Marya Ruth Dunning
MRCTV Intern

Marya Ruth Dunning is the MRCTV intern. She was previously an intern with Campus Reform and contributed nearly 100 articles to the outlet. Currently, Marya is working on an independent docuseries, Beneath The Iceberg, which exposes the Internet's role in facilitating sex trafficking and child sexual abuse. In her free time, Marya enjoys writing, doodling, listening to music, and playing with her cat, Mync.

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Marya Dunning | January 24, 2024
Would you let Joe Biden babysit your kids? In a Man On The Street video, content creator Natalie Carey asked passers-by just that, and their answers reveal a lot about the public’s faith in the Biden administration. “Hell, no,” one woman answered, “because he’d fall asleep before I even got out the door. Yeah, Joe’s way too old. Old Joe.” Related: Watch: Protestors Take Over Biden’s Abortion…
Marya Dunning | January 22, 2024
Oklahoma House Bill 3084, introduced by Justin Humphrey, would allow schools to contact animal control to remove students who identify as “furries.”
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Marya Dunning | January 22, 2024
Animal control may soon be called in to handle furries in school. Oklahoma House Bill 3084, introduced by state representative Justin Humphrey, would allow schools to contact animal control to remove students who identify as “furries.” Related: 'Some Men Have Vaginas,' Leashed Ladies, Dating A Furry ... “Students who purport to be an imaginary animal or animal species, or who engage in…
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Marya Dunning | January 18, 2024
The Business Insider has compiled a list of LGBTQ-identified characters in children’s television.   The “Insider Database” includes 259 characters and seeks “to track the historical presence of LGBTQ and gender-minority characters in animated children’s television.”   Readers can view the webpage, which displays a long list of characters, some going back years,  “But in the past decade, small…
Marya Dunning | January 18, 2024
In the past decade, small-screen animation has undergone a noticeable shift. LGBTQ characters in children’s cartoons has increased in frequency, nuance, and overtness.