Alpha Female
New Member
I went to see this with the fam over the holidays. I noted how all the sister siblings were swangin' their long, straight or long, curled relaxed hairstyles (looked like all weaves, but who can be sure these days)?! Anyway, the only 'natural' hairstyle was on one of the kids (the pre-teen girl), and she looked like she could have been mixed-race in real, and thus, the naturally curly, 'nice'-textured hair.
Then I started thinking back on other black movies - Guess Who (on TV this past weekend), Why Did I Get Married?, etc., and the long, straight or long, curled relaxed hairstyles that dominated those movies. It can be difficult to find some sisters with great-looking natural hairstyles (afros, braids, etc.) in the movies or on TV. Now I'm not talking about entertainers, musicians, or actresses who may have natural hairstyles in real life. I'm talking about the portrayal of black women on TV and in the movies. A recent Essence article said more black women are going natural, and that even of the ones currently relaxed, many of those plan to transition as well. So if being natural is growing and becoming more a foundational way of life for black women vs. just a passing fad, why are the TV and movie industries still dominated with images of women with straight or curled, relaxed looks? Why is the media slow to catch on to a different, more natural version of black beauty? Do you think the perception is still as strong as ever that straight or curled, relaxed looks are closer to the 'white standard of beauty' so must be the 'right standard of beauty?' Just something I was pondering...
Then I started thinking back on other black movies - Guess Who (on TV this past weekend), Why Did I Get Married?, etc., and the long, straight or long, curled relaxed hairstyles that dominated those movies. It can be difficult to find some sisters with great-looking natural hairstyles (afros, braids, etc.) in the movies or on TV. Now I'm not talking about entertainers, musicians, or actresses who may have natural hairstyles in real life. I'm talking about the portrayal of black women on TV and in the movies. A recent Essence article said more black women are going natural, and that even of the ones currently relaxed, many of those plan to transition as well. So if being natural is growing and becoming more a foundational way of life for black women vs. just a passing fad, why are the TV and movie industries still dominated with images of women with straight or curled, relaxed looks? Why is the media slow to catch on to a different, more natural version of black beauty? Do you think the perception is still as strong as ever that straight or curled, relaxed looks are closer to the 'white standard of beauty' so must be the 'right standard of beauty?' Just something I was pondering...