Growing up in the 80s and 90s as when i saw Nightcourt (Mac whom is a black man married to an Asian woman), Soul Man on HBO when i was 4 (white man and black woman), La Bamba in theaters at age 5 (white girl and latino boy), Scarface on TV (a white woman and a latino man), Angel Heart on video (white man and black woman), Serpent and Rainbow in theaters when i was 5 going on 6 (black woman and white man), Harlem Nights in theaters when i was 7 (white man and black woman), Tales from the Darkside The Movie in theaters at age 7 going on 8 (Rae Dawn Chong and James Remar whom one is a black woman and a white man in the final story Lover's Vow which the movie is based on that classic 80s horror anthology show), MASH the series (Lebense American man and Asian woman married), Star Trek TOS on Nick when i was 9 (white man and black woman), seeing Guess Who's Coming to Dinner in class when i was 12 especially seeing Eliza's parents (one Navajo man and one black woman) on Gargoyles when i was 12 to reading some issues of X-Men where Storm has an affair with a white man taught me growing up there is nothing wrong with interracial love.
They taught me love has no skin color/ethnicity/different cultural background but who the person is. I have been supporting interracial love/marriage since i was a kid seeing those couples in those shows/movies/comics.
This year is also the 50th anniversary of the classic comedy-drama Guess Who's Coming to Dinner.
They taught me love has no skin color/ethnicity/different cultural background but who the person is. I have been supporting interracial love/marriage since i was a kid seeing those couples in those shows/movies/comics.
This year is also the 50th anniversary of the classic comedy-drama Guess Who's Coming to Dinner.