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  • Hi. My name is Cameron Russell,

  • and for the last little while

  • I've been a model.

  • Actually, for 10 years.

  • And I feel like there's an uncomfortable tension

  • in the room right now

  • because I should not have worn this dress. (Laughter)

  • So luckily I brought an outfit change.

  • This is the first outfit change on the TED stage,

  • so you guys are pretty lucky to witness it, I think.

  • If some of the women were really horrified when I came out,

  • you don't have to tell me now, but I'll find out later on Twitter.

  • (Laughter)

  • I'd also note that I'm quite privileged

  • to be able to transform what you think of me

  • in a very brief 10 seconds.

  • Not everybody gets to do that.

  • These heels are very uncomfortable,

  • so good thing I wasn't going to wear them.

  • The worst part is putting this sweater over my head,

  • because that's when you'll all laugh at me,

  • so don't do anything while it's over my head.

  • All right.

  • So why did I do that?

  • That was awkward.

  • Well,

  • hopefully not as awkward as that picture.

  • Image is powerful,

  • but also image is superficial.

  • I just totally transformed what you thought of me in six seconds.

  • And in this picture,

  • I had actually never had a boyfriend in real life.

  • I was totally uncomfortable, and the photographer

  • was telling me to arch my back and put my hand

  • in that guy's hair.

  • And of course, barring surgery,

  • or the fake tan that I got two days ago for work,

  • there's very little that we can do to transform how we look,

  • and how we look, though it is superficial and immutable,

  • has a huge impact on our lives.

  • So today, for me, being fearless means being honest.

  • And I am on this stage because I am a model.

  • I am on this stage because I am a pretty, white woman,

  • and in my industry we call that a sexy girl.

  • And I'm going to answer the questions that people always ask me,

  • but with an honest twist.

  • So the first question is, how do you become a model?

  • And I always just say, "Oh, I was scouted," but that means nothing.

  • The real way that I became a model is

  • I won a genetic lottery, and I am the recipient of a legacy,

  • and maybe you're wondering what is a legacy.

  • Well, for the past few centuries

  • we have defined beauty not just as health and youth

  • and symmetry that we're biologically programmed to admire,

  • but also as tall, slender figures,

  • and femininity and white skin.

  • And this is a legacy that was built for me,

  • and it's a legacy that I've been cashing out on.

  • And I know there are people in the audience

  • who are skeptical at this point,

  • and maybe there are some fashionistas who are, like,

  • "Wait. Naomi. Tyra. Joan Smalls. Liu Wen."

  • And first, I commend you on your model knowledge. Very impressive.

  • (Laughter)

  • But unfortunately I have to inform you that in 2007,

  • a very inspired NYU Ph.D. student counted

  • all the models on the runway, every single one that was hired,

  • and of the 677 models that were hired,

  • only 27, or less than four percent, were non-white.

  • The next question people always ask me is,

  • "Can I be a model when I grow up?"

  • And the first answer is, "I don't know, they don't put me in charge of that."

  • But the second answer, and what I really want to say to these little girls is, "Why?

  • You know? You can be anything.

  • You could be the President of the United States,

  • or the inventor of the next Internet,

  • or a ninja cardio-thoracic surgeon poet,

  • which would be awesome, because you'd be the first one."

  • (Laughter)

  • If, after this amazing list, they still are like,

  • "No, no, Cameron, I want to be a model,"

  • well then I say, "Be my boss."

  • Because I'm not in charge of anything,

  • and you could be the editor in chief of American Vogue

  • or the CEO of H&M, or the next Steven Meisel.

  • Saying that you want to be a model when you grow up

  • is akin to saying that you want to win the Powerball when you grow up.

  • It's out of your control, and it's awesome,

  • and it's not a career path.

  • I will demonstrate for you now 10 years of accumulated model knowledge,

  • because unlike cardio-thoracic surgeons,

  • it can just be distilled right into -- right now.

  • So if the photographer is right there

  • and the light is right there, like a nice HMI,

  • and the client says, "Cameron, we want a walking shot,"

  • well then this leg goes first, nice and long, this arm goes back, this arm goes forward,

  • the head is at three quarters, and you just go back and forth,

  • just do that, and then you look back at your imaginary friends,

  • 300, 400, 500 times. (Laughter)

  • It will look something like this. (Laughter)

  • Hopefully less awkward than that one in the middle.

  • That was, I don't know what happened there.

  • Unfortunately after you've gone to school,

  • and you have a résumé and you've done a few jobs,

  • you can't say anything anymore,

  • so if you say you want to be the President of the United States,

  • but yoursumé reads, "Underwear Model: 10 years,"

  • people give you a funny look.

  • The next question people always ask me is, "Do they retouch all the photos?"

  • And yeah, they pretty much retouch all the photos,

  • but that is only a small component of what's happening.

  • This picture is the very first picture that I ever took,

  • and it's also the very first time that I had worn a bikini,

  • and I didn't even have my period yet.

  • I know we're getting personal, but

  • I was a young girl.

  • This is what I looked like with my grandma just a few months earlier.

  • Here's me on the same day as this shoot.

  • My friend got to come with me.

  • Here's me at a slumber party a few days before I shot French Vogue.

  • Here's me on the soccer team and in V Magazine.

  • And here's me today.

  • And I hope what you're seeing is that

  • these pictures are not pictures of me.

  • They are constructions,

  • and they are constructions by a group of professionals,

  • by hairstylists and makeup artists and photographers and stylists

  • and all of their assistants and pre-production and post-production,

  • and they build this. That's not me.

  • Okay, so the next question people always ask me is,

  • "Do you get free stuff?"

  • I do have too many 8-inch heels which I never get to wear,

  • except for earlier,

  • but the free stuff that I get

  • is the free stuff that I get in real life, and that's what we don't like to talk about.

  • I grew up in Cambridge,

  • and one time I went into a store and I forgot my money

  • and they gave me the dress for free.

  • When I was a teenager, I was driving with my friend

  • who was an awful driver and she ran a red and of course,

  • we got pulled over,

  • and all it took was a "Sorry, officer,"

  • and we were on our way.

  • And I got these free things because of how I look,

  • not who I am, and there are people paying a cost

  • for how they look and not who they are.

  • I live in New York, and last year,

  • of the 140,000 teenagers that were stopped and frisked,

  • 86 percent of them were black and Latino,

  • and most of them were young men.

  • And there are only 177,000 young black and Latino men in New York,

  • so for them, it's not a question of, "Will I get stopped?"

  • but "How many times will I get stopped? When will I get stopped?"

  • When I was researching this talk,

  • I found out that of the 13-year-old girls in the United States,

  • 53 percent don't like their bodies,

  • and that number goes to 78 percent by the time that they're 17.

  • So the last question people ask me is,

  • "What is it like to be a model?"

  • And I think the answer that they're looking for is,

  • "If you are a little bit skinnier and you have shinier hair,

  • you will be so happy and fabulous."

  • And when we're backstage, we give an answer

  • that maybe makes it seem like that.

  • We say, "It's really amazing to travel,

  • and it's amazing to get to work with creative, inspired, passionate people."

  • And those things are true, but they're only one half of the story,

  • because the thing that we never say on camera,

  • that I have never said on camera,

  • is, "I am insecure."

  • And I'm insecure because I have to think about

  • what I look like every day.

  • And if you ever are wondering,

  • "If I have thinner thighs and shinier hair, will I be happier?"

  • you just need to meet a group of models,

  • because they have the thinnest thighs and the shiniest hair and the coolest clothes,

  • and they're the most physically insecure women probably on the planet.

  • So when I was writing this talk, I found it very difficult

  • to strike an honest balance, because on the one hand,

  • I felt very uncomfortable to come out here and say,

  • "Look I've received all these benefits from a deck stacked in my favor,"

  • and it also felt really uncomfortable to follow that up with,

  • "and it doesn't always make me happy."

  • But mostly it was difficult to unpack a legacy

  • of gender and racial oppression

  • when I am one of the biggest beneficiaries.

  • But I'm also happy and honored to be up here

  • and I think that it's great that I got to come

  • before 10 or 20 or 30 years had passed and I'd had more agency in my career,

  • because maybe then I wouldn't tell the story of how I got my first job,

  • or maybe I wouldn't tell the story of how I paid for college,

  • which seems so important right now.

  • If there's a takeaway to this talk, I hope it's that

  • we all feel more comfortable acknowledging

  • the power of image in our perceived successes

  • and our perceived failures.

  • Thank you. (Applause)

Hi. My name is Cameron Russell,

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