#kimberly denise
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LIL KIM circa 1996
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KIMBERLY “LIL KIM” DENISE
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@earllover💲
#kimberly denise#lil kim#fashion#courthouse#female rappers#black female rappers#mine#art#mood#image#melanin#new york#brooklyn artist#hairstyle#twitter#earllover#@earllover
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*✶ cozysip alternative fc series : madelyn cline edition
maia reficco : 22 years old - argentina
shina novalinga : 25 years old - inuit
alexis denise williams : 21 years old - afrolatina
phaith montoya : 26 years old - puerto rican and hondouran.
mikey madison : 24 years old - ashkenazi jewish, mix of english, scots-irish/northern irish, along with dutch, german, welsh, and scottish.
aslihan malbora : 27 years old - turkish
sab zada : 24 years old - filipino, chinese, and unspecified hispanic.
cindy kimberly : 25 years old - indonesian / spanish.
template by @oppalus
#016. ALT FCS : mine.#madelyn cline alt fc#maia reficco fc#shina novalinga fc#alexis denise williams fc#phaith montoya fc#mikey madison fc#aslihan malbora fc#sab zada fc#cindy kimberly fc
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HAPPY 49TH BIRTHDAY, LIL’ KIM!!!
#happy birthday#happy birthday 2023#july 11#july 2023#Kimberly Denise Jones#lil kim#queen bee#rapper#black excellence#black is beautiful#black girls rock#black girl magic#cancer#lady marmalade#she’s all that
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Some prominent conservative lawmakers and commentators are advocating for ending no-fault divorce, laws that exist in all 50 US states and allow a person to end a marriage without having to prove a spouse did something wrong, like commit adultery or domestic violence.
The socially conservative, and often religious, rightwing opponents of such divorce laws are arguing that the practice deprives people – mostly men – of due process and hurt families, and by extension, society. Republican lawmakers in Louisiana, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Texas have discussed eliminating or increasing restrictions on no-fault marriage laws.
Defenders of the laws, which states started passing a half-century ago, see legislation and arguments to repeal them as the latest effort to restrict women’s rights – following the overturning of Roe v Wade and passage of abortion bans around the country – and say that without such protections, the country would return to an earlier era when women were often trapped in abusive marriages.
“No-fault divorce is critical to the ability, particularly the ability of women, to be able to exercise autonomy in their own relationships, in their own lives,” said Denise Lieberman, an adjunct professor at the Washington University School of Law in St Louis, who has a specialty in policies concerning gender, sexuality and sexual violence.
Before 1969, when then California Republican governor Ronald Reagan, who had been divorced, approved the country’s first no-fault divorce law, women, who are more likely to experience violence from an intimate partner, were often forced to stay in marriages. If they could not prove that their husband had been abusive or persuade him to grant a divorce, they would not be able to take any assets from the marriage or remarry, according to a study in the Quarterly Journal of Economics.
States around America gradually followed suit and passed similar laws allowing unilateral divorce until 2010, when New York became the last state to approve the practice.
Between 1976 and 1985, states that passed the laws saw their domestic violence rates against men and women fall by about 30%; the number of women murdered by an intimate partner declined by 10%; and female suicide rates declined by 8 to 16%.
Without such laws, “it’s hard to prove anything in court relating to a family because you don’t have any witnesses”, said Kimberly Wehle, professor at the University of Baltimore School of Law. “It’s very difficult to get evidence to show abuse of children. How do you do it? Do you put your kids on the stand?”
Conservative commentators such as Matt Walsh, Steven Crowder and lawmakers such as the Republican senator JD Vance of Ohio have argued that the laws are unfair to men and hurt society because they lead to more divorces.
The divorce rate in the United States increased significantly from 1960, when it was 9.2 per 1,000 married women, to 22.6 in 1980. But by 2022, the rate had fallen to 14.5.
On the increase in divorces, Vance said in 2021: “One of the great tricks that I think the sexual revolution pulled on the American populace” is the idea that “these marriages were fundamentally, you know, they were maybe even violent, but certainly they were unhappy, and so getting rid of them and making it easier for people to shift spouses like they change their underwear, that’s going to make people happier in the long term”.
Beverly Willett, a writer and attorney, argues that unilateral no-fault divorce is also unconstitutional because it violates a person’s 14th amendment right to due process.
The defendant “has absolutely no recourse to say, ‘Wait a minute. I don’t want to be divorced, and I don’t think that there are grounds for divorce. I would like to be heard. I would like to call witnesses,’” said Willett, who experienced a divorce she didn’t want because she thought her marriage could be saved. “I believed in my vows” and “didn’t want to give up”.
But Willett’s argument relies on the idea that “women are either property or that somehow men’s liberty is restrained by not allowing them to stay in a marriage with someone who does not want to be married”, said Wehle, who also wrote about it in the Atlantic. “I disagree with the idea that women are somehow property interests of their husbands. That is an arcane relic of law that has no place in modern society.”
Willett responded to Wehle’s critique by writing that “nobody has suggested a return to antiquated laws of the 18th and 19th century. Considerable reform that protects women and ensures their equality in family court has been enacted since then.”
On the argument that no-fault divorce reduces domestic violence, Willett points to data that most domestic violence occurs between unmarried couples and says regardless, with “any contract, any lawsuit, you still have to follow the constitution”.
But without such laws, victims of domestic violence would then have to navigate a court system that can be time-consuming, “very adversarial and very costly” because the plaintiff often must then pay for child care and transportation, said Marium Durrani, vice-president of policy for the National Domestic Violence Hotline.
“Any sort of additional barrier that we add to the ease of legal proceeding is, frankly, a nightmare and an enormous burden for survivors,” said Durrani. “I’m not trying to be an alarmist, but it can increase death [if] a survivor of domestic violence has to prove that they are being abused in a divorce proceeding.”
Still, Lieberman does not think Republicans will succeed in their efforts to make it more difficult for people to get divorced.
“I do believe that that train has left the station. I mean, we have had no-fault divorce now for 50 years,” Lieberman said. But “I didn’t think the supreme court would overturn Roe v Wade, which we had for 50 years, so I suppose we will see.”
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"ted bundy is SOO hot!" say that to
joni lenz. say that to Lynda ann healy. say that to donna gail manson. say that to susan rancourt. say that to Roberta parks. say that to Brenda carol ball. say that to Georgeann Hawkins. say that to denise naslund. say that to Janice ott. say that to nancy wilcox. say that to melissa smith. say that to laura aime. say that to carol daronch. say that to debra kent. say that to caryn campbell. say that to Julie Cunningham. say that to denise oliverson. say that to melanie cooley. say that to lynette culver. say that to susan Curtis. say that to Margaret bowman. say that to lisa levy. say that to kathty Kleiner. say that to karen chandler. say that to Cheryl Thomas. say that to Kimberly leach. say that to all the other women.
the oldest of everyone i named (and know of) was 26. the youngest of everyone i named was 12.
fuck you, all those people who think the girls were lucky that they were killed and violated even in death by ted bundy. fuck you, all those people who think this is okay.
#ted bundy#tccblr#tedbundy#im NOT sorry for hating him and im NOT sorry for hating YOU for loving him.#he raped a little girl so badly it killed her.#he raped corpses.#he killed people.#he targetted women who wanted to help him.#women who thought he was wounded or needed help and helped him.#and he kidnapped them and he violated them.#he took girls with bright futures and he did unspeakable things to them.#AND FUCK YOU FOR THINKING THATS HOT!!!!!
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Happy Birthday Kim 🥳🎂🎈🎁🎉
Kimberly Denise Jones
July 11,1974
Buon Compleanno 🥳🎂🎈🎁🎉
11 Luglio 1974
#lil kim#rapper#world music#musica#music#music industry#musician#rap#rap music#hiphop#rap hip hop#east coast hip hop#hardcore hip hop#dirtyrap#legendaryrapper#queen of rap#celebrity#legend#happy birthday
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Teens of Mount Komorebi Part 6 CC List:
Body: okruee-misc-face-details-SKINDETAIL, [AS] Lip Preset 7, EVOXYR - Visions eye presets, heihu-xingzuo_birthmarks, nesurii_lightitup-highlight, Simbience_HauteSkinblend, Pralinesims - UltimateEyebrowCollection_MaxisMatch, PS - Eyes_N157, lutessasims_nose_presets, SC-SweetBod
Make-up: JH Cosmetics - Eyeshadow 104, JH Cosmetics - Eyeshadow 121, [ d r e a m g i r l ] 3 D_l a s h e s_V6, Pralinesims_Lip_N236_LucidDream, TwistedCat_Frosty_Lashes, TwistedCat_GlitterBomb_V1_Eyeshadow, TwistedCat_Mirage_Eyeshadow, 4w25 - CutenessIntensifiesBlush, Pralinesims_Nails_Female_N27_SugarMilk, Pralinesims - UltimateEyelinerCollection, GPME - Nose Blush, Pralinesims - UltimateLipstickCollection
Accessories: [boonstow] luna moth earrings 1, serenity_HuaNecklace, TwistedCat_Pearl_Earrings, alexaarr - StarHoops
Everyday: okruee-magnolia-hair, okruee-magnolia-hair-bow-acc, [Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla] Cropped Turtleneck Sweater, [greenllamas] GREENHOUSE_Sage_Skirt_Duo, [oakiyo_x_QICC]Sweater_Weather_Jora_Boots
Formal: miiko-usagi-hair, okruee-adonis-hair-roses-acc, HUIEN- Yuna Sling, [Jius]LeatherPumps06
Sports: okruee-hilda-hair, [boonstow] random top 04, euno 0524 Leggings HQ, [boonstow] colorblock sneakers
Sleep: okruee-delancey-hair-v2, DAISYPIXELS_yfbody_Susan_Nightgown, Madlen Tsuki Slippers (Adult), DAISYPIXELS_yuBlush_Face-Mask
Party: [arethabee] kimberly hair v2, [greenllamas] SLASHER_Amandla_Top, [greenllamas] MIMOSA_Juice_Jeans_patterns, [boonstow] kawaii platform sneakers, [arethabee] piper waist chain
Swimwear: miiko-denise-hair, [boonstow] daisy summer set, serenity_LaraSlides, adrienpastel_SP34_glasses
Warm Weather: SIMANCHOLY-AmberHairV2, euno 22 1227 Y2K top, GCSSkirt_Sep22PlaidPatternedMidiSkirt, [Jius]PlatformSneakers02
Cold Weather: okruee-ana-hair, pixelunivairse-Jess dungaree shorts, [SUNBERRY]UG High slipper SOCKS 2-23.2, [IDAVALLEN] - WILLOW TIGHTS SET, CLUMSYALIEN [RAE SCARF]
Tray files are available on my Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lizzisimss
Please consider supporting if you wish :)
#lizzisimss#ts4#the sims 4#sims 4#sims 4 cc#sims cc#cc#sims 4 custom content#sims custom content#custom content#sims 4 cc list#sims cc list#cc list#sims 4 cc finds#sims cc finds#cc finds#sims 4 cc links#sims cc links#cc links
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Denise Holmes, 24 (USA 1970)
California’s early legalization of abortion was hazardous to young Californians and their mothers, but the damage wasn’t limited to those living in the state. Travelers from across the country— or even those from overseas— were also killed by “safe and legal” abortion.
Denise Joy Holmes was an Australian citizen living in Texas. She was planning to go home for the holidays with a stop on the way. On December 21, she was checked into Avalon Hospital in Los Angeles, California.
Despite the name, Avalon Hospital was an abortion facility. It was a chain location owned by Edward “Fast Eddie” Allred, the owner and founder of Family Planning Associates. His abortion corporation and owned facilities are responsible for at least 18 client deaths.
Thanks to Allred and Avalon, Denise never made it home for Christmas or saw her family again. She was pronounced dead by Allred himself at 5:00 PM that day. She was only 24 years old.
An autopsy was performed and confirmed that the abortion killed her. Denise suffered an amniotic fluid embolism, but it wasn’t just amniotic fluid. Pieces of her dead baby had been left inside of her, as shown by the pieces of fetal bone marrow found in her lungs.
After Denise’s autopsy, her body was cremated and the ashes sent to her grieving family. Her remains were buried 3 days after Christmas.
After killing Denise, Allred was welcomed into the National Abortion Federation. He was widely known for his 5-minute abortions, which were in fact reckless and caused severe internal injuries in many cases.
Denise Holmes was the first known abortion client to be killed by Allred’s facilities. She was nowhere close to the last. Others include 16-year-old Patricia “Patty” Chacon, Mary Pena, Josefina Garcia, 13-year-old Deanna Bell, 17-year-old Laniece Dorsey, Joyce Ortenzio, 19-year-old Tami Suematsu, Susan Levy, 18-year-old Christine Mora, Kimberly K. Neil, Chanelle Bryant, Ta Tanisha Wesson, Maria Leho, 16-year-old Nakia Jorden, Maria Rodriguez, Emmeko Reed and Kenniah Epps. In addition to all of the abortion clients, Barbara Plenger also died after an FPA facility’s IUD insertion caused an infected abscess that was eventually lethal.
Los Angeles Death Certificate 55459 (Affadavit 702792)
"California, County Birth and Death Records, 1800-1994", database with images, Denise J Holmes, 1970 Document 55459 page 56
"California Death Index, 1940-1997," database, Denise J Holmes, 21 Dec 1970; Department of Public Health Services, Sacramento.
"California, Los Angeles, Angelus-Rosedale Cemetery/Crematory Records, 1884-2002", database, Denise Joy Holmes, 1970.
#tw abortion#unsafe yet legal#pre roe legal#pro life#tw murder#tw ab*rtion#abortion#abortion debate#death from legal abortion#fpa
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Rapper Lil' Kim Has Had A Profound Impact On Fashion Over The Years
hen Lil’ Kim made her debut with the 1996 album Hard Core, she utterly and completely changed the rap game. A protege of Notorious B.I.G., and the sole female member of his hip-hop group Junior M.A.F.I.A., Lil’ Kim, aka Kimberly Denise Jones, had a flow that was raw and gritty, with raunchy, sexually liberating lyrics that made critics clutch their pearls. Hard Core went on to become certified double platinum by the RIAA, cementing the then-22-year-old as a bona fide hip-hop god. But it wasn’t just Lil’ Kim’s lyrical prowess that set her apart from her contemporaries that came before her. Her sense of style also made her a trailblazer, solidifying her as a pop culture fashion icon.
While other women rappers like Queen Latifah, Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes, and Da Brat favored more androgynous clothing, like oversize T-shirts and baggy jeans, Lil’ Kim’s outfits were ultra-feminine, bold, risqué, and revealing — as provocative and outrageous as her songs. She wore teeny-tiny bikinis, see-through silhouettes, candy-colored wigs, and equally vibrant fur coats. She also helped popularize ’90s and noughties logomania, a trend in which designer branding is made overtly obvious on one’s clothing and accessories (the antithesis to “quiet luxury”). In Kim’s case, logomania also applied to hairstyles, as she famously wore wigs with Chanel’s double “C” logo and Versace’s Greek key motif. (The move made sense for someone who frequently name-dropped designers in her lyrics). Aside from head-to-toe designer monograms, Kim has worn a sparkly catsuit made with 965,000 crystals, embellished headpieces with matching thongs, and a gray, floor-length chinchilla coat (which she modeled next to mob daughter Victoria Gotti in the video for 2003’s “Came Back for You”). The list goes on.
“She was bringing something new that we hadn’t really seen before,” says Elizabeth Way, fashion historian and associate curator at the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT). “For so long, female rappers had been kind of marginalized and really tried to fit in with their male counterparts, especially with their style. Lil’ Kim rejected that and embraced her femininity in both her style and her lyrics.” Marissa Pelly, stylist for the rapper Ice Spice, shares a similar sentiment, pointing out how the industry made female musicians feel like they couldn’t boldly embrace their sexuality while simultaneously being perceived as “chic” or “luxury” — as if the two concepts could not co-exist. “Now when I see female artists owning their sexuality, while also being muses for some of fashion’s most elite houses, I think of — and I thank — Lil’ Kim.”
Behind every celebrity style icon is a brilliant stylist; a wizard behind the velvet curtain, so to speak. For Lil’ Kim, it was Misa Hylton. One cannot discuss Kim’s vestiary tours de force without mentioning the industry legend by her side, who had already been masterminding looks for Mary J. Blige, Faith Evans, Jodeci, and her then-boyfriend Sean “Diddy” Combs. But theirs was a match made in fashion heaven; the two women felt an immediate kinship. “I think that Kim and I were magical together and when you have that type of synergy only greatness can come forth. We were thinking outside of the box and unapologetically taking risks. People gravitate to that type of authentic and creative energy,” Hylton told Dazed in 2018.
The two women set the bar high high from the beginning with a legendary look the promotional poster for Hard Core, Kim’s debut album: a leopard print bikini and a sheer, marabou-trimmed duster. The one-piece was designed by Sex and the City costume designer Patricia Field, who owned a store in New York City from 1996 until 2016. It was known to be a hot shopping spot for fellow performers like Debbie Harry, Lady Gaga, and Kim’s friend and frequent collaborator Missy Elliott. Hylton and Kim frequented Field’s boutique almost daily. In the years — and decades — that followed, both the look, and Kim’s signature squatting pose, would be replicated by the likes of Teyana Taylor, Nicki Minaj, GloRilla, and countless others.
Hylton and Kim also went all out for the “Crush on You” music video, directed by Lance Rivera. Inspired by the The Wiz’s color-changing Emerald City disco dance sequence, the video featured the star in monochromatic technicolor outfits and matching wigs — and instantly catapulted her to mainstream MTV fame. “When you think of the blueprint for most female musicians’ styles today, you think the designer logos; the iced-out, statement jewelry; and different styles of wigs — that was all her,” explains stylist Estelle Aporongao. “Kim’s DNA runs through the contemporary fashion industry’s veins.”
In 1998, Kim donned a bejeweled caged headpiece and matching arm sleeves to the 1998 Soul Train Lady of Soul Awards, which felt like the ultimate statement. But the rapper topped herself yet again a year later when she attended the MTV Video Music Awards in a purple wig and lilac-colored, sequined jumpsuit, complete with a single purple pasty that garnered an unforgettable reaction from Diana Ross. The moment would become the stuff of award show legend.
That same year, Kim covered Interview magazine’s November issue wearing only a Louis Vuitton headgear and LV logos painted all over her body, a moment described as a “cultural reset” by celebrity stylist Audrey Brianne, who works with Chris Tucker and Tyler Posey. “At the time, it was a fresh idea no other star had rocked quite so boldly. If people weren’t already paying attention to Lil’ Kim by then, they were now,” she says.
To be clear, Lil’ Kim was interested in fashion long before she dressed in colorful furs. “Her high school friends recounted how she would spend her allowance on clothes and had Gucci before they even knew what it was,” explains Nygel Simons, a stylist and archivist, noting that the artist also worked at Bloomingdale’s prior to rapping full time. “It really shines through when an artist genuinely loves fashion.” Nowadays, it’s not out of the ordinary for a designer to dress hip-hop artists for red carpets or sit them front row at Fashion Week, but in the 1990s, that relationship didn’t really exist. Lil’ Kim had a je ne sais quoi that both attracted and inspired designers like Karl Lagerfeld, Giorgio Armani, Betsey Johnson, John Galliano, and Donatella Versace, who would dress her for her 1999 Met Gala debut.
Way long before Barbiecore would become a part of the cultural zeitgeist, Lil’ Kim sported a pink, full-length mink coat with a studded pink bra, matching hot pants, and pink snakeskin boots for the “Rock Style”-themed Met Gala. “Donatella is my girl. We’ve loved each other from the moment we first saw each other,” Kim told Vogue in 2020. “At the Met, you’re a designer’s muse, [and] she loved the fact that I have fun in her clothes.”
Lil’ Kim has also walked the runway for designers including Baby Phat, The Blonds, and VFiles. But her closest friendship is with fashion designer Marc Jacobs, whom she calls her “bestie” and who has played a significant role in her life and career. Jacobs dressed Kim for her court appearances and subsequently became her prison pen pal when she served a one-year sentence for lying to protect friends involved in a 2001 shootout. Kim sent Jacobs the Bratz doll coloring pages she painted, which he then had framed and hung in his house. Jacobs is also writing the foreword for her forthcoming memoir, The Queen Bee.
“These were interesting and important alliances for her during the early 2000s because it further legitimized the message to her fans and the public that her empire and reach extended well beyond music,” says stylist Alison Brooks, who works with television personality and hairstylist Jonathan Van Ness. “I believe it was a turning point, not so subtly signaling to other artists to bling themselves out in designer looks with confidence and embrace their curves with body positivity before body positivity became a thing.”
When it comes to her own work, Pelly says she’s strongly influenced by Lil’ Kim. “I love how effortlessly she would combine her own fun custom pieces with luxury ones, while also demonstrating a great deal of high-end fashion knowledge.” Pelly says she had this approach in mind while styling Ice Spice for the “Barbie World” music video, pairing a custom Chanel-inspired, Christian Cowan tweed set with a Barbiecore bra by Laser Kitten, custom Emilio Pucci, and pieces from the Gaultier archives. “It’s that duality that’s so inspiring to me and creates the most interesting, well-rounded looks every time.” She also drew ideas from Kim’s 2003 “Summer Jam” performance, in which she wears SS03 Jean Paul Gaultier script belts around her waist and chest. “I love when artists love the same brands I do... I tracked down the same belts for Ice’s Paper Magazine cover back in April as a nod to the OG style icon.”
It’s difficult to imagine what would have happened if Lil’ Kim hadn’t paved the way for women in hip-hop to take fashion risks. Cardi B might not have worn archival Mugler to the 2019 Grammy Awards, and who knows if Megan Thee Stallion would have modeled for Calvin Klein. Then there’s the countless Kim homages artists have paid over the years: Beyoncé replicated several of Kim’s famous looks for Halloween 2017; Rihanna has cited the rapper’s penchant for experimenting with different looks as a major influence on her own fashion sense; and Miley Cyrus dressed in Kim’s MTV VMAs look for Halloween back in 2013, purple pasty and all. It’s for reasons like these that stylists like Simons believe Lil’ Kim deserves official acknowledgement for her legacy, particularly from the Council of Fashion Designers of America. (For years, fans have been calling on the CFDA to honor Kim with its annual Fashion Icon award.)
One thing’s for sure: You’d be hard-pressed to find another hip-hop fashion icon with the same enduring legacy. “Lil’ Kim is the blueprint,” says Simons. “Whenever you think you’re being presented with something new, if you search hard enough, you’ll find that Kim has already done it at some point.”
#lil kim#lil' kim#rap#queen of rap#rapper#fashion#fashion icon#cfda#hiphop#female rap#female rapper#queen bee#naomi campbell#hip hop
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I’m calling this AU “The Death AU” and I have several ideas for it. For one, I think Devon was a miracle baby who died in a fire alongside his father. Being a literal miracle, however, it transported to the death role. He got to personal experience and see the first ever living being that was created, and given instructions on what to do after the last living thing dies.
That he has to put up the chairs, turn the lights off and lock the universe behind him.
However, Devon’s death never stopped Kim from trying to have other children. All failed. Miscarriages that Devon had to be there for, because he’s death and wherever he is, a decay is always sure to follow. Of course, Kimberly couldn’t handle it, because Devon always left but came back at her lowest.
She didn’t want to admit it, but she started to resent him a bit. She’s seen Devon walk on the grass before, how now it wilts under his feet. Almost like the Earth itself is rejecting the idea of death because it is terrifying.
But one day, Kimberly carried a baby. And for the first 3 months where she dreaded the eventually miscarriage, it never came. Devon was never on her doorstep, waiting. In fact, he wasn’t there at all. Though sometimes she would feel a certain presence in the trees, in crowds but tried to ignore it and spend a wonderful 6 years with her daughter, Denise.
But like the cycle of all things, it came to end. It was a Friday movie night, both Kimberly and her daughter asleep on the living room floor when Devon walked in. He had visited Denise before, so she was no way wary of him. Just tired when he woke her up, told her should go now. But before, she could leave their mama a gift, kiss her forehead, maybe clean Denise’s room a bit before going away. Devon even held her hand, appeared in a form that was easy on her little eyes. Tried to the make the concept of death as peaceful and easy to both Denise and Kim.
Of course Kim knew Devon is still her first son. Of course she knew that Devon couldn’t physically kill anyone, that he was just doing his job. It didn’t stop her from mourning her daughter, dialing an ambulance, receiving the cause of death with a dull look on her face. Brain aneurysm, they said. It could happen at any age, they said. It was inevitable, they said.
Of course she knows the 6 years was special treatment because Devon still loved his mother. He had always been a mama’s boy, even now. Of course she knows Devon can’t kill anyone unless it’s their time.
But it doesn’t stop her from blaming him, feeling anger, heartache. Now she’s left with no one, and presumably nothing. It doesn’t stop her from taking her own life and what do you know, Death is right there at her bedroom door. Watching her, with sad eyes and a rueful expression trying to say “I’m sorry”.
Kim closed him out. She didn’t want Death anywhere near her death. She wanted to be alone. And standing outside that door, Devon heard his mother take her last breath, her heart coming to a stop and there was just silence. He doesn’t know why this one causes a few tears to fall down his face, but it doesn’t matter.
It’s just job now. So he goes into the bedroom, does a quick check before going out and locking the door behind him. Death puts his hood up and walks out, onto the next person on their deathbed or weeks away from it.
The way you brought Agatha All Along into this is so painful and it makes my heart ache, holy shit this AU is so sad...
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Ages after Round 1
After 3,5 days (1 year and 9 month) the current ages of Uberhood's inhabitants are:
If you didn't notice: there is now a Masterpost with all families (might contain mild spoilers): click!
You can also read the whole round 1 in chronological order if you click here!
89: Luis Aspir 86: Carlos Contender 64: Olive Specter, Patrizio Monty 60: Dora Ottomas 59: Mortimer Goth 58: Herb Oldie 57: Isabella Monty, Consort Capp 56: Coral Oldie, Betty Goldstein, PT9 Smith 55: Denise Jacquet, Herbert Goodie, Faith Goodie, Catherine Viejo 51: Jenny Smith 50: Daniel Pleasant 49: Mary-Sue Pleasant 46: Jason Cleveland 45: Marissa Cleveland 44: Edward Contrary, Albany Capp 43: Benjamin Baldwin, Stephen Tinker 42: Vivian Cho, Morty Roth 41: Isabel Baldwin, Wanda Tinker, Opal Contrary, Marcel Jocque, Sophia Jocque, Stella Roth 38: Darren Dreamer 37: Gilbert Jacquet, Buzz Grunt 36: Checo Ramirez, Leod McGreggor 35: Florence Delarosa 34: Antonio Monty 33: Loki Beaker, Pascal Curious 32: Timothy Riley, Lisa Ramirez, John Burb, Goneril Capp, Peter Ottomas, Lola Curious, Cornwall Capp 31: Armand DeBateau, Victor Aspir, Elizabeth Aspir, Issac Bell, Hannah Bell, Brandi Broke, Rose Greenman, Jason Greenman 30: Jessica Peterson, Circe Beaker, Ajay Loner, Erin Beaker, Samantha Ottomas 29: Sanjay Ramaswami, Vidcund Curious, Bianca Monty 28: Ramir Patel, Jennifer Burb, Alexandra O'Mackey, Priya Ramaswami 27: Ana Patel, Patricia Wan, Kristen Loste, Gabe O'Mackey 26: Gabriel Green, Matthew Picaso, Andrew Martin, Nervous Subject, Cassandra Goth, Regan Capp 25: Chastity Gere, Sharon Wirth, Jessica Picaso, Kent Capp, Oberon Summerdream 24: Samantha Cordial, Kimberly Cordial, Geoff Rutherford, Malcolm Landgraab IV, Chester Gieke, Jason Larson, Jodie Larson, John Mole, Trent Traveller, Julien Cooke, Nathan Gavigan, Mary Gavigan, Cyd Roseland, Robert Kim, Cynthia Kim, Tara Kat, Cleo Shikibu, Dina Caliente, Nina Caliente, Don Lothario, Lazlo Curious, Chloe Curious, Titania Summerdream 23: Connor Weir, Natasha Una, Trisha Traveller, 22: Gunnar Roque, Jane Stacks 21: Roxie Sharpe, Jonah Powers, Guy Wrightley, Mickey Dosser, Monica Bradfort, Ashley Pitts, Brittany Upsnott, Allyn Monty 20: Mitch Indie, Max Flexor, Delilah O'Feefe, Edwin Sharpe, Marla Biggs, Phineaus Furley, Ellen Frost, Chaz Whippler, Emily Lee, Tom Freshe, Matthew Hart, DJ Verse, Sarah Love, Jessie Pilferson, Jasmine Rai, Zoe Zimmerman, Frances J. Worthington III, Aldric Davis, Almeric Davis, William Williamson, Blossom Moonbeam, Klara Vonderstein, Stella Terrano, Martin Ruben, Allegra Gorey, Joshua Ruben, Kevin Beare, Castor Nova, Tiffany Sampson, Heather Huffington, Sam Thomas, Jared Starchild, Ty Bubbler, Jimmy Phoenix, Erik Swain 19: Johnny Smith, Hailey Goodie 18: Ophelia Nigmos, Swan Goodie 17: Tank Grunt, Andrzej Goodie 16: Mercutio Monty, Tybalt Capp 15: Ripp Grunt, Romeo Monty, David Ottomas 14: Justin Cleveland, Angela Pleasant, Lilith Pleasant, Puck Summerdream, Juliette Capp 13: Rick Contrary, Violat Jocque, Dustin Broke, Hermia Capp, Sandra Roth, Jacob Martin 12: Melody Tinker, Dirk Dreamer, Jules O'Mackey, Miranda Capp, 11: Tara DeBateau, Gavin Newson, Ginger Newson 09: Sofia Baldwin, Lucy Burb, Jill Smith, Bottom Summerdream, Alexander Goth, Buck Grunt, Hal Capp, Beatrice Monty, Benedick Monty, 08: Sally Riley, Daniel Bell, Desdemonda Capp, Sharla Ottomas 07: Tessa Ramirez, Tina Traveller, Isaiah Gavigan, Gabriella Newson, Gallagher Newson, Justin Kim, Xander Roth 05: Beau Broke 04: Markus Baldwin, Etsu Cho 03: Pauline Aspir, Garett Newson, Georgia Newson, Daisy Greenman 02: Ariel Capp, Tommy Ottomas 01: Willow Patel, Ian Broke, Winona Curious, Kevin Ottomas, Nadja Ottomas 00: Frank Tinker, Wendy Bell, Felicity Gavivan, Nicolas Greenman, Octavia Greenman, Victor Roth, Felix Smith, Isolde Capp, Otis Ramaswami
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hi, dear. would like to know if it's possible to have a list of fc similar to replace cindy kimberly plz ? hope you have a great day and thank you so much for your time
I've replied to this before HERE but here are some more people too!
Inanna Sarkis (1993) Assyrian Syrian / White.
Raveena Aurora (1993) Punjabi Indian - is pansexual - has spoken up for Palestine!
Huda Elmufti (1994) Egyptian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Asia Jackson (1994) Ibaloi Filipino and African American - has spoken up for Palestine!
Neelam Gill (1995) Punjabi.
Gazini Ganados (1995) Palestinian and Bisaya Filipino.
Sagonia Lazarof (1996) Assyrian.
Imaan Hammam (1996) Moroccan / Egyptian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Janella Salvador (1998) Bisaya Filipino - has spoken up for Palestine!
Joanna Pincerato (1998) Mexican, Syrian, Swedish and Italian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Sherry-Lee Watson (1999) Arrernte - has spoken up for Palestine!
Sab Zada (1999) Chinese, Filipino, and Hispanic - has spoken up for Palestine!
Sharon Alexie (2000) Cameroonian.
Andria Tayeh (2001) Jordanian and Lebanese - has spoken up for Palestine!
Maitreyi Ramakrishnan (2001) Tamil - has spoken up for Palestine!
Denise Julia (2002) Filipino - is pansexual - has spoken up for Palestine!
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Kimberly Denise Jones (July 11, 1974) known as Lil’ Kim, is a rapper. She was born and raised in New York City. She would freestyle rap, influenced by fellow female hip-hop artists like MC Lyte and the Lady of Rage. She was discovered by fellow rapper The Notorious B.I.G., who invited her to join his group Junior M.A.F.I.A.; their debut album, Conspiracy, generated two top 20 singles in the US and was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America.
Her debut studio album Hard Core (1996) was certified double platinum in March 2001. It has sold more than six million copies worldwide and spawned three successful singles: “No Time,” “Not Tonight (Ladies Night),” and “Crush on You.” Hard Core had the highest debut in the US for a female rap album at the time. Her following albums, The Notorious K.I.M. (2000) and La Bella Mafia (2003) were certified platinum. She reached #1 on the US Billboard Hot 100 with the single “Lady Marmalade”. Other notable singles from this period include “The Jump Off” and “Magic Stick,” the latter of which reached number two on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming her 2nd-highest-charting single as a lead artist.
She served a one-year prison sentence for lying to a jury about her friends’ involvement in a shooting. During her incarceration, her fourth album, The Naked Truth, was released to positive reviews from critics. A reality series covering her sentence, Lil’ Kim: Countdown to Lockdown, premiered on BET. She released her first mixtape, Ms. G.O.A.T. (2008), and appeared on Dancing with the Stars. She continued to release music and perform. Her fifth studio album, 9, was released in 2019.
She has been referred to as the “Queen of Rap,” as well as her alias “Queen Bee”. She has sold more than 15 million albums and 30 million singles worldwide. Her songs “No Time,” “Big Momma Thang,” and “Not Tonight (Ladies Night)” were each listed on Complex’s list of the 50 Best Rap Songs By Women. She was listed on VH1’s 100 Greatest Women in Music list at #45, the second-highest position for a solo female hip-hop artist. She has one daughter. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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Jenny
Emma
Luna
Lucy
Kimberly
Jessica
Charlie
Emily
Anaya
Samantha
Wanda
Wendy
Maggie
Nicole
Frankie
Renee
Maria
Mary
Jane
Carla
Talia
Natalie
Natasha
Natalia
Sasha
Sarah
Beatrice
Olivia
Trixie
Tricia
Evelyn
Eve
Lily
Izzy
Minnie
Winnie
Betty
Kat
Katie
Katlyn
Kathy
Chloe
Courtney
Zoey
Charlotte
Stephanie
Grace
Ruth
Audrey
Andrea
Lori
Loraine
Patricia
Elain
Tamara
Denise
Jolene
Victoria
Hailey
Hope
Bailey
Hannah
Hazel
Amara
Alba
Jennifer
Connie
Loretta
Christine
Christina
Irene
Violet
Rose
Daisy
Marcy
Anne
Cindy
Angelica
Tina
Suzie
Riley
Bridget
Poppy
Winona
Elizabeth
Bethany
Beth
Summer
Annabelle
Belle
Anna
Annie
Donna
Linda
Penny
Sonya
Lauren
Agatha
Carley
Emy
I have done the "Name 100 woman" challenge lol
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