TV star Issa Rae says it’s time for women to sexualise men

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Rising US star Issa Rae held her hand up Wednesday to sexualising men in her hit television series Insecure, saying it was time for the “female gaze” to have its day.

The African-American writer and producer, who first broke through playing herself in the cult YouTube series Awkward Black Girl, admitted she was all for the camera lingering longer on the glories of the naked male.

“Men are more sexualised in the series because we are seeing this through the female lens,” she told TV executives at MIPCOM, the world’s top entertainment showcase in Cannes, where she picked up its “Personality of the Year” award.

“When I am in the act myself I don’t say, ‘Ooh! Look at my body!’ You are seeing what I see, what I am looking at. It is all very intentional. We are all always seeing titties and ass on screen, this is an opportunity to reverse that.”

Rae, 33, admitted that her mother, “a good Christian woman”, squirms when she watches parts of her HBO series.

“She hates it. The bad language, the sex… She’ll say, ‘Why did I even bother with parental control and having you not watching R-rated movies if you grow to make the things that you weren’t allowed to watch?'”

But Rae said she makes no apologies for “telling the truth” or seeing the world through the eyes of black women.

“What attracts people is we are telling the truth,” she argued.

Nor is she afraid of exploring everyday racism in a world “whose default is white”, she said.

“There is an idea that no one wants black women, that we are not considered desirable. Whether it is a myth or not it is something that permeates the world of dating.

“We are living it. Our writer’s room is mostly black women… although there is one white guy. We are always telling him, ‘Now you can see what it is like for us,'” she joked.

Which is why see she was so surprised to discover that 60 percent of her audience are white.

“That threw me way off,” she declared.

“That must mean that even white people are tired of only watching white people and seeing everything from their point of view.”

Rae said she grew up in the 1990s watching lots of shows with black characters but that was “wiped away by reality TV”.

Even so Rae, whose father is Senegalese and whose mother is African-American, has been criticised for not being black enough, a subject she often addresses in her show.

It is one of many prickly issues that she tackles, including what she calls “the burden of masculinity for many black men”.