Amber Rose and Blac Chyna have been the faces of anti-respectability and slut-walks. Black feminism allows women of color to be intersectional and most importantly gives them the ability to be comfortable with themselves to define their own label. Some feminists have reclaimed the words slut, ho and even b*tch as a gender-fluid term calling out the sexist hypocrisy of men or offensive language.

20 years ago, black feminists had a different attitude on "ho culture". It was not feminist under the sexual pleasure of men. Many rappers were called out to stop degrading black women in their music videos. 20 years to the present, black women took control of the camera to empower their sexuality.

Yet what worries me is not respectability politics, but young black feminists being rejected from the movement. Mixed/biracial feminists are more noticeable than dark-skinned women who are just as newsworthy. Dark skinned girls need better and more promotion highlighting not just their beauty, but also their intelligence. Men's rights organizations, right-wing conservatives, and even black men are getting paid to destroy the image of dark-skinned women to reinforce the stereotype of their inferiority and ratchet behavior. I admire mixed feminist celebrities starring in pro-black televisions shows, but the platform has to properly denounce colorism and privilege.

Even in the body positive community, there are complaints that even "BBWs" are experiencing fat-phobia from their own feminist sisters. Also, celebrity feminists (such as Amber Rose) have to acknowledge their privilege that being thin and sexually positive puts pressure on young girls to live up to womanhood. 

Sex positivity is giving acknowledgment that all girls deserve sexual freedom and acceptance. The positive body movement needs love and adoration that their bodies are not flawed or less valuable because they are not thin. Gabby Sidibe only grabs mainstream media attention when she is losing weight, while her personal traumas of suicide were used as a joke to spam fake news. When Sidibe revealed her past life as a sex-operator and even debuted her sex scene on Empire, they were again catalysts for jokes in perspective that plus-size women do not deserve a sex life or that they do not have the anatomy to choose the men whom they want to be with.

The celebration of feminism has had its benefits, but privileged celebrities miss the point that feminism isn't about who already fit in with patriarchy, but the genders and individuals who are invisible and rejected.