字幕表 動画を再生する
"I have one of the strangest jobs on the
planet.
I started modeling when I was 16; I was a
really strong-willed sixteen-year-old and
there still were moments where I didn't speak up for myself.
00:00:13,690 --> 00:00:15,459 So I wanted to talk about how I think
everybody can become an activist. I tell
myself three things over and over:
Don't be too lazy to learn – do the
reading: do the research; call people;
talk to people. Don't be afraid to
be wrong...
You're going to be wrong. And actually, my
third thing that I always tell myself is
it's more important to apologize, then to
be on the right side of an issue.
If you're just starting out, i'm gonna give
you some advice. Commit yourself to show
up five times this year, for causes that
aren't just about you.
I used to think that I had my activist
self and my modeling self. As deeply
grateful to fashion as I am,
it's a double-edged sword. Even in my
continued participation, I try to bring
those two things together, but it's hard,
it can be hard. You know, a lot of that
injustice, a lot of that sexism that I
experience is micro. Someone who's watching
me undress or being touched by people in
a way that i would prefer they don't
touch me, being in a situation where it's
difficult to speak up, because speaking
up would be seen as being difficult. I
would call my agent and they would say
'Cameron, you're being such a feminist, don't say
anything, don't mess up this relationship
with this photographer'. And I didn't say
anything, and I felt like, 'Wow, this is
really hard', because I'm someone who is
perceived to be a woman leader and yet
even I can't always speak up. And so I
thought what we really needed to do was
find a way to become connected and to
trust each other and to build a
community, there's no such thing as
being one powerful person by yourself,
it's lonely. This should be the beginning
of all of us trying really hard to listen to everybody else."