T’Challa! T’Challa! T’Challa!
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Peter Solarz
Mike Driver
One Nice Bug Per Day

Love Begins

titsay

Origami Around
Xuebing Du
Cosimo Galluzzi

Kaledo Art

tannertan36
Misplaced Lens Cap
styofa doing anything
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Kiana Khansmith
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Cosmic Funnies
Game of Thrones Daily

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@neggablack
T’Challa! T’Challa! T’Challa!
ROCKERS remastered on Blu-ray.
Painting from the tomb of Nebamun
Thebes, Upper Egypt
18th dynasty, ca. 1350BC
Fragment of a polychrome tomb-painting representing Nebamun, standing in a small boat, fowling and fishing in the marshes, his wife stands behind and his daughter sits beneath, he holds a throw-stick in one hand and three decoy herons in the other, his cat is shown catching three of the numerous birds which have been startled from the papyrus-thicket, fish are shown beneath the water-line, eight vertical registers of hieroglyphs remain.
From the British Museum
Zaïre 74 was a three day live music festival that took place on September 22 to 24, 1974 at the 20th of May Stadium in Kinshasa, Zaïre (now Democratic Republic of the Congo). The concert, conceived by South African trumpeter Hugh Masekela and record producer Stewart Levine, was meant to be a major promotional event for the heavyweight boxing championship match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman, known as The Rumble in the Jungle. When an injury forced Foreman to postpone the fight by six weeks, the festival’s intended audience of international tourists was all but eliminated and Levine had to decide whether or not to cancel the event. The decision was made to move forward, and 80,000 people attended.
In addition to promoting the Ali-Foreman fight, the Zaire 74 event was intended to present and promote racial and cultural solidarity between African American, Afro-Latinx and African people. Thirty one performing groups, 17 from Zaire and 14 from overseas, performed. Featured performers included top R&B and soul artists from the United States such as James Brown, Bill Withers, B.B. King, and The Spinners as well as prominent African performers such as Miriam Makeba, TPOK Jazz, and Tabu Ley Rochereau. Other performers included Celia Cruz and the Fania All-Stars. source
A documentary about the Zaire 74 festival, entitled Soul Power, was released in 2009. The film was directed by Jeffrey Levy-Hinte, who served as the editor on the 1996 documentary When We Were Kings.
“WRECKING CREW !!”
Juice - 1992
Esse filme… 😭😭😭
Market at Basoko, Mbandaka, Zaïre 1972 by Eliot Elisofon
Papa Jack: Jack Johnson And The Era Of White Hopes by Randy Roberts
When Jack Johnson defeated white heavyweight champion Jim Jeffries in 1910, it was America’s notions of racial superiority that staggered under his blows. Amid riots and lynchings, the search began for the Great White Hope who could put the “uppity” new champion in his place. Here is the startling true story of the most famous-and most hated-black American of his day. “Papa Jack” takes us into a violent and sordid world. It is an astonishing tale of black defiance-and white retribution-set against the dramatic canvas of sports and spectacle in Jim Crow America. [book link]
Tupac Shakur | Stone Mountain, GA 1994 - by Chi Modu.
Ed Piskor
http://www.edpiskor.com/