For some, the idea of having to go to the bathroom with a transgender person might be a scary thought. That’s why comedian Dylan Marron decided to show just how normal of an experience it can be.
In his new web series, “Sitting in Bathrooms with Trans People,” Marron and his transgender guest of the day take part in your typical, run-of-the-mill bathroom behavior — eating waffles, drinking beer, ribbon dancing with toilet paper, and having a sit-down interview.
Okay, so maybe not quite “typical” behavior, but certainly nothing to be afraid of.
“What I wanted to do here was completely humanize the issue,” Marron told MSNBC in a recent phone interview. “To have an honest, human, warm, emotional conversation with a trans person in the bathroom is just basically saying, ‘Hey viewer, this is something I want you to open your heart to.’”
Produced for Seriously.TV, the series seeks to educate viewers about what it really means to be transgender at a time when lawmakers across the country are pushing legislation that would bar people from using the bathroom in line with their gender identity. For most people, such policies aren’t a problem. But for transgender people, whose expressed or experienced gender differs from the one assigned to them at birth, these bills amount to unlawful discrimination, according to some courts’ determination.
By far the most notorious of these measures to become law this year is North Carolina’s House Bill 2, an act which also barred municipalities from enforcing nondiscrimination ordinances that are more expansive than the state’s. Last week, North Carolina’s Republican Gov. Pat McCrory and the U.S. Department of Justice sued each other, with each taking an opposing stand on whether HB 2 violates existing federal prohibitions on sex discrimination. Days later, the Obama administration issued a sweeping directive telling every public school district in the county to grant transgender students access to the bathrooms that match their gender identity.
RELATED: HB 2 and North Carolina’s tipping point
Supporters of measures like HB 2 say such policies are necessary to protect people — usually meaning women and young girls — from potential predators who may be masquerading as transgender. However, no one has been able to show any evidence of an increase in bathroom-related assaults happening in states where nondiscrimination protections for LGBT people exist. Some defenses of laws like HB 2 are even sillier. Republican Rep. Steve King of Iowa on Tuesday said that Obama’s bathroom directive will lead to “a bunch of sweaty women around” since they won’t feel comfortable showering at school.









