Books Tarana Burke on the power of The Color Purple, Babyface, and Ted Lasso The activist and memoirist gives EW her pop culture favorites. By Seija Rankin Seija Rankin Seija Rankin is the former books editor at Entertainment Weekly. She left EW in 2022. EW's editorial guidelines Published on September 14, 2021 01:00PM EDT Photo: Dougal MacArthur; Flatiron Books Tarana Burke is most famous for her role as the founder of the #MeToo movement — she's been using the phrase to raise awareness about sexual abuse and assault since 2006 — and now she's added "memoirist" to her resumé. In Unbound, she recounts the ways in which traumatic moments of her childhood led to a life of activism, and how she came to launch the movement in the first place. In honor of the book's publication, the author offered up her own recommendations for essential (to her) pop culture. My favorite book as a child Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry by Mildred Taylor. This book got my little rebel heart riled up as a kid. It helped me understand better how and why injustice played out the way it did for Black folks. The last book that made me cry You Are Your Best Thing, coedited by Brene Brown and myself — I don't know if it's cheating to add my own book, but so many of these essays made me weep openly. Tears of joy and pain and familiarity and catharsis. The first album I bought with my own money Tender Lover by Babyface. I was 15 and I still remember leaving the store and fighting with the packaging to get it open and in to my walkman. I LOVE this album to this day. The last concert I attended IRL it was the Global Citizen festival; I'm not a huge concert person, but I will go out for Mary [J. Blige] and Beyoncé every time. I haven't missed many Verzuz during quarantine either — but earlier this year reggae legend Beres Hammond did a virtual concert and it was MAGICAL!! The movie I watch over and over The Color Purple. I know every word, every movement, every song, every ad lib of this movie. It is a balm for me. The last TV show that made me laugh out loud Ted Lasso is one of the funniest shows I have seen in a while. Also, Atlanta makes me belly laugh always. The books I read that helped inform my own writing Work by Black women from Maya Angelou and Toni Morrison, to Imani Perry and Lorene Cary. The last TV show I binged Manifest — and I feel like I willed this new fourth season into fruition so there is that. The fictional world I'd most like to live in Ashridge, the enchanted forest from Maleficent. I wouldn't dress like a fairy or anything, but I would wear loose-fitting clothes and traipse around with the fairies all day. The writer I wish more people knew about Gayl Jones. She was an inspiration for the great Toni Morrison. Not much more to say. She has a new book [Palmyres] releasing the same day as mine. Everyone should get it. The movie I think everyone should watch Exterminate All the Brutes. It's one thing to say Black Lives Matter; it's another to get a deep understanding of why the need for the phrase and movement came about. This film can help with that understanding. Related content: All the details on Tarana Burke's memoir 15 must-read September books Dazzling prose offsets sparse surroundings in two stunning new fall novels Close