Megazine: Gothic&Lolita Bible Volume 09: Part IV
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Kiana Khansmith
tumblr dot com


★
ojovivo
Noah Kahan

Discoholic 🪩

gracie abrams

izzy's playlists!
EXPECTATIONS
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Fai_Ryy
Game of Thrones Daily
wallacepolsom
Xuebing Du

@theartofmadeline

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from Ecuador
seen from Australia

seen from Italy

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from Türkiye

seen from Philippines

seen from Türkiye

seen from Italy
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Italy

seen from Bahrain
seen from Germany
@not-sob
Megazine: Gothic&Lolita Bible Volume 09: Part IV

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Tim Walker Vogue Italia 2007
Knight in shining pink armour
@pinkmistletoe anti-heterosexual outfit

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
The Ghetto Tarot is a photographic interpretation of the well-known traditional Rider-Waite-Smith deck. Set in the Haitian ghetto, these fresh scenes were inspired by those originally created in 1909 by the artist Pamela Colman-Smith. The scenes were replicated by Alice Smeets with the assistance of a group of Haitian artists called Atis Rezistans using only material they were able to find or create locally. (Source)
OMG OMG OMG THIS
Michelangelo’s The Creation of Adam (1510) / Divine and Graces Jones (1978)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Green, who lost her parents young, was raised by her aunt and uncle. While still at school, her aunt died from cancer, and three months later her uncle was diagnosed with cancer, too. Green went on to earn her degree in physics at Alabama A&M University, being crowned Homecoming Queen while she was at it, before going on full scholarship to University of Alabama in Birmingham to earn her Masters and Ph.D. There Green would become the first to work out how to deliver nanoparticles into cancer cells exclusively, so that a laser could be used to remove them, and then successfully carry out her treatment on living animals.
source
her studies thus far are only on head and neck cancers, but her theory is this treatment platform would work on all types of cancers. But needs $$$$ to keep doing research.
It seems the issue is how to target the cancer cells and in her head and neck cancer tests, she had success in mice by utilizing fda approved immunotherepy antibodies to deliver nano particles to mark the tumor. Then she could proceed to blast the shit out of cancer with fuckin lasers.
she was ready or prepared when opportunity arose
I’m so proud of her. I wish more young black women would go into science.
#BLACKGIRLMAGIC
Yes!!!!! If she really does cure cancer, watch her name & face disappear behind some white man.
Don’t let it happen! She deserves all the credit.
Me while I was writing this anime’s script:
Paris is Burning (Jennie Livingston, 1990)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
What she says: I’m fine.
What she means: Yes, Shangela was robbed. Yes, Trixie was middling at best, and then only after stronger competitors like Aja were (surreptitiously, it must be added) taken out of the competition. And yes it’s rigga morris so now the All Stars Hall of Fame currently looks whiter than the speaker’s line-up at CPAC. But it’d be a mistake to compare Trixie to Alaska in AS2, who actually slayed challenges and won every lip sync, bribery and corruption to eke out a win notwithstanding. And while it would be tempting to compare Trixie and her win with Sasha Velour and her win, such comparisons rest on two premises. The first, that they’re both undeserving winners of a RuPaul franchise, doesn’t really say anything we didn’t already know. Middling winners are picked for maximum reach and brand development for the same reason the most mediocre can be found among management in any other enterprise: they’re good for business, and RuPaul is nothing if not an MBA RuPublican with a flair for marketing. The second premise, that a pattern of rewarding mediocre whites at the expense of black queens is emerging just as the franchise is going mainstream and is depriving hard-working queens like Kennedy Davenport of their due, is dangerous, unjust, and doesn’t really go beyond the surface of appearances. Dangerous because it offers RuPaul an easy out: crown a black queen or queen of color (QoC), tick off a box in a corporate diversity quota, and RuPaul can cast off any accusations and come off as the reasonable one against the unhinged mob. Such a win would be unjust to the hypothetical winner, since her win would be seen as the Drag Race equivalent of a diversity hire in middle management. The goal of representation in mainstream culture was always a neoliberal trap, and with drag being mainstream, now - DRAG, its claim to fame is playing off the opposition between appearances and lived realities - representation/appearances should be nowhere near the top of anyone’s priorities as an end goal, nor should representation/appearances lay out the groundwork for our understanding of why They’re doing what they’re doing. A better comparison? Trixie and BeBe. Trixie’s deliberate choice to incorporate white blonde femininity with a country twang into her drag persona is a marketing strategy, as is her choice to downplay her indigeneity. Her choice to leverage her ability to pass as white in drag and to discuss her heritage as half Ojibwe only when prompted should be seen for what it is: brand development, and Trixie herself has said she’s nothing if not a good marketer (AS3, Ep. 5: Pop Art Ball). Consider Justin Timberlake’s failed attempt to mime rural sensibilities or Miley Cyrus’ inability to market herself to anyone: they’re all putting on personas to sell. Everyone here includes BeBe, but given her inability to pass as white, she responds to white supremacy as a power relation differently from Trixie. She embraces her minoritarian position rather than suppress it, incorporating her experiences as an immigrant from Cameroon into her drag persona. But mainstream means ‘lowest common denominator,’ and representation in mainstream culture means you have to market to them. Thus, her presence reminds this more centrist crowd that some people have war in their countries. And as Adorno says, capitalist culture isn’t meant to challenge its consumers; its production is intentionally sedating both as a means of social engineering and as a means of maximizing profit. The Center, whether in entertainment or in government (lmao Pelosi), is bourgeois. That means it sees friction as the problem, rather than the appearance of the problem, and mistakes a sense of harmony for the real thing. Trixie would not be where she is today if her drag incorporated her Ojibwe heritage the way BeBe incorporates her heritage. Such branding puts The Center too close to the violence that helped shape performers they want to consume passively, not engage with in any meaningful sense beyond what appears in front of them. To them, the process is putting on makeup in the workroom (’it’s fun! it’s positive! the drama is between them, I’m not involved!’), not Trixie embracing the insult hurled at her from childhood by her stepfather, or BeBe’s journey from Cameroon. Thus why Bebe and Trixie is a better comparison than Trixie and Sasha, or Trixie and Alaska. It tells us more about how drag got to where it is today, and how we individually go about the world negotiating all these different power relations and the demands they make in order to survive. It tells us about the limits of representation, both in understanding ourselves and our relation to the world, but also as a political priority. Identities are forged through violence, but The Center doesn’t want to be reminded of its complicity in that violence, how it negotiated to align with power, and it definitely doesn’t want to be confronted with examples of people who took a higher road than they could imagine for themselves. They only want to consume, and there’s a very clear strategy with them in mind being rewarded here. Trixie got to where she is the same way RPDR got drag to where it is - mainstream but watered down; made accessible, as it were - by suppressing those aspects that aren’t palatable to the center and performing a drag version of Harmony, no discord. They play a game we all do when we make Choices to resist, relay, or align with power. Is it fair that BeBe is considered one-note for embracing her African heritage at the same time that Trixie’s branding as a blonde country girl earns her praise as a simulacrum of Dolly Parton? No. Is it fair that queens like BeBe, Shangela, Kennedy or ChiChi are marginalized for their inability to negotiate with white supremacy, at the same time they have to work through capitalist-induced poverty? No, but that’s white supremacist capitalism for you, and while it would have been satisfying to see Shangela win, her being robbed goes beyond my satisfaction at watching her win, and even beyond Shangela’s satisfaction at winning herself. The franchise itself is aiming much higher than this. What does it say about a show that trotted out Nancy Pelosi to remind you to vote in a season set during a midterm election, a season where it set up two clear winners to fail to an established celebrity?
While we’re at it, now can y'all stop sending me 3 billion anons telling me Trixie’s half native thanks