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Kim Kardashian expressed that storytelling was important for criminal justice reforms at the recently-held Propper Daley Summit, reports The Hollywood Reporter.
Kim Kardashian spoke at the session which featured a starry line-up including Uzo Aduba, Chrissy Teigen, B.J. Novak and director and producer Scott Budnick.
The conversations were meant to inform upcoming on-screen plotlines and support the preservation of narrative integrity.
After learning how flawed the system is, particularly for people of colour, Scott Budnick and Kim Kardashian have long been champions for prison reform. Kardashian shared her opinions on the value of criminal justice and storytelling.
“I believe that storytelling is crucial because people frequently ask, “How can I help? What can you do?” Kardashian continued. “Once someone asked me, ‘Why do you only work on one case?
Improve the policy. People just want to feel comfortable in the community, so I told them, “If you don’t put a face with this rap sheet and you don’t comprehend.”
She said, “If you just read a piece of paper, you won’t feel safe unless you hear their narrative, unless you’ve heard where they’ve come from and where they’re at now.
Accordingly, the storytelling component is crucial for the policy to pass.
In addition, Kardashian explained how she manages her businesses, law school studies, and all of her activist work: “I pretty much have a rule where I’ll take on 10 cases at a time and I can’t really go above that.”
Kim stated that she has been pursuing law since 2019 in an interview with Vogue. Kim also declared on her Instagram account on December 13, 2021, that she had passed the “baby bar exam.”