So I saw the 1975 last night and I'm still having trouble believing we were in the same room
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@winxs490
So I saw the 1975 last night and I'm still having trouble believing we were in the same room
We live in a world where Kardashians are praised for doing things that black people.have been doing for decades, yet actually black people are getting shamed for their looks and activities.
Mini Mind
Not all great love/heartbreak songs are inspired by or about Taylor Swift jeez Louise.
YAY LEO
Mind #3
No ones saying that white people can't embrace their culture, what POC are saying is that white culture revolves around the suppression of POCs alomg with a built in superiority complex that they can't seem to let go of. Like chill, no ones saying you can't love being white, but don't get offended when a black girl loves her braids and chocolate skin, a Mexican girl loves her hips and her wavy hair, an Asian girl loves her eyes and her non-Americanized name and a Native American girl loves her heritage and their tradition. LET US LOVE OURSELVES TOO DAMN.
PPG Theory
Guys but what if when the Professor Utonium was making the PPG, he was actually trying to make the perfect woman because he wanted a family? Like it totally makes sense, he wanted her to have sugar, spice and everything nice because he wanted a nice little wife with a bit of sass added to her, but also loving and meant to be a good mom to their future children. However it all changed when he accidentally put in Chemical X and everything that he wanted in a wife was instead separated into three little girls and that's why their personalities are so different from each other. Like Blossom represents the headstrong and intelligent aspect in the Professor's dream girl because he wanted someone who could match wits with him and may even be smarter than him, Buttercup represents the sassy and tough part of the dream girl because he didn't want her to be a boring simple girl but someone who could fight for what's right, and Bubbles represents the gentle and girly yet skilled aspects of his dream girl because he still wanted her to be feminine and have a gentle side. It's just a thought though...
Malian-French Singer Inna Modja Is on a Mission to Spread Hope
To see more from Inna, check out @innamodjaofficiel on Instagram. For more music stories, head to @music.
For Inna Modja (@innamodjaofficiel ), music and art are more than just a career or hobby ā theyāre her calling to bring a moment, however brief, of happiness and hope into the world. With that in mind, the 31-year-old singer and her friend Marco Conti Sikic, a photographer and director, started the street art project #wingsforfreedom, in which they paint angelic bird wings on walls and photograph people standing in front of them as if theyāre ready to fly.
āThe idea was, for a few minutes, let them dream,ā Inna ā pronounced āee-nahā ā says of the photos, which were taken throughout Africa, and in Paris right after the terrorist attacks in November. āIn those areas of the world, hope is the most important thing. You need hope to have the strength to keep on going.ā Soon, theyāll take the project on the road to Brazil, as well as Calais, France, where theyāre teaching art and music to orphaned refugees from the Middle East.
Inna is so selfless about her charity work that when Instagram @music first calls her at her home in Paris, she asks if itās OK to call back in five minutes, then profusely apologizes for the slight delay. The reason for the hold up? She had to work on a speech for the United Nationsā International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation. Itās a personal cause to Inna, having been a victim of the horrific practice as a child at the hands of an older family member. The event marked her second time at the UN, after she performed there last year with Juanes and Cody Simpson, and came the day before her first proper concert in the United States at New Yorkās Standard Hotel.
Musically, Innaās style is the perfect fit for such a global event. Growing up in the northern Saharan part of Mali, she heard the countryās traditional music, as well as ā60s soul, Metallica, Boyz II Men, Barbra Streisand and many more. āBlues music takes its root in Malian music. Thatās why I love American music, because it has a lot alignment with our traditional music.ā On her third album, 2015ās Motel Bamako, which was inspired by her trips around the world, she raps in the Malian language of Bambara over a blend of soul, electronic and R&B music.
āI define myself as a desert girl. We are nomads. For me, traveling is a lot in my culture.ā Recently, she spent time in Mexico, seeing Mayan ruins and learning about the countryās relationship with mezcal and tequila in Zihuatanejo. As a photographer, she likes to capture the local flavors and architecture, as opposed to just the tourist sites. āIt helps me see the world on a bigger scale, so what Iām talking about in my music gets richer because I get to meet another culture, another street.ā
Tragically, being a northern desert girl is virtually impossible back in Mali. She still visits the country, but not in the area where she was raised. For the past several years, Islamic terrorists have held that part of the country and banned all forms of entertainment, from singing to soccer.
āEspecially as a female musician, talking about the crisis in Mali and doing a song called āTombouctouā about whatās going on there, itās really difficult. There are some parts in the country where I wouldnāt go because my life would be in danger. For them, I shouldnāt be doing music, I shouldnāt be not wearing a veil. But Iām a musician. I have to spread the message.ā
āāDan Reilly for Instagram @music
Mind #2
How do people love POC features on people who are not POC? Like if you don't know the history of India, don't wear a bindi, if you don't know African (I mean real African history, not that bs they taught you in school) history don't try and tell us that we are out of line for #BlackLivesMatter, if you don't know Asian history do not go around yelling "kawaii" and kimonos (that's just hitting on a few), and if you don't know the extent of suffering that Native Americans went through throughout history do not go around wearing headdresses and mocassins because they make you feel vintage and different. We POC have had our cultures suppressed for years and faced oppression when we tried to express ourselves, which led to feel ashamed for who we are. These days if you aren't white, you aren't perfect and you should be doing simple tasks that keep you in line to keep the people around you comfortable and superior to you. It has even gotten to the point that people want to erase their race from their children by only going for people lighter than they are (whitewashing), so that their children don't suffer the same treatment they did. These days, POC are ridiculed for being themselves, while others get to prance around wearing OUR culture and calling it "hipster" or "boho." Frankly that needs to stop. Be your culture, embrace yourself, do not let someone tell you what you should be proud of in yourself because we POC are rich in everything that we have; they're all just jealous of their bland history and sense of self that they have to take from us.
Mind #1
My sister always told me that someone around my age would die during the time of high school that would change my outlook on life. Time passed on, I graduated high school and no one passed, I felt relieved knowing that that didnāt happen to me, I was lucky and my sister was absolutely silly. Flash forward to now: freshmen in college, everything going well, and two weeks before I turn 19. Everything is going well. The phone rings, itās my sister. āI have some bad news,ā she starts. āYour friend was shot this morning by the police. He died at the hospital.ā And just like that, my heart shattered. She had been right, I was not lucky. The very same boy Iād knew my whole life had been taken from this world by a policeman claiming that he warned him and shot him out of miscompliance. This did not justify the shooting, nor did it explain anything because he was unarmed, but it did do something. It showed to me that life could easily be stripped from you by those you grew up learning were there to protect you from danger, that is until they deem you to be the danger. It also showed me to cherish life and to pursue my dreams so that I could better the image of my community, even if its by a small margin. I am not writing this as a sympathy post, but as a promise and as a wakeup call to everyone who complains about the Black Lives Matter campaign. We are treated the same, nor are our actions held to the same degree, if a POC brother or sister comes up with a new technology, it will not be regarded as highly as someone who is not a POC. What I getting at is that we need to repair our tarnished image, no matter what because if not then we will be subject to this treatment for as long as we live. I am making a statement that as I am a small piece of this community, but my impact will be great.
I had drawstrings on my shorts once, then I got tired of societal noof being thinner so now theyāre gone and Iām free as can beĀ
Just kidding they never came with any stringsĀ
I had drawstrings on my shorts once, then I got tired of societal noof being thinner so now they're gone and I'm free as can beĀ
Parenthood: Let's see how many times we can tell our kids no until they have the guts just say, "Fuck it." Then we ground them.
skins. | via Tumblr on We Heart It.
'One Chance to Dance' is the song that Zayn wrote with Naughty Boy for the new album!
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAASSS
Tomorrow marks the four years that I've signed my life away to this silly band, no regrets
Matt is me coming up with titles for my English papers
This time around I think Harry's just getting tired of buttons because even at Jay's wedding he just