The Culture
h
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Claire Keane
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
hello vonnie
No title available
trying on a metaphor
Xuebing Du
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Game of Thrones Daily
$LAYYYTER

★

tannertan36

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
art blog(derogatory)
almost home
No title available
will byers stan first human second

Andulka

Discoholic 🪩

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Morocco

seen from Canada

seen from Germany
seen from Belgium

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Pakistan
seen from Pakistan
seen from Pakistan

seen from United States

seen from Bangladesh
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Chile
seen from United States
@latenightbootycalls
The Culture
This is probably my favourite picture on the internet.
““There are loving and intelligent Black boys sagging their pants, and there are hateful and ignorant ones in suits. We are taught to respect men, mostly White, in suits who commit atrocities everyday, but we have to demonize Black boys and men who sag their pants? And If we are really being honest, the suit has a far more violent, dangerous, and criminal past than sagged pants. Black boys and men who sag their pants have not come close to equaling the violence and criminality of White men in suits. It has never been about what Black people are, it has always been about what we are associated with, in this racist society, whether in a suit or sagging our pants.””
— via The Anti-Intellect Blog.
Jazz is freedom. You think about that.
Holali in Osu, Accra (Ghana)
By Josef Adamu
Ali defeats Foreman, 1974, by Neil Leifer.
ANNIE HSIAO-CHING WANG
ARTIST
mobyybabyy
UGANDA. 2009. Sarah Namagembe, 42, is a resident of the market. She cooks and sells food for shoppers and cinema-goers.
© Olivia Arthur
SIERRA LEONE. Kamabai. 1968. Young boys servicing their own car wash.
UGANDA. Amuria. 2008. At the ‘traditional well’ women and children fetch water. They tried to use this water just for laundry and washing up, but as there are so few boreholes and most are broken, many end up using this water for drinking and cooking as well.
© Olivia Arthur
The Festival of Mariam Dearit takes place in Keren, Eritrea. Thousands of visitors from all parts of the country come to pray, to worship the Holy Mary, and to enjoy with a picnic, music and dance. The Mariam Dearit shrine is regarded as a holy place, and a source of fertility. This small Catholic shrine to the Virgin Mary is built into a baobab tree said to be 500 years old or more. On May 29, the day of the festival, the statue of the Madonna is carried around in a procession.
ERITREA. Keren & Danakil Coast. 2005. The people, and culture of Eritrea surrounding the time of the festivities. © Eric Lafforgue
Steve Lacy by Aidan Cullen