📷: Olympus 35RC
🎞: Fujifilm Fujicolor Superia X-TRA 400
🗓: 2016
Sade Olutola
Keni
One Nice Bug Per Day
hello vonnie
Show & Tell
Monterey Bay Aquarium
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
we're not kids anymore.
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Andulka
DEAR READER
Three Goblin Art
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
tumblr dot com
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
styofa doing anything

#extradirty

Janaina Medeiros
cherry valley forever
seen from Peru
seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from Poland

seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
@rebellioux-shit
📷: Olympus 35RC
🎞: Fujifilm Fujicolor Superia X-TRA 400
🗓: 2016

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 REAP site has all the plaintiffs' stories, but Elizabeth Faith Hunter is our fellow BJU alum. Hear her words:
EIizabeth Hunter lives in Greenville, SC. She lived in foster care until the age of 10 and survived a sexual assault during this time, after which she was placed with a family and grew up in Texas as part of a fundamentalist Christian cult. She identifies as a lesbian. Her parents did not want her to attend college because she is a woman, but she applied to Bob Jones University without her parents knowing, because it was one of the few colleges that she thought she could attend without being disowned. Bob Jones University has a student handbook detailing rules of behavior for students and includes several specific anti-LGBTQ+ policies, including regulation of romantic and sexual relationships between people of the same sex. “As someone figuring out their sexuality while at college, Bob Jones University’s policies on sexuality and marriage created a scary, harsh environment for me,” Elizabeth said. During her junior year she came out to a few friends and began posting online about LGBTQ+ themes, including mentioning that she was reading a book featuring a lesbian and writing a book where one of the characters is in a lesbian relationship. During a three hour meeting with a BJU administrator, where she was summoned without advance notice, she was told by school leadership that she “must be gay” for reading and writing these materials. She told them she was “not straight” but that she had not broken any policies. “I was asked to disavow my support for LGBTQ+ rights and relationships. I refused,” she said. “It would have been like disavowing myself.” BJU immediately placed Elizabeth on disciplinary probation, charged her a monetary fine, terminated her from her on-campus student life position in the school’s media department and forced her to attend mandatory counseling with the Dean of Women. “This was the darkest month of my entire life. I felt depressed and suicidal. For the rest of my time at BJU, I was forced completely back into the closet and had to hold my head down in shame. I survived and graduated in May of 2019. But I still feel the sting of the discrimination I endured.” She is raising her voice to protect all LGBTQ+ students at Bob Jones University and religiously affiliated colleges across the country.
Fighting a Fundamentalist University’s Anti-LGBTQ Policies
Elizabeth Hunter had fewer than 700 Twitter followers when her Christian college administrators discovered her tweets in 2018. Officials at Bob Jones University, a nondenominational Christian school in South Carolina, called her into the Student Life Office seemingly at random. When Hunter entered, she noticed a manila envelope that contained printouts of tweets they had flagged as “inappropriate.”
The Head of Student life at BJU started the meeting with questions about a tweet she’d posted on sexual assault. (She had expressed exasperation with a male classmate who claimed women were “just looking for attention” if they came forward years after an incident.) Then, they brought up two other tweets.
“Happy pride to all my friends in and out of the closet. You’re incredibly brave, and I love you,” read one. In another, she shared her excitement after meeting the author of the novel that was adapted into Love, Simon, and said that she, too, was writing a book with queer protagonists. The administrator, according to Hunter, stared at her coldly. “Are you a homosexual?” he asked.
Hunter was choked up and unable to respond. When she was hauled before administrators, Hunter was still struggling to figure out her own identity—and had only told “like three people” she wasn’t straight. She told the administrator she was probably asexual “like the Apostle Paul” because she wasn’t attracted to men. He wasn’t satisfied. “He repeatedly asked me if I was homosexual, like he wanted me to ‘confess to being gay,’ which I refused to do,” Hunter told me. “But I also refused to say that I was straight, because I couldn’t lie.”
Hunter left the meeting “traumatized.” As a punishment, the school removed the redhead with a broad smile from her leadership position as the director at the campus TV news station, fined her $75 for violating “the spirit” of the Student Handbook, and mandated that she attend three counseling sessions with the college’s Dean of Women. (The BJU Student Handbook is a rigid instruction manual for students. It says of music, for instance, “all musical choices are to be intentionally conservative in style and are to avoid the markers of our current corrupt culture which often finds its musical expression in rock, pop, jazz, country, rap or hip-hop.”) Bob Jones University did not respond to a request for comment.
For the remainder of her time at the university, Hunter “tried to keep [her] head down,” she recalls; putting her Twitter on private. But before graduation she was summoned to another meeting with administrators, where they warned her “don’t think we’re not watching you” and “your sins will find you out.” Those Orwellian tactics succeeded at intimidating her; she felt like she couldn’t tell anyone else what had happened, not even her roommate. “I had no one to turn to,” Hunter said.
At most colleges, she would have been able to go to the school’s Title IX office and file a discrimination complaint. But even though most of Hunter’s tuition at Bob Jones was paid for by a federal grant, the school’s Title IX Office had a “religious exemption” from federal law requiring them to investigate claims of discrimination and harassment against LGBTQ people.
But Hunter’s not silent anymore. Three years after that meeting, she is now the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit against the Department of Education challenging the constitutionality of Title IX, which grants an exemption to religious colleges and universities to discriminate against gay and transgender students, faculty, and staff.
From Babe, edited by Petra Collins

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
Maisie Cousins
“Nature is always beautiful and also disgusting. Even the most beautiful people leak, bleed and shit”, Maisie Cousins concludes when exploring the relationship between the beautiful and the grim themes of her super saturated, sticky photographs.
Cousins approaches the female body with a unique honesty, combining nature, food and distinctly disgusting objects to capture the reality of the human form in her own perspective. The London-based artist portrays models in a way that undermines the ideas of perfection, asking “what is the point of taking a nice picture?”. Cousins’s brightly coloured images appeal to some of our deepest disgusting thoughts, a Dazed and Confused article describes her images as, “appealing to basic human impulses - namely the ones that make you want to pick a spot.”.
Maisie Cousins began sharing her work at the mere age of 15 and soon reached far beyond sites such as Tumblr and soon started shooting for Polyester Zine. Cousins’s career soon rocketed and contributed in books such as Petra Collins’s Babe, she exhibited some rather risky images at the Tate and has had several personal exhibitions including one at the TJ Boulting Gallery. And Cousin’s s not stopping any time soon acknowledging “In all honesty, I think its pretty tough and competitive being a photographer today”. The photographer also says “It’s very easy to be exploited by big companies and magazines, but with social media and the internet you can stretch out your audience with your own control and push it in the direction you want. Photography seems to be the biggest way of globally communicating these days.”
The reason I am looking at Maisie Cousins is because I am simply astounded, inspired and honestly fascinated with her images and her reasoning behind them. I am mesmerised by Cousins’s ability to take such wonderfully bright coloured, saturated, very textured and detailed images that have such a higher meaning behind them. I am enraptured by the artists ability to simultaneously disgust and entice me in a singular photograph. I also love Maisie Cousins’s conviction to her message through photography and I love that she is not scared to produce such repulsing images that could potentially offend or cause upset.
Maisie Cousins explores sexuality through food and nature which is something I will be looking at in my book. I hope to look any the ides of how food can be seen sexually and that is why I think Cousins is such a perfect artists to look at. I am also interested in her ability to capture such a great level of detail in her images which I think is important when photographing food. The colour theme for my book is pink and Cousins often matches a similar theme so I will be looking closely at the colour palettes she uses.
I adore Maisie Cousins’s work and I have been following her for a long period of time now so I am excited to be able to study her work and use it as real inspiration for my current project. I hope to gain a lot from Cousin’s ability to carry a message through her photography and also her technical and compositional photography abilities.
Babe, The Sleepwalker 💕 Dior Anderson by @tiggy.ara_
Los Angeles

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
Had to share this @WeHeartIt
Smoke and smoke

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
https://pin.it/23dJp3P