Netflix's Potent 'Disclosure' Explores How Hollywood Has Both Damaged and Uplifted Transgender Lives

Past the halfway point of Disclosure, a new Netflix documentary chronicling Hollywood's profoundly flawed relationship with and portrayals of transgender life, writer and actress Jen Richards ponders aloud how she would feel about herself, as an out trans person, if during her formative years she had never seen any representation of herself in the media.

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'We Prioritized Hiring Trans Crew, and When We Couldn’t do That We Mentored Trans People on Set:' Sam Feder on 'Disclosure'

The doc is an exhaustive and entertaining look at how trans individuals have historically been depicted onscreen through surprising archival footage (Birth of a Nation and Bugs Bunny make appearances) and insightful interviews with a diverse array of activists and artists (everyone from the ACLU’s Chase Strangio, one of the attorneys on plaintiff Aimee Stephens’ winning team, to directors Lily Wachowski and Yance Ford).

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'Disclosure:' behind Laverne Cox's Netflix documentary on trans representation

But while mainstream visibility is welcome and influential, especially for as historically marginalized a community as transgender people, one should be wary of celebrating representation in which “a few people are elevated and the majority of people are still struggling”, Cox says in Disclosure, a Netflix documentary she executive produced on the history of transgender representation in American media.

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