Call it whatever you want - this is virtue signalling gone
to extremes you and I will never understand...
The Golden Globes made history of a sordid kind by nominating a male-born performer who 'identifies as female' for best actress. Karla Sofia Gascon was nominated Monday for Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Motion Picture, Musical or Comedy, for playing a Mexican drug lord who undergoes a gender transition in the 2024 film “Emilia Perez.”
The nod represents the first time the Golden Globes have nominated a male-born entertainer in the female category for movies, although the award show did so previously in the television category.
Last year, Michaela Jae Rodriguez, who underwent a gender transition
(I wonder if he/she got de-nutted) in 2016, took home the Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series, Drama, for playing a transgender character in the FX series “Pose".
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It's just nuts....
ReplyDeleteMen are better athletes, more beautiful models, and better actresses than women. Apparently.
ReplyDeleteGolden Globes?
ReplyDeleteJust another Hand-Me-a-Trophy award shows I don't give a rat's ass about.
Golden Globes and Oscars I haven't watched them for at least 20 years. It was bad then and the movies has gotten worse.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of "gender transition," I was in a band practice 40 years ago when the subject came up of a recent FEMALE to MALE transition.
ReplyDeleteThe mandolinist immediately replied "an addadictomy."
Say it aloud.....
One of the Bond Girls in a 1960's James Bond film was trans, and you'd never know it by looking - or at least she looked entirely like a beautiful woman in the fully controlled environment of a movie set, with movie makeup and under movie lights. But that was the exception, and who knows if the illusion would have held if you met her in person.
ReplyDeleteJudging by the more recent examples, either this particular part of movie magic peaked 60 years ago and can no longer be matched, or they no longer care to keep up the illusion. It's possible that even with 60 years of advances in makeup, the toxic formulas of the past looked better, but my bet is on the second possibility.