主义的无知,直到我

在这个年龄进入模特行业 iw 由于非常喜欢时尚,我

实际上想成为一名时尚

记者,

但我想你可以说我从未

注意到

时尚界缺乏代表性,因为在

我走进商店

并查看所有内容之前从未受到质疑 竞选形象,

看到没有人长得像我,

或者去化妆柜台看不到

任何棕色美女的脸,

但我想这是有道理的,

因为那时

我的阴影中甚至没有任何粉底,

所以也记得我是 只有 14 份,

所以我唯一

收集的杂志是 argos 目录,用来

圈出我的圣诞礼物,

所以你可以想象,当我

进入这个行业时,我认为它

会有点像

美国的下一个顶级模特多样化的幻想之

地,就像

我一样 没想到我的比赛会

在我的行业经历中占据如此重要的一部分,

但我确实记得的一件事是

我第一次

看到我们的 lenno 的兰蔻

广告 这对我来说非常痛苦,因为

我刚签约几个月左右

,我刚从我的一些

第一次试镜回家,我抬头看着

老街的一栋建筑物的一侧,我

看到了她的

脸 巨大的广告

牌,我第一次在伦敦单独看到一个

黑人模特的脸

这么大,然后我感到被看到和代表了一种温暖的

感觉

,我可以

这个我刚刚偶然进入的疯狂行业中取得重大成就,

但作为 我对周围的环境更加熟悉了,

对于一个

几乎故意没有

黑人的行业

来说,这对我来说变得

很奇怪 与白人

模特相比

,我在很小的时候就知道,

我将被置于仅仅因为

我是黑人而受到不同待遇的场景中,

现在让

我为你画一张小画吧

一个惊人的

建议 n 经纪人永远不要

在另一个黑人女孩

之后进行选角,以防选角导演让我们

感到困惑,这

使得从 50

个黑人模特中获得一个位置变得更加困难,

但这位选角导演没有

似乎很难区分

10 到 15 个金发蓝眼睛的白人

女孩,她们将参加同一个节目,

但我和我的秃头朋友

格蕾丝·鲍尔彼此看不到,

好吧 我和我的朋友们

进入城堡的方式就像

等待

我基本上被告知要降低我

对我在行业内能够取得的成就的期望

仅仅因为我是黑人

并且任何与我肤色接近的人都

应该被视为我的 竞争,但

我知道白人模特不必有这种

感觉,

可能是因为他们的头发

颜色与另一个女孩或眼睛颜色相同,或者

可能是因为他们实际上

看起来像其他人,但绝不

是因为他们的种族 e

但是这些是

每个黑人模特

在进入这个行业时以一种形式或形式经历过的一些事情

,我们接受了它,因为我们不

知道

我们年轻,我们很容易受到影响,

我们实际上是有感觉的 我们

甚至应该

感激能成为这样一个令人惊叹的行业的一部分,

它已经正常化,我们经常觉得

我们

没有发言权或安全的交流空间,

因为每当你作为一个黑人

模特决定说话时,你就会被给予

凶猛的女主角或

愤怒的黑人女孩标签甚至有

一次我被一名

男性美发师口头攻击,因为我只是说

在我的头发上放一种水性产品

会使头发毛躁,看起来

应该是直而有光泽的

当我试图向我的代理人表达这些担忧时

他们当然感到震惊,但

普遍的共识是

抱歉,宝贝,你知道这就像

世界的方式一样,我很抱歉

发生在你身上,但你能 你就像

是专业的,呃,把它放在

下巴上

是我的名字弗洛伊德梅威瑟正在

接受一个白人在下巴上的言语辱骂

这是拳击台还是

时装秀的后台

让我知道

我真的在 不知道我站在哪里,

因为

记住我是一个十几岁的女孩,所以我已经

遇到了通常的

青少年问题,即不安全感

欺凌你不知道自己

,然后突然间我成了模特

,每个人都告诉我你

知道你有 相当特权

,我在技术上

在世界上处于优势,

但事实是黑人,

突然之间,就像

你对一个黑人女孩来说很漂亮,而且也

不会出现在同一个房间里

另一个黑人女孩,因为你

看起来一样,

而且你的头发真的很难

打理,你的皮肤

甚至不会为此生产产品,

一般来说,你会

得到更少的工作报酬和更少的待遇,而

不是

仅仅因为你是 黑色的是

在这个行业中成为一名黑人女孩的时间令人困惑

和疲惫,这些经历也在网上延伸,

作为一个年轻女孩,我会上网,我

会看到无休止的

玩笑以牺牲黑人女性为代价,

会有关于能够对

我们进行身体虐待的笑话

由于我们的

肤色而更加轻松 确实尝试在网上为自己辩护,

每个人都会说这只是一个

玩笑,或者这只是

那个人正在经历的一个阶段。

这些只是

黑人女孩的一些经历,在这件事真正发生之前,

这些对我们来说在线和离线都存在

我确实感到有点孤独,我确实

觉得我唯一能做的就是

低下头

并坚持下去,希望有一天我

会成功 gh 不应该

被这样对待,

并且认为在这么

年轻的时候我将成功等同于

我可以得到基本的人类尊重的唯一方式是很疯狂的,

但是

这些

情况和人们可以做

的只有这么多 尝试粉碎我的精神和

决心 毕业后

我开始更多地工作,旅行,

结识越来越多的黑人女孩,我们

回来了,我们开始谈论并

分享我们的故事和观点,

我意识到

我并不像我想象的那样孤独 遇到了

zuri tibby adesawa

Grace Bowl 和 jordan dunn 这样的人,我

开始感到

充满希望,我开始感到不那么孤独了,

这种变化正在进行中,

但我只是不知道如何成为其中的

一部分,而不仅仅是

在行业中存在

我想我们都有同样的感觉,

因为我们还很年轻

,我们仍然在

学习我们作为黑人女性的真正强大之处

但经过多年令人不安的情况,

我真的

zed 我的沉默并没有让我觉得该死的

那些理发师仍然有他们的

工作那些种族主义时尚品牌

每个时装周都在展示我仍然每个季节都

去厕所哭泣

我仍然遇到新的

黑人女孩,他们在呼应

我曾经有过完全相同的经历

,感觉他们没有声音

,那时我意识到我的沉默

让我

成为虐待

下一代黑人模特

的同谋,仅此一点就让我想大声说出来,

我停止了努力 这条线是因为

我意识到我的沉默并没有

让我和我的朋友们得到

任何东西社交媒体

在为黑人女性提供一个

分享她们的故事和观点的平台方面发挥了重要作用

,我想我是下意识地

受到启发并想为什么

有一天我不是我 在纽约时装周的一场秀的后台,

他们问谁可以帮我

化妆和头发化妆师

举起手

我坐在她的椅子上,我意识到 d

她根本没有任何适合

我肤色的粉底 她有 30 个

白色模特粉底,还有一个棕色

粉底,她试图

为我制作,

而不是在这种情况下生气,

尽管我使用它 作为

一个教育她的机会,我

总是随身携带自己的化妆包,

这是我在网上记录的一次经历

,我只是

对行业内黑人模特的

经历保持真实,它传播开来,我感到非常惊讶和

震惊

不仅是因为人们在分享

我所说的话,而且因为他们在

倾听

和支持我,我能够写

文章

和接受采访,谈论

多样性

、时尚界缺乏代表性

和黑人

模特的经历 对我来说疯狂的时间我

意识到,

在这个行业多年后,

我终于找到了自己的声音

,这是一种我想

延伸给其他人的感觉,而

不是 几年后,我在我的行业内

创立了 lap 这个品牌,代表

leo me anderson

这个项目的目的 这个品牌

既是

一个在线服装品牌又

是一个平台,通过在线平台,

女性可以写任何关于

性心理的东西 健康关系

政治比赛只要你是

一个自我认同的女人

我想你可以说如果我没有

模特行业

继续那段旅程并经历了那些艰辛并

找到了我的声音

我不会有 甚至有一半的

灵感来创建自己的平台,

因为

我不会亲眼看到

分享你的故事和拥有自己的声音的真正力量

,这是我今天

想鼓励

在座的每个人做的事情,我

想要所有 你们想办法

帮助

那些看不见或闻所未闻的人被所有人看到

你不必成为拥有大量

社交媒体追随者

或多年艰辛的

模特 特权化

可以帮助那些看不见的人,

环顾这个

房间 对我和其他像我一样的人,

我希望有人说出来并

看到我正在经历的事情,

并让我有信心说

出来,

每个人的故事都有能力

点燃

改变,但如果它永远不会被听到

告诉

你今天决定做什么,

谢谢你来参加我的 TED 演讲

谢谢

谢谢谢谢