Coming out as a transgender woman '' commented that Jenner's debut
Vanity Fair cover, shot by
Annie Leibovitz, had special significance for its subject: "After all the magazine covers that featured the former athlete, once lauded as the 'world's greatest athlete,' the Leibovitz photograph will be the most meaningful. Looking directly at the camera, Jenner is finally herself for the first time publicly." In a
20/20 television interview with
Diane Sawyer in April 2015, Jenner
came out as a
trans woman, saying that she had dealt with
gender dysphoria since her youth and that, "for all intents and purposes, I'm a woman." Jenner wore women's clothing for many years and took
hormone replacement therapy but stopped after her romance with
Kris Kardashian became more serious, leading to marriage in 1991.
Media attention In June 2015, Jenner debuted her new name and image, and began publicly using feminine pronoun self-descriptors. Later that month, an episode of
Epic Rap Battles of History was released featuring Jenner, as Bruce (portrayed by
Peter Shukoff) and then Caitlyn (portrayed by transgender rapper Jolie "NoShame" Drake), rap battling against Bruce Banner (portrayed by
Lloyd Ahlquist) then
The Hulk (portrayed by
Mike O'Hearn).
Reception General In August 2015, Jenner won the Social Media Queen award at the
Teen Choice Awards. Feminist author
Germaine Greer called
Glamour magazine's decision to award Jenner with a "Woman of the Year" award misogynistic, questioning whether a transgender woman could be better than "someone who is just born a woman." Chris Mandle of
The Independent stated: "Jenner has gone on to inspire countless men and women, but her comments, which were made after she was celebrated at
Glamour magazine's Women Of The Year in New York were branded 'offensive and insulting'." He added: "People began tweeting the other, harder things women have to deal with, such as institutionalized oppression, abuse, and sexual assault". In 2022, Jenner said that trans swimmer
Lia Thomas was not the "rightful winner" of the
NCAA Division I women's 500-yard freestyle event, adding "It's not transphobic or anti-trans, it's COMMON SENSE!".
Show and memoir Jenner's gender transition is the subject of
I Am Cait, initially an eight-part TV documentary series, which premiered on E! in July 2015 to an audience of 2.7 million viewers. The show tied for Outstanding Reality Program at the
GLAAD Media Awards in 2016. == Politics ==