Bye, and never come back.
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from T1
seen from United States
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seen from T1

seen from Malaysia

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seen from United States

seen from Vietnam
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seen from Canada

seen from T1

seen from T1
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seen from China

seen from Poland

seen from Germany
seen from Türkiye
Bye, and never come back.
Daniel Kaluuya gives an outstanding performance as Illinois Black Panther Party chairman Fred Hampton in the film Judas and the Black Messiah, but can the film do justice to Hampton's radical politics?
what timeline are we in now?
Summary of Vidcon
- Anita and 4 other girls have a panel - youtubers that disagree with her attend to just watch observe - Anita scans the audience and recognizes some faces - Calls on a Garbage human -Called Security because she felt “Unsafe” - Security asks these youtubers to not sit in the front row because she doesn’t feel “safe” You say you want discussion, but you never let it Anita :3 Bonus: Someone unrelated did ask a reasonable question gets kicked out
If Anita’s response to the 13th Doctor being female is to complain about lack of representation in other areas, then I seriously have to question if she’s been watching the same show as the rest of us.
Bill Potts, the main companion for Series 10, was not only a black woman, but also very explicitly gay. And that’s not even looking back at past series, where we’ve had female companions, POC companions, and LGBT companions.
Just because the representation isn’t jammed together into one character, doesn’t mean that it doesn’t exist at all.
This week we kick off a month of episodes focusing on work by Black filmmakers with a look at Dee Rees' outstanding 2011 debut Pariah, a film about the experiences of a young gay Black woman that captivates with its remarkable authenticity.
Our focus on Black films continues with this week's FFR episode on Julie Dash's landmark 1991 release Daughters of the Dust, a daring film of remarkable beauty, rich with meaning and emotion, whose influence is still keenly felt today.
Listen on your favorite podcast app of choice. 😊
On this week's FFR, we discuss Chloe Zhao's outstanding new film Nomadland, starring Frances McDormand as one of a group of poor American workers who live in their vehicles, going wherever there's a place to park and a job to be done. Listen now ⤴