DarkDreamer9110
Star
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2013
As Andi explained, Cassie shrugged. "I don't think wanting equal rights, respect, and acceptance for all makes me special. I just have a platform I can use that's given me a chance to reach a large audience. I have a duty to use that platform to push for change and raise awareness. The album idea, it just feels right."
As the suggestions began, Cassie listened to the song Andi suggested, but flinched almost immediately. When it ended, she frowned. "I don't know. It's kinda ... slow." Her voice, however, showed more concern than just for the tempo.
Suddenly, she smiled, and pulled out her own phone, quickly pulling up a video. "This is a really old home movie my parents and I made once. This was basically how I ... how I came out to them, or at least how I opened up that subject for discussion."
The video was an old one, and from the quality it had likely been digitally transferred from a videocassette. It was at a birthday party, and there was a karaoke machine. With some prodding from a 12-year-old Ellie, a 12-year-old Cassie (then known by her birth name Austin) took the microphone and pulled up a song. What followed was a rendition of "Reflection" from Disney's animated Mulan, but there were points where the preteen clearly altered the lyrics whenever a gender-specific term was used, changing "bride" to "groom," "daughter" to a painfully stretched, two-syllable "son," and so on.
When it was done, she smiled at Ellie. "You helped the whole thing. As I recall, the Disney karaoke machine was your idea." She said. "I know it's a long shot, but I want to do that cover/cut professionally. 'Reflection' was a song that really spoke to me. Hell, that whole movie actually made me first start questioning my gender identity." She said.
As the suggestions began, Cassie listened to the song Andi suggested, but flinched almost immediately. When it ended, she frowned. "I don't know. It's kinda ... slow." Her voice, however, showed more concern than just for the tempo.
Suddenly, she smiled, and pulled out her own phone, quickly pulling up a video. "This is a really old home movie my parents and I made once. This was basically how I ... how I came out to them, or at least how I opened up that subject for discussion."
The video was an old one, and from the quality it had likely been digitally transferred from a videocassette. It was at a birthday party, and there was a karaoke machine. With some prodding from a 12-year-old Ellie, a 12-year-old Cassie (then known by her birth name Austin) took the microphone and pulled up a song. What followed was a rendition of "Reflection" from Disney's animated Mulan, but there were points where the preteen clearly altered the lyrics whenever a gender-specific term was used, changing "bride" to "groom," "daughter" to a painfully stretched, two-syllable "son," and so on.
When it was done, she smiled at Ellie. "You helped the whole thing. As I recall, the Disney karaoke machine was your idea." She said. "I know it's a long shot, but I want to do that cover/cut professionally. 'Reflection' was a song that really spoke to me. Hell, that whole movie actually made me first start questioning my gender identity." She said.
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