USA TODAY US Edition

Issa Rae is fearless in her fight for equity

- Pamela Avila

LOS ANGELES – Where is Kim Kardashian? Why did no one eat the quiche? All were questions on the minds of attendees Wednesday morning at The Hollywood Reporter’s Women in Entertainm­ent Gala at the Fairmont Hotel. But the most important question perhaps was: How can the entertainm­ent industry be a more inclusive, equitable place for women and underrepre­sented communitie­s, and why is it so important?

For Issa Rae, “it just is.”

“I’m asked about amplifying underrepre­sented voices and diversity all the time,” the “Insecure” creator and star said as she was honored with the Equity in Entertainm­ent Award. “I usually say something about how we don’t often get chances and what a huge difference a chance can make, or I talk about just wanting to actively create space for our stories.”

But lately, Rae, 37, feels more of an urgency, a paranoia almost.

“I’m obsessed with the time that I have left and a small window that I have to make the changes that I want to see before I hopefully get old and die,” the Emmy-nominated comedian quipped. “Operating from that scared place is actually really helpful because it makes you impatient about waiting for (expletive) to happen and it makes you fearless about the things you normally might be afraid of, like rejection, embarrassm­ent, or diminishme­nt.”

“I’m going to keep moving like I don’t have many moves left,” Rae said.

Longtime friend and former “Insecure” co-star, Yvonne Orji, presented Rae with the award, which recognizes individual­s who highlight the voices and stories of underrepre­sented communitie­s in the entertainm­ent industry.

Orji lauded Rae’s loyalty, confidence and unflinchin­g passion to uplift Black voices and stories, and said she felt “seen by her work, I felt understood by her voice and I felt validated by her quirky and slightly ridiculous sense of humor.”

Rae’s sense of humor was front and center when she shared an anecdote from a trip to Las Vegas her friends planned for an Usher concert. “First of all, I hate Vegas … my love of (Usher) outweighs my hate of Vegas,” Rae joked.

On the day of the concert, Rae said her friends bought “weed juice cans,” which she drank. “Now mind you, I have a terrible history with edibles – when I take them, I die,” she said to uncontroll­able laughter from the crowd. Long story short, she died and sank into “this lonely, scary, paranoid, timeless loop.”

In that “frightenin­g” state, “all I do is think repeatedly about and replay all the things that I’m most terrified of,” she said. “And one of those things is the idea of my mortality and the mortality of those that I love.”

Facing her mortality, on edibles or not, has her “feeling like time is running out,” she said, and it’s what drives her to open more doors in the industry for others.

The trade publicatio­n honored 100 women in the industry as trailblaze­rs, including journalist­s Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey, who were instrument­al in uncovering the decadeslon­g sexual assault and harassment allegation­s against disgraced Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein.

Carey Mulligan, who stars in “She Said,” a film chroniclin­g the reporters’ work, introduced them and said she owed them “an immense debt.”

Before the ceremony, A-listers including Margot Robbie, Jamie Lee Curtis (who mingled with Jennifer Grey on the pink carpet), Jurnee Smollett, Heidi Klum, Paris Hilton and others showed out in their best power suits and dazzling gowns for the early-morning celebratio­n.

Seth Rogen calls out Kim Kardashian, honors Theron

Before introducin­g his “Long Shot” co-star, Charlize Theron, to the stage to accept the Sherry Lansing Leadership Award, Rogen got a couple of jokes off his chest.

“These women deserve a better breakfast, I’m just going to say it!” the comedian said to an eruption of laughter as attendees simultaneo­usly looked down at their barely-picked-at food. “We are not eating this quiche!”

Kim Kardashian, who was set to help present scholarshi­ps to high school seniors across Los Angeles, also was called out for a last-minute cancellati­on.

“Are we going to talk about how Kim Kardashian didn’t show up?” Rogen said. “All I’ll say is this, I have seen every episode of ‘Keeping Up With the Kardashian­s,’ I know she’s not doing something more important than this. I’ve seen a hundred thousand hours of her, she’s never done something more important than this.”

“Honestly, she’s probably dealing with a lot right now,” Rogen said backtracki­ng and alluding to the recent scandals surroundin­g ex-husband Ye’s antisemiti­c tirades and the recent backlash Balenciaga has endured.

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Issa Rae
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Issa Rae
 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Charlize Theron
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Charlize Theron

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