Mick hee
Today's Document
AnasAbdin
Claire Keane
trying on a metaphor
Peter Solarz
hello vonnie

No title available

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
No title available

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
almost home
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

No title available
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
No title available

izzy's playlists!

shark vs the universe
will byers stan first human second
Sweet Seals For You, Always
styofa doing anything
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from Egypt
seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Türkiye
seen from Chile

seen from Malaysia

seen from Canada
seen from Türkiye
seen from Norway

seen from Türkiye

seen from Morocco

seen from Spain

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
@ordinarysnowflakes
Mick hee
Samira Wiley attends the 24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards at The Shrine Auditorium on January 21, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.
The Photographer Who Makes Her Mother an Object of Desire
When she was in graduate school, the photographer Natalie Krick began taking pictures of women in what she calls “female drag.” She would meet her subjects on Web sites like Craigslist or Model Mayhem, go over to their houses, and give them ultra-feminine makeovers: bright lipstick, false nails and eyelashes, pushup bras. One day, her mother came to visit. “She’s a lot older than the women I was photographing, and I really liked that, because I was thinking a lot about idealized beauty, and the way that the body is sexualized and styled,” Krick said recently. Women over fifty don’t appear in ads in fashion magazines; women over fifty don’t really appear in ads, period, aside from ones for prescription medications and senior cruises. Krick wondered what it would be like to photograph her mother in the way of the younger women she was working with, dolled up as a glamorized object of desire.
The resulting photographs, which won Aperture’s 2017 Portfolio Prize, appear in Krick’s first book, “Natural Deceptions,” and they are wild.
It’s tricky to nail down exactly what makes someone feel like a “racial impostor.” For one Code Switch follower, it’s the feeling she gets from whipping out “broken but strangely colloquial Arabic” in front of other Middle Easterners.
For another — a white-passing, Native American woman — it’s being treated like “just another tourist” when she shows up at powwows. And one woman described watching her white, black and Korean-American toddler bump along to the new Kendrick and wondering, “Is this allowed?”
In this week’s podcast, we go deep into what we’re calling Racial Impostor Syndrome — the feeling, the science and a giant festival this weekend in Los Angeles that’s, in some ways, all about this.
‘Racial Impostor Syndrome’: Here Are Your Stories
Illustration: Kristen Uroda for NPR
Actaeon never intended to see Diana naked, but still was torn to bits by his own hounds. Among the high gods even accidents call for atonement: when deity’s outraged, mischance is no excuse.
Ovid, Tristia 2.105-108 (trans. Peter Green, 2005)
Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you, a Texan reacting to seeing snow. ;)
Susan Kare, famous graphic artist who designed many of the fonts, icons, and images for Apple, NeXT, Microsoft, and IBM. (1980s)
me, jaywalking and making direct eye contact w the car driver that’s barreling toward me: kill me u coward
current mood
@onlyjacketposts
Winona Ryder in Heathers (1988) Natalia Dyer in Stranger Things (2016)
Stop adding stupid fucking photos to this post!!!
There Is No Right Or Wrong
Read More Deepak Chopra