Glamour that—far from getting paid to make the ad—she will likely lose money on the project. Moreover, the ad is non-partisan and crowd-funded.
It's accompanied by a simple website that shows users how to get registered and learn about what's on their ballot. And its participants weren’t lured into some viral marketing scheme for a quick buck.
Coy Malone, a dancer in the film, confirms that she has been involved in politics her entire life. She participated in the PSA thinking of her Black male friends who’ve been the target of discrimination or who’ve had nightmarish experiences with law enforcement and now feel too jaded to vote.“They’re usually the group that’s missed,” she says in an interview. “I know some Black men that have been.
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