Representation matters.

When it comes to interracial couples, this is certainly true. In 2017, The New York Times posed the question "where are all of the racial couples?" in an article about the representation of mixed-race couples on screen. The pieces pointed out that for many years, the entertainment industry "forbid depictions of interracial relationships. From 1930 until the late 1960s, the Motion Picture Production Code banned 'vulgarity and suggestiveness' so that 'good taste may be emphasized.'" The piece put a bold underline under the fact that decades have passed since these codes were dismantled. In fact, the same year of the article's release, the Pew Research Center revealed that the number rose to 10 percent, including 11 million interracial marriages in total.

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These statistics oddly haven't always extended to even our most innovative forms: texting to name just one. Up until recently, texters weren't able to express their mix-raced love via iPhones.

Now thanks to a new update, they are!

New updates to Apple's iOS 14.5 are bringing interracial couples to your texts this Spring.

New couple emojis with skin variant combinations.nbsp
Emojipedia

Apple is working to make our texting experience more inclusive and representative for all phone users. In a recent update from Unicode, the system that produces emojis, Apple has announced that they will be unveiling new designs and new options for emojis that already exist as part of iOS 14.5.

New designs for the emojis will be more representative of people with disabilities as well.

Emojipedia

They include a person with a bird, flaming heart emoji, a healed heart, and new skin tone variants for kissing couples and couples with heart emojis. There will also be accessibility-themed emojis which include an ear with a hearing aid, a guide dog, a prosthetic leg, and a prosthetic arm.