Page 138 - Katherine Ryan press pack
P. 138

use my privilege, to be an advocate and to talk about my own

               experience—to be political. That’s not to say that everyone should

               be.



               BROWN: I was reading some of your interviews, and you talked

               about how, at first, you didn’t understand why people kept asking

               you what it’s like being a female comedian, because you grew up

               thinking that you could be anything and everything. Was there a

               point where you realized that, “Maybe I was raised this way, but it’s

               not as simple as that”?



               RYAN: Yeah. I was really lucky to have been raised in this really

               powerful matriarchy where my dad was around but I was with my

               mom and my grandma most of the time. They were heavy

               influences on me. My mother has a career in technology; my

               grandma sold real estate. I watched them around the house and

               being really smart. I only had sisters, so I didn’t have boys around to

               compare us to. I just took it for granted that we had every

               opportunity available to us. I didn’t even consider that I might be

               treated a different way as a woman. I didn’t know about the gender

               wage gap, about what women in different cultures still experience

               today in terms of abuse and discrimination and a lack of a right to

               education. I didn’t know about those things because I grew up in this

               really sheltered environment in a small Canadian house. Of course,

               as soon as I moved into a big city, as soon as I traveled a little bit

               and got older, I learned about the world and had a greater sense of

               the injustices that go on, not just for women, but for minorities. I’m

               really lucky, because I had the best of both worlds. I had this

               ignorance, really, about the barriers that I might face, so I just did
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