Posting this iconic piece of media that I just NEVER found online isolated except in an archived reddit thread
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Posting this iconic piece of media that I just NEVER found online isolated except in an archived reddit thread
“Angela Lansbury clad in costume for role in the movie “The Court Jester,” eating a hamburger with Basil Rathbone while sitting at lunch in large Paramount Studio commissary during a day of filming”
Walk Like No One Is Driving
man I hate this fuckass country so much
reblog if you hate your country
Do you have advice for doing public sex stuff generally? It's so so hot and I want to do more but don't know how to go about it. Also inspired by but not actually part of the kink ask game I think: What's something you've always wanted to do in public?
Public Sex Advice
Pick your place with some understanding that this is illegal and you are doing something you're not supposed to do. Sleazy dive bars are my primary location for things like this, make sure it's not too busy and that you don't take longer than at most ten minutes. Don't make an orgasm a necessary part of things. Make sure you've had a few drinks so the bartender knows they're getting a decent tip. Some places have more security like clubs, don't try to fuck there - they will catch you and make you stop, likely kick you out for the night or permanently. A dive bar with a stall or single use bathroom is very safe. Parking a car somewhere residential where the person who catches you would have to call a cop is also relatively good because you can be gone before response times generally and most people don't want to bother anyone. A changing room is highly risky - but really fun. I would also reccomend the gay classic - a dark park at night.
2. Public Stuff you've always wanted to do?
I really want to get my fingers inside of my owner while we're sitting at a bar or in a booth, somewhere people really could see what I'm doing to it if they bothered to look.
Reblogging this manually. Op doesn't want credit for fear of being terminated.
TW: slavery and the slave trade
The fact that the trafficking of enslaved Africans underpins so much of western European culture is so severely underacknowledged by white western Europeans that it boggles the mind to think of it. I've posted here before about how pitiful have been the attempts of white institutions to account for the crimes of their past, how they will at best acknowledge only the most blatant and undeniable parts of their history while laundering responsibility for the great majority of it. One particularly striking aspect of that is how little museum space in western Europe is dedicated to discussing slavery.
The British Museum in London was formed from the private collection of Hans Sloane whose collection was funded by profits from Caribbean plantations inherited by his wife. The original museum building was bought by the British government from the children of John Montagu, a man who was literally granted ownership of the Caribbean islands of St Lucia and St Vincent by the British state. The current museum building was constructed starting in the 1820s (when slavery was still legal in the British Empire) funded directly by the British government, around 20% of whose tax income at that time came in the form of customs on imported products, such as sugar and cotton from the Caribbean.
Yet the extent of the museum's engagement with its total historic dependence on slavery is merely to have moved a bust of Hans Sloane's head to a new location with some comments on his slavery connection. There is an ongoing campaign to have merely one permanent exhibit about the slave trade at the musem. (And this is not even getting into the famous legacy of that museum as a repository of looted colonial plunder such as the Benin bronzes.)
It's not just big museums either. A tiny museum like Jane Austen's house in Chawton, UK, has a notice on its website regarding mentions of slavery that actually reassures guests that they won't go too far in doing so, "We would like to offer reassurance that we will not, and have never had any intention to, interrogate Jane Austen, her characters or her readers for drinking tea." An admission that's rather telling about what they expect the views of museum visitors to be. But why not interrogate her or her characters? That is exactly what they should be doing!
It is quite well-known among Austen fans than Mansfield Park is her book that deals with slavery: the protagonist lives in the house of a man who owns slave plantations in Antigua. Many fans are keen to find evidence in the text that the protagonist objects to this, but she ultimately marries the son of the plantation owner and lives on the land of the plantation owner and her husband's income is paid by the plantation owner, so her objections (if they exist) cannot be worth much.
In Persuasion, the protagonist's love interest is a naval officer who fought in the Battle of Santo Domingo, a battle that was explicitly about protecting British interests in the Caribbean (i.e. sugar plantations) from being captured by the French.
In Pride and Prejudice, Mr Bingley has no land and his huge income is derived from investment in government bonds, which is to say that he pays for British military campaigns (such as the same Battle of Santo Domingo) and in return he is paid by the British government out of tax income, of which a big chunk is customs levied on slave-produced products.
And that's without even getting into the question of where the cotton comes from that makes up the dresses which are a frequent subject of discussion for many Austen characters.
For that matter, what about the dresses worn by Austen herself when writing her novels? The sugar in the tea she drank? The very house she lived in was owned by her brother, who inherited it (and all his considerable wealth) from Thomas Knight, a Tory MP (which is to say, a politican from the British political wing which most heavily supported slavery). The world of Austen's novels is entirely about slavery, it is the very thing which makes the lifestyles of the characters possible. The whole museum is about slavery whether the curators like it or not, anything less than mentioning it constantly is a deliberate hiding of the truth. And when I visited it a couple of years ago, I do not recall seeing slavery mentioned even once (maybe I missed one sign in a corner of one room or something idk).
As well as the severe underreporting of slavery at museums, the lack of slavery-specific museums in western Europe is also really remarkable. The Mercado de Escravos in Lagos, Portgual and the International Slavery Museum in Liverpool, UK, are the only two that I am aware of, albeit the latter is closed until 2029. A slavery museum in Amsterdam has been proposed and is supposed to open in 2030, but given that a French slavery museum was proposed by Francois Hollande a decade ago and never built I will not get my hopes too high about it.
The London Museum Docklands has a permanent exhibit on London's connection to slavery, which is pretty good as far as it goes, but is utterly pathetic in the context that it is the only permanent exhibit about the slave trade in the whole city. The best I have seen by far is the Suriname Museum in Amsterdam, which dedicates a huge portion of its space to covering the slave trade in great detail. The fact that the museum was founded by the descendants of enslaved Africans who were trafficked to Suriname is surely why this particular museum is so good.
The contrast between that and white institutions like the British Museum is really stark. Do you treat the slave trade with the gravity it deserves, which is to say that you mention it at every opportunity and do not shy away from saying, "The slave trade is why this museum, this city, this country, this continent, why all of it is the way it is"? Or do you move one statue to a new location, put a little sign up about how one man's wife's family owned slaves a long time ago, and say "That's enough, we've dealt with the slavery issue now"?
slightly serious ask: does anyone in portland oregon happen to have a spare room that me, my gf, and our two cats can stay in for several months while i get possible breast cancer treatments?
Hey I’d really appreciate it if goyim and even ashkenazi Jews would read and rb this
Kattigan has been traveling with Wick, which is definitely a lot
i tried looking this up and it didnt seem to give me a concrete answer but in your eyes, is the rocky horror picture show transphobic? (or to phrase it better, transmisogynistic towards trans women given the unfortunate stereotypes?) ive never watched this movie nor am i too aware about its last so id like some more insight if youre fine on giving it
definitely yes. it centers around a transmisogynistic caricature who is a "transvestite from the planet transsexual" who rapes half the cast, murders a captive, and essentially transes the survivors
the creator comes off as deeply closeted, talking a lot over the years about their gender but also saying trans women can't be women. the show, to me, definitely seems to reflect a lot of internalized transmisogyny. don't get me wrong, this makes it an interesting and at times somewhat cathartic watch! to an extent it feels like it cheekily plays with and revels in transmisogynistic stereotypes, and the villain's final song before dying gives them a grain of pathos in the 11th hour. a sort of transfeminist read of the play is possible. if you squint
I adore my local theater and its actors, but when some friends invited me to go to the show with them, I stayed home, because I wanted to still be able to watch performers I loved (all tme), and I knew seeing them do this show would make me hate them. I think it's possible to enjoy the show while deconstructing it through a critical transfeminist lens, but I'm under no illusions that it's become a staple of queer culture because TMEs just love to deconstruct its transmisogyny. no, people love to fawn over a ~scary and controversial~ transmisogynistic caricature. many get offended and defensive at transfeminist criticisms of the show, treating it as being above critique because it's a classic. transfeminists are annoying buzzkill prudes for taking issue. the villain from the planet transsexual surely can't be transmisogynistic because they're not explicitly called a trans woman. we're just looking for reasons to get offended
no, lol. it's dire out there. if someone just has to see rocky horror then ok, I prescribe one hour of transfeminist reading for each instance of sexual assault or harassment committed onstage by the transvestite from the planet transsexual
I used to be a part of a shadowcast, presumably the same one you're talking about here. I was the only TMA member, and I had only been out a little over a year. It seemed like a good queer community, but I got tired of how I was treated, and I was ultimately pushed out. I only knew of 1 or 2 other trans women in that community, and as far as I know we've never gotten any role more important than Dr Scott, but leadership loves to say that race, gender identity, or body type doesn't go into casting decisions. I could probably share more details, but I think I've doxxed myself enough already.
Today I wanted to talk about Kyle Bassinga. Kyle was a 21 year old man from Georgia, whose family described him as "a kind, thoughtful, and smart young man who loved nature, music, and the people around him". Kyle Bassinga was killed on February 18th 2026, just ten days after his birthday. He was found hanging from a tree in a park.
The police ruled it a suicide. The family and local community demanded an investigation. The police refused to change their ruling.
I know this website it too white for this to really go anywhere, but an understanding of the present reality of white supremacy in the United States is just so important to transfeminism here. Lynchings never stopped, white supremacy never went away, you just stopped looking.
out of the backyard gang baljeet is one of the worst to make into a coffee table. ferb would also be pretty bad. phineas and isabella would be mid because they have those bigass heads but the skinny bodies. might be worse than baljeet and ferb if you're a person who cares about symmetry. buford would objectively make the best coffee table because his silhouette has the most evenly-spaced surface area. now if you wanna talk about pnf characters in general i think pet mode perry would be the best coffee table out of all of them
love this kinda post where you have to have seen a different specific post for it to make any sense at all
every single time time i try to check facebook marketplace for furniture i get jumpscared by this (admittedly sick) custom baljeet coffee table
Trans girls, in my experience, have largely lived an existence in which for the vast majority of our lives, we've never been anybody's first choice romantically. That's if we're chosen at all.
Second choice? Yeah. Back up plan? Happens. Fetishized? Always.
But never just chosen. Never just pursued. Never loved quite as much as we need. Never the object of obsession. Never the focus of passion.
Every love feels like it's one better option disappearing like a vapor in the wind.
So I say all that to say, if you're romantically inclined, and you love a trans girl. Choose her. Really choose her. Choose her in every moment. Make her feel like she's the only one that matters and do it every day, because it's possible, likely even, that she's never felt that before.
Really choose her, or you will break her heart.
If you're not willing to do that, leave her the fuck alone.
crang