If āhot girl summerā was a magazine cover…well, now it is, thanks to Sports Illustrated having the profound wisdom to make thee hot girl herself, Megan Thee Stallion, one of its 2021 cover stars. In fact, itās a woman of color trifecta this round, as Meg joins tennis star Naomi Osaka and model-actress Leyna Bloomāwho made history just this past spring as the first Black and Asian transgender woman to be featured in Sports Illustratedāon a trio of stunning, sunlit covers.
āIf thereās one thing that our cover models have in common, itās that they donāt have one thing in common,ā said SI Swimsuit Editor MJ Day in a statement obtained by USA Today. āThey look different, have different upbringings, have different passions and inspirations. But each is a reminder that beauty comes in many forms.ā
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āREAL SPORTS ILLUSTRATED SWIMSUIT EDITION COVER MODEL SHIT!!! šš„ā Meg posted on Instagram Monday morning, adding: āThee first female rapper on the cover of @si_swimsuit šš I want to thank all the strong women in my life who inspired me to love my body and live my best hot girl life. It means the world to me to be on this cover DREAM COME TRUE!! šā
Naomi Osakaās doing double duty on covers this month, as she also tops Vogue Hong Kong in a pair of stunning racket-inspired earrings. Of her historic appearance on SIāunbelievably the first Black female athlete to garner a cover appearanceāthe magazine captioned a post:
From hitting 100 mph serves to posing for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit, @NaomiOsaka can DO. IT. ALL. A determined athlete, Naomi has her sights set on ⨠gold ⨠at the upcoming games in Tokyo and weāre cheering her on every step of the way. š„ Thank you for being a part of our cover shoot this past spring!
However, Osakaās sojourn to the Olympics hasnāt been without controversy; particularly from those who think the phenom should be repping the United States as a Black woman, rather than equally honoring her Japanese heritage by playing for the country of her motherās birth, as well as her own. (Born in Osaka, Japan, Osaka relinquished her American citizenship in 2019, complying with Japanās law that requires dual citizenship holders to choose a nationality by age 22.) But despite Osakaās increasing outspokenness and advocacy for Black lives, it seems some of that rebuke has come from within the Black community.
āIāve been playing under the Japan flag since I was 14. It was never even a secret that Iām going to play for Japan for the Olympics,ā she reminded us during an episode of her recently debuted three-part docuseries on Netflix.
āSo I donāt choose America and suddenly people are like, āYour Black card is revokedāand itās like, African American isnāt the only Black, you know? āā she continued, turning what has undoubtedly been a painful backlash into a teachable moment. āI donāt know, I feel like people really donāt know the difference between nationality and race because thereās a lot of Black people in Brazil, but theyāre Brazilian,ā she added.
Also Black and Asian is SIās third 2021 cover star, Leyna Bloomābut thatās only part of what makes her cover appearance so significant. After becoming the first trans woman of color to grace SIās pages in March (preceded less than a year by Valentina Sampaio, the first openly transgender woman to be featured in SI), 2021 The Glow Up 50 honoree Bloom is now the first trans woman to be granted a cover.
āServing you face on the cover of our #SISwim21 issue. @LeynaBloom is making it known that she has ARRIVED,ā SI captioned its Instagram announcement. āWeāre giving tens… tens… tens… across the board for her stunning cover.ā
Those ātensā were in reference to Bloomās prominence in ballroom cultureāwhich she recently revisited as a guest star on the final season of Pose. The model-actress first came to national attention as one of the few openly transgender models to walk New York Fashion Week in 2017, subsequently became the first openly transgender model to cover Vogue India, and last made history as the first trans woman of color to star in movie premiering at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival.
āThis is what it looks like to be in full bloom,ā the Chicago native posted on Instagram following her first SI appearance. āMy spirit has reached new levels. This moment is bigger than my wildest infinite dreams. In this moment, I am a representation of all the communities I grew from, and all the communities Iām planting seeds in.ā
Having achieved yet another so-called mainstream milestone in the SI cover, Bloom once again emphasized that the moment is so much bigger than her own personal triumph in a Monday morning Instagram post.
āThis moment heals [a lot] of pain in the world,ā Bloom wrote. āWe deserve this moment and we have waited millions of years to show up as survivors and be seen as full humans filled with wonder.ā[I] am so happy, honored, and humbled to share that Iām the 1st trans woman to grace the cover of Sports Illustrated!ā she continued. āThanks so much [MJ Day] and [the SI Swimsuit] team for recognizing the importance of representation, this is all of our responsibility…To my bloodline my father, thank you for the courage and sacrifices you made to [ensure] I stand tall In every step I take. Now Iām flyingšā
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