
blake kathryn
occasionally subtle

Product Placement
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Three Goblin Art

Discoholic 🪩

if i look back, i am lost
Acquired Stardust

Andulka

titsay
Cosimo Galluzzi
art blog(derogatory)

No title available
cherry valley forever

pixel skylines
Jules of Nature
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
No title available

Origami Around
wallacepolsom

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Germany
seen from France
seen from Ireland

seen from China
seen from Türkiye

seen from Canada
seen from Spain

seen from Germany
seen from United States
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seen from Japan

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from United States
@acurrentcrush
I’m about to make this house a little less full
I want the drugs this guy on
u can’t go to college the grass ain’t even cut…
He just covered like ten topics
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
What the hell is this nigga on 😂
thats why my remote gone now😂
I still can’t follow up on this 😂
I have a headache now thanks
What the fuck did I just watch
Scary thing is he looks sober
I SWEAR I saw him at the J.Cole concert last night! Lmao. This my favorite video!!
Watched this sober didn’t understand watched it on lean didn’t under stand watched it off henny and purp made sense
I feel like I got high watching this.
Comedy Central 😂😂😂
Bruhhhhh 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Nigga on some else
Wtf fseveeerrrr 😂😂😂 this nigga drugs does drugs!!!
I had to watch this twice to fully not understand what he was saying….
LMAO…who is that in that back? LOL
LMFAOOOOOO WHO THUG ASS GRANDADDY IS THAT IN THE BACKGROUND 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
So are you taking the jacket, sir?
Big Mouth - Life is a Fucked Up Mess
true as hell
Dear Strange Man on the Train,
At 11 o’clock at night, you moved across the train car to sit far too close to two girls about half your age so you could interrupt our conversation to tell us how pretty we are. We said thank you, have a good night, and went back to our conversation.
You interrupted us a second time to say that you didn’t want to bother us, but we needed to hear it, how pretty we are. We said cool, thanks, have a good night, and went back to our conversation.
You interrupted us a third time to say you wouldn’t say anything else, you didn’t want to bother us, you just had to let us know. We said have a good night, and went back to our conversation.
This seemed to perplex you. You came all that way across a train car to bestow upon us this life altering knowledge - the fact we were pretty - and all you got was a polite thank you? You grumbled about gratitude, about how you better not end up on facebook, were we putting you on facebook? Why was my friend looking at her phone? Was she putting you on facebook? All you’d done was tell us we were pretty.
At this point, my friend says, “Sir, we’re trying to have a conversation. Please don’t be disrespectful.”
This was when you got angry. Disrespectful? YOU? For taking the time out of your day to tell us we were pretty? Did we know we were pretty?
“Yes, we knew,” says my friend.
Well, that was the last straw. How dare we know we were pretty! Sure, you were allowed to tell us we were pretty, but we weren’t allowed to think it independently, without your permission! And if we had somehow already known - perhaps some other strange man had informed us earlier in the day - we certainly weren’t allowed to SAY it! Where did we get off, having confidence in ourselves? You wanted us to know we were pretty, sure, but only as a reward for good behavior. We were pretty when you gifted it upon us with your words, and not a moment before! You raged for a minute about how horrible we were for saying we thought we were pretty, how awful we turned out to be.
I took a page out of your book and interrupted you. “Sir, you said you wouldn’t say anything else, and then you kept talking,” I said. “You complimented us, we said thank you, and we don’t owe you anything else. It’s late, you’re a stranger, and I don’t want to talk to you. We’ve tried to disengage multiple times but you keep bothering us.”
At this point, our train pulled into the next stop. My friend suggested we leave, so we got up and went to the door.
Seeing your last chance, you lashed out with the killing blow. “I was wrong!” you shouted at us as we left, “You’re ugly! You’re both REALLY UGLY!”
Fortunately, since our worth as human beings is in no way dependent upon how physically attractive you find us, my friend and I were unharmed and continued on with our night. She walked home; I switched to the next train car and sat down.
So, strange man, I know you’re confused. I don’t know if you’ll think about anything I said to you, but I hope you do learn this: when you give someone something - a gift, a compliment, whatever - with stringent stipulations about how they respond to it, you are not giving anything. You are setting a trap. It is not as nice as you think it is.
But you’ll be happy to know that when I sat down in the next car, a strange man several seats over called, “Hey, pretty girl. Nice guitar. How was your concert?”
“Thanks. Good,” I said, then looked away and put on my headphones, the universal sign for ‘I’d like to be left alone.’
“Wow. Fine. Whatever. Fucking bitch,” he said.
Fucking creepers. May I ask how feminism or anything similar would actually have prevented this from happening? This ya already socially unacceptable.
Men - because to be clear, I called them ‘strange men’ because they were strangers to me, not because there was anything abnormal about them - act this way because they are raised in a culture that lets them believe their time and opinions are more important than the time and opinions of women, and that as a consequence, they are owed women’s attention. They are socialized to believe women should be grateful to them for their attention, and that they are being denied something rightfully theirs when women are not.
Raising someone with feminism, the idea that all sexes/genders are equals and thus no party is beholden to or more important than another, would have prevented this by not allowing men to grow up expecting ‘rights’ that are not actually theirs. You say this is socially unacceptable, but there were 20+ people on that train who actively watched us being harassed and did not say a word. It is socially unacceptable, but this kind of thing happens to me and many other women multiple times a week, with often more traumatic results.
So, yes, I believe more feminism would prevent sexist moments like this. Also, water is wet, the atmosphere is 78% nitrogen, and cheese is addictive.
This was not sexist, this was an awkward man, possibly trying to get a positive reaction versus a neutral or negative one that was displayed, based off of the context you showed. Awful that he interrupted your conversation, and wanted to be engaging socially, whatever his reasons that motivated him. Generalizations of a certain biological sex does not help society as a whole, and the ideal of feminism does not help. The people who “actively watched” you be verbally harassed possibly believed you were perfectly capable in handle yourselves. You’d probably be more upset if there was another man that told the strange man to back off, due to him possibly being “chivalrous”. I find the whole event to be amusing for the awkwardness of the conversation and would only had stepped in had he’d been physical. I really don’t see how this event was “sexist”, and only say that you’re really reaching.
Well I wouldn’t see any part of this amusing, more times then I can count on my hands I’ve been"complemented" and met with really awful responses when I don’t praise someone endlessly… Yes some guys are awkward which is unfortunately bundled up it these kind of interaction. But the problem is when people are instantly hostile when you don’t drop everything and pretend it’s the first time someone’s every noticed you let alone called you pretty! Imagine it’s so women saying this to a guy, if she reacted the same way she’d get called out on being a bitch or what have you… I’m in a shit mood some my writing is terrible but here are two examples;
At the shops waiting for people doing my own thing and someone calls me pretty. I’m preoccupied but I look up and say oh thank you and go back to what I was doing only to have them mutter that they did me a favour and it’d pay to not be so emo. Like sorry I’m on the phone and didn’t drop everything… Perhaps I could say “I was at fault for not engaging in further conversation”
And more recently on a train had a dude compliment my bow to which I replied the same way “oh thanks” and he wished me a good day as I did to him. That was it. Same response from me but boy it’s nice to not feel like I’m a bad person for not saying how amazing and nice they are for complementing me??
Ugh I doubt any of this makes sense or helps but I really can’t look at the situations I’ve been put into and find them funny…..
Thanks for the response and the perspective, and yes they are two different incidents that happened. I find that these compliment baiters to be funny, because they just want attention too, but aren’t observant of the environment they’re in. The situation is uncomfortable, sure, especially when they resort to negative attention seeking behaviors, but for her to contort it to a sexist deposition is something that I’m confused about and don’t agree with at all. These people were probably not taught the art of communication and observation. They don’t need feminism for that. They need to experience a social life.
i find perspectives like this interesting because it lies outside both the sexism sphere and also the victim-blaming sphere. i would say that OP’s post is classified as a sexist thing because i cannot imagine a scenario where a guy would pass another guy on the street saying “hey man, cool hairstyle,” and the other guy responding with a simple “thanks dude,” and then suddenly chased for a follow-up, and then getting a “fine, don’t talk to me then, fucking faggot!” as a response for ignoring the other person.
so why does this happen to women– not just once or twice in a lifetime, but multiple times? i mean, there are nearly 80,000 reblogs with women sharing, on average, 5+ examples of this happening to them and that’s just rattling off the top of their head!
doesn’t that say a little something about the power dynamic between men and women?
i am extremely interested to hear differing view points about this.
Is it possible that this man didn’t know how to interact with women in a non-awkward manner? Absolutely.
Did that make it our responsibility to accommodate him? Absolutely not.
You can control your own actions, but you cannot control others’ reactions to you. I can’t stop this man from trying to talk to us, but I can choose how I respond. He can choose to interact with us, but he can’t force us to be interested. Expectations of people’s reactions not aligning with their actual reactions is often the case in these situations, and is in part a thing that feminism works to dismantle: we’re raised in subtle and insidious ways to think women owe something to men, and men not receiving it gives them a right to lash out, and feminism seeks to level that playing field.
And possibly, if you removed all context from this interaction, you could say it was something other than sexism. But the thing is you can’t remove the context, because this was an older man harassing two younger women, and removing that context changes the situation so deeply it’s not even worth discussing. Like mentioned above, this is a situation that happens to women on a regular basis, in a way that it does not happen to men on a regular basis, because of sexism. And the way that it’s being regularly responded to here - no matter what I say, no matter how many women chime in how regularly it happens to them, it’s dismissed by people who were not present as incorrect or overreacting or misrepresenting - is pretty sexist, too. Not because of the gender identities of the people dismissing it, but because we’re raised to think comments made by women are more likely to be rooted in emotion than reason and are less believable.
..Yeah, I went on a date in New York.
I appreciate John’s story but the fact that OP blurred out Amy Schumer is the funniest think I’ll see all week and it’s only tuesday.
Representation matters
This show was truly ahead of its time
When I tell you I do a yearly re-watch of Daria and enjoy every moment of it.
First photo of Rami as Freddie Mercury for the new biopic - out in theatres Dec 25th 2018!
Hate that the movie leaves out major chunks of Freddie’s life but damn if Rami don’t look good.
Tall Girls vs. Heels
MOTHERFUCKERS COULDN’T GET ON WONDER WOMEN’S LEVEL
GIVE THIS MAN A RAISE
MODERN DAY PHILOSOPHER
This has to become a more okay thing
It Me.
Music, Poetry, Dance, Theater, Movies in NYC this Weekend
Friday, August 18:
Click here for tickets
“Crown Heights” movie opens in theaters today. Watch the trailer:
Mary J. Blige & Lalah Hathaway “Strength of a Woman” tour at Coney Island Ford Amphitheater (8.18) and Madison Square Garden (8.19). Click here for tickets.
Saturday, August 19:
Click here for the full schedule of music (including a performance by Lalah Hathaway and Johnny Gill on 8.19), fashion, children’s activities, health fair and more happening this weekend in Harlem at 135th Street Between St. Nicholas Avenue and Malcolm X Boulevard.
Click for details about the “We’re Gonna Be Allright - A Self-Care Festival” at Weeksville Heritage Center in Brooklyn.
Click here for tickets.
Click here for tickets.
Click here for tickets.
Summerstage Presents JIM JONES Saturday, August 19, 2017 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem
Sunday, August 20:
Click for details about the Bronx Museum of the Art’s “Boogie on the Boulevard” street festival
Discount $55 tickets are available for “PIPELINE,” the new drama by Dominique Morisseau at the Lincoln Center Theater, which is closing August 27, 2017. Click here and use code PLTM55 to purchase tickets.