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Teen Vogue

@teenvogue / teenvogue.tumblr.com

The young person's guide to conquering (and saving) the world
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On January 12, just one day after Sex Education dropped its first season on Netflix, a new fan of the teen drama tweeted, "Emma mackey as maeve wiley can kill me, rob me, sacrifice me or put me alive in the oven and I’d say thankyou." While this point of view is undoubtedly a bit extreme, the sentiment stands — Maeve, with her pink hair streak, vintage fringe jacket, and take-no-prisoners attitude, rocks. It's easy to see why fans are so devoted to Maeve Wiley that they'd let her do practically anything. As Emma herself puts it, Maeve is "unapologetic," "clever," and, okay, "quite bad*ss."

Emma, 23, stars in Sex Education as Maeve, a high-schooler who is the brains behind a pop-up sex clinic she creates with classmate Otis Milburn (Asa Butterfield), who offers sex and relationship advice to his peers (for a price). Emma tells Teen Vogue that she was drawn to Maeve "immediately" after reading the script — to her boldness, her unabashed appreciation for sex, and her knack for talking about it openly and eloquently, without awkwardness.

Maeve is more than just the rebellious-girl archetype in Sex Education. Essentially abandoned by her parents, she supports herself with money from the clinic and lives more or less alone in a trailer park. While Otis is enthralled with her and she embodies a cool-girl aesthetic, Maeve also experiences intense harassment at school from classmates who call her "c*ck-biter" and frequently slut-shame her, to the point where even her best friend, Aimee Gibbs (Aimee Lou Wood), keeps their friendship a secret to avoid being socially ostracized. Through it all, Maeve is tough and practical, a catalyst for Otis's growth and new experiences as well as a fully fledged character in her own right.

📸: Netflix

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It’s only a matter of time before Danielle Macdonald becomes a household name. The Australian actor stole the show at last year’s Sundance Film Festival with her stirring performance as Patricia Dombrowski (aka Patti Cake$), an unlikely aspiring rapper from New Jersey gunning for hip-hop fame in the Geremy Jasper-directed film, Patti Cake$. As a plus-size white woman with a Rubenesque figure and curly strawberry blonde hair, she’s far from your typical emcee, a point many of her peers and mother use to downplay her talents when she makes her career ambitions known. But despite their criticism and lack of support, she goes on to make a name for herself within hip-hop.

The breakout role put Danielle on the map. And now she’s poised to win over audiences again with another underdog story, this time playing plus-size teenager, Willowdean, in Netflix’s, Dumplin’. The comedic drama adapted from Julie Murphy’s YA novel of the same name follows an overweight, Dolly-Parton-loving teenage daughter of an ex-beauty queen (played by Jennifer Aniston), as she competes in the local beauty pageant her mother runs, Miss Teen Bluebonnet, in a protest against its narrow and discriminatory beauty standards. Her plan escalates when some of her peers follow suit, and collectively, they change the pageant for the better and open up hearts and minds in their small Texas town to the fact that beauty comes in all sizes.

It’s a charming story tackling important topics such as the image-driven world of beauty pageants, unrealistic beauty ideals, and the importance of self-acceptance. As an actor of size, Danielle saw a bit of herself in Willowdean. Just like her, she’s also struggled with feeling completely comfortable in her skin but ultimately learned to feel accept herself and her body once realizing everyone has insecurities.

"I think we all go through those moments of self-doubt," Danielle tells Teen Vogue. "Don't get me wrong I still go through them, [but] you just get to a point where you're like, ‘I'm OK with who I am. You are enough.’”

The Dumplin' soundtrack features remixed classics from Dolly Parton and new songs the songstress co-created with prolific producer Linda Perry specifically for the project. It’s a fitting addition given that Dolly is a guiding force in Willowdean’s life, whose music, alongside her clan of supportive friends, helps the teen overcome negative internal thoughts about her physical appearance. Prior to Dumplin’, Danielle's knowledge of beauty pageants was fairly limited to what she’s seen in previous movies. But she quickly learned along the way they’re not usually as catty as they’re often portrayed on screen.

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Since its release in August, Netflix's To All the Boys I've Loved Before has been a gift to the internet, blessing us with internet boyfriend memes, endless Noah Centineo interviews, and much-needed discussions about the importance of representation in Hollywood. That's a lot to get out of one movie, and fans have been clamoring for sequels basically since the film came out. But thanks to one Twitter account, more To All the Boys-centric content is just a click away.

Newly-viral Twitter presence @IncorrectTATBIL is, in a sense, a type of fanfiction for To All the Boys I've Loved Before. But instead of longer stories about these beloved characters, the account imagines short, fictional conversations between Lara Jean, Kitty, Margot, and Peter Kavinsky that almost feel like they could have been outtakes from the film. In one early hit tweet, Kitty tells Lara Jean, "Here's my wall of inspirational women," to which Lara Jean responds, "Is that a picture of you?" Kitty then proclaims, "I'm big enough to admit I'm often inspired by myself." The moment feels so perfectly in character with Anna Cathcart's Kitty Covey, a bold, sharp, comic presence in the film.

Like many good internet things, @IncorrectTATBIL was started by young web friends: Vanshika, 19, and Laura, 21, who started tweeting their TATBILB-inspired conversations in August after the movie's release on Netflix. They quickly racking up thousands of followers. "I could probably write you a whole book on what I love about the movie, but what really inspired me to make the account were the characters," Laura told Teen Vogue. "I adored them a lot and I wanted to see more of them."

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  • Netflix announced on Sept. 12 that it had renewed its divisive comedy series Insatiable for a second season, according to a press release.
  • The series, which stars former Disney Channel star Debby Ryan in the leading role, follows a fat, unpopular high schooler nicknamed "Fatty Patty" who loses a significant amount of weight over a summer, and when she returns for the new school year, seeks revenge on people who are mean to her.
  • Upon its release, Insatiable generated a significant deal of controversy, with many viewers believing that at its core, the show was not a satirical look at the modern teen experience, but rather a fatphobic, LGBTQ-bashing, and sexual assault–mocking narrative. The use of a fatsuit in flashback scenes was also widely contested.
  • Unsurprisingly, the social media reaction has been just as divisive for the show's renewal, with fans and detractors duking it out.

📸: Netflix

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  • Sierra Burgess Is a Loser dropped on September 7, and many spent the weekend catching up on yet another Netflix rom-com. 
  • Unlike the effusive praise that met To All the Boys I've Loved BeforeSierra Burgess got a fair share of criticism for a couple of reasons. 
  • Model and actor Nyle DiMarco called out the movie on Twitter for a specific reason: a storyline in which Sierra Burgess lies about being deaf.
  • In a September 9 tweet, Nyle noted that he tuned into the movie because his friend's deaf brother had a role in it, and he was excited to see representation for deaf actors and American Sign Language (ASL) onscreen. Though he tuned in with high hopes, Nyle said he was disappointed by what he saw.
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Since its release last week, Netflix rom-com To All the Boys I've Loved Before has been giving the internet a lot of feelings. Adapted from Jenny Han's popular novel, the movie tells the story of shy high school junior Lara Jean Song Covey (played by Lana Condor), whose five private love letters to previous crushes get sent out, leaving her to deal with the fallout.

In the movie, Lara Jean is a true romantic, immersing herself in the world of classic '80s movies like Sixteen Candles. It's fitting, then, that author Jenny Han made sure the movie's actors payed homage to other iconic teen movies during filming. On Aug. 19, Jenny shared a series of behind-the-scenes clips where cast members each took on a different influential '80s or '90s movie, ranging from The Breakfast Club to Say Anything.

"When I was on the set of #ToAlltheBoysIveLovedBefore, I coerced the cast into making these teen movie moments bc I’m a pushy queen," Jenny wrote on Twitter. She then included a short gif of Noah Centineo, who plays Peter Kavinsky, hoisting up Lana Condor in the seminal lift scene from Dirty Dancing, while "(I've Had) The Time of My Life" played in the background (BRB, swooning forever).

📸: Netflix

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In this op-ed, entertainment news editor Claire Dodson explains why Netflix's controversial new show Insatiable isn't really about its fat characters, and how, because of that, it's a wasted opportunity to show three-dimensional fat (and formerly fat) characters on screen.

When I was in high school, I was a 6-foot-tall, fat teen who was uncomfortable in her large body. I wore large t-shirts to cover up the folds of my stomach. I hunched over to make myself seem smaller. Every morning before school, I slipped a tight swimsuit on under my clothes to act as a corset. I did that for three years.

Every book I read, every movie or TV show I watched, reinforced the idea in my head that if I wanted someone to love me or if I wanted to be successful, I would have to lose weight. And I remember that feeling inconsistent with my actual life — I had great friends, I played basketball for my high school (a fat athlete, oh my!), I went out on weekends, I found things I was good at that have led me to my job today as an editor at Teen Vogue.

I wanted to see that on screen, instead of feeling ashamed and self-conscious everytime a fat character appeared in something I was watching with my thin friends. I wanted to be inspired by strong fat women so that I could overcome the urge to cover my body up and the internalized belief that even though my life seemed pretty OK, I was deficient in some way because I’m not thin.

For these reasons, I was hesitant to watch Netflix’s Insatiable. Why would I, a fat woman who has grappled with the lack of media representation, watch something that’s been called “obscenely cruel” and “almost unwatchable” as well as “racist” and “tone deaf?”. But, curiosity got the best of me, and I ended up watching all 12 episodes of season 1 in a night.

It was disappointing like I knew it probably would be. But it wasn’t just the blatant fatphobia that bothered me. While watching, I realized one of the biggest problems with Insatiable is that even though it wants to be about fat people, it’s not really about fat people, at all.

The trailer, which came out on July 19, frames the story like this: fat teenager Patty Bladell (played by Debby Ryan) is bullied at school — and basically everywhere else — but after an incident where she punches a homeless man for attempting to steal her candy bar and he punches her back (causing her to have her jaw wired shut for 3 months), she emerges 70 pounds lighter, skinny and ready to set out for revenge against everyone who ever mocked her (oh, and become a pageant queen).

But the trailer is a trap. It’s the television equivalent of clickbait. Because the show itself isn’t about being fat, and it’s not even really about being formerly fat, like Patty. Sure, Patty gets all the big action: she often goes into inexplicable rage spirals; she murders two people and almost kills a third; she pushes a classmate out of a wheelchair; she outs two closeted queer men. She joins a long list of fat villains (looking at you Crabbe and Goyle from Harry Potter, or Ursula from The Little Mermaid) whose evil is compounded by their fatness, even when Patty’s fat is all in her head.

Even though Patty is painted as the heroine in the trailer, she isn’t really. Over the course of 12 episodes, she gets almost no character development. She learns nothing from her (increasingly bad) mistakes. The audience is given nothing from her to win us over. But you know who does get that development? Every thin character.

Alyssa Milano’s Coralee, a struggling housewife-turned-entrepreneur, wins you over with her earnestness and vulnerability. Nonnie (Kimmy Shields), Patty’s best friend, is awkwardly charming as she works through her crush on Patty and starts embracing her queerness — I found myself thinking I would actually watch a show about her journey. Patty’s pageant coach Bob Armstrong (Dallas Roberts) and the district attorney Bob Barnard (Christopher Gorham) both become better people by the end of the series, as they each become honest about their sexuality and more thoughtful and caring towards their children. Even minor characters, like fellow pageant queen Roxy (Chloe Bridges), are three-dimensional, such as when she reckons with her estrangement from her father and her resentment at being sent into foster care.

Patty’s weight loss, however, acts as a stand-in for her character development. Beyond the head-scratching proclivity for murder, there’s nothing else to say about her that we don’t know at the outset.

📸: Netflix

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Like the romance novels with which its heroine is obsessed, To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before is practically picture perfect. Lara Jean Song Covey (Lana Condor) writes a love letter to each crush she has, and keeps them in a hatbox left to her by her late mother. When, one day, the hatbox turns up empty and the letters reach the boys they’re written to, Lara Jean’s life gets turned on its head, as her past crushes come back to haunt her.

The film, which directed by Susan Johnson, is an utter charm. Adapted from Jenny Han’s novel of the same name, it’s the perfect romantic comedy. It’s funny, it’s relatable, and it’s compelling. And it just so happens that its all-American heroine is Asian-American.

Ahead of the film’s release on Netflix on August 17, we spoke to Han about the ups and downs of getting the movie made, Lara Jean’s sense of fashion, and food as cultural connective tissue.

Teen Vogue: The book To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before was first optioned as a movie adaptation four years ago; what has the road from page to screen been like for you?

Jenny Han: It’s definitely been a long road. Four years isn’t that long if you think about it in terms of how long it takes to get a movie made; I think once the team was in place, then things moved very fast. But up until that point, it was always kind of up in the air. It’s fairly common to get something optioned, but really rare to actually see it become a movie. It took casting to begin and for them to be doing stuff on location for me to actually believe that it was happening.

TV: Did you ever doubt that it was going to get made?

JH: I did. I think that one of the biggest struggles with it was to find the right partners who would agree to cast an Asian-American family, and to have Lara Jean, specifically, be Asian. That was the biggest challenge. I think that oftentimes what people say is, “We need an actress who’ll be able to greenlight a movie,” and my counterargument to that is always that, when it comes to a teen movie, you have very few people who can greenlight a movie. It’s not going to be Tom Cruise or Julia Roberts — those are the people who greenlight movies, and in terms of young talent, it’s going to be a gamble no matter what you do. Even if it’s somebody with a really big social media following, you just don’t know if that’s going to translate into the movie getting made.

With Asian-Americans actors, specifically, there’s been fewer opportunities for them in TV and film, and fewer that have the ability to actually make a career out of it. It becomes a bit of a chicken and egg situation, where they’re like, “Oh, but they’re not famous names,” but they haven’t had a chance to be in anything yet, either. You want to give people a chance to grow and evolve as well.

📸: Netflix

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