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Jules of Nature
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Three Goblin Art
Misplaced Lens Cap
will byers stan first human second

Kiana Khansmith

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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Keni
macklin celebrini has autism
Show & Tell
Cosmic Funnies

PR's Tumblrdome
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

pixel skylines

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
almost home
we're not kids anymore.

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@thrilling-silence
mmmmm
Seohyun Kim by Roni Ahn for Vogue Hong Kong Magazine - November 2019
Kohei Takabatake at Etro F/W 2020 by Acielle Tanbetova
Anok Yai at CR Runway 2019
a mess
Today I learned the IRS doesn’t audit rich people because it’s too much work.
i dont want to look “pretty” i want to look otherworldly and vaguely threatening
I’ve been thinking a lot about the character of the blonde popular bitch in teen movies. There are a lot of examples:
Regina George (Mean Girls), Sharpay Evans (High School Musical), Heather Chandler (Heathers), and Cher Horowitz (Clueless) just to make a few.
What is interesting is all of their characters are defined by three primary characteristics: being physically attractive, being ultra-feminine, and having ambition. Now what’s interesting is the first two characteristics are things that society likes in women, so in a typical story one would expect these characters to be treated as heros or at least love interests. But instead ¾ of these characters are either primary or secondary villains. Cher is the exception, being the protagonist of her movie, but many of her actions are vilified by the script so despite being the protagonist, it isn’t until the end that she is treated like a hero.
Why is this character type villainized?
The answer is that these characters are women who use the things that society likes in women (femininity, beauty) not for men, but for their own personal use. This goes back to the aforementioned ambition. These characters crave power, and are willing to work for it, more specifically, they are willing to use their ~feminine wiles~ to get it. By having this ultra masculine character trait, these characters are seen as villains when they perform simple acts like caring about their appearance, or being flirtatious. Traits like this, ambition, flirtation and even vanity are praised in male characters.
Many of the actions and personalities these women do/have are strikingly similar to many male anti heroes in action movies.
They are arrogant, clever, manipulative, self-aggrandizing, just like characters like Tony Stark, Loki, Han Solo and Deadpool. But whereas these anti heroes become lovable scoundrels with hearts of gold, these characters become the villains of their tales because they are teenage girls.
To me what this says is audiences and writers are fine with all the traits associated with ambition, they just aren’t fine when it’s associated with femininity. Because an ambitious clever man is a scoundrel, but an ambitious woman is a bitch.
As a little girl constantly seeing these characters portrayed as evil made me develop a really negative image of femininity. I wanted to think I was superior to other girls because I feel better presenting pretty masculine. I was really misogynistic to a lot of girls because of my preconceived notions about femininity equating to shallowness and bad intentions. I know there are a lot of gay/gnc girls that like me had similar misogynistic hang ups because of gender non conformity and that really sucks!
As such I think it’s really cool when movies subvert the blonde bitch trope. To some extent, Clueless did this, but I think a better example is Legally Blonde. Elle Woods is clearly ambitious and hard working, but she’s also a feminine pretty blonde woman. And she is absolutely the hero of her story, and she is able to succeed due to a combination of her femininity and her ambition without having to compromise either!
What, like it’s hard?
Allow women to be feminine and ambitious and written like heros!
Mens Fashion - www.GoGetGlam.com
…. *scribbles furiously on notepad*
Tips
For the guys, butch women and non binary people all there. I’m a woman, but I’m reblogging this for anyone who finds this useful. ❤️
someone: so what do you think is the solution to homelessness?
me, socialist:
Let homeless people occupy peopleless homes, build houses for use rather than exchange, 3D print comfortable houses in a day, convert corporate skyscrapers into housing and commercial malls into publicly-accessible community centers with living commons and entertainment
When you say it to people and they break
“But the money? … we can’t just? But, Money? We can’t just… help… people? Can we? The Money. We can’t just help people? Like that? We can’t just? Money?”
To really break them, tell them it’s cheaper to give homeless people homes than it is to leave them on the street.
Reblog to live like Enya
I’m not seeing any problem with this.
Living the dream.
she is absolutely living the dream
Her and Stevie Nicks. Stevie keeps herself surrounded by ladies and there are areas of her house and property where men are strictly not allowed, like the pool area. Some journalist said something like, “No man gets to see Stevie without Stevie’s permission.”
Her and Enya are fucking unapologetic about it, and I fucking love them for it.
“Self worth is so vital to your happiness. If you don’t feel good about you, it’s hard to feel good about anything else.”
— Mandy Hale (via naturaekos)
This isn’t very composed but my 16 year old cousin was shot to death this week and I needed to write something