BADASS WOMEN
Why She’s a Badass Bush’s fame is tied
primarily to her acting roles (One Tree Hill, Chicago
P.D.), but activism has also played an important part
in her life for as long as she can remember. While
growing up in Pasadena, Calif., she would organize
fund raisers, protests, and clubs in school to tackle
issues that were important to her. Now she’s focused
mainly on empowering women and protecting the
environment. To date, Bush has raised nearly
$500,000 for charity through her social-media
channels (including Instagram and Twitter), built
three primary schools in Laos and Guatemala,
co-founded an inclusive nontoxic finishing salon in
Detroit that helps fund grants for budding
female entrepreneurs, and signed her
name to Time’s Up’s founding letter. “I feel
the most capable, curious, and badass
when I am active in my community,
educated about current events, and using
my voice,” she says.
Media Maven Bush was hesitant to
embrace social media until BP’s 2010
Deepwater Horizon oil spill, one of the most
devastating industrial disasters in history. The
accident made her realize how she could galvanize
her accounts’ followers to help protect the planet.
She has since promoted many other causes—most
recently the #EndPeriodPoverty initiative from
Always after learning that nearly one in five girls
in the U.S. misses school because she can’t afford
feminine hygiene products. “The fact that we
live in a country where wealth disparity creates
barriers for girls on the basis of their biology is
crazy to me,” she says. “Especially since there’s
not a person on earth who would be here if it
weren’t for a menstruating woman.”
Pressing On Bush attributes her drive to the
resilience she acquired working as a full-time
actor since the age of 21. “It’s funny—the world
only sees your successes,” she says. “They don’t see
the thousands of auditions actors go on for jobs we
don’t book, the hundreds of hours we spend in
It doesn’t
matter
how many
hurdles
you have
to jump
over.
It just
matters
that you
keep
going.Ó
84 InSTYLE NOVEMBER 2019
meetings we take in support
of something that might not
happen, or all the times we
miss a wedding, a birthday,
or the birth of someone’s
child because we’re away working.” She also admits
that being a young star wasn’t always a plus. “My
naïveté put me in positions I wish I hadn’t been in,
but the good and the bad add up to the sum of your
life. It doesn’t matter how many hurdles you have
to jump over. It just matters that you keep going,”
she says. “That’s pushed me over any obstacles I’ve
faced—whether or not I’ve always done it in the
right way is sort of irrelevant.”
Talking Points The culmination of her life’s
work has been distilled into what she considers her
most gratifying project to date: her new podcast,
Work in Progress with Sophia Bush (inset), which
is described as “frank, funny, personal, profes-
sional, and sometimes even political conversa-
tions” with guests like Gloria Steinem and Chelsea
Handler. “It is the most fulfilling and fun thing
I’ve done in a long time,” Bush says. “The podcast
feels like such a wide-open runway for curiosity,
inspiration, and possibility.” —SHALAYNE PULIA
G etting
It Done
ACTRESS AND ACTIVIST
SOPHIA BUSH ON USING HER
PLATFORMS TO EFFECT CHANGE