Vox: All Posts by Chika Ekemeziehttps://cdn.vox-cdn.com/community_logos/52517/voxv.png2022-08-11T08:00:00-04:00https://www.vox.com/authors/chika-ekemezie/rss2022-08-11T08:00:00-04:002022-08-11T08:00:00-04:00Why do wigs on TV look so awful?
<figure>
<img alt="Dominique McElligott as Queen Maeve on Amazon Prime’s “The Boys.”" src="https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/FgJ0G93MHOwn67ezk92qucMoEao=/40x0:661x466/1310x983/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/71231699/THBY_S3_UT_301_210225_THIJAN_00872_1__1__thumb.0.jpg" />
<figcaption>Why are wigs on TV so ... wig-looking all the time? | Amazon Prime</figcaption>
</figure>
<p>A Hollywood hairstylist on why onscreen wigs don’t look anything like they should.</p> <p id="ItqSAZ">Reimagining regular, human actors and actresses as superheroes for the big screen usually requires a few things: a sense of otherworldly gravitas, an intense exercise regimen, and excellent costuming, which includes wigs. On this last point, Hollywood struggles. Even in 2022, wigs in movies and TV are still coming up short. </p>
<p id="V1NYcK">A perfect example of this is <a href="https://www.polygon.com/reviews/23150171/the-boys-season-3-review-amazon">the third season</a> of <em>The Boys</em> on Amazon Prime. Throughout the latter half of the season, viewers are face-to-screen with Queen Maeve’s awful, terrible wig. It was just so ... wiggy. It didn’t look too far off from an image that could be found in an Amazon wig review. But Queen Maeve’s wig wasn’t a $30 wig received via two-day shipping. It was featured on a television show with special effects so high-tech that they recreated the inside of a man’s penis. Yet they were unable to get me to believe that Queen Maeve’s tresses had actually grown from her head. </p>
<p id="rA1mT4">There’s no limit to the number of <a href="https://www.avclub.com/wigging-out-17-times-horrible-hairpieces-ruined-tv-sho-1798287048/slides/2">bad onscreen wigs</a> that we’ve seen over the years. Tyler Perry is often <a href="https://www.sis2sis.com/tyler-perry-addresses-rampant-use-of-bad-wigs-in-sistas/">asked</a> about the terrible wigs he allows on his productions, most notably Shemar Moore’s infamously horrific cornrow wig in <em>Madea’s Family Reunion. </em>The <a href="https://twitter.com/Rocioceja_/status/1290829093114482688?s=20&t=9gRgsrkRdsevGmHhbSIUwQ">wigs in<em> Twilight</em></a><em> </em>looked like cosplay at best. After dyeing her hair blonde and having to cut it off from the damage the hair dye caused, Jessica Alba donned a wig for the <em>Fantastic Four </em>sequel, and <a href="https://crustula.com/2012/03/31/fantastic-four-rise-of-the-silver-surfer-review/">one critic</a> described it as “a ridiculously bad wig that a neophyte drag queen from a small town in Nebraska would have turned her nose up at.” </p>
<p id="onbv4j">What’s particularly irksome about being forced to look at godawful wigs onscreen is that if you take a quick look around, you can find plenty of examples of properly applied wigs. Whether it’s women (especially Black and brown women) walking down the street or the YouTube and TikTok tutorials that you can watch by the dozen to learn how to properly put on your first lace front, wigs can look <em>good. </em>Knowing what Black women can do with some HD lace (the part of the wig that meets the skin) , literally blending hairlines into the skin, why on earth are wigs on TV so bad? </p>
<p id="spu4VB">Camille Friend, a veteran hairstyling professional who’s worked on films like <em>Black Panther, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, </em>and <em>Captain America: Civil War</em>, says there are a few major reasons wigs end up looking so busted onscreen. One reason is the budget.</p>
<p id="WBXH82">“If all you have for a wig budget is $10,000, that’s one wig,” she says. “Those are decisions people have to make. If you’re doing bigger movies, your budget is $100,000; it gives you leeway, and you can buy better wigs and get better looks.” </p>
<p id="W0g75Y">The second reason is skill. At the end of the day, it takes <em>a lot </em>of skill and time to make a cheap wig look good onscreen, but it’s possible. Friend runs <a href="https://www.hairscholars.com/">Hair Scholars</a>, which offers master classes and mentorship programs focused on specialty skills needed for the film and TV business. “There are so many tricks of the trade,” she says. “A lot of the time, people don’t get the knowledge. There’s always little things you can do to take an inexpensive wig and make it look expensive.” </p>
<div id="fDvRPM">
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet">
<p lang="en" dir="ltr">some of my favorite bad wigs in movies/tv <a href="https://t.co/oXNBjT9Are">pic.twitter.com/oXNBjT9Are</a></p>— chibodee crocket (@de_avis_) <a href="https://twitter.com/de_avis_/status/1049404882581630978?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 8, 2018</a>
</blockquote>
<script async="" src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
</div>
<p id="swbfGI">But there are also things that contribute to wigs looking fake onscreen that are out of a stylist’s control. Friend says this is when a good relationship with other production staff comes into play. “You want to have good relationships with your DP or gaffer. I’m very vocal about good lighting, because lighting can make or break us.” Friend also stresses the importance of camera tests that play with color, which requires a set that is invested in the process. </p>
<p id="yjSo3B">Justin Dickson, a gaffer and lighting technician who has worked on the set of shows like <em>Insecure, Snowfall, </em>and<em> On My Block, </em>agrees that the relationship between hairstylists and other production staff is of the utmost importance. Dickson says it’s important to speak to stylists and get inside the hair and makeup trailer to make sure the lighting matches the color temperature of the lights on set. This requires a budget and schedule that prioritizes things like realistic hair and makeup — and, most important, hairstylists who know what they’re doing. </p>
<div class="c-float-right"><aside id="rp663A"><q>Actresses are not leaving sets with $10,000 on their heads</q></aside></div>
<p id="2yoSCV">Imani Bee, a <a href="https://www.instagram.com/itsimanibee/">wellness advocate </a>who acts, models, and works as a development executive at THORO Artists, says she has worked with stylists who seem to come from the Tyler Perry school of wig styling. When she works on sets, she usually brings her own wigs and extensions so that the stylists don’t have to do anything. However, when she was working abroad on one set in South Korea, the stylists told Bee they would be doing her hair. “I was so nervous about the shoot itself and I wanted people to like me and to get more opportunities,” Bee says. She had brought a wig, and when the stylist was finished applying it, Bee found it sitting halfway off her head. She didn’t end up saying anything because she was 19 at the time, and didn’t want to ruffle any feathers. </p>
<p id="3SU2Ez">Bee says these types of experiences are made worse when there are few or no Black stylists or actors on set. “If it’s an all-white cast, nine times out of 10, they’re not going to put the budget toward the one nonwhite cast member,” she says. At her most recent gig, Bee did her own hair on set because she was told there was no one on set who could do it. Friend stresses the importance of having Black hairstylists on all kinds of sets. It’s one of her personal goals through her educational program Hair Scholars. It’s important that Black stylists don’t stay pigeonholed, only working on predominantly Black sets. Friend gives these stylists both the technical skills and the networking skills to make sure Black stylists are everywhere, from TV to million-dollar movie sets. </p>
<p id="bd7Nol">What about the countless hairstylists on social media who seem incredibly talented and know how to make a wig look good? According to entertainment professionals like Friend, the wigs on movie sets are for an entirely different purpose than the ones you see online. When hairstylists on social media apply wigs, they are usually using silicon glue to adhere their hair to a wig cap, so they can wear it overnight, or for a few days. And like Friend says, wigs on movie sets can cost upward of $10,000. A wig that a stylist like Friend works with on sets uses the finest lace, finer than any you can find on a wig ready to purchase. That, on top of the high-quality materials used in the rest of the wig, can contribute to a much more expensive product. Actresses are not leaving sets with $10,000 on their heads. </p>
<p id="EhueaC">The other thing to keep in mind is that sometimes it’s not necessarily a bad thing for a hairstyle to not look natural. “There’s overlap, but you have to know your medium. If I’m going to do something on the red carpet or a photo shoot, I can come in there with big, bad [hair],” Friend says. This is different than when she’s styling for someone who’s supposed to look like a normal, run-of-the-mill person. There’s a difference between something looking like a good wig and something looking like natural hair. Bee points to all of the hairstyles featured on <em>Insecure</em> as an example of styles that are not designed to make the audience believe that the hair had grown from the actress’s head. “It was one of the few projects I watched where I was looking at the hair and was impressed. ... I wanted to achieve the styles that Issa [Rae] had on that show,” Bee says. </p>
<p id="LkjPPq">There’s a difference between realistic hair and a good wig. For productions that feature Black actors, and Black women specifically, the purpose of the hairstyling isn’t necessarily to be realistic as much as it is to reflect the reality of how a Black woman might actually do her hair. </p>
<p id="ge6w5w">On the other hand, for actors of any race, a wig can be an integral part of the storytelling process. For example, in <em>Stranger Things, </em>the character Eleven’s hair represented what she was going through on the show. In the beginning, Millie Bobbi Brown cut her hair into a buzzcut, which was narratively integral to the show. Years later, when the story again called for her character’s hair to be buzzed, the show used a realistic, short-haired wig.</p>
<p id="EQns8a">Which brings us back to superhero movies. Friend, who has worked on seven Marvel movies, says, “When you go do a superhero movie, there’s already a blueprint because you have a comic book, fans. Things have already been somewhat established. ... [The look is] something that’s already been talked about and set.” </p>
<p id="VhU6oB">The base material for the HBO Max series <em>Titans </em>features an alien superhero named Starfire, known for bright green eyes and even brighter red hair. In <em>Titans</em>, Starfire is played by Anna Diop, a Black actress. In the first images released of Diop as Starfire, fans were startled by her hair. The costuming, the hair in particular, was shocking because of how bad it was. (Separately, Diop faced a heinous <a href="https://www.vox.com/2018/7/27/17618954/teen-titans-starfire-racism-anna-diop">torrent of racist harassment</a>, based solely on the casting of a Black woman as Starfire. We’ll leave that aside, for now.) Fortunately, the second and third seasons saw vast improvements in her hair, which made for a better overall viewing experience.</p>
<div class="c-float-right"><aside id="LgwRYC"><q>“Someone can be taken out of the story by looking at a bad wig”</q></aside></div>
<p id="PgeTI5">It may seem odd that something as seemingly innocuous as a wig can influence the success of storytelling, but it’s true. </p>
<p id="tcQe5M">“Someone can be taken out of the story by looking at a bad wig. They forget what the story is about and zero in on ‘something’s not right,’ even if they don’t know what it is,” Dickson says.</p>
<p id="pmGsIF">And in the case of Black characters with bad hair, it’s ... embarrassing. Like there wasn’t enough care on set to make sure this person didn’t show up on camera looking wild. This becomes particularly egregious when there are only one or two Black actors on set, as Bee has experienced. When this happens on sets with budgets of millions of dollars, what does that say about how much these sets value Black actors? </p>
<p id="tTnZA3">The sad fact of the matter is that in some cases, <a href="https://www.tiktok.com/@kechsbigcomfycouch/video/7078432020292013358?_t=8U0oyI6jG94&_r=1">white people just can’t tell what a bad wig is</a>. If a stylist is on set and thinking about how an audience might react to hair, they might not be actively thinking about how it looks to an audience that knows how to clock a wig. Even if the stylist can see the flaws, they might think they can get away with it. Unfortunately, for viewers who can spot the difference, they can’t help but notice. And if the wig is being applied on one of few Black actors on a cast, it can end up making them look like a joke. The lack of diversity and inclusion for Black actors is reflected in thousands of ways and sets, and wigs that are more like hats than hair are just one example. </p>
<p id="6kxP1p">The disastrous wig situation onscreen seems to be due to a combination of failures — most often, it is likely the result of commonly low budgets and occasionally low efforts on the part of the production team. But from the silver screen to television, when bad wigs are applied to actors’ heads, we all suffer. Instead of being able to enjoy what we’re watching, we’re having to rip our eyes away from terrible hairlines, visible lace, and frizzy hair. It’s fairly obvious that Hollywood has a wig problem. What remains to be seen is what productions are willing to invest to address it. </p>
<p id="N1CAVH"></p>
<p id="8HZHUq"></p>
<p id="6IryU7"></p>
<p id="jbKsuB"></p>
<p id="JC1lzR"></p>
https://www.vox.com/culture/23299998/bad-wigs-hair-tv-film-superhero-black-womenChika Ekemezie2021-10-08T08:50:00-04:002021-10-08T08:50:00-04:00The appeal and the shortcomings of women-only gyms
<figure>
<img alt="An illustration of women at a gym." src="https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/N2E3MtAIPKGG9q__h-CCUZtsdLA=/1158x0:5127x2977/1310x983/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/69968615/GettyImages_1156397190.0.jpg" />
<figcaption>At the gym, we’re really looking to feel comfortable. | iStockphoto/Getty Images</figcaption>
</figure>
<p>In middle school, I wanted a Curves membership. But I really just wanted to be comfortable working out.</p> <p id="TbyRDu">Back in the late aughts, when I was a chubby middle-schooler vowing that “<em>this</em> summer would be the summer that I’d get skinny,” I begged my mother for a Curves membership. Curves — one of the largest women-only gyms in the country — was, to my mind, exactly what I needed to finally be able to fit into the size-zero jeans my peers wore. (That never ended up happening.)</p>
<p id="MMzM9S">It’s an age-old conundrum: I felt too insecure about my body to go to the gym and work out, but I probably would have felt better about my body if I went to the gym and worked out. As a middle-schooler in the 2000s, nothing was more embarrassing than being seen exercising in public if you weren’t already thin and thought of as “<a href="https://www.vox.com/culture/2020/1/15/21060692/lizzo-jillian-michaels-body-positivity-backlash">physically fit</a>.” </p>
<p id="eFMHJz">There was no “fit at any size” movement during that time. Instead, there was my yearly physical, with its annual reminder that I was, according to my BMI, obese. Never mind that I was healthy by all other metrics and participated in sports year-round; never mind that I was strong for my age and gender. To the world, I was fat and unfit and had to go to the gym as penance.</p>
<p id="bEsaOb">And if there was one thing an unconfident 11-year-old couldn’t do, it was work out among dozens of muscular, in-shape men. There was something so intimidating about those male gym regulars. The idea of one taking notice of my existence in their<em> </em>space, their domain? As a preteen with no idea how to even talk to boys her own age, working out with full-grown men was not<em> </em>going to happen.</p>
<div class="c-float-right"><aside id="IqIUEd"><q>And if there was one thing an unconfident 11-year-old couldn’t do, it was work out among dozens of muscular, in-shape men</q></aside></div>
<p id="bHTdYK">My mom didn’t end up springing for the Curves membership or any other women’s gym — but plenty of other women did. Curves became synonymous with women-only gyms and, at its peak, was <a href="https://www.referenceforbusiness.com/history2/15/Curves-International-Inc.html">one of the fastest-growing franchises</a> not only in the country but also globally. Other national franchises like Lucille Roberts, alongside local women-only gyms around the world, offered the benefits of a single-gender fitness environment that I so desperately looked for as a preteen, and in the early 2000s, their <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2000/HEALTH/diet.fitness/05/31/women.only.wmd/index.html">popularity</a> was thriving.</p>
<p id="d9gHdE">Today, single-sex gyms have fallen out of favor as a fitness trend (quite a few Curves, for instance, <a href="http://www.unhappyfranchisee.com/curves-franchise-failures/">have closed</a>). And for many, frankly, they don’t feel very 2021. With the rise of studio exercise classes, which are often de facto single-gender, their necessity is less clear, and their explicit delineation around gender raises <a href="https://apnews.com/article/courts-religion-sports-lifestyle-ea132a3d9ebb1141b4cad7a368877aa9">questions of inclusivity</a>, particularly when it comes to trans and nonbinary gym-goers. </p>
<p id="k3comE">Curves states on its website, at least, that it does not discriminate by race, gender, or sexual orientation. But some women’s gyms have seriously dropped the ball, asking <a href="https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2018/05/29/transgender-woman-reacts-furiously-after-being-turned-away-from-womens-only-gym/">incredibly invasive questions</a> about trans women’s transitions and implementing discriminatory practices based on their perceptions of womanhood. And for nonbinary people, “women-only” messaging can be exclusionary, which is unfortunate for a space that strives to be a place of comfort. </p>
<p id="pf2h8U">Still, for many, these gyms represent a way to reach your fitness goals and maintain a healthy lifestyle, free from the intimidation and harassment often present in co-ed gyms. You can’t talk about the benefits of women’s gyms without talking about harassment in co-ed gyms.</p>
<p id="9EDQRw">A <a href="https://www.exercisebike.net/sexual-harassment-gym/">2018 survey by an exercise product site</a> found that nearly one in five women said they had experienced harassment at the gym, causing the majority of them to change their behavior in some way. From changing what they wore (or their workout program) to considering an all-women gym to refraining from going to the gym at all, it is a common occurrence for women to adjust their lives based on what happens at the gym. In an ideal world, the gym is supposed to be a safe space, but the behavior of other gym-goers can seriously infringe on that.</p>
<p id="XOzP7q">Courtney Tenz, a German-based copywriter and brand marketing lecturer, says an all-women gym helped her get over her fears of working out in public when she was living in Boston in her early 20s. The gym felt safe and welcoming, and the trainers were incredibly supportive.</p>
<div class="c-float-right"><aside id="2r2HWA"><q>“It’s much more than a gym, it’s a community”</q></aside></div>
<p id="SrtkBT">Similarly, L’Oreal Thompson Payton, a Chicago-based writer and editor, says she feels at home when she’s working out around only women. Payton, who attended an all-girls Catholic high school, appreciates the feelings of “solidarity and sisterhood” she found at her pole-dancing studio. “It’s much more than a gym, it’s a community,” she says. Unlike Curves or Lucille Roberts, the studio was a de facto women-only space, but Payton found the same solace that women sought in those gyms.</p>
<p id="zlKOpi">Charisma Lowe, a 26-year-old social media manager based in Atlanta, works out with a female trainer in a co-ed gym and says men constantly come up to her and her trainer to give them tips.</p>
<p id="1cDi77">“There’s a lot of micromanaging, and I’m not sure if they mean any harm, but it comes across like she doesn’t know what she’s doing,” Lowe says. “But obviously, I hired her because she knows what she’s doing.” Lowe is also hypersensitive to what she wears while working out, having gotten looks once for donning just a sports bra on a hot day. She sticks to T-shirts no matter the weather, and has even gone so far as to wear sweaters to the gym.</p>
<p id="QWd8nv">And Sade Adebayo, a 29-year-old powerlifter from Virginia, complained that she faced sexual harassment when working out in a co-ed gym. Men would make comments about her body, telling her not to work out her upper body and to focus on her glutes and legs. Other times, men would strike up inappropriate conversations with her. Some would even go as far as inappropriately spotting her by putting their genitals on her. Adebayo also says men would use their size and stature to intimidate her and make her feel uncomfortable at the gym.</p>
<p id="lVCph6">For reasons like these, I once thought working out among other women seemed like the perfect way to mitigate <a href="https://www.thecut.com/2014/01/women-get-twice-as-often-as-men.html">gymtimidation</a> and harassment. And for many, women-only gyms may feel like a godsend. However, I’ve realized as I’ve grown older that it’s not always that simple. Working out among only women definitely offers benefits and a level of comfortability that I yearned for. But when you’re trying to navigate feelings of intimidation, shame, or unwelcomeness in the gym, there are other factors that come into play.</p>
<aside id="4690kR"><div data-anthem-component="newsletter" data-anthem-component-data='{"slug":"the_goods"}'></div></aside><p id="dKMFPk"><a href="https://www.instagram.com/ashleighkast/">Ashleigh Kast</a>, a fitness coach who specializes in working with women who have metabolic and autoimmune issues, says women’s gyms, such as Curves, that offer a model of “women-specific” fitness perpetuate harmful myths about gender and fitness. “[Places like Curves] thrive on the understanding that men and women should train extremely differently, which is not true or founded in science,” Kast says.</p>
<p id="h7BwkW">As a result, Kast thinks of gyms like Curves as less intense. While <a href="https://www.shape.com/fitness/workouts/does-curves-workout-work">Curves workouts can be pretty effective</a>, Kast says Curves has marketed itself in a way that differentiates it from more challenging programs. It may be the case that in an attempt to seem more feminine, the marketing made Curves workouts seem less difficult.</p>
<p id="aTqh9O">And even though Tenz, the copywriter, fell in love with her gym in Boston, for her the women-only gyms in Germany left something to be desired. “I tried one for a few months, but it mostly felt like a place where retirees went to socialize, so it didn’t feel as powerful to work out there. It was great for them, though, just not enough for me,” she says.</p>
<p id="2fc6mb">Sade used to work out at a local Gold’s Gym that offered a section called “Lady Gold’s.” Even though Sade doesn’t have any complaints about the environment there, the lackluster equipment made it impossible to stay in that section. “If I did want to work out exclusively in Lady Gold’s, I would have limited equipment available to me,” she says. To Sade, the variety and quality of the equipment just weren’t comparable to that of the gym’s co-ed area.</p>
<p id="bjQkNI">Now Sade works out in a specialized powerlifting gym, which she says definitely has its perks: There’s a camaraderie that you get from exercising in a space where people have similar goals, and she’s never experienced sexual harassment at her powerlifting gym.</p>
<div class="c-float-right"><aside id="mJqyv4"><q>Going to a gym that was filled with women who shared a common goal that wasn’t about aesthetics felt incredibly empowering</q></aside></div>
<p id="Kjhyai">Much later in life, I had the opportunity and privilege of working out in a gym that was majority women. For a few months, I went to a powerlifting gym that had an all-women competition team. As someone who had perfected her resting bitch face to ward off any comments or looks when I went to a commercial gym, going to a gym filled with women who shared a common goal that wasn’t about aesthetics felt incredibly empowering. And our goals that were<em> </em>aesthetic were as varied and diverse as we were. We were a group of women that were unafraid of looking “bulky.” Instead, we were in awe of the physical representations of our hard work, like our muscular thighs and our calloused hands. </p>
<p id="vkOvOo">Reflecting now, I realize that Curves may not have been the best place for me. Curves, and other women’s gyms, have a perception of being for a certain type of demographic: older people, but also skinny people. The feelings of self-consciousness wouldn’t subside if my larger, Black body was working out among a gym full of thinner, white ones. It felt like everyone was pursuing the same aesthetic, one I knew I would never achieve.</p>
<p id="e7Bmt3">I’m not 11 years old anymore. I no longer have to ask my mom for permission for anything, let alone a gym membership. But what I consider a safe, inclusive workout space looks a lot different from the Curves commercials I was watching as a preteen. It’s not just about the gender makeup of a gym. </p>
<p id="WGLJ65">Really, what we’re looking for, and what gyms like Curves were trying to offer, is a space where we can come in, work out, and not think. Not think about other people’s or even our own opinions of our bodies. At the end of the day, we’re just trying to do something that is good for our physical and mental health. If you can find that in a Curves gym, then good. But if you haven’t found it, it’s definitely out there. And you may have the legacy of Curves to thank for it.</p>
<p id="pfES4V"><em>Chika Ekemezie is the founder of </em><a href="https://www.getrevue.co/profile/twentysomething"><em>twenty-something</em></a><em> and a Philadelphian who writes about sex, dating, and the politics of daily life. You can find her work in publications like Cosmopolitan, Vice, and Bustle. Follow her on </em><a href="https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://mailtrack.io/trace/link/8dd0d34d4a92b72f7f7fb267d943291b41ce1490?url=http*3A*2F*2Fclick.revue.email*2Fss*2Fc*2FOvZMTmFNG_ogo9mVNMFA33KaPv7N-2vAJ5VYJ1ygn-1YCrStDhba-GhM4PsZnJu2teuzx-2OPxOujrT6ifY_SbqB2i4fxDJ7fotyRazJ1EInLt5qnyNwtDNfOdfB-J0wm9cwAvst7yIHOW3Lsv_Bujr18Zs4ngKWBFHi2Hcl-vY*2F3fq*2FmAEG-wxaSeSVuPBli2q8Fg*2Fh2*2FsSatmmcI5ZTdmjWZZyXCZkrAbyDhI1Lnh2IGB0PywD0&userId=6201511&signature=8431ec2c4fb3bc84__;JSUlJSUlJSUlJQ!!FCkwbCh4Gg!KvmfIBB8dpRLrp-bPEjf_wFUIG2Bc01PjgAhKHSc0uxVhWPjGGhf5H-MgM_ZawV8XAnJ%24"><em>Twitter</em></a><em> and </em><a href="https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://mailtrack.io/trace/link/e28a1d5b3a92eff7235f0069aadbb5ad008ad655?url=http*3A*2F*2Fclick.revue.email*2Fss*2Fc*2FXN2t88CAhalHja1RClwc6tx3SM3tHWydEUi_5PVKrvi7naafarqPtbcTWbalvGf8ib5iLg0dlwCINVzIug8m0TzJDwG0Fb567JSYrKP5angVoI531B9M4sXZkpT_k5hFnQYCfsUUoKVYG-zd_7tgi5ZIDQiLJ6_lDA-IB_2f3dQ*2F3fq*2FmAEG-wxaSeSVuPBli2q8Fg*2Fh3*2F-quho2tDgaAdBEergub1QcLOmfaAvrZo6fzutB9vHkU&userId=6201511&signature=d4bf0b9db956ab30__;JSUlJSUlJSUlJQ!!FCkwbCh4Gg!KvmfIBB8dpRLrp-bPEjf_wFUIG2Bc01PjgAhKHSc0uxVhWPjGGhf5H-MgM_Za0jJs68z%24"><em>Instagram</em></a><em>. </em></p>
https://www.vox.com/22709598/women-only-gyms-curves-gender-transChika Ekemezie