Feeling a bit like a celebrity with the selfie line at my hefla this afternoon... but the smiles were all genuine, though at times accompanied with tears, as I said goodbye to some of the most wonderful youth I've ever known. Sidi Rahal forever.

roma★

oozey mess

Product Placement
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Peter Solarz
art blog(derogatory)

Discoholic 🪩
todays bird
Xuebing Du

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styofa doing anything
we're not kids anymore.

ellievsbear

if i look back, i am lost
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
taylor price
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macklin celebrini has autism

Kiana Khansmith
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
seen from Saudi Arabia
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@the-ellebelle
Feeling a bit like a celebrity with the selfie line at my hefla this afternoon... but the smiles were all genuine, though at times accompanied with tears, as I said goodbye to some of the most wonderful youth I've ever known. Sidi Rahal forever.
Oscar nominations still "amplify work in a way nothing else does," says the director of the nominated documentary '13th,' who spoke to THR from the set of Disney's 'A Wrinkle in Time.'
“What do this year’s more inclusive nominations mean for the industry?
Very similar to the prison system in this country, where over the years we’ve put Band-Aids on something that needs surgery, in the film industry we’ve often done cosmetic changes to something that needs structural reconstruction. As far as the Academy goes, there now are structural changes put in place — and I was part of that decision-making — and the hope is that those changes will continue to manifest in years like this where the true world is reflected, but we won’t know until years to come. We can applaud this year’s Oscar nominations, and we should. It’s a beautiful year, and it will be even more beautiful when there are Latino, Asian-American, Native American, people with disabilities [represented].
What do you say to women and people of color who are daunted by the obstacles in Hollywood?
Anyone who thinks it’s too daunting should go do something else, because if you walk in thinking that it’s daunting, then it’s going to be that for you, and this is not for you. But if you walk in ready for it, to fight for your stories, to recognize that the traditional walls are collapsing, that the old system is on its last legs, that there are new ways to create material, to distribute material, to amplify your material, there’s no one stopping you. What you really have to interrogate is what do you want: Do you want to tell your story or do you want to be famous and win an Academy Award? ‘Cause those are two different things. There’s nothing stopping you anymore from telling your story.
Julie Dash, a beautiful filmmaker far, far more talented than I am, was making films in the early '90s, and her [Daughters of the Dust] became a classic film that’s in the National Archives. But she’s not a household name; she only joined the Academy last year when I lobbied to get her in — she’s on the margins and the outskirts of quote-unquote mainstream Hollywood, and yet over the years she’s found a way to tell her stories and be satisfied outside of that industry paradigm. So if you want to tell your stories, what I would say to someone is, “Go tell them.” And I believe that that is not a frivolous statement: It can be done; there are people doing it and go for it.”
Read the full interview here
More Ava DuVernay posts
In a last ditch effort to master the difficult art of couscous balls before I leave Morocco, I enlisted the expertise of the women who hutsle couscous for a living. I think I can finally say I'm a pro baller. #couscous #morocco #peacecorps #culture #baller #proball
When you finally break down and buy something from your favorite boutique you've been frequenting for two years... ... #incidentalmatching #cookbook #grabbedthefrenchonethough #artisan #morocco #broke #moroccomagic
Today is International Hijab Day! Bochra taught me this amazing wrap. For more information on the Hijab, check out my blog. Link in bio. . . . . #hijab #internationalhijabday #morocco #culture #hijabfashion #peacecorps
The beginning of Lydia Davis’s story, “New Year’s Resolution,” from The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis
She talked about it with The Paris Review:
INTERVIEWER
Your reading in Zen Buddhism informs many of your stories—for example, “New Year’s Resolution.”
DAVIS
“My New Year’s resolution is to learn to see myself as nothing.” I had fun with that one because, you know, “nothing,” according to that discipline, is a good thing, but according to my upbringing and Freud and family dynamics, “nothing” is a big problem. So that story is about two disciplines colliding and the poor head caught in the middle saying, Uh, wait a minute . . .
Listen to her read the whole thing here.
(Thanks to Maud.)
Watch an Animated Italo Calvino Story
Actor John Tuturro narrates a fairy tale form the Italian fable master
Watch it on Electric Literature!
Turturro reads Calvino.
Sam Sanders joins the PCHH roundtable for a conversation about some of our favorite writing, television and movies of the year.
Currently Listening. Love it!
Wake up Earlier
I need this
My annual henna pic!
These brilliant paintings were made by Duane Bryers, the artist responsible for my all-time favourite pin-up girl. Hilda is not only sexy, but she has a distinct personality that I don’t see in the other girls of her category. While most pin-ups are simply eye candy, Hilda makes me laugh and marvel at her adorable down-to-earth-ness.
badwolfbutch you needed to be aware
thank u for making me aware also i love her double chin thank god for the artist making a realistic double chin its so cute
@pennysanchezofficial she’s cuuuute
With freedom, books, flowers, and the moon, who could not be happy.🌼
Oscar Wilde (via gqandw)
Secret rooms concealed by bookcases
Andy Warhol too! Check it out.
http://stylefrizz.com/200912/andy-warhols-artistic-work-as-childrens-book-illustrator/
Carol is the best! She will always be Ms. Hanigan to me.
This holiday season, the gourmand in your life will accept one gift and one gift only: Salvador Dalí’s cookbook, with its recipes for frog pasties and thousand-year-old eggs. Any kitchen without it is disappointingly ordinary and should be destroyed immediately. “Dalí’s lavish and erotic cookbook Les Diners de Gala was first published in 1973, featuring 136 recipes compiled by the painter and his wife Gala. Divided into twelve chapters with titles such as ‘Prime Lilliputian malaises’ (meat) and ‘Deoxyribonucleic Atavism’ (vegetables), the book also features sumptuous Dalí illustrations and photographs of the painter posing alongside tables loaded with a banquet’s worth of food. Chapter 10, entitled ‘The “I Eat GALA”,’ is devoted to aphrodisiacs. In one illustration, a disembodied head with biscuits for hair and a fringe made of a jar of jam sits on a platter alongside a large cube of blue cheese, the sides of which show a crowd in front of a mountain. Another shows a desert scene in which a telephone receiver is suspended on a twig over a melting plate holding two fried eggs and a razor blade.”
This and more in today’s arts and culture news.
I love discovering books I never knew about from people I least expect!
Marcy Dermansky at Greenlight Bookstore, 10/10/16