How about Jada Pinkett Smith?

What do you think? Is she for real?

Who better to ask, then a woman who is known for her outspoken beliefs as the wife of the former congressman, and for her outspoken feminism, as one of the most prominent activists in the LGBTQ movement.

What about the late Michael Jackson?

What about those kids, the ones at the hospital?

What about the many who died because of homophobia, transphobia, violence, and fear? What aboutHow about Jada Pinkett Smith?

“People would come up to me and say, ‘Jada, you were my main inspiration for being a feminist,'” said Jessica Pfeiffer, the star of “Sister Act!,” referring her to her childhood idol.

Pfeiffer, 32, didn’t know what “feminism” meant when she first read Simone de Beauvoir’s book, “The Second Sex.”

“I was in a group of girls, and we were just soHow about Jada Pinkett Smith? You know, the one who can’t seem to get a movie made about her because everyone in Hollywood just wants to be famous and then marry her. And she does that with the kind of success that she had by getting Twilight right into theaters all the way back in 2007. She was a huge success then. And now she’s a gigantic, gigantic disappointment. (I could go on and on about her other recent film, Choke, which was a terrible decision on the part

title: How about Jada Pinkett Smith?

How about Jada Pinkett Smith?

What do you think? Is she for real?

Who better to ask, then a woman who is known for her outspoken beliefs as the wife of the former congressman, and for her outspoken feminism, as one of the most prominent activists in the LGBTQ movement.

What about the late Michael Jackson?

What about those kids, the ones at the hospital?

What about the many who died because of homophobia, transphobia, violence, and fear? What aboutHow about Jada Pinkett Smith?

“People would come up to me and say, ‘Jada, you were my main inspiration for being a feminist,'” said Jessica Pfeiffer, the star of “Sister Act!,” referring her to her childhood idol.

Pfeiffer, 32, didn’t know what “feminism” meant when she first read Simone de Beauvoir’s book, “The Second Sex.”

“I was in a group of girls, and we were just soHow about Jada Pinkett Smith? You know, the one who can’t seem to get a movie made about her because everyone in Hollywood just wants to be famous and then marry her. And she does that with the kind of success that she had by getting Twilight right into theaters all the way back in 2007. She was a huge success then. And now she’s a gigantic, gigantic disappointment. (I could go on and on about her other recent film, Choke, which was a terrible decision on the part