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Justin Vernon x The Roots - Perth.
(via asunkee)
Posted on February 14, 2012 via blue [j] with 6 notes
Source: bluejjc
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(via starsmemoirs)
Posted on October 16, 2011 via Wicked Clothes with 1,363 notes
Source: wickedcloth.es
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Teach your daughters well.
We need to teach our daughters to distinguish between a man who flatters her and a man who compliments her …. a man who spends money on her and a man who invests in her …. a man who views her as property and a man who views her properly ….. a man who lusts after her and a man who loves her ….. a man who believes he is God’s gift to women and a man who remembers a woman was God’s gift to man.
Hear hear!
Posted on September 30, 2011 via GORILLAZOZO with 1,756 notes
Source: smilezoey
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Can you imagine a Senegalese-American Liz Lemmon running 30 Rock? Black women in film and television have been crammed into the role of the stony-faced, long-suffering strong woman or the devilish diva with daddy issues and a thing for the drink. But what about all of us in between? What about the quirky black girl figuring things out and trying to make it through the world?
Indie filmmaker Issa-Rae has tapped into the dialogue of millions of black woman, creating, writing, directing, producing and starring in an huge viral success. The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl are the mishaps and lessons of J, a girl surviving the everyday and doing big things for black women in television. AfriPOP! threw a few questions Issa Rae’s way.
AfriPOP!: Rather than wait for the world to change how they portrayed black women in the media, you created your own platform for a different image. What was the spark that made you turn your thoughts and ideas about ABG into a viable reality that continues to grow?
Issa Rae: I was honestly just tired of seeing the SAME black characters on screen. It’s frustrating to see the same four to five characters depicted when I know that there is so much more to us than that. We’re way more dimensional and diverse than Hollywood makes us out to be. I had been sitting on this character for a while until my friend sent me an article from Clutch Magazine where the writer asked, “Where’s the black Liz Lemon?” and I knew I had to hurry up and make this character happen.
You’ve been getting a lot of love online. Why do you think the show has become so popular?
I think the show has become so popular online because a lot of people can identify with the situations J goes through AND because people feel the same way I do, in terms of seeing the SAME black characters on screen that they can’t necessarily relate to. The word-of-mouth for this series has been AMAZING and I feel like people are realizing that we don’t have to accept these limited characters anymore.
(via i-lovebeingblack)
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ॐ साई राम: Today, I grieve
for the 2,976 lives lost in the United States
for the thousands more innocent lives terrorized in Iraq and Afghanistan
for our Muslim brothers and sisters victimized by hate crimes and harassment
for the millions of humans suffering around the world so a few can live as they wish
for the…
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I used to love without fear a long time ago, And all I ever wanted was love, Then somebody came around and tried to hurt me, Tried to make me feel like I was unworthy, Took a pure love and tried to make it dirty, Truth was they never did deserve me
Lauryn Hill (via pauliejuice, ogck-deactivated20101126) -
(via pauliejuice)
Posted on August 16, 2011 via Sweety, I hate You. with 97 notes
Source: soonlove
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The three things a guy should want to change about his girl is her last name, her address, and her viewpoint on men
Kid Cudi (via sallyssa)(via iscreamcupcakes)
Posted on August 14, 2011 via I'm a bear. I bite. No claws though. with 5 notes
Source: sallyssa
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#ATI weekend

![fyeahafrica:
Can you imagine a Senegalese-American Liz Lemmon running 30 Rock? Black women in film and television have been crammed into the role of the stony-faced, long-suffering strong woman or the devilish diva with daddy issues and a thing for the drink. But what about all of us in between? What about the quirky black girl figuring things out and trying to make it through the world?
Indie filmmaker Issa-Rae has tapped into the dialogue of millions of black woman, creating, writing, directing, producing and starring in an huge viral success. The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl are the mishaps and lessons of J, a girl surviving the everyday and doing big things for black women in television. AfriPOP! threw a few questions Issa Rae’s way.
AfriPOP!: Rather than wait for the world to change how they portrayed black women in the media, you created your own platform for a different image. What was the spark that made you turn your thoughts and ideas about ABG into a viable reality that continues to grow?
Issa Rae: I was honestly just tired of seeing the SAME black characters on screen. It’s frustrating to see the same four to five characters depicted when I know that there is so much more to us than that. We’re way more dimensional and diverse than Hollywood makes us out to be. I had been sitting on this character for a while until my friend sent me an article from Clutch Magazine where the writer asked, “Where’s the black Liz Lemon?” and I knew I had to hurry up and make this character happen.
You’ve been getting a lot of love online. Why do you think the show has become so popular?
I think the show has become so popular online because a lot of people can identify with the situations J goes through AND because people feel the same way I do, in terms of seeing the SAME black characters on screen that they can’t necessarily relate to. The word-of-mouth for this series has been AMAZING and I feel like people are realizing that we don’t have to accept these limited characters anymore.
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