We are allowed to be wanted. We are allowed to want.

It shouldn’t feel radical to say that — but it does, because for a very long time, the cultural conversation around plus-size Black women and sexuality has been shaped by two equally damaging extremes: hypersexualization that reduces women to bodies without interiority, and desexualization that pretends plus-size women don’t have desire at all.

Neither one is the truth. Both have done real damage.

When plus-size Black women are hypersexualized, their desires are treated as spectacle — something to consume, not something to honor. When they are desexualized, they become invisible in spaces where desire, intimacy, and romance are being centered. In both cases, their humanity gets flattened.

What gets erased is this: plus-size Black women have full, complex, layered inner lives. They experience attraction, longing, heartbreak, chemistry, and joy — all of it — the same as anyone else. And they deserve to see that reflected back at them in the stories we tell.

Full-Figured Flings is unapologetic about centering plus-size Black women as fully dimensional romantic and sexual beings. FFF doesn’t ask permission. It doesn’t add disclaimers. It doesn’t frame desire as a surprise because of who the characters are. It simply tells the story as if these women’s pleasure matters — because it does.

For a lot of audiences, seeing that on screen is going to feel like exhaling for the first time.

Don’t miss the Atlanta premiere on April 25th. Grab your Eventbrite tickets and be in the room when this conversation changes.

🎟️ Get Your Atlanta Tickets 🎟️

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