2021 Hyundai LGBTQ Partnership Announced
nd Annual GLAAD Media Awards and 2021 Outfest Fusion QTBIPOC Film Festival.
âAt Hyundai, we place a high value on inclusion and diversity and are proud to partner with organizations that fight for LGBTQ rights every day,â said Angela Zepeda, CMO, Hyundai Motor America. âIt is important for us to support this community from both a consumer and employee perspective. Hyundai has achieved a 100 percent score in the Human Rights Campaign Foundationâs Corporate Equality Index for five consecutive years.â
Lauren Neal, 2020 Hyundai Emerging Director award winner, and Canyon Road Films, an LGBTQ-owned production company, worked with Hyundai to develop the commercialÂ
Hyundai Extends Support for the LGBTQ Community with Several Partnerships in 2021 hyundainews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hyundainews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Michaela Coel and Andra Day to Be Honored at Outfest Fusion QTBIPOC Film Festival
Mónica Marie Zorrilla, provided by
April 7, 2021
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Coel, known best for creating and starring in “Chewing Gum” and “I May Destroy You,” will be acknowledged with the Fusion Achievement Award; Day, the star of Lee Daniels’ biopic “The United States vs. Billie Holiday,” will be presented with the James Schamus Ally Award.
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“Coel’s work in ‘Chewing Gum,’ ‘I May Destroy You,’ and more portrays complex characters who have helped open the door for more empathetic conversations about the issues facing members of this QTBIPOC community,” said festival executive director Damien Navarro, in a statement.
email article Automation and artificial intelligence are becoming part of the fabric of medical care, but can put clinicians on alert, as many new technologies do even more so because most examples come from science fiction. Terminator, Ex Machina, 2001: A Space Odyssey are all sexy and they sell because they re playing off our worst existential fears, said Nathan Tenhundfeld, PhD, principal investigator at the Advanced Teaming, Technology, Automation, & Computing Human Factors Lab and assistant professor of psychology at the University of Alabama in Huntsville.
But automation is already part of our lives, in ways that seem normal now. We automated phone operations and automated elevator operations and yet nobody really has apprehension of making a phone call or hopping on an elevator now, he said. Once we normalize what these technologies can do and what they will be used for, I think people will be a lot quicker to buy into it.