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12 Old Movies that are still a delight to watch
Despite the rapid evolution of the film industry, certain old movies continue to captivate audiences even today. These cinematic gems, often celebrated at the film festival, have transcended their era and remain a delight for movie lovers of all ages.
Casablanca (1942)
Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman's iconic performances in this romantic drama set against the backdrop of World War II make it a must-watch for movie lovers. Over seventy-five years after its release, we're still quoting lines from this timeless classic.
Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961)
Audrey Hepburn's iconic portrayal of Holly Golightly in this romantic comedy-drama captures the essence of 1960s glamour and sophistication. Aside from catapulting Hepburn into the role of Hollywood fashion icon, her performance is one of her best.
It's a Wonderful Life (1946)
Jimmy Stewart's heartfelt performance as George Bailey in this beloved holiday classic reminds us of the power of love, friendship, and our impact on others. It might be over seventy years old, but it is one of the best movies ever.
The Women (1939)
Starring Joan Crawford, Norma Shearer, and Rosalind Russell, this fantastic female-led movie did wonders for women despite the era. The story centers around divorce, fashion, and unyielding gossip, making for a terrific girls' night viewing.
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962)
This psychological horror starring Hollywood greats Bette Davis and Joan Crawford has achieved cult status over the years. You'll never see sibling rivalry quite like this as two competitive sisters are holed up together in a fancy mansion in old Hollywood. The authentic dislike between the two actresses is palpable.
An Affair to Remember (1957)
Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr's poignant romance in this classic tearjerker about star-crossed lovers who vow to meet at the Empire State Building captures the essence of old-fashioned romance. You'll struggle to feel anything but love between the two main characters, and it's quite beautiful.
The Godfather (1972)
You won't find a greater mob movie with a more talented cast of actors than The Godfather. The soundtrack is beyond powerful, and the performances of Marlon Brando, Robert De Niro, and Al Pacino are second to none.
Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)
Judy Garland's performance as Esther Smith was considered her best-to-date, with her alternate lyrics turning a melancholy Christmas number into a positively upbeat one. This classic musical is a delight for the whole family.
These timeless films, celebrated at film festivals around the world, continue to inspire modern filmmakers and captivate audiences. Their enduring appeal is a testament to the power of great storytelling, unforgettable characters, and the timeless magic of cinema.
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King of Cups. Weiser Waite Smith Tarot
The King of Cups is seated and is holding a cup close to his chest. He does not look into it, but gazes outward. It is not clear if he is offering you the cup or is keeping it for himself. The King of Cups is traditionally seen as the romantic figure—more committed and stable than the Knight; less wishy-washy than the Queen. But the King is also thoughtful and concerned about others, or a spiritual figure. When it comes to the matters of the heart, the King of Cups prefers to take an intellectual approach. He can dissect the various methods of love, its biological and its emotional components, and the historical and sociological pressures on a couple to marry. He would watch a romantic comedy and understand how it relates to myths such as Psyche and Eros, Tristan and Isolde, and he would have something to say on how these movies give their viewers unrealistic expectations for emotional connection. He will also have read a lot of Freud. None of this should impact the King of Cup’s ability to feel and to love, however. The understanding, if anything, adds depth to his emotions. The King does not reach this level of knowledge in order to scheme. He is not trying to game anyone or learn bogus seduction techniques. He simply wants to understand his own heart in order to survive its pangs and know what to do with it. At the time that Harry Harlow was studying psychology in the 1920s, there was a strange atmosphere in the scientific community. Male doctors were instructing new mothers not to touch their babies. Too much touch and too much comfort would make a baby soft and dependent as he or she grew older, they contended. Better to let the infant learn self-sufficiency, cry out his problems, and figure out what to do on her own. It would lead to strong, intelligent men and women. Harlow knew this was nonsense, and he decided to prove it. He would separate baby monkeys from their mothers and put them in cages to see how they reacted. He would create fake monkey mothers out of cloth and wire—the cloth ones provided no food, while those fashioned from wire did—and see which ones the babies preferred. Even when hungry, they would cling to the soft cloth mother. Babies without any touch at all simply didn’t thrive. Many became violent, anxious, and began to hurt themselves. Babies need touch and love, he determined—as much, if not more so, than they need food. Harlow’s studies revolutionized our understanding of love and the human need for it. Periodically we decide that the need for love must be weakness, and then someone—a King of Cups—goes about proving it’s essential for human life. Like all the Kings, the risk is overabstraction. That by studying love and emotions they run the risk of separating themselves from it. Or, understanding the darker side of love so well, they can’t let themselves trust ever again. Harlow himself was a terrible husband, or so said his first wife Clara Mears. Cold and distant, showing more concern and attention to his monkeys than to his own family. But in general, the King of Cups can recite Shakespeare’s sonnets, explain the science of attachment, quote studies on the evolutionary advantages of love, and yet refuse to give himself over to the actual experience of it. But the King of Cups has a tremendous capacity for love and emotional connection, if he is willing to accept that the strangest aspects of love cannot be dissected logically. Love is as mysterious as the soul, and people have been trying to figure out that thing for centuries without much luck. The brain will take you only so far into love; the rest of the way has to be lit with uncertainty. RECOMMENDED MATERIALS The Seven Storey Mountain, book by Thomas Merton Mothers and Others: The Evolutionary Origins of Mutual Understanding, book by Sarah Blaffer Hrdy Love at Goon Park: Harry Harlow and the Science of Affection, book by Deborah Blum Jessa Crispin
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https://loveinquotes.com/the-best-sex-takes-us-somewhere-somewhere-warm-and-expansive-a-paradise-of-lust-and-happiness-sex-is-and-can-be-and-should-be-but-only-very-rarely-is-an-act-of-communion-with-something-bigger-than/
The best sex takes us somewhere. Somewhere warm and expansive, a paradise of lust and happiness. Sex is and can be and should be but only very rarely is an act of communion with something bigger than ourselves. Men fuck and women make love, people say, but we men make love when we fuck a woman we adore: it’s the same thing to us. We mean it sincerely. I had places inside me only Cathy could fill with her body, and I made her happy with my body more than I ever thought I could. ― Deborah Smith, The Crossroads Cafe
#DeborahSmith, #DeborahSmithDeborahSmithLoveQuotes, #DeborahSmithQuotes, #DeborahSmithLoveQuotes, #TheCrossroadsCafe, #TheCrossroadsCafeQuotes
#Deborah Smith#Deborah Smith Deborah-Smith-love quotes#Deborah Smith quotes#Deborah-Smith-love quotes#The Crossroads Cafe#The Crossroads Cafe quotes#LoveQuotes
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hello angel, I hope that you are doing well.
I’m sorry if I may be pestering you... but I thought that I could ask you this. Could you perhaps display a collection of quotes revolving around “disappearing.” ?
In a sense, from everybody’s life. but still being alive. But I would appreciate anything that you post.
Again, sorry for pestering. Thank you and I wish you all of the best.
It was very easy to disappear. Very easy to put on a red coat, switch off all the lights, go somewhere else, not go back to sleep anywhere.
Valeria Luiselli, from Faces in the Crowd (tr. Christina MacSweeney)
Louise Glück, from Averno
Nikki Giovanni, from “Cotton Candy on a Rainy Day”
Han Kang, Human Acts (translated by Deborah Smith)
I’d never seen anything like it. You haven’t got the strength. You are exchanged for a ghost,
Hélène Cixous, Hyperdream (tr. Beverly Bie Brahic)
“The me you see isn’t me – I am my ghost.”
Mahmoud Darwish, from ‘Mural’, Mural (trans. John Berger & Rema Hammami)
fr. “Extracting the Stone of Madness” by Alejandra Pizarnik, tr. Yvette Siegert
Mahtem Shiferraw, Your Body is War; “The Art of Invisibility”
The girl speaks even more slowly than usual, she’s absentminded, she who’s usually so interested in everything, her expression has changed, she’s become a spectator…
Marguerite Duras, from The Lover
Me, as ever, gone.
Anne Carson, from Decreation; “Despite her Pain, Another Day”
Mary Oliver, Blue Horses; “Blueberries”
...and / this is what we are reduced to, / the task of being disembodied / the small, small task of disappearing / without a sound, without a whisper of sorrow.
Mahtem Shiferraw, Your Body is War; “The Suicide Chamber”
Perdita doesn't seem to mind this or to sense that she is in danger of losing her right to corporeality. On the contrary, she purposefully deflects attention. When someone accidentally speaks to her, she just shakes her head. If they still won't take the hint, she'll add, 'No, I'm not here,' in a gentle way rather than a snippy one.
Helen Oyeyemi, from Gingerbread
ANN LAUTERBACH x NIGHTCORP | “Eclipse with Object”, And For Example (1994); untitled photos/edits by @nightcorp, published 14 July 2019 (x)
Christa Wolf, Cassandra: A Novel and Four Essays (tr. Jan van Heurck)
The girl is in a trance. All day in a kind of trance… She never makes a gesture. Immobile. Confronting herself. Surprised. Somnambulistic. She only moves to become someone else.
Anaïs Nin, from Nearer the Moon: The Previously Unpublished Unexpurgated Diary, 1937-1939
I don’t seem to want / anything others want. I don’t even know if / I want something. To be perfectly quiet, still alive / with no one pressing me.
Alice Notley, from Certain Magical Acts; “I Went Down There”
Sue Zhao
...I turned apathetic and silent. I could not say the most important thing, so it no longer occurred to me to say anything.
Christa Wolf, Cassandra: A Novel and Four Essays (tr. Jan van Heurck)
And I wish that I was someone else, a girl with words behind her face, not this one done up like a stone in herself.
Eimear McBride, from The Lesser Bohemians
Anna Kamienska, from A Nest of Quiet: A Notebook
Janet Fitch, from White Oleander
It was like not feeling real any more. Disconnected despite all the talking. Watching the self I’d built up over four or five years just crack and fall off me like paint.
Eimear McBride, from The Lesser Bohemians
Ono No Komachi, tr. by Jane Hirshfield and Mariko Oratani, from The Ink Dark Moon Love Poems by Ono No Komachi and Izumi Shikibu
I just can’t bear to think about it, actually. Just…empty. All day and night. Day after day and night after night.
Harold Pinter, from Betrayal
and i / learned to see but not show feeling and i learned to talk / while not / screaming
Nikki Giovanni, from "Poem of Angela Yvonne Davis”
Henry Dumas, Knees of a Natural Man: The Selected Poetry of Henry Dumas; “Saba”
Mahtem Shiferraw, Your Body is War; “The Memory of the Body”
Olga Broumas, Beginning with O; “Love Lines”
Joanna Klink, from “Winter Field”
Sometimes, when I'm careless, I think survival is easy: you just keep moving forward with what you have, or what's left of what you were given, until something changes—or you realize, at last, that you can change without disappearing, that all you had to do was wait until the storm passes you over and you find that—yes—your name is still attached to a living being.
Ocean Vuong, from On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous
#and you're not pestering at all mi amor <3#ask#anon#compilation#you can also look through these tags:#la sonnambula#but we are ghosts only#quote compilation#long post
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‘Translators are like ninjas. If you notice them, they’re no good.” This quote, attributed to Israeli author Etgar Keret, proliferates in memes, and who doesn’t love a pithy quote involving ninjas? Yet this idea – that a literary translator might make, at any moment, a surprise attack, and that at every moment we are deceiving the reader as part of an elaborate mercenary plot – is among the most toxic in world literature.
The reality of the international circulation of texts is that in their new contexts, it is up to their translators to choose every word they will contain. When you read Nobel laureate Olga Tokarczuk’s Flights in English, the words are all mine. Translators aren’t like ninjas, but words are human, which means that they’re unique and have no direct equivalents. You can see this in English: “cool” is not identical to “chilly”, although it’s similar. “Frosty” has other connotations, other usages; so does “frigid”. Selecting one of these options on its own doesn’t make sense; it must be weighed in the balance of the sentence, the paragraph, the whole, and it is the translator who is responsible, from start to finish, for building a flourishing lexical community that is both self-contained and in profound relation with its model.
Since I began an MFA in literary translation at the University of Iowa exactly 20 years ago, there have been numerous positive changes in the way translators are paid and perceived. Take the International Booker prize, which since 2016 has split the generous sum of £50,000 between author and translator, thereby genuinely recognising the work as a fundamentally collaborative entity that, like a child, needs two progenitors in order to exist.
Despite this type of extraordinary progress, there is ample room for improvement still. Often enough, translators receive no royalties – I don’t in the US for Flights – and a surprising number of publishers do not credit translators on the covers of their books. This is where the author’s name always goes; this is where you’ll find the title, too. People tend to be surprised when I mention this, but take another look at the International Booker, and you’ll see what I mean.
Since the 2016 launch of the redesigned prize, not one of the six winning works of fiction has displayed the translator’s name on the front. Granta didn’t name Deborah Smith there; Jonathan Cape didn’t name Jessica Cohen; Fitzcarraldo didn’t name me; Sandstone Press didn’t name Marilyn Booth; Faber & Faber didn’t name Michele Hutchison. At Night All Blood is Black by David Diop, 2021’s winner from Pushkin Press, doesn’t name Anna Moschovakis on its cover, although its cover does display quotes from three named sources. Four names, in other words, on the cover of a book Moschovakis wrote every word of. But her name would have been too much.
The underlying assumption on the part of many publishers seems to be that readers don’t trust translators and won’t buy a book if they realise it’s a translation. Yet is it not precisely this type of ruse that breeds distrust, and not translation itself? What tends to encourage a reader to pick up an unfamiliar book is the thrilling feeling that they are about to embark upon an interesting journey with a qualified guide. In the case of translations, they get two guides for the price of one, an astonishing – an “astounding”, a “wonderful”, a “fantastic”, a “fabulous” – bargain.
We desperately need more transparency at every level of literary production; this is just one example, although I do feel it’s an urgent one. Translators aren’t like ninjas. But we are the ones who control the way a story is told; we’re the people who create and maintain the transplanted book’s style. Generally speaking we are also the most reliable advocates for our books, and we take better care of them than anybody else. Covers simply can’t continue to conceal who we are. It’s bad business, it doesn’t hold us accountable for our choices, and in its wilful obfuscation it is a practice that is disrespectful not only to us, but to readers as well.
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Fifty (50)Toxic People Quotes To Help You Develop Boundaries .
If you’ve recognized you need to set limits with people in your life, these toxic people quotes will help you do just that.
We all have toxic people in our lives who can’t be avoided. It could be a friend, family member, or a coworker whom you just can’t stand.
Their toxicity manifests in a lot of different ways. Maybe they are full of interpersonal issues, are needy and disrespectful, or maybe they try to manipulate and control you, and are extremely critical of themselves and other people. Whatever the case, dealing with toxic people isn’t easy.
If you are often made uncomfortable by how those around you treat you, maybe it’s time to set and maintain personal boundaries. Clear boundaries that will help ensure your relationships are mutually respectful, supportive and caring. You deserve to be treated well.
It’s time to establish boundaries in your life for negative people, and these toxic people quotes are the necessary first step. They will inspire you to set the limits for acceptable behavior from those around you and help you avoid getting too close to people who don’t have your best interests at heart.
Toxic people can only upset you if you let them upset you. Recognize and distance yourself from their behavior. And when interacting with them, focus on the positive.
Below is our collection of inspirational, wise, and thoughtful, toxic people quotes, toxic people sayings, and toxic people proverbs, collected from a variety of sources over the years.
Toxic People Quotes To Help You Develop Boundaries
1.) “If it comes, let it come. If it goes, it’s ok, let it go. Let things come and go. Stay calm, don’t let anything disturb your peace, and carry on.” ― Germany Kent
2,) “It’s amazing how quickly things can turn around when you remove toxic people from your life.” — Robert Tew
3.) “You create more space in your life when you turn your excess baggage to garbage.” ― Chinonye J. Chidolue
4.) “Pay no attention to toxic words. What people say is often a reflection of themselves, not you.” ― Christian Baloga
5.) “Letting go of toxic people in your life is a big step in loving yourself.” – Hussein Nishah
6.) “Don’t let toxic people infect you with the fearof giving and receiving one of the most powerful forces in this world… LOVE!”― Yvonne Pierre
7.) “Don’t let negative and toxic people rent space in your head. Raise the rent and kick them out.” — Robert Tew
8.) “You lift your spirits by moving away from what upsets you. If the stove is hot, you can’t ask how to touch it but be happy about it.” ― Queen Tourmaline
9.) “If a person finds negative people in his life, then he needs to mend his own nature than that of others, for his own basic grounding decides the level of acidic or toxicity surrounding him.” — Anuj Somany
10.) “Toxic people will pollute everything around them. Don’t hesitate. Fumigate.” ― Mandy Hale
Toxic people quotes to inspire healthy self-respect
11.) “There’s folks you just don’t need. You’re better off without em. Your life is just a little better because they ain’t in it.” ― William Gay
12.) “There are people who break you down by just being them. They need not do anything. Dissociate” ― Malebo Sephodi
13.) “Every day you must unlearn the ways that hold you back. You must rid yourself of negativity, so you can learn to fly.” — Leon Brown
14.) “We all have those toxic people around us that make our lives miserable… The day we take them out from our lives, we will all become better people; including them…” ― Rodolfo Peon
15.) “Letting go doesn’t mean that you don’t care about someone anymore. It’s just realizing that the only person you really have control over is yourself.” — Deborah Reber
16.) “How you choose to feel today should not be dependent on others.” ― Anthon St. Maarten
17.) “May you reach that level within, where you no longer allow your past or people with toxic intentions to negatively affect or condition you.” ― Lalah Delia
18.) “Surround yourself with positive people who believe in your dreams, encourage your ideas, support your ambitions, and bring out the best in you.” — Roy Bennett
19.) “Let negative people live their negative lives with their negative minds.”― Moosa Rahat
20.) “Toxic people attach themselves like cinder blocks tied to your ankles, and then invite you for a swim in their poisoned waters.” ― John Mark Green
Quotes about toxic friends, family and relationships
21.) “As you remove toxic people from your life, you free up space and emotional energy for positive, healthy relationships.” ― John Mark Green
22.) “I have found the best way to deal with a toxic person is to not respond in any other way than monotone voice and a businesslike manner.” ― Jen Grice
23.) “Weeding out the harmful influences should become the norm not the exception.” ― Carlos Wallace
24.) “You will find that it is necessary to let things go; simply for the reason that they are heavy. So let them go, let go of them. I tie no weights to my ankles.” — C. JoyBell C.
25.) “We teach people how to treat us.” – Dr. Phil
26.) “Sometimes it’s better to end something & try to start something new than imprison yourself in hoping for the impossible.” – Karen Salmansohn
27.) “People appear like angels until you hear them speak. You must not rush to judge people by the color of their cloaks, but by the content of their words!” ― Israelmore Ayivor
28.) “Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too can become great.” — Mark Twain
29.) “Look around you at the people you spend the most time with and realize that your life can’t rise any higher than your friendships.” ― Mandy Hale
30.) “Stop letting people who do so little for you control so much of your mind, feelings, and emotions.” — Will Smith
Toxic people quotes to help you set and maintain boundaries
31.) “When people pressure you to engage in negative decisions and actions, look at them boldly in the eyes and dare them to do good.” ― Edmond Mbiaka
32.) “Don’t ever stop believing in your own transformation. It is still happening even on days you may not realize it or feel like it.” ― Lalah Delia
33.) “Letting go means to come to the realization that some people are a part of your history, but not a part of your destiny.” — Dr. Steve Maraboli
34.) “If a negative viewer looks at you with an ugly fiendish eye, find a way and pluck off his eyes, or better still, protect your good image.” ― Michael Bassey Johnson
35.) “People inspire you, or they drain you. Pick them wisely.” — Hans F. Hasen
36.) “Save your skin from the corrosive acids from the mouths of toxic people. Someone who just helped you to speak evil about another person can later help another person to speak evil about you.” ― Israelmore Ayivor
37.) “I will not allow anyone to walk in my mind with dirty feet.” – Mahatma Gandhi
38.) “Some people are in such utter darkness that they will burn you just to see a light. Try not to take it personally.” ― Kamand Kojouri
39.) “We do not have to be mental health professionals to identify the traits of the possible sociopaths among us.” ― P.A. Speers
40.) “These are the attributes of Bullshit people; they will…blur your imagination, take your endowments for a piece of debris, make you ridiculous, and most importantly, you got to send them to the recycle bin.” ― Michael Bassey Johnson
Toxic people quotes to help you deal with negativity
41.) “Don’t let people get the best of you they can say what they want but don’t let that distract you from achieving your goals.” ― Alcurtis Turner
42.) “Until you let go of all the toxic people in your life you will never be able to grow into your fullest potential. Let them go so you can grow.” – DLQ
43.) “The friends who would forsake you for choosing to live a positive life, would also leave you if you find yourself going through some painful consequences due to some negative decisions and actions.” ― Edmond Mbiaka
44.) “You cannot expect to live a positive life if you hang with negative people.” — Joel Osteen
45.) “We don’t get to choose our family, but we can choose our friends. With courage, we can weed out narcissistic people. We can focus on those who do appreciate us, love us, and treat us with respect.” ― Dana Arcuri
46.) “If they do it often, it isn’t a mistake; it’s just their behavior.” — Dr. Steve Maraboli
47.) “My encouragement: delete the energy vampires from your life, clean out all complexity, build a team around you that frees you to fly, remove anything toxic, and cherish simplicity. Because that’s where genius lives.” — Robin S. Sharma
48.) “Someone who smiles too much with you can sometime frown too much with you at your back.” ― Michael Bassey Johnson
49.) “It is really exhausting to live in a dictatorship of ‘Me’, which is basically a tyranny of others.” ― Stefan Molyneux
50.) “Let go of negative people. They only show up to share complaints, problems, disastrous stories, fear, and judgment on others. If somebody is looking for a bin to throw all their trash into, make sure it’s not in your mind.” – Dalai Lama
Which of these toxic people quotes was your favorite?
Sometimes you find yourself with a friend, family member, or a partner who is really difficult to get along with. When you’re around them, you feel degraded or manipulated. Dealing with such people is never easy so you should find ways to tune out the toxicity that can’t be avoided.
Don’t invest too much time or effort with toxic people. They don’t deserve your mental energy. Hopefully, the toxic people quotes above will help you deal with such negative people.
How did you find these toxic people quotes? Do you have any other inspirational quotes to add to the list? Let us know in the comment section below. Also, don’t forget to share with your friends and followers.
If you’ve recognized you need to set limits with people in your life, these toxic people quotes will help you do just that.
We all have toxic people in our lives who can’t be avoided. It could be a friend, family member, or a coworker whom you just can’t stand.
Their toxicity manifests in a lot of different ways. Maybe they are full of interpersonal issues, are needy and disrespectful, or maybe they try to manipulate and control you, and are extremely critical of themselves and other people. Whatever the case, dealing with toxic people isn’t easy.
If you are often made uncomfortable by how those around you treat you, maybe it’s time to set and maintain personal boundaries. Clear boundaries that will help ensure your relationships are mutually respectful, supportive and caring. You deserve to be treated well.
It’s time to establish boundaries in your life for negative people, and these toxic people quotes are the necessary first step. They will inspire you to set the limits for acceptable behavior from those around you and help you avoid getting too close to people who don’t have your best interests at heart.
Toxic people can only upset you if you let them upset you. Recognize and distance yourself from their behavior. And when interacting with them, focus on the positive.
Below is our collection of inspirational, wise, and thoughtful, toxic people quotes, toxic people sayings, and toxic people proverbs, collected from a variety of sources over the years.
Toxic People Quotes To Help You Develop Boundaries
1.) “If it comes, let it come. If it goes, it’s ok, let it go. Let things come and go. Stay calm, don’t let anything disturb your peace, and carry on.” ― Germany Kent
2,) “It’s amazing how quickly things can turn around when you remove toxic people from your life.” — Robert Tew
3.) “You create more space in your life when you turn your excess baggage to garbage.” ― Chinonye J. Chidolue
4.) “Pay no attention to toxic words. What people say is often a reflection of themselves, not you.” ― Christian Baloga
5.) “Letting go of toxic people in your life is a big step in loving yourself.” – Hussein Nishah
6.) “Don’t let toxic people infect you with the fearof giving and receiving one of the most powerful forces in this world… LOVE!”― Yvonne Pierre
7.) “Don’t let negative and toxic people rent space in your head. Raise the rent and kick them out.” — Robert Tew
8.) “You lift your spirits by moving away from what upsets you. If the stove is hot, you can’t ask how to touch it but be happy about it.” ― Queen Tourmaline
9.) “If a person finds negative people in his life, then he needs to mend his own nature than that of others, for his own basic grounding decides the level of acidic or toxicity surrounding him.” — Anuj Somany
10.) “Toxic people will pollute everything around them. Don’t hesitate. Fumigate.” ― Mandy Hale
Toxic people quotes to inspire healthy self-respect
11.) “There’s folks you just don’t need. You’re better off without em. Your life is just a little better because they ain’t in it.” ― William Gay
12.) “There are people who break you down by just being them. They need not do anything. Dissociate” ― Malebo Sephodi
13.) “Every day you must unlearn the ways that hold you back. You must rid yourself of negativity, so you can learn to fly.” — Leon Brown
14.) “We all have those toxic people around us that make our lives miserable… The day we take them out from our lives, we will all become better people; including them…” ― Rodolfo Peon
15.) “Letting go doesn’t mean that you don’t care about someone anymore. It’s just realizing that the only person you really have control over is yourself.” — Deborah Reber
16.) “How you choose to feel today should not be dependent on others.” ― Anthon St. Maarten
17.) “May you reach that level within, where you no longer allow your past or people with toxic intentions to negatively affect or condition you.” ― Lalah Delia
18.) “Surround yourself with positive people who believe in your dreams, encourage your ideas, support your ambitions, and bring out the best in you.” — Roy Bennett
19.) “Let negative people live their negative lives with their negative minds.”― Moosa Rahat
20.) “Toxic people attach themselves like cinder blocks tied to your ankles, and then invite you for a swim in their poisoned waters.” ― John Mark Green
Quotes about toxic friends, family and relationships
21.) “As you remove toxic people from your life, you free up space and emotional energy for positive, healthy relationships.” ― John Mark Green
22.) “I have found the best way to deal with a toxic person is to not respond in any other way than monotone voice and a businesslike manner.” ― Jen Grice
23.) “Weeding out the harmful influences should become the norm not the exception.” ― Carlos Wallace
24.) “You will find that it is necessary to let things go; simply for the reason that they are heavy. So let them go, let go of them. I tie no weights to my ankles.” — C. JoyBell C.
25.) “We teach people how to treat us.” – Dr. Phil
26.) “Sometimes it’s better to end something & try to start something new than imprison yourself in hoping for the impossible.” – Karen Salmansohn
27.) “People appear like angels until you hear them speak. You must not rush to judge people by the color of their cloaks, but by the content of their words!” ― Israelmore Ayivor
28.) “Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too can become great.” — Mark Twain
29.) “Look around you at the people you spend the most time with and realize that your life can’t rise any higher than your friendships.” ― Mandy Hale
30.) “Stop letting people who do so little for you control so much of your mind, feelings, and emotions.” — Will Smith
Toxic people quotes to help you set and maintain boundaries
31.) “When people pressure you to engage in negative decisions and actions, look at them boldly in the eyes and dare them to do good.” ― Edmond Mbiaka
32.) “Don’t ever stop believing in your own transformation. It is still happening even on days you may not realize it or feel like it.” ― Lalah Delia
33.) “Letting go means to come to the realization that some people are a part of your history, but not a part of your destiny.” — Dr. Steve Maraboli
34.) “If a negative viewer looks at you with an ugly fiendish eye, find a way and pluck off his eyes, or better still, protect your good image.” ― Michael Bassey Johnson
35.) “People inspire you, or they drain you. Pick them wisely.” — Hans F. Hasen
36.) “Save your skin from the corrosive acids from the mouths of toxic people. Someone who just helped you to speak evil about another person can later help another person to speak evil about you.” ― Israelmore Ayivor
37.) “I will not allow anyone to walk in my mind with dirty feet.” – Mahatma Gandhi
38.) “Some people are in such utter darkness that they will burn you just to see a light. Try not to take it personally.” ― Kamand Kojouri
39.) “We do not have to be mental health professionals to identify the traits of the possible sociopaths among us.” ― P.A. Speers
40.) “These are the attributes of Bullshit people; they will…blur your imagination, take your endowments for a piece of debris, make you ridiculous, and most importantly, you got to send them to the recycle bin.” ― Michael Bassey Johnson
Toxic people quotes to help you deal with negativity
41.) “Don’t let people get the best of you they can say what they want but don’t let that distract you from achieving your goals.” ― Alcurtis Turner
42.) “Until you let go of all the toxic people in your life you will never be able to grow into your fullest potential. Let them go so you can grow.” – DLQ
43.) “The friends who would forsake you for choosing to live a positive life, would also leave you if you find yourself going through some painful consequences due to some negative decisions and actions.” ― Edmond Mbiaka
44.) “You cannot expect to live a positive life if you hang with negative people.” — Joel Osteen
45.) “We don’t get to choose our family, but we can choose our friends. With courage, we can weed out narcissistic people. We can focus on those who do appreciate us, love us, and treat us with respect.” ― Dana Arcuri
46.) “If they do it often, it isn’t a mistake; it’s just their behavior.” — Dr. Steve Maraboli
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i was tagged by: @joeylwitter
apple juice or orange juice | breakfast in bed or dinner in a blanket fort | peanut butter or butterscotch | rain or snow | water park or amusement park | guitar or violin | flip flops or sneakers | big cats or bears | ocean or lake | bonfire or picnic | draw or write | oak or mahogany | volleyball or tennis | key chains or post cards | queso or salsa | skate board or roller blades | porch or patio | love quotes or inspirational quotes | hearts or stars | backpack or duffle bag | orchard or garden | baby bunnies or baby ducks | pastels or earth tones | New York City or Los Angeles | secret stairs or secret tunnel | street magician or escape artist | fairies or gnomes | comedy or mystery | purple or green | daisies or dandelions | crayon or chalk | sunglasses tinted blue or sunglasses tinted yellow | bracelets or rings | question mark or exclamation point ——–
last song: Scars by Sam Smith
last movie: She’s the Man
currently watching: Shameless, Charmed (1998), Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist, Wandavision
currently reading: Just ordered the All Souls Series by Deborah Harkness
currently playing: Nothing, was playing the Sims 4 ages ago, with expansion Seasons and Get to Work; wanna buy pets: cats and dogs
currently craving: Hamburgers and chips
i tag: @bartonclinton @greengableslover @softdeckerstars @amandaseyfried @chloedecks @cherylblossom
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Star Vs The Forces of Evil AMA
A list of the most important or interesting things from the AMA on Reddit from yesterday. The questions were answered by Daron Nefcy (show’s creator), Dominic Bisignano and Aaron Hammersley (writers, supervising producers), and Adam McArthur (Marco’s voice actor).
“I'm not sure what Star and Marco's future looks like but I know they are very much in love now.” the most important of quotes.
When asked if Starco was planned from the beginning Daron simply said “It was planned. We never did anything just because we got pressure from fans” in one answer, and “I did have it planned for some time“ in another one.
Daron wanted for Star and Marco to make mistake and date other people before finally finding each other to grow from those experiences, the “messy” nature of relationships in the show having been on purpose to treat them as real teenagers.
The Severing Stone did break a curse, but the curse was never the reason behind Star and Marco’s feelings. Breaking it simply allowed them to start realizing that their feelings had nothing to do with it (which implies placebo effect as the only actual impact of it in that regard).
Aaron Hammersley thinks that Star liked Marco since the beginning, but feelings started growing after the Blood Moon ball.
Right now there are no plans for more books, comics, or DVD sets, but Daron would like to work again with Star if Disney ever wanted more.
Ever since they got renewed for a 4th season they knew it would have been the last one, and set out to write an ending for it. Daron is very satisfied by the ending they wrote and said this about its open nature: My goal was to create a satisfying ending that still left room for more. I feel like it’s in the DNA of the universe to solve one problem but create another. That’s Star Butterfly! I know it may not have been satisfying for everyone, but I hope it inspires a lot of fan fiction and drawings. I didn’t want to solve everything and leave the fans nothing to play with! Plus, if I ever got to do more with Star I want something to play with.
Toffee was a historian and researched the Butterfly family and their magic like no one before. The skull pauldrons in Moon the Undaunted were from family members of the royal court he killed (so the cheekmarks were just intimidation / “rule of cool”).
Meteora’s rebirth was all Eclipsa’s doing, but she didn’t know if the spell would have worked or not, that’s why she was initially in tears.
Seth has been dead for a long time, and he was put in the book just to have some supplemental elements for the show’s world, without ever having intentions to use him in the series.
Tom still has his fire-travelling powers, since they’re inherent to being a demon.
Ponyheads evolved out of their bodies thousands of years ago. Princess Pony Head’s mother is dead (not as a result of magic being gone, she was already dead).
Ludo stole the tadpoles from an orphanage.
Omnitraxius was just a “middleman to accessing the Multiverse”, so his death doesn’t affect the structure of alternate realities.
According to Daron Starfan13′s real name is Amanda Jacobs, according to Adam it’s Deborah Perla.
The hardest episodes to write are those where they need to get to a specific plot point, and they need a story to introduce it in a natural feeling way.
Earth and Mewni are the only dimensions that got cleaved together.
Doop-Doop is gone, but the laser puppies are regular puppies now.
Daron sees the Blood Moon magic as both a curse and a blessing, but didn’t provide any further explanation for Eclipsa’s father’s portrait talking to Marco beyond “magic”.
Warnicorns are unicorns who feed on the blood of their enemies.
Among the episodes that didn’t end up becoming a thing Daron mentioned one about Skullnick dating a monster, and one about Rafael’s job (he’s an artist).
Daron confirmed that the first Mewman settlers were indeed humans who fell through the Magic Well in Echo Creek.
They tried writing an episode about Monster Arm’s return several times, but they could never make it work. Daron believes that it might still be inside Marco, and might come back one day (doesn’t really make any sense given magic’s destruction but hey who am I to question The Daron). According to Adam it makes his immune system stronger.
Daron wouldn’t want to do a crossover episode.
Toffee genuinely believed he had won until, and I quote, “he got his face blasted”. So he didn’t really know how all turns out. But they still wanted to end the show with magic’s destruction as a way to pay him homage. So he wasn’t right all along, but he also was.
Star and Ludo are totally going to play basketball together, eventually.
Between The Cure and The Smiths Marco would absolutely like the latter more, according to Daron; according to Bisignano he’d like the Bauhaus.
Dominic Bisignano (writer, supervising producer, storyboarder, director) would have liked for the show to have more slow paced episodes, with less jokes and less self contained story lines, to better explore the characters.
Erik did turn back to normal with magic’s destruction, but he has “the painful memory of having been a squirreltoad”.
The Realm of Magic is very sensitive and people aren’t supposed to be there, that’s why Moon washing her “wounds” in it was enough to throw everything off balance.
Star on Wheels was inspired by Daron falling in a lake as a kid as a result of not being able to brake on her bike; Lake House Fever by Hammersley’s experience of being snowed in a cabin with his wife (then girlfriend) and her parents.
Marco’s cheekmarks were just due to his exposure to magic, and weren’t connected to the Blood Moon.
Star would love Pringles, but they do upset her stomach.
Easter egg in Cheer Up Star: in Rafael’s shack a painting by Van Gogh that has been stolen and never found again can be seen on a shelf. So he either drew a replica, or he’s the one who stole it.
ANSWERS BY ADAM
(I’m making a separate section for these because it’s harder to tell whether what he says is canon or not, since Adam wasn’t involved with the show’s writing)
Nachos is still with Marco.
Marco still has his Princess Turdina outfit.
Father Time is still fine, since he wasn’t a magical creature (obviously, or the Universe would be kinda done...).
When asked about what he imagines Marco doing after the finale, he answered “hopefully supporting Star in whatever she's doing, as well as still using those butt-kicking skills he developed in the Neverzone!”.
Ludo got his goons by bullying them into submission.
Just gonna post a screen for this answer about Brunzetta because it seems a bit “wishy washy” and phrasing is important to convey that.
Adam thinks that Marco might have worked with Janna, if he hadn’t gotten together with Star.
Gustav was measuring the Diazes in their sleep (in The Other Exchange Student) to make them custom alpaca wool sweaters.
According to Adam Dave (Tom’s father) was just a regular Mewman who worked as a barista at the coffee shop Lady Lucitor frequented. She tipped well and he fell in love.
Toffee called Marco a disappointment in Storm the Castle because he thought he’d have been more of an adversary.
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50 + Most Inspiring Christmas Quotes By Famous Authors | MyQuotesHub
MyQuotesHub - is the best web platform if you are looking for the amazing and unique collection of quotes. It has an amazing collection of most encouraging Life Quotes, Love Quotes, motivational quotes, and even telugu quotes.
Everyone loves good quotes and sharing quotes on special occasions like birthdays, festivals, etc. with our loved ones makes them feel even more special. And as now Christmas and New Year's Eve is coming up, you really got a good opportunity to convey your wishes in the best way i.e. with the best and sweet Christmas Quotes.
Christmas is the most amazing Eve of the year, so we're here to help you to celebrate this with your loved ones. We've designed the best list of the most amazing Merry Christmas Quotes ever which will double your celebrations by sharing them with friends and family members. These quotes will your mind and heart with joy and remind you of the reason for the season. All these Christmas Eve's quotes are from the most famous persons. You can write these quotes on the tag while wrapping gifts for the ones you care. This will add an extra flavor and make them feel even more special.
Here are the best quotes on Christmas Eve listed below:
"Christmas isn't a season. It's a feeling." —Edna Ferber
"My idea of Christmas, whether old-fashioned or modern, is very simple: loving others. Come to think of it, why do we have to wait for Christmas to do that?" – Bob Hope
"May you never be too grown up to search the skies on Christmas Eve."
"I stopped believing in Santa Claus when I was six. Mother took me to see him in a department store and he asked for my autograph." – Shirley Temple
"Christmas is not a date. It is a state of mind." – Mary Ellen Chase
"I will honor Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year." – Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol
"Christmas is not a time nor a season, but a state of mind. To cherish peace and goodwill, to be plenteous in mercy, is to have the real spirit of Christmas." – Calvin Coolidge
"Unless we make Christmas an occasion to share our blessings, all the snow in Alaska won't make it 'white'." – Bing Crosby
"No man is a failure who has friends." — It's a Wonderful Life
"Christmas is the season for kindling the fire of hospitality." — Washington Irving
"God bless us, every one!" — A Christmas Carol
"Our hearts grow tender with childhood memories and love of kindred, and we are better throughout the year for having, in spirit, become a child again at Christmastime." – Laura Ingalls Wilder
"Christmas is doing a little something extra for someone.” – Charles M. Schulz
"I don't think Christmas is necessarily about things. It's about being good to one another." — Carrie Fisher
“Peace on earth will come to stay, When we live Christmas every day.” – Helen Steiner Rice
"He who has not Christmas in his heart will never find it under a tree." – Roy L. Smith
"Blessed is the season which engages the whole world in a conspiracy of love." – Hamilton Wright Mabie
"Teacher says every time a bell rings, an angel gets his wings." – Zuzu Bailey, "It's A Wonderful Life"
"Every gift which is given, even though it be small, is in reality great, if it is given with affection." – Pindar
“Christmas is a day of meaning and traditions, a special day spent in the warm circle of family and friends.” – Margaret Thatcher
"Christmas is a time when everybody wants his past forgotten and his present remembered." – Phyllis Diller
“Christmas will always be as long as we stand heart to heart and hand in hand.” — Dr. Seuss
"I heard the bells on Christmas Day / Their old familiar carols play / And wild and sweet, the words repeat / Of peace on earth, good-will to men." – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
“One can never have enough socks,” said Dumbledore. “Another Christmas has come and gone and I didn’t get a single pair. People will insist on giving me books.” – Harry Potter
“A lovely thing about Christmas is that it’s compulsory, like a thunderstorm, and we all go through it together.” – Garrison Keillor, Leaving Home
“Just remember, the true spirit of Christmas lies in your heart.” — The Polar Express
“I don’t want Christmas season to end, because it’s the only time I can legitimately indulge in on particular addiction: glitter.” – Eloisa James, Paris in Love
"At Christmas, all roads lead home." – Marjorie Holmes
"I wish we could put up some of the Christmas spirit in jars and open a jar of it every month." – Harlan Miller
“There's nothing cozier than a Christmas tree all lit up.” ― Jenny Han
"One of the most glorious messes in the world is the mess created in the living room on Christmas Day. Don't clean it up too quickly." – Andy Rooney
"The best of all gifts around any Christmas tree: the presence of a happy family all wrapped up in each other." — Burton Hills
"Christmas is most truly Christmas when we celebrate it by giving the light of love to those who need it most." - Ruth Carter Stapleton
"A good conscience is a continual Christmas." – Benjamin Franklin
"Christmas, my child, is love in action." – Dale Evans
"The best way to spread Christmas cheer is singing loud for all to hear." – Will Ferrell, Elf
"Mankind is a great, an immense family... This is proved by what we feel in our hearts at Christmas." ― Pope John XXIII
"Maybe Christmas, he thought, doesn't come from a store. Maybe Christmas...perhaps...means a little bit more!" – Theodor Seuss Geisel, How the Grinch Stole Christmas
"Love the giver more than the gift." – Brigham Young
"Christmas will always be as long as we stand heart to heart and hand in hand." – Dr. Suess
"Christmas waves a magic wand over this world, and behold, everything is softer and more beautiful." – Norman Vincent Peale
"Christmas is a season not only of rejoicing but of reflection." – Winston Churchill
"What is Christmas? It is tenderness for the past, courage for the present, hope for the future." – Agnes M. Pahro
"Gifts of time and love are surely the basic ingredients of a truly merry Christmas." ―Peg Bracken
"Christmas is like candy; it slowly melts in your mouth sweetening every taste bud, making you wish it could last forever." – Richelle E. Goodrich
"Christmas is a necessity. There has to be at least one day of the year to remind us that we’re here for something else besides ourselves." ― Eric Sevareid
"Christmas is a tonic for our souls. It moves us to think of others rather than of ourselves. It directs our thoughts to giving." ― B.C. Forbes
"Christmas is the day that holds all time together." — Alexander Smith
"Like snowflakes, my Christmas memories gather and dance — each beautiful, unique, and gone too soon." – Deborah Whipp
"Christmas now surrounds us, Happiness is everywhere. Our hands are busy with many tasks as carols fill the air." – Shirley Sallay
"It is Christmas in the heart that puts Christmas in the air." – W.T. Ellis
"Christmas is forever, not for just one day. For loving, sharing, giving, are not to put away." – Norman Wesley Brooks
"The world has grown weary through the years, but at Christmas, it is young." – Phillips Brooks
"I believe… I believe… It’s silly, but I believe." – Susan, Miracle on 34th Street
"That’s what Christmas memories are made from, they’re not planned, they’re not scheduled, nobody puts them in their blackberry, they just happen." – Deck the Halls (2006)
"Christmas may be a day of feasting, or of prayer, but always it will be a day of remembrance—a day in which we think of everything we have ever loved." – Augusta E. Randel
"Freshly cut Christmas trees smelling of stars and snow and pine resin—inhale deeply and fill your soul with wintry night." - John J. Geddes
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Marvel maniacs united at New York City’s New Amsterdam Theater Monday night to pay tribute to the man whose imagination launched the Marvel Universe: Stan Lee.
As the creative force behind Marvel Comics, Lee created or co-created Spider-Man, Iron Man, The Fantastic Four, The X-Men, Thor, The Hulk, Doctor Strange and many other characters. He also had cameos in nearly every Marvel film.
Marvel Celebrates Stan Lee, filmed for a future ABC TV special, was hosted by Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D star Clark Gregg, whose character Phil Coulson was first introduced in Iron Man.
The evening featured heartfelt speeches by Marvel movie and TV stars, as well as Lee’s Marvel Comics colleagues and friends, interspersed with video montages featuring Mark Hamill, Evangeline Lily, Kevin Smith, Elizabeth Olsen, Mark Ruffalo, Lou Ferrigno, Seth Green, Jimmy Kimmel, and rappers Method Man of Wu-Tang Clan and Darryl McDaniels of Run-DMC.
One such tribute quoted Avengers: Endgame by concluding with the words “Stan, we love you 3000.”
Before the filming started, Marvel’s Daredevil star Charlie Cox gave opening remarks, and his Daredevil co-star Deborah Ann Woll later spoke about how Lee’s creations have completely changed pop culture as we know it.
“Ten years ago, could you have imagined that the average person on the New York subway would have strong feelings about The Winter Soldier?” she asked. “Or that the woman who cuts your hair would have a crush on The Winter Soldier…and on Loki?”
Gregg’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. co-star Ming-Na Wen spoke about how Lee was one of the driving forces behind making Marvel Comics more inclusive, while Loki himself, Tom Hiddleston, spoke about how Lee became just as big a star as the heroes he created.
“Stan Lee’s in more movies than I am!” Hiddleston marveled.
Paul Bettany, who plays Vision, thanked Lee for “giving us freaks and weirdos a place to belong.”
But perhaps Hiddleston said it best.
“Stan Lee started a story with no end, and it changed the world,” he noted. “We couldn’t stop it now if we tried. ‘Nuff said.”
So far, there’s no airdate for the special.
Marvel, like ABC News, is owned by Disney.
#Stan Lee#Tom Hiddleston#Paul Bettany#Ming-Na Wen#Clark Gregg#charlie cox#Deborah Ann Woll#waiting for that anon to come back with 'is this a Stan Lee blog now???'
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[TASK 151: JAMAICA]
In celebration of Caribbean American Heritage Month, here’s a masterlist below compiled of over 1,170+ Jamaican faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever faceclaim or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK - examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
Cleo Laine (1927) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress and singer.
Mona Hammond (1934) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Possibly Other / Chinese] - actress.
Joan Hooley (1936) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Leonie Forbes (1937) Afro-Jamaican - actress, broadcaster, and producer.
Martine Beswick (1941) Jamaican [Portuguese / British] - actress and model.
Carole Crawford (1943) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Cynthia Richards (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rita Marley (1946) Cuban [Afro-Jamaican] - singer.
Millie Small (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Beryl Cunningham (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Esther Anderson (1946) Jamaican - actress, filmmaker, and photographer.
Marcia Barrett (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Beverley Kelso (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Audrey Hall (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Grace Jones (1948) Afro-Jamaican, as well as 1/16th Scottish - model, singer and actress.
Marcia Griffiths (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eleanor Alberga (1949) Afro-Jamaican - composer.
Fae Ellington (1950) Afro-Jamaican - media personality and lecturer.
Susan Cadogan (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lillian Allen (1991) Afro-Jamaican - musician and writer.
Liz Mitchell (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dawn Penn (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Judy Mowatt (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Patsy Yuen (1952) Jamaican [Hakka Chinese] - model, fashion designer, and Miss Jamaica World 1973.
Claudja Barry (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actress.
Lorna Bennett (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Marcia Hines (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer, and tv personality.
Adrienne Banfield-Jones (1953) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - tv personality.
Doña Croll (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Carlene Davis (1953) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Samantha Rose (1954) Jamaican - singer.
Rosanne Katon (1954) Jamaican / Unknown - model, actress, and comedian.
Shari Belafonte (1954) Afro-Jamaican, Dutch Jewish, Irish, Scottish / African-American - actress, model, writer and singer.
Sandy Daley (1954) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Cindy Breakspeare (1954) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Irish, English] / British - singer and model.
Sandi Bogle / Sandy Channer (1954) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Chinese, Possibly Other] - tv personality.
Jacqui Gordon-Lawrence (1956) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Sheila Hylton (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sheryl Lee Ralph (1956) African-American, Afro-Jamaican [including Cameroonian] - actress and singer.
Jaki Graham / Jacqueline Graham (1956) Jamaican [including Nigerian] - singer-songwriter and producer.
Marcia Aitken (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sharon Forrester (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Precious Wilson (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ruby Turner (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer-songwriter.
Suzanne Packer (1958) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino] - actress.
Janet Kay (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer-songwriter.
Tonya Williams (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
J.C. Lodge / June Carol Lodge, (1958) Jamaican - singer, actress and artist.
Barbara Eve Harris (1959) Trinidadian [Afro-Jamaican] - actress.
Sister Carol / Carol Theresa East (1959) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer.
Gail Vaz-Oxlade (1959) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Spanish, Possibly Other] - tv personality and writer.
Carroll Thompson (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer, bassist, and pianist.
Camille Turner (1960)Afro-Jamaican = performance artist, curator, and educator.
Lonny Chin (1960) Jamaican, Chinese, Welsh, Swedish - actress and model.
Marla Glen (1960) Afro-Jamaican / Mexican - singer.
Buntricia Bastian (1960) Afro-Jamaican - makeup artist.
Diane Louise Jordan / Diane Johnson (1960) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter and radio presenter.
Gina Belafonte (1961) 1/4 Afro-Jamaican, 5/8 Jewish [Dutch Jewish, Russian Jewish, Sephardi Jewish], 1/16 Irish, 1/16 Scottish- actress and producer.
Venice Kong (1991) Jamaican [Chinese] - model and actress.
Pauline Henry (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Kim Appleby (1961) Afro-Jamaican / British - actress and singer-songwriter.
Tracy Spencer (1962) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer.
Sister Nancy / Ophlin Russell (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Downtown Julie Brown / Julie Brown (1963) Afro-Jamaican / British - actress, tv personality, DJ, and VJ.
Caron Wheeler (1963) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, pianist, and producer.
Sharon Marley (1964) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - singer-songwriter, percussionist, dancer, and curator.
Gloria Reuben (1964) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican (including Cameroonian, Ghanaian, Ivorian, Malian, Nigerian), Ashkenazi Jewish, Sephardi Jewish, likely some English] - actress, singer, and producer.
Sophia George (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Angie Le Mar (1965) Afro-Jamaican - actress, tv presenter, comedian, producer, director, and writer.
Gigi Hamilton (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Kate Langbroek (1965) Jamaican, Jewish / Dutch - tv presenter, comedian, and radio presenter.
Doris Pearson (1966) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer, dancer, and choreographer.
Michelle Hurd (1966) Afro-Jamaican / English, Scottish, German - actress.
Pepa / Sandra Denton (1966) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actress.
Lorraine Pearson (1967) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer.
Tania Evans (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Jeanette von der Burg / Jeanette Söderholm (1967) Afro-Jamaican / Swedish - singer.
Skin / Deborah Ann Dyer (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer, DJ, and model.
Cedella Marley (1967) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - actress, singer-songwriter, dancer, fashion designer, and author.
Kay Purcell (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Lady G / Janice Fyffe (1968) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Karyn Bryant (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actress, writer, and television personality.
Nadine Sutherland (1968) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lisa Shaw (1968) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Karen Robinson (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Denise Pearson (1968) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Alexia Gardner (1968 or 1969) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, and producer.
Sardia Robinson (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actress, comedian, writer, and producer.
Saskia Garel (1969) Jamaican [Chinese / Spanish] - actress and singer-songwriter.
Roxanne Beckford / Roxanne Beckford-Hoge (1969) Afri-Jamaican - actress.
Michaela Pereira (1970) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Nigerian, Taino, Irish, Unspecified Other] / European - television personality.
Michie Mee / Michelle McCullock Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actress.
Yanna McIntosh (1970) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Audrey Reid (1970) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Deni Hines / Dohnyale Hines (1970) Afro-Jamaican / Ethiopian, Somali - singer.
Jaya / María Kagahastian-Gotidoc (1970) Afro-Jamaican, Visayan Filipina, Spanish / Filipina - actress, singer, rapper, tv host, dancer, and producer.
Diana King (1970) Afro-Jamaican / Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Monie Love / Simone Johnson (1970) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and radio personality.
Naomi Campbell (1970) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Chinese, Possibly Other] - actress, model, and businesswoman.
Kathryne Dora Brown (1971) Afro-Jamaican / Irish, English, Scottish, German - actress.
Jada Pinkett Smith (1971) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian / African-American - actress, singer-songwriter, comedian, and businesswoman.
Karin Taylor (1971) Jamaican, Brazilian, Chinese - model and blogger.
Charmaine Sinclair (1971) Indo-Jamaican - porn actress and model.
Billie Myers (1971) Afro-Jamaican / British - singer-songwriter.
Vernie Bennett / Vernett Bennett (1971) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Natasha Williams (1971) Jamaican - actress.
Patra / Dorothy Smith (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Salena Godden (1972) Afro-Jamaican / Irish, Scottish, English - musician, performer, poet, and author.
Selena Griffin (1972) Unspecified Native American, Jamaican, Cuban, African-American - actress.
Lady Saw / Marion Hall (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lorraine Pascale (1972) Afro-Jamaican - model, tv personality, and celebrity chef.
Georgianna Robertson (1972) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Indian, Scottish] - model and actress.
Easther Bennett (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rachel Stuart (1972) Afro-Jamaican - model, actress and television personality.
Lisa Moorish (1972) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Irish, Scottish, Unspecified Asian] / English - singer-songwriter.
Staceyann Chin (1972) Afro-Jamaican. Chinese-Jamaican - spoken-word poet and performing artist.
Misa Hylton-Brim (1973) Afro-Jamaican, Japanese / African-American - fashion designer and stylist.
Beenie Man / Anthony Moses Davis (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Macka Diamond (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Nadia Brown (1973) Afro-Jamaican - poet, writer, and author.
Beverley Knight (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, tv presenter, and producer.
Tanya Stephens (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Stacey McKenzie (1973) Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Scottish - model and television personality.
Elizabeth Llewellyn (1973 or 1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Carlene Smith (1973) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Elle Downs (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Amber Katori Wilson (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Chevelle Franklyn (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Karen Chin (1974) Jamaican - DJ.
Christine Adams (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actress and model.
Brenda Edwards (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actress and tv personality.
Robinne Lee (1974) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino, Chinese, British] - actress and author.
Divine Brown (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Skye Edwards (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Zadie Smith (1975) Afro-Jamaican / English - novelist.
Queen Ifrica / Ventrice Morgan (1975) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Shaznay Lewis (1975) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - actress and singer-songwriter.
Lisa Hanna (1975) Afro-Jamaican - Miss World 1993.
Ce'cile / Cecile Claudine Charlton (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sharon Duncan-Brewster (1976) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Naomie Harris (1976) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Trinidadian - actress.
Denise Nurse (1976) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter.
Marsha Thomason (1976) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress.
Charlotte / Charlotte Kelly (1976 or 1977) Jamaican - singer-songwriter, pianist, keyboardist, guitarist, and producer.
d'bi Young (1977) Afro-Jamaican - dub poet and activist.
Oluniké Adeliyi (1977) Afro-Jamaican, Yoruba Nigerian - actress.
Kerry Washington (1977) African-American, Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, as well as some English, Scottish, Unspecified Native American] - actress.
Camille McDonald (1977) Afro-Jamaican - model and television personality.
Michelle Buteau (1977) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, French] / Haitian [Afro-Haitian, Lebanese] - actress, comedian, and podcast host.
Jully Black / Jullyann Gordon (1977) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Possibly Other] - actress, singer-songwriter, and producer.
Nyanda / Nyanda Thorbourne (1978) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, English] / African-American - singer-songwriter.
Foxy Brown / Jennifer Esmerelda Hylton (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Alesha Dixon (1978) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer.
Gwendolyn Osborne (1978) Afro-Jamaican / British - actress and model.
Alaine Laughton (1978) Jamaican [Taino, Afro-Jamaican] - singer-songwriter.
Nicole Lyn (1978) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican / Chinese, English] - actress.
Mamadee / Mamadie Wappler (1979) Sierra Leonean, Jamaican / German - singer-songwriter.
YayaBeatsFace (1979) Afro-Jamaican - makeup artist.
Terri Walker / Chanelle Gstettenbauer (1979) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Lisa Maffia (1979) Afro-Jamaican / Italian, English - singer-songwriter, rapper, model, tv presenter, and fashion designer.
Judi Love (1980) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and radio presenter.
Sabrina Colie (1980) Jamaican [Indo-Jamaican / Afro-Jamaican, Scottish] - actress and director.
Nahtasha Budhi (1980) Afro-Jamaican - actress and model.
Daisi Pollard (1980) Afro-Jamaican - model, beauty queen, businesswoman, author, and actress.
Daenya McDonald (1980) Afro-Jamaican - actress and model.
Melina Matsoukas (1981) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Cuban / Greek Jewish, Polish Jewish - director.
Jamelia / Jamelia Niela Davis (1981) Jamaican / Zimbabwean - singer, tv presenter and actress.
Susan Kelechi Watson (1981) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Nadirah X / Nadirah Sabreen Seid (1977) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Carla Campbell (1980) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Nordia Coco Witter (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kimberly Megan (1981) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Shanna Malcolm (1981) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Olivia / Olivia Theresa Longott (1981) Jamaican, Indian, Cuban, Unspecified Native American - singer.
Ms. Dynamite / Niomi McLean-Daley (1981) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian, Afro-Grenadian / Irish, Scottish, English, German - singer-songwriter, rapper, and producer.
YolanDa Brown (1982) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter, saxophonist, and composer.
Kristin Kreuk (1982) Jamaican [Chinese, Afro-Jamaican, Scottish], Chinese, Indonesian / Dutch - actress and producer.
Chrisette Michele (1982) Afro-Jamaican, Unknown - singer.
Spice / Grace Latoya Hamilton (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jaye Jacobs / Emma Jaye Jacobs (1982) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Ebony Bones (1982) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, model, and producer.
Kerron Ennis (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Irie Love (1982) Hawaiian, Jamaican, Dutch, English, Unspecified Native American - singer.
Selita Ebanks (1983) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Caymanian - model and actress.
Trey Anthony (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actress, comedian, producer, and playwright.
Layla Flaherty (1983) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actress, model, and tv personality.
Vinessa Antoine (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Nyla Thorbourne (1983) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Nyla / Nailah Thorbourne (1983) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, English] / African-American - singer-songwriter.
VV Brown / Vanessa Brown (1983) Afro-Jamaican / Puerto Rican - singer-songwriter, model, pianist, guitarist, percussionist, and producer.
Speech Debelle / Corynne Elliot (1983) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Kendra Westwood (1984) Jamaican / Grenadian - actress.
Donisha Rita Claire Prendergast (1984) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] / Unspecified - actress, model, dancer, filmmaker, and poet.
Cherine Anderson (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actress.
Keisha Buchanan (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Vanessa Veasley (1984) Afro-Jamaican / Louisiana Creole, Irish, Spanish - model.
Keisha Buchanan (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Etana / Shauna McKenzie (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Camille Davis (1984) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Ika Wong (1984) Jamaican [Chinese, Unspecified White, Unspecified Black / Unknown] - reality star.
Sakina Deer (1984) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Tami Chynn / Tammar Chin (1984) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, Possibly Other] / Jamaican [Chinese], Cherokee - singer-songwriter and dancer.
Jamie Gunns (1985) Indo-Jamaican / English - model.
Kreesha Turner (1985) Afro-Jamaican, Chinese-Jamaican / Scottish, German-Canadian - singer.
Fefe Dobson (1985) Jamaican / Unspecified Indigenous Canadian, Irish, English, Dutch - singer.
Charlene-Vanessa Draytón (1985) Jamaican / Puerto Rican - actress.
Amanda Brown (1985) Afro-Jamaican / Puerto Rican - singer.
Keyshia Ka'oir (1985) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Mia Isabella (1985) Jamaican, Puerto Rican, French - porn actress - Trans!
Tessanne Chin (1985) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, Possibly Other] / Jamaican [Chinese], Cherokee - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Lyric Rochester (1985) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Nicole Beharie (1985) Afro-Jamaican / Nigerian - actress and singer.
Yendi Phillips (1985) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - model, tv host, Miss Jamaica Universe 2010, and Miss Jamaica World 2007.
Zahra Redwood (1985) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Jamaica Universe 2007.
Andrea Lewis (1985) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer.
Chantal Raymond (1985) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Jamaica World 2010.
Antonia Thomas (1986) Afro-Jamaican / English, possibly Welsh - actress.
Laura Mvula (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Kittian - singer.
Adi Alfa (1986) Nigerian / Jamaican, Chinese, British - actress.
Rebecca Ferguson (1986) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer.
Rebecca Silvera (1986) Afro-Jamaican - reality star.
Annaliese Dayes (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Saint Lucian, Afro-Barbadian, Afro-Grenadian, Afro-Vincentian - model, television personality, and presenter.
Dominique Moore (1986) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Raine Seville (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Nerissa Irving (1986) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Chrystina Sayers (1986) Afo-Jamaican, Unspecified Native American, African-American, Irish - musician.
Ishawna (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Tracy Z. Francis (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Mexican - actress.
Arabella Ruby (1987) Afro-Jamaican, British / White American - actress.
Lashana Lynch (1987) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Sharmila Makeda (1987) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Guyanese - actress.
Zaraah Abrahams (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian, Iraqi - actress.
Cleopatra Coleman (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish, possibly other - actress.
Sandy Green (1987) Jamaican - singer-songwriter and keyboardist.
Rox / Roxanne Tataei (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Iranian - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and keyboardist.
Angel Nelly (1988) Jamaican - dancer.
Margot Bingham (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Russian Jewish, German Jewish - actress.
Jade Ewen (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish, Italian [including Sicilian] - actress and singer.
Gillain Berry (1988) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Aruban - model and Miss Aruba 2010.
Leonie Elliott (1988) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Elease Donovan (1988) Afro-Jamaican - reality star.
Ashleigh Francis (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish - model and Miss World Australia 2010.
Karla Crome (1988) Afro-Jamaican, Irish - actress.
Alexandra Burke (1988) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican, Irish - singer.
Natalie Duncan (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Greek, English - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Annastasia Baker (1988) Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Danielle Rickards (1988) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Chantal Zaky (1988) Jamaican [British, Canadian, Portuguese] / Egyptian - model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2012.
FKA Twigs / Tahliah Debrett Barnett-Smith (1988) Afro-Jamaican / English, Spanish - singer and dancer.
Alisha Wainwright (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Haitian - actress.
Anita Antoinette (1989) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Rochelle Humes (1989) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer and television presenter.
Yrsa Daley-Ward (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Nigerian - actress, model, and writer.
Lianne La Havas (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Greek - singer.
Lesa-Gayle Wee Tom (1989) Afro-Jamaican - beauty queen and reality star.
Aluna Francis (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Tanzanian, Indian - singer.
Barbee / Faith J Eselebor (1989) Nigerian / Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Steph Fearon / Stephanie Fearon (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Maltese - actress.
Ayesha Curry (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] / African-American, Polish - actress, tv personality, celebrity cook, and author.
Kamille / Camille Purcell (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Cuban - singer-songwriter and producer.
Brittany Lyons (1989) Jamaican [Unspecified White, Possibly Other] - model and Miss Jamaica World 2008.
Gaye McDonald (1989) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Dhq Sher (1990) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Alyssa Veniece (1990) Jamaican [Chinese, German, Portugese, Indian, French] - actress.
Jourdan Dunn (1990) 7/8 Afro-Grenadian, 1/16 Afro-Jamaican, 1/16 Syrian - model.
April Jackson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - model, reality tv star, and Miss Jamaica Universe 2008.
Delilah / Paloma Ayana Stoecker (1990) Nigerian, Jamaican, Cuban, English / Spanish, French - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Jade Anouka (1990) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Trinidadian - actress and poet.
Elle Royal / Danielle Prendergast (1990) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Jenaae Jackson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Earth Jamaica 2009.
Ciarra Nevitt (1990) English, Jamaican, St. Lucian - actress.
Sharlene Rädlein (1990) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Scottish, German, Possibly Other] - model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2015.
Zita Hanrot (1990) Afro-Jamaican / French - actress.
Danielle Nicole (1990) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
HoodCelebrityy / Tina Pinnock (1991) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jade Thompson (1991) Afro-Jamaican / English - model.
Jessie Morrison (1991) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Bella Blair (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Kaci Fennell (1992) Afro-Jamaican - host, model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2014.
Junglepussy / Shayna McHayle (1991) Jamaican / Trinidadian - rapper and actress.
Stefflon Don / Stephanie Allen (1991) Afro-Jamaican - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Tori Kelly (1992) Afro-Jamaican, Puerto Rican / Irish, German - singer and actress.
Latty / slickchic_latty (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Young M.A / Katorah Marrero (1992) Afro-Jamaican / Puerto Rican - rapper.
Olivia Olson (1992) Afro-Jamaican / Swedish - actress and singer.
Shannon Hamilton (1992) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Camille Kostek (1992) Polish, Irish, Jamaican - model and reporter.
Zaddy / Just On My Chill (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Misha B / Misha Bryan (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and rapper.
Georgina Campbell (1992) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress.
Kamie Crawford (1992) Jamaican, German, Irish, Cuban, Indian, African-American - actress, TV host, model and Miss Teen USA 2010.
Petite-Sue Divinitii (1992) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Vivianna Grant (1992) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Jessica Plummer (1992) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer and actress.
Leomie Anderson (1993) Afro-Jamaican - model and designer.
Antoinette Robertson (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Daneille Mattis (1993) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Alicia Burke (1993) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Renae McLean (1993) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Simona Brown (1993 or 1994) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Ella Mai (1994) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - singer.
Kadesha Porter (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Christina Nelson (1994) Jamaican - dancer.
Winnie Harlow (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Shay Cherise (1994) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Tamara Lawrance (1994) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress.
Ella Eyre (1994) Afro-Jamaican / Maltese - singer.
Adrienne Show (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Zuri Tibby (1995) Afro-Jamaican, Dominican, Indian, Irish - model.
Nay / Nay and Meech (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Tsheca White (1995) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Miss RFabulous (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Zuri Marley (1995) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter.
Ella Balinska (1996) Afro-Jamaican / Polish - actress.
Isabel Dalley (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model and Miss Universe Jamaica 2016.
Samantha J / Samantha Gonsalves (1996) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Portuguese, Sephardi Jewish] - singer-songwriter and model.
Shanice Allen (1996) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Davina Bennett (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2017.
Amira McCarthy (1996) Afro-Jamaican, Irish / Gambian - singer.
Cheyenne Maya Carty (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Dionne Bromfield (1996) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer-songwriter and tv personality.
Hannah Shakespeare (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Shenseea / Chinsea Lee (1996) Afro-Jamaican, Korean - singer.
Jorja Smith (1997) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer.
Barbra Lee-Grant (1997) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Jada Kingdom (1998) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Shanice Archer (1998) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress.
Tami Williams (1998) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Gabz / Gabrielle Gardiner (1998) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Selah Marley (1998) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - model.
Emily Maddison (1999) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Jamaica Universe 2018.
Tia Rolph (1999) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Willow Smith (2000) 3/4 African-American, 1/8 Afro-Barbadian, 1/8 Afro-Jamaican - singer, actress and dancer.
Koffee / Mikayla Simpson (2000) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, DJ, and guitarist.
Haile Thomas (2000) Afro-Jamaican - international speaker, youth health activist, vegan food & lifestyle influencer.
Shameika Gordon (2000) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Sydney Aitcheson (2000) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Gabriella Laws (2001) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Alyssia Tsang (2001) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Iris Dubois (2001) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Alaina Tsang (2001) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Ciara Johnson (2001) Afro-Jamaican - model and blogger.
Zipporah Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer.
Linlyn Lue (?) Jamaican [Chinese] - actress.
Michele Austin (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Jo Hamilton (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Scottish, Possibly Other] / Kenyan, Scottish - singer, multi-instrumentalist, and composer.
Zahra Newman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Maureen Okpoko (?) Tuareg Nigerian / Jamaican - actress.
Tanya Muneera Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Natalia Castellanos (?) Jamaican, Surinamese, Venezuelan, Colombian - actress.
Sukina Abdul Noor (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Wilma Reading (?) Afro-Jamaican, Afghan, Torres Strait Islander, Unspecified Aboriginal Australian, Irish, Scottish, English - singer.
Ayanna Witter-Johnson (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, cellist, and composer.
Nadine Benjamin (?) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer.
Eden Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - instagrammer (edenmarley).
Doreen Shaffer / Monica Johnson (?) Jamaican [Afro Costa Rican / German] - singer.
Sarafine Andres (?) Jamaican, Bahamian, Indian - instagrammer (sarafine_andres).
Pamputtae / Eveanna Henry (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Diane Söderholm (?) Afro-Jamaican / Swedish - singer.
TAP (?) Jamaican, Bahamian - youtuber (instagram: theycallmetap).
Chyna Layne (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipina - actress.
Sheyla Bonnick (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Iman McDonnaugh (?) Jamaican, Trinidadian, Italian, Irish - model.
Michael Hyatt (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Samantha Cole (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Andrea-Rachel Parker (?) Afro-Jamaican, Spanish, Unspecified Native American - actress.
Tia Hendricks (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Gabrielle Graham (?) Jamaican, Montserratian - actress.
Philicia Saunders (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Kerri McLean (?) Afro-Jamaican / Flemish, Welsh - actress.
Johanna Thea (?) Afro-Jamaican, Indian, Swiss, English - actress and writer.
Ranking Miss P / Margaret Anderson (?) Afro-Jamaican - radio presenter.
Janeshia Adams-Ginyard (?) Afro-Jamaican - stunt actress.
Jacinth Headlam (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Tai Brown (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Andrea Laing (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Whitney White (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actress.
Danielle Pinnock (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Jo Martin (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actress.
Sharon Ferguson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Tahirah Sharif (?) Afro-Jamaican / Pakistani - actress.
Suzie McGrath (?) Afro-Jamaican, English - actress.
Rachael Grace (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Lisa Marie Summerscales (?) Jamaican / English - actress.
Lisagaye Tomlinson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Genevieve Capovilla (?) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actress.
Josanne Hutchinson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress, playwright and poet.
Shaniqua Okwok (?) Jamaican / Ugandan - actress.
Lisa Mercedez (?) Jamaican - rapper.
Nathalie Merchant (?) Jamaican, Panamanian / Romanian - actress.
Simone Moore (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Maya Nadine (?) Jamaican [Chinese], German - actress.
Alana Henry (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Toyah Frantzen (?) Cuban, Afro-Jamaican, Dutch - actress, director and writer.
Arianna D'Amato (?) Afro-Jamaican, Italian - actress.
Devynity / Devyn Wray (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, MC, spoken word artist, and poet.
Porsche Thomas (?) Jamaican, Trinidadian - actress.
Catherine Burrell (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Debra Ann Townes (?) Jamaican, Panamanian, African-American, Unspecified Native American - actress.
Brittoni Sinclair (?) Jamaican / African-American - actress.
Yvonne Curtis / Yvonne McIntosh (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Aleisha Barnett (?) Jamaican [Guyanese, Unknown] - actress.
Gail Hamilton (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Kristen Graham (?) Jamaican, Chinese - actress and model.
Maia Watkins (?) Afro-Jamaican / Guyanese, Ukrainian - actress.
Queen Paula (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Renee Mittelstaedt (?) Afro-Jamaican, German - actress and model.
Tymika Tafari (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Nicolette Lynch (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Melissa Suppiah (?) Jamaican, Sri Lankan, Portuguese - actress.
Nahtoreya Coleman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Shirley Thompson (?) Afro-Jamaican - violinist and composer.
Noelle Kerr (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Naomi Dela Cruz (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipina - actress.
Kadian Thomas (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Leonie Haynes-Moses (?) Grenadian / Barbadian, Jamaican - actress.
Simone Michaud (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress, model coach, singer-songwriter, lyricist, musician, and producer.
Iza Scott (?) Jamaican, Unspecified Native American, Irish, Polish, French - actress.
Myra McKenzie Merriweather (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Naomi Grossett (?) Afro-Jamaican, Irish - actress.
Miqueal-Symone Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Rosemary Mathurin (?) Jamaican / Saint Lucian - actress.
Annette Brissett (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
The Ra11n / Metis Monroe / Kara Jade (?) Afro-Jamaican / Metis [Plains Cree, Unspecified] - rapper, model, and MC.
Myrna Hague (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Denai Moore (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Christina Knight (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Natalie Storm (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Quanteisha / Quanteisha Benjamin (?) Afro-Jamaican, Indian - singer-songwriter and rapper.
Akira Reid (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Doreen Shaffer / Monica Johnson (?) Jamaican [German / Costa Rican] - musician.
Llanakila / Victoria Brown (?) Afro-Jamaican - artist, painter, digital illustrator, and digital artist.
Polly A. / Meleni Smith (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - singer.
Tenza (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Vashti Clarke (?) Afro-Jamaican - model, actress, and entrepreneur.
Dahlia Harris (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Chantelle Ernandez (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kimberly Huie (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
D'Angel / Michelle Downer (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer, actress, model, and brand ambassador.
Naki Depass (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Stacy-Ann Gooden (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Beverley Heath Hoyland (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Nicketa Steer (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Natalya Spencer (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Trillary Banks (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - rapper.
Khalia (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Lovena Fox (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kim Roberts (?) Jamaican / Dominican - actress.
Djanet Sears (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress and director.
Tasha the Amazon / Tasha Schuman (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ordena Stephens-Thompson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Dancehall Queen Stacey (?) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Mad Michelle (?) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Janica Coralee (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (janica_coralee).
Jessica Wong (?) Chinese, Jamaican - Instagrammer (jessleewong).
Joelette (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (estrella.marie).
Amanda (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (mandaaub).
Jeneil Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Dom Collins (?) Afro-Jamaican - model and Instagrammer (domalexi).
Shawna-Kay (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: kay_shawnakay)
Racquel Mckenzie (?) Afro-Jamaican - model, actor and dancer (Instagram: kellzbroadway)
Keliah Singh (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: _iamkeliahsingh_)
Shenelle Katina (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (shenellekatina).
Yanique Barrett (?) Afro-Jamaican - tv host, singer and Instagrammer (yaniquecurvydiva).
Melenigma (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (melenigma).
Natosh Renee (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (natoshrenee).
Aiyana A. Lewis (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (aiyanaalewis).
Shevon K. Nieto (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer, athlete and Instagrammer (shevonstoddart).
Monica Claire Loshusan (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (monicaclaire876).
Meshane Kelly (?) Afro-Jamaican - model and Instagrammer (kellymeshane).
Chantaé (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer, model and Instagrammer (tina.channiel).
M:
Harry Belafonte (1927) Afro-Jamaican, Sephardi Jewish / Afro-Jamaican, Irish, Scottish - singer and actor.
Seaman Dan / Henry Gibson Dan (1929) 3/4 Torres Strait Islander, 1/8 Jamaican, 1/16 Niuean, 1/16 New Caledonian - singer-songwriter.
Alvin "Seeco" Patterson / Francisco Willie (1930) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Dizzy Reece / Alphonso Son Reece (1931) Afro-Jamaican - trumpeter.
Ernest Ranglin (1932) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and composer.
Carlos Malcolm (1934) Afro-Jamaican - trombonist, percussionist and bandleader.
Baba Brooks (1935) Afro-Jamaican - trumpet player.
Scratch / Lee Perry / Rainford Perry (1936) Afro-Jamaican [including Yoruba Nigerian] - singer-songwriter, producer, and inventor.
Scratch / Lee Perry / Rainford Hugh Perry (1936) Afro-Jamaican [Yoruba] - singer and music producer.
Clifton Jones (1937) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Lester Sterling / Mr. Versatile (1936) Afro-Jamaican - trumpet and saxophone player.
Kenny Lynch (1938) Afro-Jamaican, British / Barbadian - actor, singer-songwriter, and entertainer.
Derrick Harriott (1939) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jimmy James (1940) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Winston Jarrett (1940) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garth Fagan (1940) Afro-Jamaican - choreographer.
Tito Simon / Keith Foster (1940) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Bunny Lee / Edward O'Sullivan Lee (1941) Afro-Jamaican - record producer.
Bongo Herman / Herman Davis (1941) AfroJamaican - hand-drummer, percussionist and singer.
Stranger Cole / StrangeJah Cole / Wilburn Theodore Cole (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Carl Douglas (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Phil Pratt (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
U-Roy / Ewart Beckford (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Toots Hibbert / Frederick Nathaniel Hibbert (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dobby Dobson (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer and record producer.
Eric "Monty" Morris (1942) Jamaican - musician.
Alvin Ranglin (1942) Jamaican - singer.
Thom Bell (1942) Jamaican - songwriter, arranger, and record producer.
David Madden (1943) Jamaican - musician.
Dandy Livingstone / Robert Livingstone Thompson (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Boris Gardiner (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Ras Michael / Michael George Henry (1943) Jamaican - singer.
Willie Francis (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Roydel Johnson / Congo Ashanti Roy (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Peter Straker (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actor.
Anton Phillips (1943) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Bob Andy / Keith Anderson (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Max Romeo (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kiddus I / Frank Dowding Jr (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
B.B. Seaton / Bibby / Harris Lloyd Seaton (1944) singer and record producer.
Sydney Crooks / Luddy Pioneer / Norris Cole / Luddy Crooks / Frankie Diamond /
Brother Cole (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dwight Pinkney (1945) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Cornell Campbell (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ernie Smith (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Denzil Dennis (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
The Mighty Pope / Earle Heedram (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rupie Edwards (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Burning Spear / Winston Rodney (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Aston Barrett (1946) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Tommy Cowan (1946) Afro-Jamaican - producer and singer.
Winston Groovy Winston Tucker (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ijahman Levi / Trevor Sutherland (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer and guitarist.
Willard White (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Enos McLeod (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Douglas Ewart (1946) Afro-Jamaican - multi-instrumentalist and instrument builder.
Bunny Wailer / Neville O'Riley Livingston (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Conroy Gedeon (1947) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Barry Biggs (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
King Jammy / Lloyd James (1947) Afro-Jamaican - dub mixer and record producer.
Dave Barker (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eric Donaldson (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Cedric Myton (1947) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Jesse Green (1948) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Johnny Osbourne (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Winston Francis (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
King Sounds / Roy Livingstone Plummer (1948) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Oliver Samuels (1948) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and actor.
Lloyd Parks (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Lloyd Lovindeer (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Pablo Moses / Pablo Henry (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ken Boothe (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Herman Chin Loy (1948) Jamaican [Chinese] - musician and producer.
Jimmy Cliff (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer, musician, and actor.
Junior Byles / Kerrie Byles (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garth Dennis (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Roy Cousins (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer, producer and record label owner.
Big Youth / Manley Augustus Buchanan (1949) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Anthony Sherwood (1949) Afro-Jamaican - actor, producer, director and writer.
Gil Scott-Heron (1949) Afro-Jamaican, African-American - poet and musician.
Tony Ray (1949) Jamaican [Jewish] - singer, bassist, and drummer.
Jimmy London (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Leroy Sibbles (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Pat Kelly (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Junior Marvin / Donald Hanson Marvin Kerr Richards Jr (1949) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and singer.
Philip Akin (1950) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Pablove Black (1950) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Watty Burnett (1950) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Flabba / Errol Holt (1950) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Paul Douglas (1950) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Leroy Wallace (1950) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Peter Ashbourne (1950) Afro-Jamaican - musician and composer.
Pluto Shervington (1950) Afro-Jamaican - musician, singer, engineer and producer.
Carl Lumbly (1951) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Robbie Lyn (1951) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Junior English (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Horace Andy (1951) Afro-Jamaican - songwriter and singer.
Constantine "Vision" Walker (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lynval Golding (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer and guitarist.
Errol Dunkley (1951) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Basil Wallace (1951) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Clinton Fearon (1951) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.
Niney the Observer / George Boswell (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Bruce Ruffin (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Clive Hunt (1952) Afro-Jamaican - musician, arranger, composer and producer.
Don Carlos (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Admiral Bailey (1952) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Dr Alimantado / Winston James Thompson (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer, DJ, and producer.
Keith Sterling (1952) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Mutabaruka / Allan Hope (1952) Afro-Jamaican - poet, musician, actor, educator, and talk-show host.
Leroy Smart (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Sly Dunbar (1952) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Delroy Lindo (1952) Afro-Jamaican - actor and director.
Carl Malcolm (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Ronny Cush (1952) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Dillinger / Lester Bullock (1953) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Robert Wisdom (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Santa Davis / Carlton "Santa" Davis (1953) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Al Campbell (1954) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
David Jahson (1954) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Everton Blender (1954) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Robbie Shakespeare (1953) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and record producer.
Clive Chin (1954) Jamaican [Hakka Chinese] - musician and producer.
Trinity / Junior Brammer (1954) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and producer.
Linval Thompson (1954) Afro-Jamaican - musician and producer.
Mikey Chung (1954) Jamaican [Chinese] - keyboard, guitar and percussion player, arranger and record producer.
Gussie Clarke (1954) Afro-Jamaican - producer.
Gary Wilmot (1954) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor, singer, and comedian.
Natty Wailer / Nathaniel Ian Wynter (1954) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Gary Crosby (1955) Afro-Jamaican - bassist and composer.
Fred Locks / Stafford Elliot (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Johnny Clarke (1955) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Tapper Zukie / David Sinclair (1955) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and producer.
Beres Hammond (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
DJ Kool Herc / Clive Campbell (1955) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Tony Tuff / Winston Anthony Morris (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Honey Boy / Keith Williams (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Neville Staple (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sylford Walker (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jah Screw / Paul Love (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Jah Thomas / Nkrumah Thomas (1955) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and record producer.
Earl "Chinna" Smith (1955) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Ojiji / Rupert Harvey (1955) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Glen Washington (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Tinga Stewart / Neville Stewart (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dread Hinds / David Hinds (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer and guitarist.
Don Letts (1956) Afro-Jamaican - musician, DJ, and director.
Ambelique / Owen George Anthony Silvera (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Freddie McGregor (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Tyrone Downie (1956) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Burro Banton (1956) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Wayne Jarrett (1956) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
U Brown / Huford Brown (1956) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Electric Dread / Winston McAnuff (1957) Jamaican [7/8 Afro-Jamaican, 1/8 Scottish] - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and percussionist.
Dean Fraser (1957) Afro-Jamaican - saxophonist.
Joseph Cotton (1957) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Peter Williams (1957) Jamaican - actor.
Vivian Jones (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eek-A-Mouse / Ripton Joseph Hylton (1957) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Brigadier Jerry (1957) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Ini Kamoze / Cecil Campbell (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Junior Giscombe / Norman Giscombe (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Anthony Johnson (1957) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - singer.
Michael Rose (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Afrika Bambaataa (1957) Afro-Jamaican - disc jockey, rapper, songwriter and producer.
Maxi Jazz / Maxwell Fraser (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, rapper, and DJ.
Ainsley Harriott (1957) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter, entertainer, and celebrity chef.
Lenny Henry / Lensworth Henry (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, tv presenter, comedian, and writer.
Levi Roots / Keith Graham (1958) Afro-Jamaican - musician, tv personality, and celebrity chef.
Ras Midas (1958) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
David Reivers (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Earl Sixteen / Earl John Daley (1958) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
George Nooks / Prince Mohammed (1958) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lone Ranger / Anthony Alphanso Waldron (1958) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Brian Bovell (1959) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Papa Kojak / Floyd Anthony Perch (1959) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and singer.
Mel Gaynor (1959) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Brazilian - singer, drummer, and percussionist.
Sidney Mills (1959) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Ranking Joe / Joseph Jackson (1959) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Roy Rayon (1959) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Spanner Banner / Joseph Bonner (1959) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Cleveland Watkiss (1959) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, guitarist, and pianist.
Leo Williams (1959) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Cocoa Tea / Calvin George Scott (1959) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Luke / Uncle Luke / Luke Skyywalker / Luther Campbell (1960) Afro-Bahamian / Afro-Jamaican - actor, rapper, record executive, and promoter.
Linford Christie (1960) Afro-Jamaican - actor and former sprinter.
Peter Metro (1960) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Tiger / Norman Washington Jackson (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eric "Fish" Clarke (1960) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Mikey Craig / Michael Craig (1960) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and guitarist.
Levi Tafari (1960) Afro-Jamaican - actor and poet.
Patrick Andy (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Peter Thomas (1960) Afro-Jamaican - reality star.
Admiral Tibet / Kenneth Allen (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Shaun Wallace (1960) Afro-Jamaican - tv personality.
General Trees / Amos Edwards (1960) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Pato Banton / Patrick Murray (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Rikki Beadle-Blair (1961) Afro-Jamaican / Unspecified - actor, singer-songwriter, dancer, director, choreographer, screenwriter, and designer.
Professor Nuts / Carl Wellington (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Colin McFarlane (1961) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Master T / Tony Young (1961) Afro-Jamaican - television personality.
Half Pint / Lindon Andrew Roberts (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Paul Innocent (1961) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Maxi Priest / Max Elliott (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Emanuel Walsh (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Shinehead / Edmund Carl Aiken (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and rapper.
Colin Salmon (1962) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Robert Ffrench (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Danny Red / Danny Dread / Daniel Clarke (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Triston Palma (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
King Kong / Dennis Anthony Thomas (1962) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and singer.
Anthony Red Rose (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eddie Bo Smith Jr. (1962) Afro-Jamaican - actor and musician.
Tony Rebel / Patrick George Anthony Barrett (1962) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Super Cat / William Maragh (1963) Afro-Jamaican / Indo-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Patrick Robinson (1963) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor.
Chaka Demus / John Taylor (1963) Afro-Jamaican - musician and DJ.
Junior Reid / Delroy Reid (1963) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Courtney Pine (1964) Afro-Jamaican - keyboardist, saxophonist, flutist, clarinetist, and bassist.
Romero Jennings (1964) Jamaican - makeup artist.
Gully Bop / Robert Lee Malcolm (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Icho Candy / Winston Evans (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Maurice Dean Wint (1964) Jamaican - actor.
Luciano (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sanchez / Kevin Anthony Jackson (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Barrington Levy (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Stedman Pearson (1964) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and dancer.
Alrick Riley (1964) Afro-Jamaican - actor, director, and writer.
Kevin Michael Richardson (1964) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Steve Williamson (1964) Afro-Jamaican - keyboardist, saxophonist, and composer.
Kurtis Mantronik / Kurtis el Khaleel / Graham Curtis el Khaleel (1965) Jamaican / Syrian - DJ, drummer, keyboardist, and producer.
Gary Beadle (1965) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Lieutenant Stitchie / Cleveland Laing (1965) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Anthony McKay (1965) Afro-Jamaican, Unspecified Hispanic - actor, producer and writer.
Prezident Brown / Fitz Albert Cotterell (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Cutty Ranks / Philip Thomas (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mikey Spice / Michael Theophilus Johnson (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Slick Rick / Richard Walters (1965) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and producer.
Ice MC / Ian Campbell (1965) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Roderick Williams (1965) Afro-Jamaican / Welsh - singer and composer.
Michael Bentt (1965) Afro-Jamaican - actor and former boxer.
Goldie / Clifford Price (1965) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish - actor, DJ, and visual artist.
Tippa Irie / Anthony Henry (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Coolie Ranx / Obiajula Ugbomah (1965) Yoruba Nigerian / Jamaican - actor and singer.
Junior Williams (1965) Afro-Jamaican / Dominican, Italian - actor.
Daddy Freddy / S. Frederick Small (1965) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Pinchers / Delroy Thompson (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Macka B / Christopher MacFarlane (1966) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Normski / Norman Anderson (1966) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and DJ.
Mark Van Hoen (1966) Jamaican, Punjabi Indian, Dutch, English - musician.
Bushwick Bill (1966) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Richard Chevolleau (1966) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Junior Tucker / Leslie Tucker (1966) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Richie Stephens (1966) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Shabba Ranks / Rexton Rawlston Fernando Gordon (1966) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
A Guy Called Gerald / Gerald Simpson (1967) Afro-Jamaican - DJ, keyboardist, drummer, and producer.
Arnold Pinnock (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Papa San / Tyrone Thompson (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jerome Sydenham (1967) Nigerian, Jamaican, British - DJ, musician, producer, and label owner.
Singing Melody / Everton Hardweare (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Andrew Tosh (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sidney Sloane (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actor, tv presenter, and radio presenter.
Phillip Leo / Phillip Pottinger (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, guitarist, keyboardist, and producer.
Darren Barrett (1967) Afro-Jamaican - trumpeter-songwriter, flugelhorn player, bandleader, producer, photographer, and videographer.
Young MC / Marvin Young (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer-songwriter, rapper, and producer.
Dennis Seaton (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Capleton / Clifton George Bailey III (1967) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Howard McNair (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Daddy Screw / Michael Alexander Johnson (1968) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Chubb Rock / Richard Simpson (1968) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Errol Lee (1968) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Evan Parke (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Tricky / Adrian Thaws (1968) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Guyanese, English - actor, singer, keyboardist, harmonicist, and producer.
Mad Cobra / Cobra / Ewart Everton Brow (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Shaggy / Orville Burrell (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, DJ, and producer.
Ziggy Marley (1968) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - actor, singer-songwriter, guitarist, pianist, percussionist, and producer.
Adrian Lester (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor, director, and writer.
Omar / Omar Lye-Fook (1968) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese / Indo-Jamaican] - singer-songwriter, keyboardist, bassist, guitarist, and drummer.
Leeroy Thornhill (1968) Afro-Jamaican, Mauritian - DJ, keyboardist, and dancer.
Kid / Christopher Reid (1968) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor, comedian and rapper.
Roni Size / Ryan Williams (1969) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and producer.
Mark Rhino Smith (1969) Jamaican, Cherokee, Ghanaian, Chinese, Unspecified White - actor.
Junior Kelly / Keith Morgan (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garfield Wilson (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Roger Cross (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Spragga Benz / Carlton Errington Grant (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mark Smith (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actor and body builder.
Thriller U / Eustace Hamilton (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
B.O. Dubb / Raymond Ebanks (1970) Afro-Jamaican, English / Finnish - rapper.
Conrad Coates (1970) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Jah Mason / Andre Johnson (1970) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Pete Rock (1970) Afro-Jamaican - producer, DJ and rapper.
Derrick Morgan (1970) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Tyson Beckford (1970) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese], Afro-Panamanian - actor and model.
Delroy Pearson (1970) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Flourgon / Michael May (1970) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Me One / Eric Martin (1970) Jamaican - singer-songwriter, rapper, multi-instrumentalist, and producer.
Yami Bolo / Rolando Ephraim McLean (1970) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Tony T. / Neal Antone Dyer (1971) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, and DJ.
General Levy / Paul Scott Levy (1971) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
D-Flame / Daniel Kretschmer (1971) Jamaican / German - rapper.
Anthony Hoyes (1971) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Richie Spice / Richell Bonner (1971) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Merciless / Leonard Bartley (1971) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Sadiki / Henry Buckley Jr. (1971) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bounty Killer / Rodney Basil Price (1972) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Ian Edwards (1972) Afro-Jamaican - actor, comedian, producer, and writer.
Chuck Fenda / Leshorn Whitehead (1972) Afro-Jamaican - musician and DJ.
Roots Manuva / Rodney Smith (1972) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, producer, and remixer.
Stephen Marley (1972) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - singer and producer.
Tony Matterhorn (1972) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Raymond T. Williams (1972) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Erik Griffin (1972) Jamaican, Belizean, Honduran [African, Indian, Spanish, Possibly Other] / Irish, Possibly Other - comedian, writer and actor.
Wayne Wonder / Von Wayne Charles (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rikrok / Ricardo Ducent (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Little Hero / Paul Gayle (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Busta Rhymes / Trevor George Smith, Jr. (1972) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actor.
Wentworth Miller (1972) 1/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 African-American, 1/4 Rusyn, 1/8 Curaçaoan [Dutch, French, Swedish, Hispanic, Polish], 1/16 Lebanese, 1/16 Syrian - actor and model.
Doron Bell (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Mark Shim (1973) Afro-Jamaican - saxophonist.
Antonio / Maurice Silvera (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Chezidek / Desbert Johnson (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Stephen Graham (1973) 1/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Swedish, 1/4 Irish, 1/4 English - actor.
Buju Banton / Mark Anthony Myrie (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bushman / Dwight Duncan (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ismael Lea South (1973) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Glen Scott (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, producer, and arranger.
Sean Paul / Sean Paul Francis Henriques (1973) Jamaican [Chinese, English, German / Afro-Jamaican, Portuguese Jewish, French Jewish, Serbian Jewish, Dutch Jewish, German Jewish] - rapper, singer, and producer.
Nicholas Pinnock (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Ghost / Carlton Hylton (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Don Yute (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Adrian Holmes (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Canibus / Germaine Williams (1974) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actor.
Mr. Vegas / Clifford Smith (1974) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Terror Fabulous / Cecil Campbell (1974) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Mega Banton / Garth Williams (1974) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Andru Donalds (1974) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.
Rampage / Roger McNair (1974) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Kevin Hanchard (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Mr. Lexx / Lexxus / Christopher George Palmer (1974) Afro-Jamaican - performer.
Huey Dunbar / Eustace Dunbar IV (1974) Jamaican / Puerto Rican - singer.
Laurence Westgaph (1975) Nigerian / Jamaican, Barbadian - model and tv presenter.
Des Coleman / Desune Coleman (1975) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, and weather presenter.
Choclair / Kareem Blake (1975) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Glenn Lewis (1975) Jamaican / Trinidadian - singer.
Klashnekoff / Ricochet Klashnekoff / Darren Kandler (1975) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Julian Marley (1975) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer.
Dulé Hill (1975) Afro-Jamaican - actor and dancer.
Elephant Man / Oneal Bryan (1975) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.
Lutan Fyah / Anthony Martin (1975) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.
Keron Grant (1976) Afro-Jamaican - comic artist.
Kardinal Offishall / Jason D. Harrow (1976) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Laza Morgan (1976) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Ky-Mani Marley (1976) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - actor, singer-songwriter, guitarist, trumpetist, pianist, and bongo player.
Gramps Morgan Roy Morgan (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Anthony B / Keith Blair (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eddy Wata (1976) Nigerian / Jamaican - singer.
Duane Stephenson (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Fantan Mojah (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sizzla / Miguel Orlando Collins (1976) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Vybz Kartel (1976) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Pierre Gage (1977) Jamaican, Haitian - singer.
Garfield Taylor (1977) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Natty King / Kevin Christopher Roberts (1977) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bryan Art (1977) Afro-Jamaican - singer, songwriter, musician, producer, and guitarist.
Wally Rudolph (1977) Afro-Jamaican - actor and writer.
Dan-e-o / Daniel Faraldo (1977) Afro-Jamaican, Spanish - actor and singer.
Doc Brown / Ben Bailey Smith (1977) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor.
Soweto Kinch (1978) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - saxophonist.
Hector Lincoln (1978) Jamaican, Cuban - actor.
Jermaine Fagan (1978) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Swizz Beatz / Kasseem Dean (1978) Afro-Jamaican, Puerto Rican - producer, rapper, DJ, and entrepreneur.
Da'Ville / Orville Thomas (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garrison Hawk (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Walker T / Marvin Christopher Walker (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Glamma Kid / Iyael Lyases Tafari Constable (1978) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer.
Shane West (1978) Jamaican [English, Sephardi Jewish, distant Scottish] / Cajun [French], distant Spanish, English, Irish - actor and musician.
Glamma Kid / Iyael Lyases Tafari Constable (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Damian Marley (1978) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English] - singer-songwriter, rapper, DJ, and producer.
Jah Cure / Siccature Alcock (1978) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Shemron O. Cowan (1978) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Lyriq Bent (1979) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Gunplay / Richard Morales Jr. (1979) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Busy Signal / Reanno Devon Gordon (1979) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kamau Preston (1979) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Shiah Coore (1979) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Warrior King (1979) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Vacca / Alessandro Vacca (1979) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Jade Jones (1979) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer-songwriter, tv personality, and celebrity chef.
Paul Campbell (1979) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Leon Lopez (1979) Afro-Jamaican / Spanish - actor, singer-songwriter, model, tv presenter, and director.
Rory Reid (1979) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter.
Shequida / Shequida Hall / Gary Hall (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, drag queen, and playwright.
Mighty Mystic / Kevin Mark Holness (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Karamo Brown (1980) Afro-Jamaican - tv host and television personality.
Alano Miller (1980) Jamaican, Bahamian, Cuban - actor.
Jaja Soze / Elijah Kerr (1980) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
DJ Flava / Kemar McGregor (1980) Afro-Jamaican - producer.
Kevin Mark Trail (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Floyd West / Pied Piper (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Wayne Marshall (1988) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Claude Kelly (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Perfect / Greg Rose (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
I Wayne / Cliffroy Taylor (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ding Dong Ravers / Kemar Christopher "Ding Dong" Dwaine Ottey (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer and dancer.
Teacha Dee / Damion Darrel Warren (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Protoje / Oje Ben Ollivierre (1981) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Vincentian - singer.
Marvin Priest / Marvin Cornell Elliott (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Ricky Whittle (1981) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor and model.
E-Dee / Everton Charles Dennis (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Desus Nice / Daniel Baker (1981) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and social media personality.
Kalil Wilson (1981) Nigerian, Kalinago, Jamaican, French, English - singer, pianist, percussionist, composer, and arranger.
Omar Turner (1981) Afro-Jamaican - writer.
DeeWunn / Damone Walker (1981) Afro-Jamaican - MC, songwriter and performer.
Safaree Samuels (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer, rapper and tv personality.
Mavado / David Constantine Brooks (1981) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and singer.
Aidonia / Sheldon Lawrence (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Tarrus Riley (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Merchant / Ricardo Renford Nicholson (1981) Afro-Jamaican - DJ, writer and producer.
Exco Levi / Wayne Ford Levy (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Willy William (1981) Afro-Jamaican - DJ, record producer, and singer.
City Boy / Bradley McIntosh (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer, rapper, record producer and former actor.
Danny Lee Wynter / Danny Wynter (1982) Afro-Jamaican / Romani, Italian - actor and writer.
Muslim Belal / Ashley Chin (1982) Jamaican [3/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Chinese] - actor, rapper, spoken word artist, screenwriter, and poet.
Samuel Anderson (1982) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor.
DJ Nicco (1982) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Serani / Craig Serani Marsh (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Demarco / Collin Demar Edwards (1982) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Blakkman / Oral White (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Gak Jonze / Micah Lei (1982) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Assassin / Jeffrey Campbell (1982) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Jammer / Jahmek Power (1982) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, MC, and producer.
Mo George / Mohammed George (1982) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Antiguan - actor.
Asher D (1982) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Walshy Fire / Leighton Walsh (1982) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - DJ, MC, and producer.
Giggs / Nathaniel Thompson (1983) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Akala / Kingslee McLean Daley (1983) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian, Afro-Grenadian / Irish, Scottish, English, German - rapper-songwriter, poet, journalist, and activist.
Rolan Bell (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
D.J. Taylor (1983) Afro-Jamaican / English, Irish - actor.
Howard Charles (1983) Afro-Jamaican, English - actor.
Shebada / Keith Ramsay (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actor and comedian.
Eldie Anthony (1984) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Ghetts / Justin Clarke (1984) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Grenadian - rapper.
Blak Ryno / Ryno Di Stinger (1984) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman (1984) Afro-Jamaican / likely English - actor and model.
Shawn Emanuel (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, pianist, and producer.
I-Octane / Byiome Muir (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dev / Devin Joseph Griffin (1984) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor, DJ, and radio presenter.
Kalado / Eton Gordon (1984) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Booba Starr / Dane Salmon (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Big Narstie / Tyrone Lindo (1985) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, and MC.
Sinqua Walls (1985) Afro-Jamaican, French, Unspecified Native American, possibly other - actor.
Bashy / Ashley Thomas (1985) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Dominiquais - actor and rapper-songwriter.
Stylo G / Jason McDermott (1985) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and rapper.
Taxstone / Daryl Campbell (1985) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and social media personality.
Konshens / Garfield Spence (1985) Afro-Jamaican - singer, DJ, and producer.
Wretch 32 / Jermaine Sinclair (1985) Afro-Jamaican, Guyanese, Zambian - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Kano / Kane Robinson (1985) Afro-Jamaican - actor and rapper.
Nineteen85 / Anthony Paul Jefferies (1985) Afro-Jamaican - producer and songwriter.
Smiler / Joseph Bartlett-Vanderpuye (1985) Jamaican, Guyanese, Zambian - rapper and MC.
Marvin Humes (1985) Afro-Jamaican / English, Scottish - singer, disc jockey, television presenter, and radio host.
Dexta Daps / Louis Grandison (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jonathan Emile (1986) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and singer.
OMI / Omar Samuel Pasley (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Starboy Nathan / Nathan / Nathan Fagan-Gayle (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Rusty Beaman (1986) Jamaican - actor.
Penn Badgley (1986) English, Irish, likely around 1/16th or 1/32 Afro-Jamaican, as well as German and Scottish, Dutch, Welsh, French Huguenot - actor and musician.
Rocky B / Plat’num B / Bezzle / Marcel Somerville (1986) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, DJ, and producer.
Scorcher / Tayo Jarrett (1986) Nigerian, Jamaican, Vincentian - rapper.
iSH / Ishan Morris (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor and singer.
Boi-1da / Matthew Samuels (1986) Afro-Jamaican - keyboardist-songwriter, drummer, and producer.
Tyler Lepley (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actor.
Fazer / Richard Rawson (1987) Afro-Jamaican - actor, rapper-songwriter, singer, DJ, and producer.
Christopher Martin (1987) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kid Fury / Gregory A. Smith (1987) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber, comedian, and writer.
Tommy Lee Sparta / Leroy "Junior" Russell (1987) Afro-Jamaican - singer
SPOT (1987) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Irish] / Afro-Guyanese - rapper and pianist.
Mike Beatz / Michael Anthony Barnett (1988) Afro-Jamaican - hip-hop recording artist and producer.
King Bach / Andrew B. Bachelor (1988) Afro-Jamaican - actor, comedian, and Internet personality.
Third World Don (1988) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and music producer.
Kemuel Crossty (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actress.
LunchMoney Lewis / Gamal Lewis (1988) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer.
T-Minus / Tyler Mathew Carl Williams (1988) Afro-Jamaican - record producer.
Nick Sagar (1988) Jamaican / Guyanese - actor.
Popcaan / Andrae Hugh Sutherland (1988) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mo Gilligan / Mosiah Gilligan (1988) Afro-Jamaican - comedian.
Aston Merrygold (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Irish, English - actor, singer-songwriter, tv personality, and dancer.
Charly Black (1989) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Meechy Darko / Dimitri Simms (1989) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Malachi Kirby (1989) Jamaican [3/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Unspecified South Asian] - actor.
Eka Darville (1989) Afro-Jamaican, some Unspecified White - actor.
Labrinth / Timothy Lee Mckenzie (1989) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Kittian, Afro-Nevisian - singer, rapper, multi-instrumentalist, and record producer.
Bambaata Marley (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter, guitarist, pianist, drummer, and percussionist.
Ricardo Hewitt (1989) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Leroy Kenton (1989) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Andrew Trabass (1989) Afro-Jamaican - comedian, actor, musician and YouTuber.
Corbin Bleu (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actor, dancer and singer.
Jesse Royal (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino] - singer-song
Daniel Marley (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] / Iranian Jewish - rapper.
Geaux Yella (1989) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Sean Kingston (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer and rapper.
Chip / Chipmunk / Jahmaal Fyffe (1990) Afro-Jamaican - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Byron Carvil Cecil Napier (1990) Afro-Jamaican - actor..
Govana / Romeo Nelson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jason Forbes (1990) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Dominiquais - actor, comedian, and writer.
Leeroy Reed (1990) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and tv personality.
Romain Virgo (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Russhaine Berry (1990) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Kranium / Kemar Donaldson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bena Di Senior / Radeem Haslam (1991) Afro-Jamaican - musician, producer and entrepreneur
Chad Subratie (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Jo Mersa Marley (1991) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer.
DJ Akademiks (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Shamier Anderson (1991) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Blaize Andres (1991) Afro-Jamaican, Mexican - actor.
Quite Perry / Rohan Perry (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Sevn Thomas (1991) Afro-Jamaican - producer and singer.
Zuse (1991) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Jah Lando (1991) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and rapper.
Jamali Maddix (1991) Afro-Jamaican / Italian, British - comedian.
Tre C. Roberts (1992) Jamaican / Trinidadian - actor.
Jahmiel (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Chronixx / Jamar McNaughton (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jason Facey (1992) Afro-Jamaica - dancer, choreographer, producer, actor, photographer, and clothing designer.
Drew Ray Tanner (1992) Chinese, Afro-Jamaican, French-Canadian, possibly other - actor.
Prince Marni (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Vincent Ross (1992) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Lloyd Barker (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Indie Allen / Michael Allen (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Stephan James (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Krishane / St Aubyn Antonio Levy (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kortnee Simmons (1993) African, Dominican, Brazilian, Jamaican, Unspecified Native American - actor.
Jhaedee Richards (1993) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Alkaline / Earlan Bartley (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Demetrius Joyette (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Masego / Micah Davis (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer and saxophonist.
Shane Paul McGhie (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Masicka / Javaun Fearon (1993) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Jourdan Copeland (1993) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Rejjie Snow / Alex Anyaebunam (1993) Igbo Nigerian / Jamaican, Irish - rapper-songwriter and producer.
The Chicken Connoisseur / Elijah Quashie (1993) Afro-Jamaican - youtuber and restaurant critic.
Cashief Nichols (1993) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
PartyNextDoor / Jahron Anthony Brathwaite (1993) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Trinidadian - rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer.
Dalton Harris (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jaboukie Young-White (1994) Afro-Jamaican, Cuban, Chinese, Irish - comedian and writer.
Kedar Williams-Stirling (1994) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
JavierNathaniel (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Aaron Miller (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Jnel / Jnel Comedy (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Don Hinds (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Romone Robinson (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
RiskyKidd / Shane Schuller (1994) Afro-Jamaican / German - rapper, guitarist, and pianist.
QQ / Kareem Dawkins (1994) Afro-Jamaican - singer..
Layton Williams (1994) Afro-Jamaican, Montserratian - actor, singer, and dancer.
Jonny Brown (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Robb Banks / Richard O'Neil Burrell (1994) Afro-Barbadian / Unknown - rapper.
Daniel Caesar (1995) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - singer.
Joey Badass / Jo-Vaughn Virginie Scott (1995) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer and actor.
Shameik Moore (1995) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, dancer, and rapper.
Derrick Monasterio (1995) Jamaican [Lebanese, East Indian, Sephardi Jewish, Scottish], Italian / Filipino [Tagalog, Waray], Spanish [Castilian, Valencian], English - actor, dancer, and singer.
Yaadman Etan (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Raz Fresco (1995) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
KyngTavii / Tovaughn Hamilton (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
K'Vonne Legore (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Skip Marley (1996) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter.
Astro / Brian Vaughn Bradley, Jr. (1996) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, producer, and actor.
C.J. Wallace (1996) Afro-Jamaican / African-American, European - entrepreneur, actor, and musician.
Tevin Steele (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Fry Irish (1996) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Montell Martin (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Twani Price (1996) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Montel Douglas (1996) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Kyle Bent (1997) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Zion David Marley (1997) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - rapper.
Khalil Madovi (1997) Jamaican, Zimbabwean - actor, rapper, singer, tv presenter, producer, and artist.
Alton Mason (1997) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Harris J / Harris Jung (1997) Jamaican, English / Indian, Irish - singer, guitarist, and pianist.
Deron Campbell (1998) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Yanrique Wright (1998) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Joseph Griffin (1998) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Shevon Salmon (1998) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Jaden Smith (1998) 3/4 African-American, 1/8 Afro-Barbadian, 1/8 Afro-Jamaican - actor, rapper, singer and model.
Malique Thompson-Dwyer (1998) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Romaine Dixon (1999) Afro-Jamaican - model.
ItzMarico (2000) Afro-Jamaican - Tik Tok star.
Joshua Omaru Marley (2002) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - singer and model.
Phil Chen (?) Jamaican [Hakka Chinese] - bassist.
Yohan Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer.
Shaun Escoffery (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and singer.
Gerald Eaton (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter and producer.
Juice Aleem (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Supa Dups / Dwayne Chin-Quee (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Hakka Chinese, Possibly Other Chinese, German] - DJ, drummer, and producer.
KJ Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - rapper.
Arrow Benjamin / Dean McIntosh (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Willy Chin / Warren Hoo (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - DJ and producer.
Carl Henry (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
The Kemist (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, English] - DJ, songwriter, and producer.
Jah Vinci / Kirk Rhoden (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bobby Chin (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - DJ.
Eddy François (?) Jamaican, Haitian - singer.
Sid O'Connell (?) Afro-Jamaican, Irish - actor and producer.
Nathan Mitchell (?) Jamaican, Trinidadian - actor.
Junior Simpson (?) Afro-Jamaican - comedian.
Neil Reidman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Toby Sandeman (?) Afro-Jamaican, French, English - actor and athlete.
Sanjay Orlando (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
GAIKA (?) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Grenadian - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Jordane Christie (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Adam Gifford (?) Jamaican, Costa Rican, Cherokee, Italian - actor.
Jurell Carter (?) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor.
Dexter Bell (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Lloyd Everitt (?) Afro-Jamaican / Welsh - actor.
Martin Huss (?) Afro-Jamaican - model and rapper.
Shawn Turner (?) Afro-Jamaican, Unspecified - actor.
Allius Barnes (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Roe Dunkley (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Justin Harris (?) Afro-Jamaican, German - actor.
Wayne Booth (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Fletcher Harrington (?) Afro-Jamaican, Scottish, Russian, English - actor.
Scott Xylo / Shaquille Thompson (?) Afro-Jamaican - bassist-songwriter, drummer, and producer.
Jah Turban (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Alexander Nunez (?) Afro-Jamaican / Chilean - actor.
Jimel Atkins (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Nari Blair-Mangat (?) Afro-Jamaican / Indian - actor.
Dimitri Abold (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Shomari (?) Jamaican, Sierra Leonean - actor.
Di Vinci SanTana (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actor.
Jackie Guy (?) Jamaican - dancer and choreographer.
Danilo Reyes (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipino - actor and musician.
Andrew Adams (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Stephen Barrington (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Darien LaBeach (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
G.K. Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, West Indian, Italian, Scottish. - actor.
Trinity Brooks (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Shomari Downer (?) Afro-Jamaican, possibly British - actor.
Trevor Thomas (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Colton Royce (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipino - actor.
Mark Green (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Damiãn Garth Brown (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Sure Shot / Mark Duffus (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, drummer, and producer.
Dudney Joseph Jr. (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Odell Davis Jr. (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer-songwriter, and producer.
Christian Wong (?) Jamaican [Chinese] - actor.
Sebastien Heins (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
DJ Excalibah / Matthew Xia (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Possibly Other] / Scottish, English - DJ, radio presenter, and director.
Jason Robinson (?) Jamaican - actor.
Durant Mcleod (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino, Chinese, Jewish, Scottish] - actor.
Joshua Nathan Guardabascio (?) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actor.
DJ Ace Koromantyn (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, DJ, producer, and blogger.
Endless / Allan Tennent (?) Jamaican - actor.
Marc Anthony Lowe (?) Indo-Jamaican / South Indian, Taino, Chinese - actor.
Matt U Johnson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Dennis Leonard Johnson (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actor.
Kenya Wint (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Brushy One String / Andrew Chin (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Di Genius / Stephen McGregor (?) Afro-Jamaican - producer and singer.
General Degree / Cardiff Butt / Snapple Dapple (?) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Indecka / Chevol Grant (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kashief Lindo (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Five Steez (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Gary Pine (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Delly Ranx (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rvssian / Tarik Johnston (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eklypse Sicka / Keniel Flowers (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Herman Marquis (?) Afro-Jamaican - saxophonist.
Harold Butler (?) Afro-Jamaican - pianist and songwriter.
Ron Butler (?) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Phil Chen (?) Jamaican [Chinese] - guitarist.
Nelson Miller (?) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Mad Lion / Oswald Priest (?) fro-Jamaican - rapper and musician.
Arif Cooper (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician, music producer, event promoter and a radio broadcaster.
Steven "Lenky" Marsden (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Alozade / Michael Sterling (?) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Calton Coffie (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mikey Dangerous (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Conrad Bromfield (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Ras Criss (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Kirk Diamond (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Ras Droppa / Samuel Richards (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Prince Hammer / Beris Simpson (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Kiprich / Marlon Jaro Plunkett (?) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Denroy Morgan (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Louie Rankin (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actor.
Addis Pablo (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Willi Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician and producer.
Michael Cory Davis (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and filmmaker.
Pablo Gad (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ernest Cupidon (?) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and actor.
Alicai Harley (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Charles Officer (?) Afro-Jamaican - writer, actor and director.
Dean Redman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Orisha Shakpana (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Tre Mission (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Walter Chin (?) Afro-Jamaican - celebrity photographer.
Jay Douglas (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Carl Harvey (?) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and producer.
Nigel Shawn Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and director.
Lemur Shifaka (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Dana Carrabon (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and model (Instagram: kidcarra)
Rh’mone Foster (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and model (Instagram: bookfrostyee)
T.J. Moore (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: inspiremoore)
Dlorenzo (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: dlorenzo_official)
NB:
Parisa Fitz-Henley (1977) Afro-Jamaican - Non-Binary (She/Her and They/Them Pronouns) - actor.
Ellyn Jade / Jade Willoughby (1990) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino, British] / Ojibwe - Two-Spirit (Unspecified Pronouns) - model and actor.
Not problematic but has expressed being uncomfortable being used so don’t use!:
Justine Skye / Justine Skyers (1995) Afro-Jamaican / Indo-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, and model. - Source.
Problematic:
Lady C / Lady Colin Campbell (1949) Jamaican [Lebanese / Sephardic Jewish, Spanish, Portuguese, Irish, English] - tv host, radio host, socialite, and author. - Intersex! - Anti-black racist comments about Meghan Markle and Meghan and Harry’s baby and whorephobic comments.
Rustie Lee (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer, tv personality, and celebrity chef. - UKIP supporter.
Wayne Jobson (1954) Jamaican [Unspecified White] - musician and producer. - Appropriation of dreadlocks.
Al Roker (1954) Afro-Jamaican, African-American / Afro-Bahamian - actor, tv personality, weather forecaster, journalist, and author. - Comments that are racist to Japanese people and defended a white weatherman over his racist remarks referring to Martin Luther King Jr.
Yehoshua Sofer (1958) Jamaican [Ukrainian Jewish] - rapper - Appropriation of dreadlocks and anti-black comments, including referring to Rastafarians as a “cult”.
Mike Tyson (1966) African-American, likely Afro-Jamaican - boxer and actor. - Convicted of rape and is a Tier II sex offender.
Jeremy Renner (1971) Panamanian / Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican], German, English, Scottish, Swedish, Irish - actor, singer, producer - N-word, g-slur, t-word, w-word to refer to Black Widow, played a Nazi character and described him as a “poor twisted soul”, saying a movie about a Nazi falling in love with a black woman “isn’t about racism” to him it’s “people with problems and how they choose to deal with them” and calls it “sweet and endearing”, and compared trans women to crossdressers.
Jason Barrett (1976) Afro-Jamaican - actor, screenwriter, and mixed martial artist. - Arrested for illegally selling guns.
Pete Wentz (1979) Afro-Jamaican / German, English - musician. - Dated a 15 year old when he was 23 who he later posted revenge porn of and threatened.
Kaya Jones / Chrystal Neria (1984) German, Irish, Scottish, Spanish, Unconfirmed Costa Rican, Unconfirmed Nicaraguan, Unconfirmed Panamanian, Unconfirmed Jamaican, Unconfirmed Chinese, Unconfirmed Colombian, Unconfirmed Unspecified Black, Unconfirmed Jewish / Italian [including Sicilian], Unconfirmed Mexican, Unconfirmed Apache - singer, violinist, DJ, model, actress, and dancer - Trump supporter who even has said she would like to put down the first brick in the wall on the Mexican border, has used multiple racial slurs, has compared the residential school system of Native Americans to white people willingly sending their kids to boarding schools, Islamophobic comments, anti-black comments, and honestly so much more.
Aml Ameen (1985) Afro-Jamaican - actor - Transphobia.
Teddy Sinclair / Natalia Kills / Natalia Cappucini / Verbalicious / Natalia Keery-Fisher (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Uruguayan [Italian, Irish, Possibly Other] - singer, guitarist, drummer, and actress. - Bullied an X-Factor contestant.
Madeleine Mantock (1990) Jamaican, Unspecified White - actress. - Plays a Latine character on Charmed when she is not Latine.
Frank Dillane (1991) Afro-Jamaican / English, Irish, Scottish, remote Manx - actor - Arrested for battery.
Leigh-Anne Pinnock (1991) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian, possibly other - singer. - Defended her boyfriend after he made homophobic remarks.
Herizen Guardiola (1996) Afro-Jamaican / Cuban - actress and singer-songwriter. - Dated a 16-year-old when she was 20.
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NCIS: Los Angeles Season Nine Rewatch: "Plain Sight"
The basics: The team infiltrates a charity fundraiser to hunt down $1 million worth of stolen weapons.
Written by: Joseph C. Wilson wrote or co-wrote “Full Throttle”, “Stand-off”, “Personal”, “Plan B”, “Sacrifice”, “Blye, K.” Part One, “Gold Standard”, “Unwritten Rule”, “Fallout”, “Between the Lines”, “Exposure”, “Reign Fall”, “Kolcheck, A.”, “Cancel Christmas”, “Head of The Snake”, “Home is Where the Heart Is”, “Queen Pin” and "Golden Days"
Directed by: Dennis Smith directed “Fame”, “Standoff”, “Rocket Man”, “Cyberthreat”, “Exit Strategy”, “Patriot Acts”, “Out of the Past” part one, “The Livelong Day”, Between the Lines” (written by Wilson), “Deep Trouble” part two, “Black Budget”, “Black Wind”, “Blame it On Rio”, “Defectors”, “Matryoshka” part one, “Granger, O”, “The Queen's Gambit”, “Hot Water" and "From Havana With Love".
Guest stars of note: Eddie George is back from "Kulinda" as Byron Brown, Rocky Marquette as Tony Young, Chris McGarry as William Bradford, Rebecca Wiscoky as Sasha Livingston (and in the photo above from NCIS’s season four episode “Dead and Unburied” - she was the bad guy in that episode too), Joseph C. Phillips as Charles Livingston, Chad T. Wood as Supervisor, Eddie Alfano as Security Guard, Tre Hale as Felix Swoope, Lauren Jenna as Yvette Jackson, Xingu Del Rosario as Jack, Alejandro Barrios as Connor Murray, Djakarta as Deborah, Clay Wilson as Marcus and Colin Wilson as Kevin.
Our heroes: Get to party with the new boss (and her car).
What important things did we learn about:
Callen: Does not have weird things buried in his backyard. Sam: Mentoring kids with Byron Brown. Kensi: Announced she doesn't like reality shows – hello? Deeks: Looking for his own work whip. Eric: Found Hetty's boat but not Hetty. Nell: Updates Kensi on the Audi. Mosley: Secured an invite to the party as Executive Assistant Director. EAD has its privileges. Hetty: In Vietnam.
What not so important things did we learn about:
Callen: Wants to buy jet skis with Sam. Sam: Early morning boat caulker. Kensi: Not enjoying life as a passenger. Deeks: Thinking about a man bun. Eric: Did not find a receptive audience for his Star Trek imitation. Nell: Not around much. Mosley: Owner of some pricy guns (used in "Fast 8" last summer too!). Hetty: Not in the episode.
Who's down with OTP: Kensi and Deeks shared the day driving around in a quality vehicle before realizing it is someone else's quality vehicle. They're off to what could be Deeks's last summer.
Who's down with BrOTP: Callen and Sam spend most of the episode in a good bantering place.
Any pressing need for Harm and Mac: No. These are civilians committing crimes.
Today in Harley: Likes having four seasons. Is quite believable as a gun instructor. Properly lethal when Callen's life was on the line. Steals an iPad with ease.
Fashion review: Callen starts the episode in a dark blue long-sleeve tee shirt, Sam in a black henley. Both men change into suits – blue for Callen with a french blue dress shirt and a teal tie; black suit, black shirt, no tie for Sam. Blue plaid button down for Kensi. Gun metal grey v-neck tee for Deeks. Red and blue plaid shirt for Eric over a red tee. Light grey dress for Nell with a blue blazer. Same outfit for Hetty – I don't think her clothes change much until mid-season. Black dress and jacket for Mosley on her return from DC that becomes a black and white sleeveless v-neck party dress for the event. Black v-neck tee shirt and slacks for Hidoko in the office, red polo at the party.
Music: None.
Any notable cut scene: None.
Quote:
Callen: "You got a big heart, Sam but you barely know this guy." Sam: "I barely knew you at one point." Callen: "Oh, might I remind you that you didn't really like me when we first met?" Sam: "What makes you think that's changed any?" Callen: "I'm just saying, sometimes you have to look at the possibilities. You remember that CIA operative, Junior Ramirez?" Sam: "Was a good guy." Callen: "He was a better agent, until we found out he had 13 and a half bodies buried in his backyard." Sam: "You got something you want to tell me about your yard?" Callen: "Just wondering if we ever really know anyone." Sam: "Just find it hard to believe is all. Spent a lot of time with that guy. My radar is rarely off." Callen: "Sometimes when people show us who they really are, we need to believe them." Sam: "I told you that."
Anything else : A white cargo truck is leaving the docks. The truck driver and the security guard at the docks are friendly. The guard notices something is off. Something is – a man jumps up from the passenger's side and shoots both the guard and the driver. The shooter pushes the driver out of the vehicle and sets up to leave. An accomplice doesn't think the shooter should have, well, shot people. The not dead yet guard shoots the shooter. The accomplice drives off pushing the shooter from the truck.
Callen meets Sam at his new home – the boat. Sam is caulking a window of the boat. Callen is cracking wise. And thinking about getting jet skis. Sam is does not jet ski – they're loud, crass and most jet ski riders are irresponsible. Eric calls – they're needed in Ops.
In Ops, Eric and Nell have video of the truck incident on the big screen in Ops. In the truck was a shipment of M27s – weapons to be sent to Camp Pendleton. The weapons could be sold on the street for well over a million dollars. Sam is more concerned they'd be used in a terrorist attack.
Facial ID has the accomplice as Tony Young, a small time criminal – this theft is way out of his level of criminality. More video shows Young meeting with Sam's friend Byron Brown. Sam is shocked. He is mentoring some kids with Byron. “He’s a good man.” Callen is worried Byron switched sides. Byron resigned from Kulinda a week earlier. Sam is going with Callen to find Byron Brown. Kensi and Deeks are in the field looking for Tony Young at his last known address.
Deeks is driving! And he's driving a Porsche he took from the motor pool – "the keys are in it. The universe wanted me to have it." Admittedly the vehicle isn't great for undercover work and there is no place to put Kensi's long gun or a suspect. But the car is "awesome". The Audi is almost repaired. Deeks wants his own "work whip" – he's going to talk to Mosley about it before Hetty returns and shuts him down. Kensi thinks he should be more worried about Mosley allowing him to keep his job. Deeks agrees.
Tony Young's home is an RV in a drive way. Tony's girlfriend Yvette is there – day drinking. She allows Deeks to search the RV for Tony but he's not there. The RV disgusts Deeks. Kensi offers her card for when Tony returns but Yvette is not interested. Leaving the driveway, Deeks tells Kensi that there was a second glass of wine and an action movie on the TV – Tony is nearby. Deeks thinks Yvette is calling Tony right now.
Callen and Sam bicker over Sam's big heart, Byron and a former CIA contact who Sam thought was a nice guy and a good agent until they found 13-bodies buried in his backyard. Sam wants to know if Callen has anything suspicious in his backyard. Sam says his radar is rarely off – something is up. Callen reminds Sam that Byron could be involved in three murders. Callen puts a tracker on Byron's SUV just as Byron leaves a nearby building. Walking with Byron is Travis Coogan – a member of the Real IRA. The Real IRA and stolen weapons – bad mix.
Deeks is taking selfies in the Porsche. He's talking about getting a manbun. Kensi is wondering why Tony Young is involved in this. He's not a big theft guy – he's a hired gun. Yvette leaves the trailer and drives off with Kensi and Deeks following.
Back at the office, Eric tracked Byron to "the 'Bu"- a charity auction/shooting event is being hosted by Livingston-Bradford – a defense contractors whose slogan is "Essential Weapons For an Unsettled World." 90% of L-B's business is selling guns to armies and private security outfits all over the world. The other 10% is a philanthropic division that helps poor countries. The company has been suspected of selling arms to both sides of the Western Sahara conflict. Callen thinks it would be easy to hide guns at a shooting event. Eric is tasked with cross-referencing Byron with the guests at the party.
While Callen and Sam try to figure out their way into the party, Mosley arrives. She wants them to go in as NCIS agents. She has an invite and they are her security detail. She wants Callen and Sam to step up their game since it is a semi-formal event. As Mosley leaves, Sam thinks the invite is a Hetty-like move. Callen disagrees. Eric updates the two on Hetty. Or her boat. The Lady H has been in a Hawaiian marina for weeks. Eric looked through security video, social media, geo-tagged vacation photos. No Hetty. Sam thinks something is up and Callen agrees in a sad way. Maybe it is an enviable end to Hetty's career - sailing off into the sunset.
Callen, Sam and Mosley arrive at the party. Sam is not happy – "guns and alcohol, what could go wrong?" Mosley checks in and picks up her personal weapons – two pricy Glock 41 MOS. Mosley meets Charles Livingston and his wife Sasha, one half of the hosting team and the company.
The Livingstons bring Mosley, Callen and Sam to William Bradford, the other half of the company. He is about to announce they are donating $20 million in aid to those caught up in the Western Sahara conflict. Mosley is impressed. The money will go for water and anti-malaria measures (Nia Long's charitable work includes considerable efforts to battle malaria). Charles Livingston hopes this ends the rumors that they are selling guns to both sides of the war. Bradford wants to do more – move completely into philanthropy.
As the Livingstons and Bradford tend to their other guests, Mosley, Callen and Sam see them moving in different directions. The Livingstons are in this to make money, Bradford wants to give it away. Eric turns on the trio's button cameras and starts running facial recognition on the other guests.
Sam sees Byron bringing Coogan through the crowd. He decides to make contact. Byron and Sam meet like brothers. Byron explains he's working a job like this for his kids' tuitions. The two plan to meet after this current assignment. Sam did not like the worried vibe coming from Byron.
Kensi and Deeks follow Yvette to Tony. He is talking to two 'working girls' and Yvette is not pleased. When she pulls Tony by the ear, Tony pushes back. Deeks is entertained, Kensi is not. She goes to confront the two. Yvette stays but Tony runs, giving Deeks the opportunity to chase him in the Porsche. Deeks follows but Tony jumps over the car before being tackled by Kensi.
Yvette drives off as Kensi and Deeks question Tony. Tony explains that Byron Brown paid him to help with the theft of the guns. It wasn't his plan and he certainly didn't kill anyone. Tony spills on the weapons sale at a downtown warehouse. Kensi calls it in.
Hidoko is working the party as a gun instructor. Mosley does some version of skeet shooting and wins some applause from the crowd. Even Callen and Sam are impressed. Callen hears from Kensi about the weapons sale. He and Sam are confused – the sale is over an hour away from the party. Eric has gotten ID's on a number of party guests – politicians, union officials, bankers. It is a who's who of the business community. Eric found something odd in Livingston-Bradford's company. They own a number of defunct companies that look like they are being used to hide something.
Tony goes to sell the weapons to a local bad guy. After promising a lot for the weapons, the bad guy is only going to pony up $200K, "and you're lucky I'm giving you that."
After the money is transferred, Kensi and Deeks yell federal agents and no shooting happens - weird. The bad guy is Felix Swoope. He's another low-level bad guy trading up in the world. Felix won't help – he wants a lawyer.
At the party, some of the folks involved are not nearly as good with guns as Mosley was. In his role as bodyguard, Callen asks Hidoko where the guns come from for the guests. Livingston-Bradford supplies them. He wonders about the cleaning and care of the available weapons. Hidoko steps away to find out. She returns with an iPad with all the guns available and their backgrounds..
Sam calls Kensi and asks about the weapons – they're all accounted for. When he asks about the white cargo truck, nobody seems to know what happened to it. When Kensi and Deeks talk to Tony, they learn Byron took the truck and left the weapons for Tony to sell. The cargo truck is owned by a company supplying guns to the party – it would fit right in. Callen and Sam realize Byron is part of an assassination attempt.
Sam goes to find Byron. The two men fight. It is a big struggle where Byron keeps explaining he does not have a choice. Sam is about to get the upper hand with Byron when he his hit in the head by a third party. Byron escapes.
Callen finds the missing cargo van and two dead security guards who were supposed to be working the party. A man in the suit tries to shoot Callen. He fails. Callen finds three cases for sniper weapons. There are likely two other snipers out there and a third could be Byron. They both wonder about the target of three snipers. Sam remembers Byron telling him that he had no choice – Callen dispatches Kensi and Deeks to the Brown home to check on his family.
Kensi and Deeks see the Brown family being held hostage. Deeks opens a door off the kitchen and shoots the hostage taker. Kensi goes into the front door and pulls Mrs. Brown and her two sons to safety.
Back in Ops, Eric explains to Nell that he found phony shipping receipts that mask the company supplying guns to both sides of the Western Sahara conflict. Sam realizes that Bradford is the target – the Livingstons are selling the guns and Bradford's move out of the weapons business would hurt the Livingstons's side deals. Sam is going to look for Byron, Callen is going to protect Bradford.
Sam sees an open window on the second floor of the mansion. Byron is going to kill Bradford to protect his family. Sam shows pictures of Kensi with Byron's family. Sam and Byron look for the other snipers. Just as Bradford takes the stage, Callen has to tackle him to take out the other sniper. One of the waiters arrives with a gun. Just as Callen pulls out his weapon to kill the waiter, Hidoko takes the man out. Callen is impressed.
The Livingstons are in handcuffs. Bradford seems surprised. Charles Livingston is too. Not so surprised – Sasha. She's furious that their lives work was being thrown away by Bradford. Sadly, also in custody is Byron. He provided security for Sasha Livingston when she went to Western Sahara. That's how he got dragged into this mess. Sam is going to help Byron as best he can – more than anyone, Sam knows what it means to protect your family. Byron is grateful same believed him. "It wasn't hard to do."
Mosley is so happy with Callen and Sam and their work on the case that she's letting them use her membership at the Soho House. She's going back to shoot for a while. Callen and Sam continue their argument about jet skis.
Deeks is happy with all his selfies. He wants to take his new work whip up to Neptune's Net for beers and crab cakes. Kensi will go if he promises never to say 'work whip' again. Eric and Nell arrive – the Audi will be ready to go in the morning. Deeks is going to talk to Mosley about…and Mosley arrives. Before they can talk, Mosley tells Eric and Nell she needs to see security cameras – someone went for a ride in her personal vehicle. The Porsche. And the paint is scratched. Nell and Eric are off to look at security footage. Kensi is going to buy Deeks his last meal as he tries to get the Wonder Twins to delete the security footage.
And Microsoft gets their credit. Yay Microsoft!
What head canon can be formed from here: Not much. Sam is still mentoring kids despite the troubles in his own life. Deeks wants a work whip.
Episode number: Episode four of season nine, 196 overall.
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https://loveinquotes.com/the-best-sex-takes-us-somewhere-somewhere-warm-and-expansive-a-paradise-of-lust-and-happiness-sex-is-and-can-be-and-should-be-but-only-very-rarely-is-an-act-of-communion-with-something-bigger-than/
The best sex takes us somewhere. Somewhere warm and expansive, a paradise of lust and happiness. Sex is and can be and should be but only very rarely is an act of communion with something bigger than ourselves. Men fuck and women make love, people say, but we men make love when we fuck a woman we adore: it’s the same thing to us. We mean it sincerely. I had places inside me only Cathy could fill with her body, and I made her happy with my body more than I ever thought I could. ― Deborah Smith, The Crossroads Cafe
#DeborahSmith, #DeborahSmithDeborahSmithLoveQuotes, #DeborahSmithQuotes, #DeborahSmithLoveQuotes, #TheCrossroadsCafe, #TheCrossroadsCafeQuotes
#Deborah Smith#Deborah Smith Deborah-Smith-love quotes#Deborah Smith quotes#Deborah-Smith-love quotes#The Crossroads Cafe#The Crossroads Cafe quotes#LoveQuotes
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Midsummer Night's Dream | William Shakespeare | Comedy | Audiobook full unabridged | English | 1/2 Content of the video and Sections beginning time (clickable) - Chapters of the audiobook: please see First comments under this video. Magic, fairies, young lovers chasing each other through a forest, a man with a donkey's head, and impish Puck wreaking havoc right and left. What's going on here? It's A Midsummer Night's Dream, Shakespeare at his most fanciful. The play opens with Theseus, Duke of Athens, preparing for his wedding. Egeus complains to Theseus that his daughter Hermia refuses to marry Demetrius. When Hermia is given the choice between marriage to Demetrius or life as a nun, she and her true love Lysander flee into the forest. Demetrius follows them; and Helena, who loves Demetrius, follows him. Also in the forest are Oberon and Titania, king and queen of the fairies, at odds with one another. At Oberon's behest, Puck causes Demetrius to fall in love with Helena -- oops, he missed, that was Lysander instead. Mayhem ensues. In the meantime, a group of bumbling craftsmen rehearses a play. Puck gives one of them, Bottom, the head of an ass and makes Titania fall in love with him. Further hilarity results as Bottom sees nothing at all odd about this. Eventually everything is straightened out, Bottom and the rest "perform" their play, there is a triple wedding, and Puck assures us the whole thing has been a dream. Number of quotes you know: 5 (what fools these mortals be). Useful insults: 19. (Summary by Laurie Anne Walden) Cast: Theseus, Duke of Athens – Mark F. Smith Egeus, father to Hermia; and Snout, a tinker – John Lieder Lysander, in love with Hermia – mb Demetrius, in love with Hermia – David O'Connell Philostrate, master of the revels – Philippa Quince, a carpenter – Brian Edwards Snug, a joiner – Elizabeth Klett Bottom, a weaver – Simon Taylor Flute, a bellows-mender – David Nicol Starveling, a tailor – Jessica Miller Hippolyta, queen of the Amazons – Cori Samuel Hermia, daughter to Egeus, in love with Lysander – Laurie Anne Walden Helena, in love with Demetrius – Rosalind Wills Oberon, king of the fairies – Fr. Richard Zeile of Detroit Titania, queen of the fairies – Deborah Irving Puck, or Robin Goodfellow – Karen Savage Peaseblossom – Larysa Jaworski Cobweb – Charlene V. Smith Moth – Alana Jordan Mustardseed – Jamie Ash Young Stage directions – Paul Williams Fairy song composed and performed by Rosalind Wills; performed by Rosalind Wills and Larysa Jaworski Audio edited by Cori Samuel and Laurie Anne Walden This is a Librivox recording. If you want to volunteer please visit https://librivox.org/ by Priceless Audiobooks
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Aight, there are now a mega.nz link, a tumblr link, and a list under the cut, because I also found a backup of free links to various banned books, and my authors-of-colour list is formatted weird so that's just linked.
I feel obliged to put a disclaimer that I don't necessarily endorse the things on this list, because you know, I haven't read most of them. Some things may seem really goddamn odd, and you can ask "hey why is X on the list" but the answer you're probably gonna get it "someone pitched it on tumblr and it sounded worth checking out so now it's on the list" or "read it when I was a baby Devil who thought I was a faerie and now I hate that I don't have a record of every pebble I've ever turned so I want another copy".
This should also explain why a lot of the books I do wholeheartedly recommend aren't on here, like the October Daye series: already own them. If you want those recs, ask me.
Anyhow, if anyone wants to steal my lists, go for it. The only list I actually compiled is my personal booklist, which is still a work-in-progress and is updated whenever someone pitches a book to me.
I also keep a list, if anyone wants it, of the 'power one-liners' you find around tumblr and the internet. All the famous ones like “To become god is the loneliest achievement of them all.” -Obama, From Tumblr user’s twofingerswhiskey’s mother’s dream to some really unknown ones like "There is a fine line between self-care and self-ruination and, oh boy, are you tap-dancing on its ashes." -incorrect-third-life-quotes.
Someone else made a docx and shared it, and then it stopped being updated about two years ago, and then I kept my own copy for inspiration when I need it. I update it whenever I find a new one, and while I can't always source them properly, I do my best.
Anyhow, lists under the cut!
Authors of Colour List
Please go here to access it; it is a rich-formatted docx because I am not copying out every goddamn link by hand. While I try to at least save the original post's link when I back up a post, it appears this one doesn't have that, because I suck. That being said, it shouldn't be too difficult to reverse search it.
Banned Book PDFs
Please go here to access it; I saved it in html formatting, tumblr did not let me import it into a post, but past me delightfully did leave the post link in so I'm going to link you to the original post where I got it and call it a day.
Pale's Personal To-Read-In-Hardcover List
PRIORITY
Discount Armageddon, Seanan McGuire
Over The Woodward Wall, A. Deborah Baker
A Field Guide to Otherkin, Lupa
NOVELS
Lunar Chronicles, Marissa Meyers {Scarlet, Cress, Winter, Stars Above}
Pendragon Cycle, Stephan Lawhead
Percy Jackson, Rick Riordan {full original series}
Darkest Powers, Kelly Armstrong {trilogy}
Dark Breakers, CSE Cooney {full series}
Discworld, Sir Terry Pratchett {I have books 1-5}
Eragon, Christopher Paolini {just the first book}
Dairwaith, Barbra Hambly {full series}
Circle of Magic, Tamora Pierce {full series}
Beauty Queens, Libba Bray
The Chinese Garden, Rosemary Manning
Miss Pym Disposes, Josephine Tey
Olivia, Dorothy Strachey
Frost in May, Antonia White
The Lake of Dead Languages, Carol Goodman
Miss Timmins' School for Girls, Nayana Currimbhoy
The Basic Eight, Daniel Handler
Picnic at Hanging Rock, Joan Lindsay
Tam Lin, Pamela Dean
Fire and Hemlock, Diana Wynne Jones
I Love You Philip Morris, Raider Waite Smith
Child of a Hidden Sea, A.M. Dellamonica
Gods Behaving Badly, Marie Phillips
The Black Jewels, Anne Bishop
Tooth and Claw, Jo Walton
An Unkindness of Magicians, Kat Howard
The Princess Bride, William Goldman
What Should Be Wild, Julia Fine
The Mists of Avalon, Marion Zimmer Bradley
Turning Darkness Into Light, Marie Brennan
The Various, Steven Augarde
Lud-in-the-Mist, Hope Mirrlees
Among Others, Jo Walton
The Accidental Turn, J.M. Frey {series}
All Out: The No-Longer-Secret Stories of Queer Teens throughout the Ages, Saundra Mitchell
Furiously Prognosticating, Dane Asmund
Humans Wanted, Jody Lynn Nye and others
Unburied Fables, Tiffany Rose and others
Are You a Weirdo?, Luka Buchanan
The Changeling, Zilpha Keatley Snyder
The Midnight Front, David Mack
Minecraft: The Island, Max Brooks
Minecraft: The Crash, Tracey Baptiste
Minecraft: The Lost Journals, Mur Lafferty
Minecraft: The End, Catherynne Valente
Minecraft: The Voyage, Jason Fry
Minecraft: The Shipwreck, C.B. Lee
The One And Only Ivan, Katherine Applegate
Wishtree, Katherine Applegate
Home of the Brave, Katherine Applegate
Turning Darkness Into Light, Marie Brennan
The Various, Steven Augarde
The Goblin Emperor, Katherine Addison
Spinning Silver, by Naomi Novik
Greta Helsing, Vivian Shaw {series}
The Eyre Affair, Jasper Fforde
The Diamond Age, Neal Stephenson
His Majesty’s Dragon, Naomi Novik
Eifelheim, Michael Flynn
The City We Became, N.K. Jemisin
Yiddish for Pirates, Gary Barwin
Something More Than Night, Ian Tregillis
The Golem and the Djinni, Helene Wecker
The Balloon Adventure, Emmy Cicierega
The Last Girl Scout, Natalie Ironside
Women of the Otherworld, Kelly Armstrong
Spinning Silver, Naomi Novik
The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles, Julie Andrews
Rainbow Magic, Daisy Meadows (series)
Book of Dragons, Edith Nesbit (series)
Dragonkin, Lavie Tidhar
Piranesi, Susanna Clarke
A Wizard Abroad, Diane Duane
The Mythic Dream, Dominik Parisien
Shifting Hearts, Lauren Brownless
No Man of Woman Born, Ana Mardoll
The Library at Mount Char, Scott Hawkins
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Anonymous
A Bridge To The Quiet Planet, Steven Savage
TEXTBOOKS
How NOT to Kill Your Houseplant, Veronica Peerless
Master Book of Herbalism, Paul Beyerl
Mrs B's Guide to Household Witchery, Kris Bradley
Druid's Herbal for the Sacred Earth Year, Ellen Evert Hopman
The Awen Alone; Walking the Path of the Solitary Druid, Joanna Van Der Hoeven
Refuse to Choose, Barbara Sher
The Sisters Grimmoire: Spells and Charms for Your Happily Ever After, Bree NicGarran
Pestlework: A Book of Magical Powders & Oils, Bree NicGarran
Witchery: Practical Spellcraft, Bree NicGarran
If... (Questions For The Game of Life), Evelyn McFarlane
Making Stuff and Doing Things: DIY Guides to Just About Everything, Kyle Bravo
Cooking is Terrible, Misha Fletcher
Elven Psychology: Understanding the Elfin Psyche and the Evolutionary and Esoteric Purpose of Mental Disorders, The Silver Elves
High Magick: A Guide to the Spiritual Practices That Saved My Life on Death Row, Damien Echols
How to Make a Journal of Your Life, Dan Price
Accessible Gardening for People with Physical Disabilities: A Guide to Methods, Tools, and Plants, Janeen R. Adil
The World of the Druids, Miranda J. Green
Blood & Mistletoe: The History of the Druids in Britain, Ronald Hutton
The Mabinogi and Other Medieval Welsh Tales, Patrick Ford
The Mabinogion, Gwyn and Thomas Jones
On Ugliness, Umberto Eco
Werewolf Magick, Denny Sargent
At Stake: Monsters and the Rhetoric of Fear in Public Culture, Edward J. Ingebretsen
Religious Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know--And Doesn't, Stephen Prothero
Holy Terror: Thinking about Religion after September 11, Bruce Lincoln
Ancient Legends of Ireland, Lady Wilde
Understand Bestiality and Zoophilia, Hani Miletski (*disclaimer made during post: this is on here specifically so I can help take Lycantheory to court and put him behind bars for life. You can't beat an enemy if you don't know how they work. This was recced to me by someone with a virtually identical goal. Don't @ me.)
Geisha, A Life, Mineko Iwasaki
Zeus Grants Stupid Wishes: A No-Bullshit Guide to World Mythology, Cory O’Brien
Invoking The Morrigan, Stephanie Woodfield
The Book of Satyr Magick: Otherkin Shamanic Sorcery, Lotuswolf Satyrhorn
Fantasy and Belief: Alternative Religions, Popular Narratives, and Digital Cultures (Approaches to New Religions), Danielle Kirby
The Otherkin, John Love
Otherkin, Philippe Valentin Giffard
Folk Witchcraft, Roger J. Horne
The Elements of Eloquence, Mark Forsyth
Have you read Dragonkin by Lavie Tidhar? I just finished it and have mixed feelings.
uh,
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Fitness Quotes
Official Website: Fitness Quotes
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• As the proud father of two teens and past Chairman to the Presidents Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, I am committed to educating parents and especially young people on ways to live a long, healthy and active life. – Lee Haney • At least for soccer players, it comes down to a blend of two types of fitness – your base endurance, which comes from longer distance running, and your speed, which comes from sprint-based workouts. – Heather O’Reilly
jQuery(document).ready(function($) var data = action: 'polyxgo_products_search', type: 'Product', keywords: 'Fitness', orderby: 'rand', order: 'DESC', template: '1', limit: '68', columns: '4', viewall:'Shop All', ; jQuery.post(spyr_params.ajaxurl,data, function(response) var obj = jQuery.parseJSON(response); jQuery('#thelovesof_fitness').html(obj); jQuery('#thelovesof_fitness img.swiper-lazy:not(.swiper-lazy-loaded)' ).each(function () var img = jQuery(this); img.attr("src",img.data('src')); img.addClass( 'swiper-lazy-loaded' ); img.removeAttr('data-src'); ); ); ); • Clearly, society has a tremendous stake in insisting on a woman’s natural fitness for the career of mother: the alternatives are all too expensive. – Ann Oakley • Find fitness with fun dancing. It is fun and makes you forget about the dreaded exercise. – Paula Abdul • First of all, let’s get one thing straight: fitness and exercise aren’t the same thing. You can exercise without getting fit, but you can’t get fit without exercise. – Jaclyn Smith • Fitness – if it came in a bottle, everybody would have a great body. – Cher • Fitness is a luxury when you are busy! – Lauren Conrad • Fitness needs to be perceived as fun and games or we subconsciously avoid it. – Alan Thicke • I am about to get involved with the biggest cancer hospital in Norway. They are building a fitness center to work with patients. I will be a consultant. – Grete Waitz • I can jog, but I can’t run. That’s hard for me. I like the fact that I can jog for fitness, but to me there’s a huge difference between jogging and running. – Mary Decker • I didn’t have the same fitness or ability as the other girls, so I had to beat them with my mind. – Martina Hingis • I do a one-hour workout called Drenched, a cardio-boxing fitness routine, Monday through Friday. There are usually between twenty-five and fifty people there – everyone from stay-at-home moms and professional martial artists to teenagers and seniors. They play great dance music. When I can, I take two classes back-to-back. – Carrie Ann Inaba • I have been through various fitness regimes. I used to run about five miles a day and I did aerobics for a while. – Sting • I’m healthy now. I probably wouldn’t say I’m at my best fitness level and I haven’t played that much lately, but I’m healthy and that’s all that matters. – Mary Pierce • I’m still very professional about my fitness. I stay in trim as I always did. – Peter Shilton • In terms of fitness and battling through cancer, exercise helps you stay strong physically and mentally. – Grete Waitz • It’s been a long road back to health and fitness for me. I am just glad to have been given the opportunity to do what I love most. – Jonah Lomu • It’s not about weight, it’s about fitness, and one component of being fit is to have relatively low body fat, because fat is not very efficient, whereas muscle is. – Deborah Bull • I’ve always believed fitness is an entry point to help you build that happier, healthier life. When your health is strong, you’re capable of taking risks. You’ll feel more confident to ask for the promotion. You’ll have more energy to be a better mom. You’ll feel more deserving of love. – Jillian Michaels • My generation is the first in my species to have put fitness next to godliness on the scale of things. Keeping in shape has become the imperative of our middle age. The heaviest burden of guilt we carry into our forties is flab. Our sense of failure is measured by the grade on a stress test. – Ellen Goodman • Our children are obese, either have or being threatened by diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and not socially adjusting properly to others because of a lack of fitness. – Richard Simmons • Our growing softness, our increasing lack of physical fitness, is a menace to our security.- John F. Kennedy • Personally, I need a high level of physical fitness in order to feel at ease. – Jurgen Klinsmann • Physical fitness can neither be acquired by wishful thinking nor by outright purchase. – Joseph Pilates • Physical fitness is not only one of the most important keys to a healthy body, it is the basis of dynamic and creative intellectual activity. – John F. Kennedy • Regarding the fitness craze: America has lost its soul; now it’s trying to save its body. – George Carlin • So I’ve broadened the fitness concept to make it one of moderation and balance. – Kenneth H. Cooper • Tactics, fitness, stroke ability, adaptability, experience, and sportsmanship are all necessary for winning. – Fred Perry • The physical fitness of our citizens is a vital prerequisite to America’s realization of its full potential as a nation, and to the opportunity of each individual citizen to make full and fruitful use of his capacities. – John F. Kennedy • Training is such a vital part of preparation for a game, you really do train to play. It tops up your ability, like sharpening a carving knife. You can get away with not doing it for a while, as long as you have reached a certain standard of fitness. – Graeme Le Saux • You must also give mental and physical fitness priority. – Jim Otto
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