Rachel Zegler’s latest victim act slights J. Lo,…
Rachel Zegler has put her foot in her mouth again.
In a new profile for Harper’s Bazaar UK, the 24-year-old “Snow White” star reveals the cold, exhausting reality about Latinas in Hollywood:
They didn’t exist before her.
In a video for Harper’s Bazaar UK, actress Rachel Zegler ridiculously claimed that there wasn’t a lot Latina illustration when she was growing up. Harper’s Bazaar UK/YouTube
Zegler’s era has been taught that issues have been so horrible for anybody who isn’t white and straight, they refuse to perceive that they don’t seem to be breaking boundaries. Getty Images
Zegler, a New Jersey native whose maternal grandmother was from Colombia, primarily said she was a trailblazer for people with darkish options.
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In a video interview accompanying her florals-heavy cowl shoot, the actress was requested about her method to magnificence as a youthful woman. And it sparked a hilariously ahistorical speech about illustration in the leisure business.
Her method “was a lot more shaped by what I was witnessing in big pieces of media,” she said. “So it was who was on magazine covers, who was in the beauty commercials. Who was in movies. Who was considered the most beautiful movie star at the time.”
According to her, it was “definitely very Eurocentric” ladies — which resulted in isolation for the Gen Z gal. “Being a young Latina, that was hard because not a lot of people looked the way I did.”
Despite Zegler’s declare that no one in films, magazines and magnificence campaigns appeared like her when she was growing up, there are hundreds of Latina ladies, like Eva Mendes, who weren’t only A-list film stars but also landed big magnificence campaigns.
No one, she added, had bushy eyebrows or darkish eyes like her. However, don’t underestimate the internal strength of a budding diva.
“As I’ve grown up, I’ve really been able to find [representation] within myself,” she said.
Friends, one thing tells me that Zegler — best identified for her anti-Israel, “free Palestine” stance and her willpower to make Snow White a feminist icon — has never appeared outdoors of herself. Not even once.
Because she would have observed a little one thing about the celeb photo voltaic system of her youth — it’s densely populated by a slew of wildly widespread and profitable Latina artists and actresses.
Rachel Zegler’s claims about no Latina ladies in leisure during her childhood is a slight to stars like Jennifer Lopez.
Her weird model of current popular culture historical past is a complete stiff-arm to Bronx-born Puerto Rican Jennifer Lopez. It slights Salma Hayek, Eva Longoria, Eva Mendes and Rosario Dawson. Jessica Alba, Shakira, Sofia Vergara.
The checklist may go on, but Zegler would just take an eraser to it.
All of these ladies haven’t only graced all of the celebrated American magazine covers, they’ve fronted blockbuster films and been the face of global magnificence campaigns for beauty giants. They’ve also turned administrators, producers and celebrated businesswomen.
For such a proud Latina, Zegler sure is oblivious to their existence.
This Cosmo cowl is just one of the many ladies’s magazines that Latina actress and businesswoman Jessica Alba has graced.
Her declare reveals a lot about her worldview, where id trumps all.
Zegler got here of age in an period that preached variety and illustration, while valorizing victimhood. It wasn’t enough to be proficient — one needed one thing that made them different or gave them some kind of imagined hardship.
The Bazaar interview goes along with the victimhood narrative, noting that she was criticized for being too darkish to play Snow White but not Latina enough to play Maria in “West Side Story.”
Rosario Dawson on the duvet of Marie Claire in 2005, when Zegler was a little woman.
“But I refuse to assimilate for anybody else’s comfort,” Zegler said defiantly. Oh boy.
The manner she speaks about herself, one would think about the actress is a uniquely treasured individual with scales, one eye and a tail.
But she’s not an unique creature from the lagoon. She’s just an objectively lovely woman with an objectively lovely voice.
Besides showing on numerous magazine covers, Eva Longoria was a longtime ambassador for cosmetics and haircare manufacturers like L’Oréal.
(Also, she appears “Eurocentric,” whatever she considers that to be. She’s a white Hispanic who is also, reportedly, half-Polish. Drop her into any southern European nation, she’d match in just positive.)
Zegler’s era has been taught that issues have been so horrible for anybody who isn’t white and straight, they refuse to perceive that they don’t seem to be breaking boundaries.
It’s not enough to succeed; they need to be the first one there — modern-day tradition explorers. The ones who encountered a jungle but bushwhacked their manner through the tough to discover the promise land for others.
Zegler, who starred in Disney’s flop live-action “Snow White,” stirred up controversy by attempting to make the character feminist. ©Walt Disney Co./Courtesy Everett Collection
But for somebody who takes such pleasure in her heritage, Zegler ought to perceive that she’s strolling a path that has not only been effectively trod, it’s been easily paved over by all the megawatt stars who got here before her.
They even rolled out the purple carpet for you.
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