Khloe Kardashian on Kris Jenner dating Corey Gamble: ‘It’s weird!’
The extended sneak peek at the docu-series “I Am Cait” has made the audience realized that it would be the start of “what is sure to be one unforgettable journey”.
Jenner teared up when she first caught sight of her reflection in a mirror as the new “Caitlyn“.
She used her acceptance speech for the ESPYs Arthur Ashe Courage Award to deliver a powerful message about the hardships the transgender community faces on a daily basis.
She later travelled to San Diego to meet the family of a trans teenager who had committed suicide.
“Cait was so smitten she insisted on dragging Candis in front of the cameras”, a source said. When Jenner pulls out a Tom Ford dress she’s excited to wear, Kardashian discourages the idea, saying “Mom has that”.
And these are just the bold-faced names. “It was really, really tough on me“, she confessed about the months leading up to the mag hitting the newsstands. What were your reactions?
Caitlyn’s eight-part docuseries that was heavily supported by the network, but the former Olympian was surprised that her greatest fans, her children, did not do the same.
“I just hope I get it right”, she says. Caitlyn even got to go on stage to introduce Boy George at the concert. West has been surprisingly absent from all the media attention surrounding Jenner’s transition, but last night’s episode shows the “All Day” rapper is just as supportive as the rest of the Kardashian clan. “By featuring stories like Kyler Prescott’s… she’s giving the spotlight to those who deserve it most”.
Previews of upcoming episodes reveal that there is more interesting material to come. Caitlyn brings in Susan P. Landon from the Los Angeles Gender Center to talk to her family about gender identity: “Acceptance is the most important thing”, Landon says. (“I’m not a Biblical scholar, so I don’t know what that verse meant to people at the time”, the counselor responded.) During a sitdown chat with Caitlyn, Esther acknowledged that comprehending the full transition was hard.
Slate was equally blunt, calling it “a respectable TV show with noble motives that easily evades [our] worst anxieties for it. And in doing so, it slams into what I never, ever could have imagined for it: dullness”.