Jada Pinkett-Smith questions: 'Should black women's mags put white women on their covers?'

CLUTCH - Can we implore them to include us in their pages while we shut them out of magazines that are for us by us? Jada Pinkett-Smith believes that this request of mainstream magazines presents a conundrum...

Luther Vandross was outed as gay after his death.

From Clutch Magazine:

There was and still is a need for black women to be represented on the newsstands, both in magazines that target us and in mainstream magazines that embrace diversity. Though Essence magazine caters to an audience of African-American women, many still champion the need for major magazines like VogueVanity Fair and Cosmopolitan to feature ladies of all races. Jada Pinkett-Smith believes that this request of mainstream magazines presents a conundrum. Can we implore them to include us in their pages while we shut them out of magazines that are for us by us?

She writes:

Will there ever be a day in which women will be able to see each other beyond race, class, and culture?

There is a question I want to ask today. I’m asking this question in the spirit of thinking outside of the box in order to open doors to new possibilities. These possibilities may be realistic or unrealistic. I also want to make it clear that there is no finger pointing here. I pose this question with the hope that it opens a discussion about how we can build a community for women based upon us all taking a deeper interest in one another. An interest where skin color, culture, and social class does not create barriers in sharing the commonality of being… women. With love and respect to all parties involved, my question is this…if we ask our white sisters, who tend to be the guardians of the covers of mainstream magazines, to consider women of color to grace these covers, should we not offer the same consideration to white women to grace our covers?

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