What a man 😍

seen from Malaysia

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seen from Malaysia
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seen from China
seen from China
seen from China

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What a man 😍

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
Solarpunk Magazine Issue 06: Lunarpunk Available Now
Our long-awaited lunarpunk issue is ready for pickup! Collect your copy today! 🌗💙
That’s a wrap for our first year of publication. We are so grateful for our contributors, editors, and readers; we would not be here without your support.
Solarpunk Magazine is a queer and BIPOC-led publication. Your support means everything in a world that would prefer us to be silent. Thank you!
Our crowdfunding campaign for our second year launches December 6th, 2022, on Kickstarter. The vast majority of money we raise goes towards paying our contributors the SFWA rate at 8 cents per word.
Thank you, all!
As promised, another from the Unemployed Magazine shoot.
«Κτίριο Γαλλικού Ινστιτούτου στη Θεσσαλονίκη» / “French Institute Building, Thessaloniki” / “Institut Français de Thessalonique“ _ Αρχιτέκτων / Architect / Architecte: Δημοσθένης Μολφέσης / Demosthenes Molfessis.
«Aρχιτεκτονικά Θέματα» / “Architecture in Greece”, Ετήσια Επιθεώρηση / Annual Review, Issue 06, [1972], pp. 181-185.
Solarpunk Magazine Issue 06 Cover & Contributor Reveal!
Get ready for our special lunarpunk-themed issue! 🌔 Lunarpunk offers a gothic, witchy aesthetic to solarpunk’s utopian call for change. Lunarpunk works may explore paganism, spirituality, hauntedness, death positivity, and lunar-focused motifs and symbols. If this seems like your subgenre, check out our sixth issue!
Cover art by Anselmo J. Alliegro.
Stories by Amanda McNeil, BrightFlame, Kanishk Tantia, M. Lopes da Silva, Samantha Panepinto, and E.G. Condé.
Poetry by Ai Jiang, Alexander Etheridge, and T.R. Siebert.
Interior art by Carly A-F and Brianna Castagnozzi.
Nonfiction by Rob Cameron, Dominic Loise, and Justine Norton-Kertson.
Available November 8th, 2022. 💚

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
"Some find their escalating, three-note calls haunting, disturbing, a desperate cry for help. I find them so beautiful. I ask them to sing me to sleep. Eventually, they do." –Jennifer Acker, The Common Statement
Warm Brew – First Dual Cover Artists - Interviewed by Emily Berkey for ISSUE 06
The following interview with Warm Brew appears in print in ISSUE 06 of SUSPEND Magazine available to purchase here. Interview conducted by Emily Berkey and photography by William Azcona.
It’s a Saturday night and I’ve arrived at the Paramount Recording Studios in Hollywood. I’m told, “Don’t go into Studio X, Party Next Door is in there…We’re next door.” I’m led by the studio’s security to the back patio where I spy music producer and DJ, Al B Smoov, Warm Brew member Ray Wright, and a few others over near the restroom, huddled together laughing. Eventually, Manu Li emerges from the bathroom, pencil and pad in hand.
“Did you just open-door-studio-poo?” someone asks. Manu eyes me and shrugs, “Yeah.”
After dishing out side-hug-hello’s, we sit around an oversized table illuminated by the amber string lights above us. Manu takes drags of a hand rolled cigarette and scratches his pencil on his notebook, scrawling lyrics as they come to him. A spliff is passed around as Ray tells stories and Manu mumbles to himself, giving life to the words on his page.
Once the spliff turns to ash, we head upstairs to their studio space. The dim magenta lit room is filled with a laid back, soulful, base heavy beat you’d want to bump on your ride to the beach with the top down.
I check Serk’s (third member of Warm Brew) beer – It’s cold.
Ray fetches me a beer and the guys sink back into their groove.
Serk sits on a stool across the room, he’s already laid his verse. Ray sways to the beat as he looks at lyrics on his phone and melodically raps his verse to himself. Manu finishes his verse, pauses, puts his pencil down, and does a celebratory jig.
The music stops, and after a discussion on “doing wax” (survey says they don’t necessarily enjoy dabbing) commences, Manu steps into the dark recording booth. With his notebook in hand, he lays his 16.
“He’s all about going to the beach in his raps,” Ray announces.
“Remember when he was into the jacuzzi? He was in the jacuzzi in every rap,” Serk laughs.
In the booth, Manu raps, “We don’t watch movies anymore ‘cuz my life a movie.”
I survey the room and concur, this could be a scene out of a movie.
Al B Smoov bobs his head to a beat he’s creating on his computer while he grinds weed and rolls it into a backwoods; as the room shares the blunt, I sip my warm brew and let the skunky air and the base of the beat fill my chest.
In perfect straight-out-of-a movie timing, a studio runner enters the room with warm chocolate chip cookies. The crew moves their seats closer to the plate and digs in. Within five minutes, all twelve cookies have disappeared. This is the second plate of their ten-hour studio session.
Ray enters the booth and fumbles over his first few takes, grunting in frustration after every verbal misstep. Eventually, he sinks into a comfortable space and, with a melodic cadence, lets his double time raps flow freely. The entire vibe of the song is transformed once he lays his 16, adding a Nate-Dogg-sounding soulfulness to the already laid-back track.
After a self-congratulatory spliff is smoked, we step across the hall and Warm Brew sinks into a leather couch where we discuss their personalities, their recent trip to Paris for Be Street, run-ins with the police, and what they’re recording. Here’s what went down.
Purchase ISSUE 06 here to read the entire interview with Warm Brew on pgs. 114-125.
RELATED POSTS
Warm Brew – First Dual Cover Artists - Interviewed by Emily Berkey for ISSUE 06
The following interview with Warm Brew appears in print in ISSUE 06 of SUSPEND Magazine available to purchase here. Interview conducted by Emily Berkey and photography by William Azcona.
It’s a Saturday night and I’ve arrived at the Paramount Recording Studios in Hollywood. I’m told, “Don’t go into Studio X, Party Next Door is in there…We’re next door.” I’m led by the studio’s security to the back patio where I spy music producer and DJ, Al B Smoov, Warm Brew member Ray Wright, and a few others over near the restroom, huddled together laughing. Eventually, Manu Li emerges from the bathroom, pencil and pad in hand.
“Did you just open-door-studio-poo?” someone asks. Manu eyes me and shrugs, “Yeah.”
After dishing out side-hug-hello’s, we sit around an oversized table illuminated by the amber string lights above us. Manu takes drags of a hand rolled cigarette and scratches his pencil on his notebook, scrawling lyrics as they come to him. A spliff is passed around as Ray tells stories and Manu mumbles to himself, giving life to the words on his page.
Once the spliff turns to ash, we head upstairs to their studio space. The dim magenta lit room is filled with a laid back, soulful, base heavy beat you’d want to bump on your ride to the beach with the top down.
I check Serk’s (third member of Warm Brew) beer – It’s cold.
Ray fetches me a beer and the guys sink back into their groove.
Serk sits on a stool across the room, he’s already laid his verse. Ray sways to the beat as he looks at lyrics on his phone and melodically raps his verse to himself. Manu finishes his verse, pauses, puts his pencil down, and does a celebratory jig.
The music stops, and after a discussion on “doing wax” (survey says they don’t necessarily enjoy dabbing) commences, Manu steps into the dark recording booth. With his notebook in hand, he lays his 16.
“He’s all about going to the beach in his raps,” Ray announces.
“Remember when he was into the jacuzzi? He was in the jacuzzi in every rap,” Serk laughs.
In the booth, Manu raps, “We don’t watch movies anymore ‘cuz my life a movie.”
I survey the room and concur, this could be a scene out of a movie.
Al B Smoov bobs his head to a beat he’s creating on his computer while he grinds weed and rolls it into a backwoods; as the room shares the blunt, I sip my warm brew and let the skunky air and the base of the beat fill my chest.
In perfect straight-out-of-a movie timing, a studio runner enters the room with warm chocolate chip cookies. The crew moves their seats closer to the plate and digs in. Within five minutes, all twelve cookies have disappeared. This is the second plate of their ten-hour studio session.
Ray enters the booth and fumbles over his first few takes, grunting in frustration after every verbal misstep. Eventually, he sinks into a comfortable space and, with a melodic cadence, lets his double time raps flow freely. The entire vibe of the song is transformed once he lays his 16, adding a Nate-Dogg-sounding soulfulness to the already laid-back track.
After a self-congratulatory spliff is smoked, we step across the hall and Warm Brew sinks into a leather couch where we discuss their personalities, their recent trip to Paris for Be Street, run-ins with the police, and what they’re recording. Here’s what went down.
Purchase ISSUE 06 here to read the entire interview with Warm Brew on pgs. 114-125.
RELATED POSTS