"I shop in your closet all the time, don't I?" Hadid, 22, flicks a lock of dyed-green hair out of her boyfriend's eyes as she poses the question. "Yeah, but same," replies Malik, 24. "What was that T-shirt I borrowed the other day?"

"Unlike how this new Vogue cover shoot presents it, the lived experience of being gender-nonconforming is rarely that fun and glamorous... It looks like being spit on in public, or like being terrified to leave the house because the night before, someone on the subway yelled that you should be set on fire. On an average walk through New York City in a dress, I will receive anywhere between 10 and 20 slurs."

The article glamorizes gender-nonconforming and nonbinary identities in a way that makes them look trendy instead of looking at the people who actually identify this way. Most importantly, Gigi and Zayn may be eschewing fashion norms that come with the gender binary, but they’re not actually gender fluid. That identity is not something new to try on, and most of all it is not just a fashion statement. Gender-fluid and gender queer people are human beings, not fads.