clapsandpraises:

deezyville:

chocolatecoveredsnaps:

Unpopular Opinion Time
I so fux with Solange more than beyonce. She’s so much edgier and stylish in my opinion. Never will I reblog the Knowles with the golden tresses. Got fans that do that enough.

I offer you the greatest of co-signs for this. Her songs also include a lot more substance and less “snap left to right ass-shakery”. I need that substance sometimes.  I’m more than prepared for the backlash from the Bey Stans, however…


I secretly agree with both of the above.

clapsandpraises:

deezyville:

chocolatecoveredsnaps:

Unpopular Opinion Time

I so fux with Solange more than beyonce. She’s so much edgier and stylish in my opinion. Never will I reblog the Knowles with the golden tresses. Got fans that do that enough.

I offer you the greatest of co-signs for this. Her songs also include a lot more substance and less “snap left to right ass-shakery”. I need that substance sometimes.  I’m more than prepared for the backlash from the Bey Stans, however…

I secretly agree with both of the above.

(via jaycueisay)

did-you-kno:

Source
rouillee:

haha, good stuff

rouillee:

haha, good stuff

(via ohyoungmaster)

hungryforbones:

Disrespectful, but hilarious! Hahaha

hungryforbones:

Disrespectful, but hilarious! Hahaha

(Source: gaticavf, via striving-for-excellence)

blackacrylic:

23.01.11

I had a really interesting discussion about identity, self hate, cultural capital etc with my BFF today and it got me thinking of Margaret Bowland’s selection of paintings of young black girls in white face. When asked to comment on ‘Kenyetta and Brianna’ Bowland that ‘It is a commentary on how women still have to jump through all these hoops to be desirable. These girls are still visible beneath all those layers of crap … they’re still looking back at you.’ I think that a lot of black girls looking at Bowland’s paintings would say that the metaphor transcends beyond the art world. For many black girls Bowland’s paintings are a life metaphor - reflecting a reality where black girls are often marginalised by European standards of beauty. I agree with Cherise Kramarae when she states that ‘For women of color who are viewers, trying to achieve idealised femininity entails not only adjusting or refining one’s body, but also rejecting one’s identity and certain characteristics altogether. To resist this artificial standard is to stand apart from beauty as defined by society’. The frustrating thing for me is that even if you put the fact that there is very little aesthetic diversity across all media platforms to the side, in the black community we impose European standards of beauty on each other with a vengeance. It’s black men that make fun of Alek Wek and it’s black girls arguing about natural hair v relaxer/weave war (e.g ‘These little nappy headed hoes need a terminator’ - Nicki Minaj) etc. It’s this infighting that is the real tragedy.

Somebody told a lie and we believed it.

(via yeesindeed)

fitnesschicks:

l

Goal

Tags: Workotus

"It’s a uniquely American prudishness. You can write the most detailed, vivid description of an ax entering a skull, and nobody will say a word in protest. But if you write a similarly detailed description of a penis entering a vagina, you get letters from people saying they’ll never read you again. What the hell? Penises entering vaginas bring a lot more joy into the world than axes entering skulls."

— Author George R. R. Martin (A Song of Ice and Fire.) Interview published in May 2012 Rolling Stones Magazine. (via sweetupndown9)

(via camdamage)

(Source: jessicaclark, via braintame)

Tags: Style

"Parting Shot: For the master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house. They may allow us to temporarily beat him at his own game, but they will never enable us to bring about genuine change. Racism and homophobia are real conditions of all our lives in this place and time. I urge each one of us here to reach down into that deep place of knowledge inside herself and touch that terror and loathing of any difference that lives here. See whose face it wears. Then the personal as the political can begin to illuminate all our choices."

— Audre Lorde (via sonofbaldwin)

Awesome…

Awesome…

(via tristansayshey)