Whatever it is, she seems to be heading in a good direction. Cyrus made a media splash on Tuesday—not for appropriating twerk culture or for spewing an LSD-fueled rant on Instagram, but for launching a super-cool charity foundation to benefit LGBT, homeless, and at-risk youth.
To announce the Happy Hippie Foundation, Miley held a concert in her own backyard that featured transgender punk pioneer Laura Jane Grace and every lesbian’s favorite rocker, Joan Jett. Jett and Cyrus sang the song “Different,” their raspy, grunge-y vocals interspersing stanzas.
"Have you ever taken flak from the bullies on attack 'cause you're different/They laugh and call you names but that ain't no badge of shame just 'cause you're different/People gonna stare, you unsettle them and scare 'em 'cause we're different/Walking down the street, when you pass they take a peek there's something different," sang Jett and Cyrus.
The video, posted to the Happy Hippie Foundation Facebook page, is the first in a series of “backyard sessions” that will post exclusively on the page. Ostensibly, the videos will draw attention to the foundation’s outreach and fundraising. And Cyrus isn't all talk—the foundation has already done real work on the ground prior to today's unveiling.The first round of Happy Hippie grant money went to a Los Angeles homeless youth drop-in center called My Friend’s Place. The foundation set the center up with a full two years of meals and snacks, clean socks and underwear, and other services for its homeless youth population.
But Cyrus made one more thing clear when she announced the foundation in an interview with Out magazine: Miley Cyrus is genderqueer.
“I didn’t want to be a boy,” she told Out magazine. “I kind of wanted to be nothing. I don’t relate to what people would say defines a girl or a boy, and I think that’s what I had to understand: Being a girl isn’t what I hate, it’s the box that I get put into.”
Cyrus came out as queer (or at least, non-straight) just yesterday in an interview with the Associated Press, telling a reporter that not all of her romantic relationships have been heterosexual. But when she stated today that she also doesn’t identify with any particular gender, suddenly so much about Cyrus just made sense.
It's not just amazing that a celebrity is putting their fortune to good use helping queer kids get off the streets, it's also important for gender non-conforming youth to see a pop culture icon state that it's OK to opt out of gender altogether. In the light of Bruce Jenner coming out as a trans woman—watched by 17 million people—his gender transition is now a household concept that most people have at least a basic understanding of. But sometimes lost in the growing discourse around trans issues are the genderqueer, genderfuck, and gender non-conforming people who decide that having to pick one side or the other just isn't for them.
According to the Genderqueer IdentitiesTumblr, most genderqueer people identify either with both established genders (female, male), fall somewhere in the middle of the spectrum, or feel that they exist outside of concepts of gender altogether.
Miley isn’t the first celebrity to identify as non-binary when it comes to gender, but she’s definitely the most well-known. Other popular figures who have identified as genderqueer include comedian Eddie Izzard, who identifies as a transvestite and has called himself “a complete boy plus half girl,” and rapper Angel Haze, who announced on Twitter that they identified as "agender" and preferred the pronouns "they/them."
The impacts of Miley's foundation, her fluid sexuality, and her non-binary gender identity, are sure to be huge for LGBT youth. But more importantly, it's a nice change of pace to see a massive star put their money where their mouth is.
Photo via Melissa Rose/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)