This is true. I saw a documentary about it. Men’s orgasm faces are allowed in teenage comedies rated PG13, but women’s orgasm faces can often push it into NC-17 territory, no joke. [x]
This is pretty much the equation:
women receiving abuse = PG-13/R
women receiving pleasure = R/NC-17
there is a whole documentary about women vs men and sex vs violence and film ratings. i recommend it
TW: sexual assault/violence/rape
You can beat/murder/sexually assault/rape a woman in a movie, and still the film will have a lower rating than if she has an orgasm
juicyjacqulyn: petitedeath: flightofthecoco: nerdloveandlolz: ...
(via BUTTER COW: Vandals Pour Red Paint On Sculpture |...
(via BUTTER COW: Vandals Pour Red Paint On Sculpture | WHOTV.com)
Why would you do this to the butter cow???
mouffettefatale: VOICE OF DAVID LYNCH
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Shreve & Company Coffee server, 1900-1910 brass, gold,...
Shreve & Company
Coffee server, 1900-1910
brass, gold, ivory, silver
7 in HIGH x 3.5 in WIDE x 8.5 in DEEP
Gift of the Women’s Board
A92.1
(via OMCA COLLECTIONS)
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geekquality: curiousmeans: pond-songs: GINA TORRES HAS BEEN IN PRETTY MUCH EVERY SINGLE...
GINA TORRES HAS BEEN IN PRETTY MUCH EVERY SINGLE NON-BRITISH FANDOM SHOW/MOVIE
XENA WARRIOR PRINCESS
ANGEL
THE MATRIX
FIREFLY
24
PUSHING DAISIES
SUITS
AND EVEN
HANNIBAL
worship her
she ageless
and regal
and a brilliant actress
spoiler alert: gina torres appreciation life
Do not forget Cleopatra 2525.
And Huge!
dontbearuiner: ratherastory: alexdarke: Because censorship is...
Doonesbury cartoons by the brilliant Garry Trudeau
Oh, hey. I hadn’t yet come across something that I would always reblog, but here it is!
Garry Trudeau: Dropping truth since 1970.
ornamentedbeing: I have spent so long trying to find this...
I have spent so long trying to find this image. I can’t begin to put into words how happy I am to have not only found where it is from but all of the different views that the Museum has graciously taken of the costume.
Bunka Gakuen Costume Museum
Empress Dowager Akinori (1849-1914)
昭憲皇太后(1849-1914)着用
I love the mix of cultures in this piece, how seamlessly the two are intertwined. It’s effortless and graceful. Note how the traditional chrysanthemum have been incorporated into Western fashion. It is so uniquely beautiful.
The original text reads: 大礼服(マント・ド・クール)は、明治時代から昭和戦前期の宮廷服である。女子の最高の礼服で、襟あきが大きく、袖無しか短い袖のドレスにトレーン(引き裾)を付けることが特色である。本資料のボディスとトレーンは緋ベルベット、スカートには白繻子地を用い、それぞれに菊花を日本刺繍によって豪華に表している。大きく膨らんだパフ・スリーブ、釣り鐘形のスカートなどの特徴は、明治20年代後半に調製されたことを示している。
This court dress (manteau de cour) was worn as the imperial dress from Meiji (1868-1926) through Showa (1926-1989) period up to the beginning of WW2. The distinct features of this most formal type of women’s dress is the broad neckline, short or no sleeves, and a skirt with a long train. The original material of the bodice and the train is scarlet-coloured velvet, the skirt is made from white satin and shows the magnificent Japanese chrsyanthemum embroidery. The large puff sleeves and the bell-shaped skirt both show the typical production of the the late half of Meiji 20’s era (1892-1897).
(a huge thank you for this translation goes to the following)
untitled by hexmoon
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clawmarks: Primula auricula nigra
moniquill: sothisiswhatshemeans: Caramel stuffed apple cider...
Caramel stuffed apple cider cookies.
The lack of a link made me weep. But then I fixed that with google.
bobbycaputo: Dancers Among Us - Jordan Matter
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anarcho-queer: The Shot Glass Heard Around The World In 1969,...
The Shot Glass Heard Around The World
In 1969, the Stonewall riots — precipitated when the NYPD burst into the famed gay bar and started being their usually abusive selves — defined the modern gay movement.
Among the first to physically resist the police was Marsha P. Johnson, the now infamous transgender rights activist who co-founded S.T.A.R. (Street Transgender Action Revolutionaries) with Sylvia Rivera in the ’70s.
At 1:20 in the morning on Saturday, June 28, 1969, four plainclothes police officers entered Stonewall Inn and announced “Police! We’re taking the place!"
Officers forced the customers to form into two lines divided by perceived gender and show them their genitals to confirm if it matched the gender on their identification card.
At some point during the raid, Marsha Johnson proclaimed, ‘I got my civil rights!’ and then threw a shot glass into a mirror, adding on to the tension and creating an atmosphere of resistance. Some witnesses and historians believe her action is what instigated the riot.
Patrons began to refuse to produce their I.D. and police decided to arrest everyone still at the bar. Those who were not arrested gathered outside the bar and quickly drew a crowd of over 1,000 queers. As rumors spread through the crowd that those inside were being beaten by cops, they began throwing pennies, beer bottles and other items at police.
A drag queen who was shoved by an officer in front of the crowd responded by hitting him on the head with her purse as the crowd began to boo.
Soon after, an unidentified lesbian was hit on the head with a billy club after complaining that her handcuffs were too tight. She faced the bystanders and shouted, “Why don’t you guys do something?”
Police threw her into the back of a patrol wagons, at that point the crowd became a mob and collectively resisted the police.
——-
Along with Sylvia Rivera, the two transgender revolutionaries created S.T.A.R. and STAR House in which they housed, fed and clothed homeless drag queens and trans* youth by hustling in the streets of NYC so that their children didn’t have to.
Marsha P. Johnson is often credited for inciting the Stonewall Riots, yet she receives close to no recognition by mainstream Gay Organizations and the queer community. I have no doubt that the erasure of Marsha’s participation in the riots and the Gay Liberation Movement is due to her being a black, transgender radical. Had she’d been a white gay cis-male, her name would be permanently embedded in every queer’s mind.
I know Marsha as a courageous queer revolutionary, a queen of Queens, a Stonewall Veteran, a dedicated activist, a mother of S.T.A.R. and a personal idol. She deserves more than anyone I know, to be recognized by the queer community.
In July 6, 1992, Johnson’s body was found floating in the Hudson River off the West Village Piers shortly after the 1992 Pride March. Friends of Johnson claims she was harassed near the spot where her body was found. The police disregarded this and ruled her death a suicide without any evidence. However, in November 2012, the NYPD re-opened the case.
Click here to watch “Pay It No Mind”, a documentary on Marsha P. Johnson.
Hello internet. I am freaking out.
Hello internet. I am freaking out.