Currently obsessed with Beastars and this plushie of Legoshi with his giant ass head and teeny little body. 🥺
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Currently obsessed with Beastars and this plushie of Legoshi with his giant ass head and teeny little body. 🥺
What other aids stuff do you recommend? I saw the show you mentioned is on HBO so I'm watching it and I'd like to know more.
I won't overwhelm you but here are some I've enjoyed
Before we start though, regardless of whether you're at risk I recommend learning about pre-exposure prophylaxis aka PrEP. For some reason nobody ever talks about it but essentially it's a drug that dramatically, somewhere between 90-99%, lowers risk of contracting HIV. PrEP combined with condoms and/or your positive partner(s) meds getting their virus down to undetectable levels (undetectable=untransmittable) essentially eliminates your chances of getting it.
PEP (post exposure prophylaxis) is also available if you have been, or may have been, in transmittable contact. It shouldn't still be like this.
Anyway, enough of that.
UK:
Stephen Fry's HIV and Me - documentary about HIV/AIDS in the UK
Tell the Wolves I'm Home - a fiction book by Carol Rifka Brunt about a girl whose best friend and uncle died of AIDS. A surprise since she didn't even know he was gay and had a long term partner living in the home she visited so often. It's really fucking good
The series anon mentioned is It's A Sin, a five part series set in the UK in the 1980s and spanning the main portion of the epidemic. It's very good and I guarantee you will sob. Sidenote, it's nice watching things involving effeminate gay men etc. that don't feel like mockery (the cast and also the guy who made it are gay).
US:
How to Survive a Plague - both a book and a documentary. Disclaimer, I've read the book but only watched a few clips of the documentary (which I think is available on Amazon but like... It's old it's okay if you steal it for educational purposes). David France is a gay man and so the book contains a lot of personal anecdotes about the gay/bi men and lesbian/bi women involved in particular (since the men were, you know, dying, women were the ones running a lot of groups and organising care in hospitals and whatnot).
And the Band Played On - a very comprehensive book by journalist Randy Shilts. I believe there's also a film. It's a little older than HTSAP but just as important, I think. Don't mistake the shorter paragraph for lower enthusiasm.
Pose - TV series focusing on American ballroom culture, specifically trans women of colour, and how the AIDS epidemic affected them. Can be found on netflix.
Here is a clip of people emptying the ashes of the people they lost onto the Whitehouse lawn in protest of the government purposefully ignoring them (since the people who got AIDS were gay/bi men, trans women, IV drug users etc) and an interview with Peter Staley, a prominent activist who was involved in ACT UP, TAG, amfAR etc
The quilt you see at the beginning of the first clip is the AIDS memorial quilt. Every panel is roughly the size of a grave and there are eight to a section. And no, it's not even remotely close to one for everyone.
This is fucking killing me. Pop music for the summer.
Fireworks have started and Jav is forcing me to hold his hand
I just watched all of Its A Sin (new short series on channel 4 and hbo about/set during the AIDS crisis in the UK) and as you might imagine for the last half hour I was sobbing loudly and uncontrollably. My cat Valjean came up to me and I thought oh maybe like other pets he will attempt to comfort me :) but instead he just shouted very loudly in my face, hit me, and walked away and I realised he's never seen me audibly cry before so I have no idea what the fuck he thought was happening but he Did Not Like It
Anyway it's v v good and I highly recommend it
Anon, I'm not going to tolerate people accusing other anons or me of actively supporting genocide because they said happy Thanksgiving and I replied in kind. Most people aren't even aware of the truth behind its history, it's not a sign of any of the things you're trying to imply. You have no idea what any of us do or don't do and do or don't believe and your assumption that everyone must be American is... Really weird and also gross.
It's not helping anyone, it just makes you look bad when you do shit like that.
Tagged by @struwwelzeter to post the posters of my nine favourite films. I wanted to do it but also I have seen so few films that I did have to reveal my undying love for the 2005 classic Robots instead of bumping it down the list with something cool and intellectual. I could have said one flew over the cuckoo's nest instead but I did eventually get sick of it so
Um. @krankes-gehirn pretend I don't already know. @thetimecrystal @ambreiiigns @chloeamanda @nyarisu I have no idea who has already been tagged sorry
I'll be throwing watermelons at you if you try to throw anything at any of my clients with learning disabilities and other health probkems who can't wear masks. People who are genuinely exempt remain so.
Where in this entire exchange did I say exempt disabled people were included in this? As a disabled person myself I am, in fact, fully aware of our existence and rights, thanks.
A watermelon is a bad projectile and I haven't seen any in Asda in a long time and then the only person assaulting disabled people would be you, ironically. I need the oranges but you could try apples or something? I can't run away and my noise cancelling headphones will be in so I won't even hear them coming.