
Danielle Kwateng-Clark
Senior Culture Editor
dani.kwateng@vice.comDanielle Kwateng-Clark is the senior culture editor at Broadly. Her passion is telling the stories of women of color in the arts, fashion, and pop-culture.
New York City Bans Discrimination Against Black Hairstyles
New guidelines recognize that harassing, threatening, or professionally punishing people because of their hair texture or style is racial discrimination.
Netflix's 'Siempre Bruja' Is a Tone Deaf Erasure of Slavery's Trauma
A prime example of problematic Afro-Latinx narratives, this series finds a slave witch traveling through time to save her lover, the son of her master.
Lorena Bobbitt Tells Her Own Story: 'Immigrant Women Don't Have a Voice'
Broadly spoke with Lorena Bobbitt about her 1993 domestic assault trial that gripped the nation, and how her immigration status shaped her narrative.
How Black Queers Made 'Sis' a Gender Neutral Term of Endearment
"Sis" is an evolved expression, rooted in the Christian church and revolutionized by queer Black people—and it's not a term everyone can or should use.
7 Movies on Netflix That Prove Being Single Is The Best
No one's expecting anything of you this February 14, and that's a good thing! Celebrate being single this Valentine's Day by enjoying these films on Netflix right now.
Afrofuturism: The Radical Genre Imagining a Future for Black People
Afrofuturism imagines alternative possibilities for Black people through works grounded in the harsh realities of present day. Could their creations help inspire better real-world futures?
'Bend it Like Beckham' Is the Gayest Love Story Never Told
While "Bend it Like Beckham" is often mistaken for a coming-of-age story about soccer player best friends, many of us saw our own baby queer desires in Jess and Jules' relationship.
Art Museums Need to Address Colonialist Theft—Not Diversity
The Museum of Modern Art will close this summer to include more works from artists of color. Activists say this does little to reconcile centuries of exploitation.
How Dr. Ruth Brought Radical Sexual Politics Out of the Shadows
Director Ryan White talks to Broadly about his new documentary on Dr. Ruth Westheimer, the legendary educator who took sex out of the bedroom and onto the dinner table.
Court Upholds Conviction of Woman Who Told Boyfriend to Kill Himself
A Massachusetts court has upheld Michelle Carter's conviction of involuntary manslaughter and coinciding 15-month jail sentence based on texts in which she coaxed her boyfriend to take his life.
On Turning Racist White People into Memes to Cope with Collective Trauma
While names like #BBQBecky and #PoolsidePete are catchy (and funny), many believe the terms for white people weaponizing 911 calls against Black people in blatantly innocuous situations is a form of dealing with pain.
'I Am the Night' Unearths New Details of Hollywood's Black Dahlia Murder
Patty Jenkins’ new TNT series uncovers new details connected to the infamous Black Dahlia murder of the 1940s—and explores it as a story of racial identity.