The nonprofit organization is partnering with the photo agency to try to eradicate the traditional stereotypes that continue to creep into stock images.
Poet Kosal Khiev has performed at the London 2012 Olympics, but first discovered poetry in solitary confinement in a US prison. He shares his story with the BBC's Helier Cheung.
Actress Alfre Woodard performs a very moving piece from abolitionist, women's rights proponent, and former slave Sojourner Truth that was originally delivered in 1851. Yep, before the Civil War, before the right to vote for anybody but white men ... THAT 1851.
Do you have trouble understanding what your husband's trying to say? Or are you a man baffled by your wife? Well, that's probably because, if you're a guy, you're speaking 'Menglish' and she's not (Telegraph)
Scientists have cracked it! Men and women don't understand each other because he speaks 'menglish', a report reveals. A sceptical Rebecca Holman tries to learn a new language. (Daily Telegraph)
"Consent panties" could become a reality but Radhika Sanghani hopes there will never be a time when women need their knickers to speak for them (Daily Telegraph).
A discussion of the controversy about how female politicians are viewed. Links to ideas about women's role and the way motherhood is often seen as a barrier to a successful career.
Maybe a father's words can deliver his daughter through this gauntlet of institutionalized shame and into a deep, unshakeable sense of her own worthiness and beauty. A look at how the language of make-up ads can affect girls.
Pulitzer Prize winning author Toni Morrison,spoke about the controversy brewing after comments which questioned whether The Bluest Eye is appropriate to be on a suggested reading list for Ohio students.
When Noah Cho was young, he thought that couples would be like his parents - that Asian men would be paired with white women. But he writes that when he looks in the mirror and reflects on his own experiences, he feels "unattractive and undesirable."
The first TV spot featured an adorable, curly-haired moppet named Gracie who had a black father and a white mother. The ad for Cheerios prompted a storm of protest and counter-protest last summer. Now, the cereal-maker is back with a sequel (NPR Code Switch)