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“I hope that one day someone will make flowers grow in even the saddest parts of you.”
— vacants
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I have a VERY hot take for you all:
Straight people should never be regarded as LGBT icons.
Beyonce, Ariana, Taylor Swift, ect…. They’re not gay icons. They’re not gay. They shouldn’t be regarded as gay/lesbian/bi icons.
If their music resonates with you and you’re lgbt- cool idrc. But I hate that, like… they’re regarded as The Best Gay Icons when they’re not gay.
Lady Gaga? Actually a gay/bi icon. Janelle Monae, Freddie Mercury, ect. They’re LGBT icons.
Shut the fuck up about Ariana and Taylor Swift being gay icons.
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i always forget my grandma used to be a clown so it caught me the fuck off guard when she saw this
and no hesitation saying “oh it’s that creepy clown- oh he’s drinking that’s against clown code”
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you: fall out boy
me, an intellectual: descend quickly elsewhere juvenile male preadolescent
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Went kayaking with my girlfriend and we made the cutest friend!
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“Another part of why I think this green dress resonates so much is that it’s a real collaboration. The thing is, to make a dress that bold everyone has to be committed to it. Seamus [McGarvey], the DP, has to be committed to shooting that dress in an iconic way. It has to fit Keira in an iconic way. Joe has to want it to have a function like that. The real secret of the green dress is its function in the movie. If it hadn’t had that function, it could’ve been a dress that comes and goes, really. But because it has such a pivotal moment — or she’s wearing it at such a pivotal moment — and Seamus and Joe have shot it in a way, and Keira looks so good in it, I think it’s just this perfect storm of things all going right at the same time. There’s a shot of her standing, smoking outside — this side shot — and the dress is quite well laid out. It’s a great shot; it has a real ’30s glamour but it’s also a bit more modern. It just captures what we were trying to do in the movie. You can make a really brilliant dress but, and I’ve seen this in other films, the actor’s only shot from the waist up. Unless you frame it in a way that’s really going to sell it to its best advantage, it’s never going to have the impact it could have. Seamus shooting it in the full-length way and it being lit so beautifully is what sets it up.” — Jacqueline Durran, costume designer for Atonement (2007) dir. Joe Wright
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