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tv   Nightline  ABC  September 15, 2016 12:37am-1:04am EDT

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this is "nightline." >> tonight, while celebrities like beyonce are rocking natural hair in formation, a disturbing school ban on traditional black hairstyles igniting a national ba discrimination. >> i've worn those hairstyles. so i definitely felt targeted. >> the mother and daughter fighting back. plus drop-dead gorgeous. this youtube star has made a career out of being herself. no matter who she is. >> i'm gay, right? i am transgender. i am a lesbian. >> how gigi gorgeous went from bullied at school to being embraced by millions. your taco salad cleared for
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burritos. you thought your pizza delivery guy was high? first the "nightline 5." >> there's no one road out there. no one surface. no one speed. no one way of driving on each and every road. but there is one car that can conquer them all, the mercedes-benz c-class. five driving modes let you customize the steering, shift points, and suspension to fit th you're on. the 2016 c-class. lease the c-300 for $369 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. narrator: fewer new hampshire students are while wall street and oil companies get billions in tax breaks. and whose side is kelly ayotte on? she voted to cut funding for pell grants and against letting students refinance their loans at lower rates.
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the personal and political. it involves hair. specifically the hairstyles of young african-americans. and the controversial decision made by one school district that fed into a heated national debate. here's abc's deborah roberts. >> reporter: this 15-year-old ashanti scott knows hair can say so much about us. a cheerleader at butler high in louisville, kentucky, she proudly wears hers in its natural tightly curled state. so she was stunned this year when she saw her school's new >> it was the hair and i noticed that as you kept reading it just added more and more hairstyles that were natural and mostly worn by black people. >> did it feel personal to you? >> it felt very personal to me because i've worn those hairstyles. >> it was almost like an attack on me and who i am and my culture. >> reporter: ashanti and mom attica became part of a hot national debate about
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line in the new policy. banning dread locks, twists, afros longer than two inches, and cornrows, which is even misspelled. attica, kentucky state legislature, immediately called her daughter's school. but it was after hours so she did what many of us do when frustrated, turned to social media. on twitter she wrote, so my daughter had registration today and let's just say she's not happy about the the tweet going viral within minutes. >> why not wait till the next day and call the school? and try to sort it out that way this. >> because it was fresh, it was on my mind, i knew i had the rest of the night to connect to other people who may also have some concerns about the policy as well. >> reporter: and she did. soon hundreds of responses. many from parents posting photos of their own children with hair-dos that would violate the policy. >> i talked to my girlfriends
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hair every single day. >> reporter: the tweet first striking a nerve here in louisville. >> i thought about coming to work several times with it out but have always decided against it. would it be too much? really, what is too much? >> reporter: that same question at the center of a growing conversation about self-identity. with more and more african-americans choosing to embrace their god-given hair. >> the natural hair movement is more than hair. it is a lifestyle. it is learning to be comfortable in the skin that you're author and blogger on natural hair, recalls growing up feeling that straight hair was more acceptable than curly or kinky hair. >> everything that i saw growing up, magazines, television, movies, people on the street, people on the runway, all you saw was straight hair. long, straight hair. even women that look like me had long, flowing, straight hair. i knew that whenever my hair got wet, it didn't look like that.
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>> reporter: today natural hair has gone mainstream. ? my dad alabama my mother louisiana ? >> reporter: from beyonce -- ? i'm a baby with a baby hair afro ? >> reporter: to sesame street -- ? my hair looks good in corn rows ? >> reporter: look at celebrities rocking natural hair on magazine covers and the red carpet. >> for the last 50 years, we're told the way we're notoo enough, the way our hair naturally grows from our scalp, our features, our lips, our butts, our hips, our everything, not acceptable. to be able to reclaim that and take that back and say, you know what, i am beautiful, i'm gorgeous, and i don't need to change anything about myself. that's powerful. >> reporter: a perception this father and daughter duo are embracing big-time. >> when i take photos, i feel like a princess. >> reporter: one instagram photo at a time.
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6-year-old daughter jackson have become a social media sensation. >> grow your hair, be phenomenal, be fabulous, be exactly who you are. >> reporter: celebrating their crowns as vinny calls them. >> this is not about photos, this is not about images. it's about inspiring people to believe in themselves. >> reporter: for him, teaching his daughter to be proud of where she comes from. >> we should all love where our roots come from. whether it's straight, long, kin where her hair goes, it's gorgeous. >> reporter: a message thought revolutionary back in the '60s during the black power movement. even perceived as a political statement. ? you have the prettiest hair in the world ? >> reporter: just ask hairstylist isis brantley. she recently hosted a rally in dallas. >> african children are under attack.
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is unprofessional, untidy, unkempt. >> reporter: but her argument may have been lost with a controversial guest. rachel dolezal, a white woman making headlines claiming she was black. >> this is a justice issue. as an educator i have a responsibility to participate in the movement. >> reporter: though dolezal, a hair braider, supports the natural hair movement, apparently many don't support her. st dozen turned out for the event. but braids were never meant to cause controversy in louisville, kentucky, says william allen, principal at butler high. >> we're about kids here at this school. >> reporter: he says the ban on natural hairstyles was all a big misunderstanding. >> the language for braids has always been in our dress code. strictly for male students. there's never been restrictions for female students. doesn't a policy like that inherently single out black
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our students. it gave us a chance to take a step back and look at culture versus style. look at specific instances we have in our dress code policy that might relate to a specific group. >> reporter: just after attica scott's tweet the school quickly called a meeting. >> today i'm proposing we immediately suspend our section of the dress code policy about students' hair. >> reporter: suspending the policy but igniting more anger. >> i would love to hear from the students first -- >> theha african-american community -- >> instead of making assumptions, y'all should have asked. >> reporter: but one black member of the decision board, sha reese balden trainam, mom of a daughter at butler, said the policy was simply about neat grooming, not offending a culture. >> i know it sounds crazy standing here with an african-american woman with braids. i was not offended. it doesn't mean that i don't
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issues can be resolved before going on social media. >> i don't want to live in a world where everywhere i go, i have to see everything as black and white. i don't want to raise my kids like that. but i will teach them to stand up for what is right. i applaud her for seeing an issue and standing up for it. but i think that we have to be very careful aboutow affects our children. . >> it's not about intent, it's the way it landed. the way it land for me are, my daughter, other parents, it was discriminatory and it was offensive. >> you've got a principal who was black, parents on the council who are black. do you really think they were out to discriminate against black students? >> just because you're black doesn't mean you're not feeding into the system. i work at places often where
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where there have been issues of race. that doesn't end just because i work there and i'm black. >> reporter: butler has since changed its dress policy to say that hair must be well-groomed, well-kept, and at a reasonable length. a positive outcome, say ashanti and attica scott, and hopefully a lesson, they say that will relevance nate beyond the classroom. >> it's not about one school. it's about the public school system and the way that it's policing kids who are trying to get an education. they want to come and learn. >> reporter: for "nightline" i'm deborah roberts in louisville, kentucky. next, she's got both glamour and guts. inside the world of gigi gorgeous, the youtube star who has helped pave the way for so many other transgender people. breaking news from the tech world. and it involves flying burritos. hey, need fast heartburn relief?
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oil wells in new hampshire? you'd think so the way kelly ayotte voted. ninety percent with the big oil koch brothers. she voted to give big oil more than $20 billion in tax breaks. they gave kelly ayotte campaign contributions. corporate special interests are spending millions supporting her campaign... kelly ayotte: paid for by big oil; voting for big oil. not working for us. dscc is responsible for
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before caitlyn jenner, there was gigi gorgeous, the young youtube s w videos and moving personal stories helped change and open minds about transgender people. tonight my "nightline" coanchor juju chang takes us inside gigi's fabulous but still challenging world? "social stars." >> reporter: she is every inch the hollywood fantasy version of perfection. >> it's true. >> reporter: a barbie come to life with platinum hair and six-inch stilettos.
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>> reporter: this voluptuous, gorgeous woman, gigi gorgeous, started life as a canadian boy named gregory. >> i knew i was different, i knew i felt like a girl. >> hi, it's gigi -- >> reporter: her honest and outrageous youtube videos have made her a star in the internet age. >> definitely makes your lips look full and glossy -- >> reporter: nearly 2.4 million youtube subscribers watching her every move. >> why do i look like a muppet but you look like a rock ar >> reporter: gigi, now 24, came of age just as youtube was starting to catch on. at first, as a gay teenager, sharing his love of makeup. >> so this look is super, super easy. >> reporter: and talking about his dates with boys. >> yeah, from there the weirdness escalated and the date got even worse. >> reporter: and then struggling in realtime as thousands of fans watched with the idea that she was, in fact, transgender. >> this video is kind of me just telling you guys that i want to
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along the road and i said, you know what, i am transgender. kind of like a ding moment. >> your self-discovery has been shared by millions. >> i came out twice. essentially. on my youtube channel. >> what was harder, coming out as gay or transgender? >> i think definitely coming out as transgender was harder for me because it was more truthful, it was more raw, it was more real. >> hi, guys. it's me, gigi. >> reporter: her unscripted life playing out for before caitlyn jenner. she shared everything from light-hearted shopping sprees and beauty tips to raw, intimate details of her plastic surgeries, of which there have been many. >> all i remember is just throbbing pain. like i thought -- i felt like someone had shot me in my face. >> reporter: all this catapulting gigi to bona fide hero status of the lgbtq
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>> crazy. i have fathers who come, oh my goodness, i can't believe i'm meeting you, me and my daughter watch your videos and bond over it. >> reporter: some of her favorite videos. >> this is one i filmed after a recent relationship. and i got super creative and filmed a music video with my friend. ? ? stay with me stay with me ? >> reporter: and read me some comments -- good and bad. >> while i am proud that a trans girl can fly in a private jet and w never acknowledges how blessed/lucky she is. >> reporter: with all those fans and all those views -- >> leave them on about an hour and then you are good to go. >> reporter: come endorsements. one big break from crest in canada. >> i'm going to work with crest, it was a huge honor to be with the first transgender spokesperson for the brand. it was a huge deal for me. >> reporter: before the fame and fans, a struggle to fit in. did you ever get bullied or harassed?
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in elementary school. when high school came around, i found myself. i found my strength and my voice. >> reporter: when she did, it was too late to tell her mother, who died from cancer when gigi was 19. >> there's no other point in my life where i would want her back more than i do right now. but i can't. i can't have her back. >> my mom is someone i never got to say in her eyes that i was transgender and that's something that will always, always just sit not struggles, gigi is using her fame to confront issues facing the transgender community. what kind of message do you want to send? >> it's awful that there's so much discrimination in the world. but i would just say, hold on, be positive, find someone on youtube that you can relate with. >> reporter: while gigi's life now may seem carefree, her perfect pink bubble of existence burst dramatically on a recent
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>> i was denied entry into dubai because i am transgender. >> what did you letter, if anything, from that detainment? >> i learned that discrimination is not over. and it makes me scared for anybody else like me. and maybe they didn't have the resources to get out or get help. it is very scary. >> reporter: back at home, she is a hollywood "it" girl teaming with mylie cyrus to raise awareness for transgender issues. >> everybody, mylie cyrus! ? and i spoke pot ? >> reporter: introducing her at the vmas. ? >> i'm shopping with gigi. >> it's so good. >> that is life. this is life. >> reporter: her greatest weapon? being herself. today shopping for that next killer outfit to silence the haters. >> i'll be right back. ta- ta-da! >> reporter: perfect for the red carpet or her next date. gigi now happily in a relationship with a woman.
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>> now you're dating a girl. >> uh-huh. >> explain that to people who have a more linear view of sexuality. >> i found someone that i truly love, and i have fallen in love with her. and that's the truth. and, you know, labels can be labels but at the end of the day, love is love. >> reporter: but then just hours ago, gigi posting this video on her youtube page.
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finally tonight what may be the best and most delicious use of drone technology ever. it's a bird. it's a plane. it's a -- burrito. students at virginia tech could soon be getting their chipotle fix via drone. the top-secret experiment led by google's project wing that "the roanoke times" says it caught on camera. could flying fast fke the tech giant is not the first to drum up drone delivery. amazon marketing prime air, promising packages in 30 minutes or less. >> drops off the package and flies straight back up to altitude. >> walmart looking to pilot the technology. but it isn't just home delivery. from extreme racing -- to shooting hollywood blockbusters like "skyfall" -- drone
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chipotle and google hope this test is but a taste to come. still no word whether guac will cost you extra. burning questions. thank you for watching abc news tonight. gma first thing in the morning. as always we're online 24/7 at abcnews.com and on our "nightline" facebook page. thanks again for watching and good night. >> now at 11:00, a shooting in manchester. one person was taken to the hospital with a gunshot wound to the chest. we are live with the latest details tonight.
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for granted when you turn the fossett on. >> plus, the drought hitting kinks and hard. how the town is helping families whose wells have run dry. >> autumn taking over again as temperatures begin to fall. who could see frost before the week is over. >> 1980's star molly ringwald stopping in the granite state. her message as she campaigns for a presidential candidate. breaking news tonight. manchester fire confirming one person was shot on merrimack street. good evening. i'm shelley walcott. tom and i'm tom griffith. : police and first responders responded to the scene just before seven tonight and at this hour they still have the area blocked off. shelley police just clearing the : scene within the last hour, and that's where we find out jean mackin who joins us live

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