#million dollar smile there
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idbe-theman · 2 days ago
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God he’s gorgeous
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GLEN POWELL attends the 82nd Annual Golden Globe Awards (Jan 05, 2025)
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catarium · 7 months ago
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A week ago I didn’t knew anything about Guilty Gear, and now I’m enamored with so many characters.
I fucking love A.b.a, she is so mentally unstable <3
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zu-is-here · 1 year ago
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original from Veil (2019)
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b0nk9 · 9 months ago
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Natsu: I haven't really known what I've been doing since I was like 15, but I don't think it's too obvious Lucy: It is. It is extremely obvious.
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violent138 · 2 months ago
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Bruce Wayne has a reconstructed, tooth-replaced megawatt smile he can tell you the exact price of.
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malignantrog · 10 months ago
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😁
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pumpkinrootbeer · 6 days ago
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No photo sums these two up better
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Mikko's hair poking out every where. Mikko just the embodiment of the :D emoji meanwhile Nate is 😮‍💨 "nothing to smile about in my life"ing it up over there next to the most whimsical guy in the league
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bruciemilf · 3 months ago
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Okay fine I’ll draw the butch fem Thomas art. since I have the biggest dick here
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rocketqueen1989x · 2 months ago
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STOP HE’S SO CUTE 😢😢😢
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coochiequeens · 8 days ago
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Rest In Peace Debrina Kawam
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/31/nyregion/coney-island-subway-burning-victim-identified.html
Debrina Kawam of Toms River, N.J., was burned alive on Dec. 22 in a videotaped killing that shocked New York.
By Chelsia Rose MarciusAndy Newman and Shayla Colon
Published Dec. 31, 2024 Updated Jan. 1, 2025
Investigators have learned the name of a woman who was burned alive — and beyond recognition — aboard a Brooklyn train last week.
The police identified the woman as Debrina Kawam of Toms River, N.J. She was the victim of an apparently random attack captured in videos that showed her bracing herself against the doorway of an F train in Coney Island, her body engulfed by flames. Sebastian Zapeta-Calil, 33, has been accused of setting fire to Ms. Kawam with a lighter and was charged with first-degree murder and arson.
Ms. Kawam’s identity was confirmed on Monday through fingerprint analysis, said Julie Bolcer, a spokeswoman for the city medical examiner’s office. Ms. Kawam was 57, though police officials initially had said she was 61.
Mayor Eric Adams said at a news conference at City Hall on Tuesday that she briefly stayed in the city’s homeless shelter system. “No matter where she lived, that should not have happened,” Mr. Adams said.
Just watching that tape — I couldn’t even watch it all the way through,” he added.
Investigators had used every means possible to identify the woman, the Brooklyn district attorney, Eric Gonzalez, said at a news conference last week. They took her fingerprints and collected DNA evidence. They gathered surveillance footage from the subways, hoping to find a clear image of the woman’s face before the fire.
The fragmentary traces Ms. Kawam left behind in yearbooks and public records sketch a troubled life.
She appeared to have graduated from Passaic Valley Regional High School in Little Falls, N.J., four decades ago. Her yearbook entry from 1985 — illustrated with a photo of her with long, feathered hair — mentioned memories of freshman and sophomore cheerleading and trips to the shore. It listed her ambition as airline stewardess and said that her “secret ambition” was “to party forever.” In a senior poll, she was one of three girls voted “most punk” and one of three girls voted “million-dollar smile.”
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A 1985 yearbook photo shows Debrina Kawam, the victim of an apparently random attack on the New York subway.
Credit...US School Yearbook
According to Ms. Kawam’s Facebook profile, she studied business and marketing at Montclair State University; a spokesman for the school said Wednesday that he could not immediately confirm her attendance. From 2000 to 2002, when she was in her 30s, Ms. Kawam was a customer service representative for the New Jersey-based pharmaceutical giant Merck, a company spokeswoman said.
But municipal court records going back 20 years include dozens of minor cases against a Debrina Kawam in cities and towns along the Jersey Shore, in Jersey City and in the suburbs of New York. Most were citations for public drinking, trespassing or disorderly conduct, including the most recent, in July, for public drinking in Atlantic City.
Homelessness in America
Jump in Homelessness: Homelessness soared to the highest level on record in 2024, driven by high rents, stagnant wages and a surge in migrants seeking asylum, the federal government reported.
A Search for Meaning: Religion is often overlooked as a factor in the lives of the needy, but those who gather at a Bible study for the homeless in Virginia say it helps sustain them.
Berkeley’s Toughened Stance: The progressive stronghold in California plans to target large homeless encampments, relying on a Supreme Court decision handed down by a conservative majority.
In a 2008 bankruptcy filing, she wrote that she had not been working “due to illness.” After her father, William Kawam, died in 2009, she posted on a tribute page that he was the best father a daughter could have had, and that “I will always regret that it took me later in life to figure that out.”
Roxann Krammer, a Toms River resident, said that her late husband, George Krammer, had been Ms. Kawam’s romantic partner from about 2011 to 2014 and that they had lived together. The relationship, her husband had told her, had been chaotic.
The police gave an address for Ms. Kawam in Toms River, a small, gray one-story home that had been owned by the victim’s mother in a sprawling retirement community. A neighbor said that until the house was sold in 2024, she would see an older woman and someone Ms. Kawam’s age coming and going.
The older woman seemed to be taking care of the younger woman, who appeared disabled, and would lead her by the hand, said the neighbor, Valerie Waskiewicz.
“I had the impression that the older woman had her hands full taking care of the younger woman,” she said.
The current owner of the home, Olga Corpion, said she had never met Ms. Kawam or her mother, but that in May, shortly after she moved in, a stranger came to her door.
“She said ‘I’m Debrina, I want to see my mother,’” Ms. Corpion recalled. Ms. Corpion said it seemed odd that someone would not know that her mother had moved and Ms. Corpion said that Ms. Kawam seemed troubled. She said she offered to call Ms. Kawam with information about her mother, but Ms. Kawam told her she had no phone and quickly left.
Ms. Kawam was in New York City as early as April 28, when the police issued her a summons in Midtown Manhattan for drinking on a public sidewalk, according to city records. She was scheduled to appear in June, but did not show up. Her social service records show that she stayed at a women’s shelter in the Bronx from Nov. 30 to Dec. 2.
On Dec. 22, around 7:30 a.m., Ms. Kawam was sitting motionless on a subway train, apparently asleep, when Mr. Zapeta-Calil walked up, took out a lighter and set her on fire, according to prosecutors and the police. He then stepped out of the train and sat on a bench on the subway platform, staring as the smoke and flames overwhelmed Ms. Kawam, the police said.
Then, video of the incident shows a man who appears to be Mr. Zapeta-Calil rising and approaching Ms. Kawam. Instead of trying to douse the blaze, he waves a shirt at her, appearing to fan the flames. At least one police officer can be seen walking by her as people on the platform scream.
Officers who came to the scene did not appear to focus on Mr. Zapeta-Calil sitting on the bench as they tended to Ms. Kawam. But their body cameras had captured him and the clothes he wore: a gray, hooded sweatshirt; a wool hat; tan boots; and paint-splattered pants.
The Police Department released the photos publicly and soon after, three teenagers called 911. They said they had recognized Mr. Zapeta-Calil from the photos and that he was aboard another train in Brooklyn. The police ordered the train stopped and arrested him.
The authorities do not believe Ms. Kawam and Mr. Zapeta-Calil knew each other. She was already on the train when he boarded it in Queens, and they both rode to the end of the line in Coney Island, the official added, according to a law enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity. People often sleep on subway trains in cold weather; the outside temperature on the morning Ms. Kawam was killed was 16 degrees.
Mr. Zapeta-Calil is an undocumented immigrant from Guatemala who was deported in 2018 only to illegally return to the United States, according to federal immigration officials.
The suspect had been living for the past couple of months at a shelter in Brooklyn for men with drug and alcohol problems, according to the police and residents of the shelter. A grand jury indicted him last week on first-degree murder, second-degree murder and arson charges.
After Mr. Zapeta-Calil’s arrest, federal officials issued two immigration detainers, according to Jeffrey Carter, a spokesman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Detainers are requests to the police and the city Department of Correction that they notify the federal agency before Mr. Zapeta-Calil’s court case is done and is released from jail.
City sanctuary laws prevent city agencies from sharing immigration information about defendants with federal officials, including when they will be released from police custody or from jail. However, the laws let the agencies tell ICE about noncitizens who have been convicted of any of 177 serious offenses, including rape and felony assault.
Susan C. Beachy contributed research. Shayla Colon reported from Toms River, N.J.
Chelsia Rose Marcius is a criminal justice reporter for The Times, covering the New York Police Department. More about Chelsia Rose Marcius
Andy Newman writes about New Yorkers facing difficult situations, including homelessness, poverty and mental illness. He has been a journalist for more than three decades. More about Andy Newman
Shayla Colon is a reporter covering New York City and a member of the 2024-25 Times Fellowship class, a program for journalists early in their careers. More about Shayla Colon
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elvisbooty76 · 8 months ago
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btsstaysgold · 9 months ago
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Seokjin's got the type of beauty that makes you wanna stop and STARE for hours..
(crtto)
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zu-is-here · 1 year ago
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<– • –>
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minarcana · 1 year ago
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not to objectify a guy or reduce a man to his appearance but heeeey hiiiii
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pianokantzart · 10 months ago
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Do you think whenever a villain or anyone of royal status just folds when they first meet Luigi? Imagine the Mushroom Kingdom having some diplomatic meeting or something and there are a bunch of Royals in the room, good and evil alike, and Mario and Luigi are there too cause Peach wants em to be there. Then one of the Kings sees Luigi, just sitting there kicking his legs cause his feet don't touch the ground, wide eyed puppy face and adorable moustache.
Next thing you know, every single royal in the room has their attention on the green plumber.
Actually, I think it's a slow burn every single time.
One of Luigi's most prevalent traits is his ability to slide under the radar. He's got a way about him that's like catnip to royalty and individuals of power, but only when they take a moment to examine him a little closer. He's a diamond in the rough, but the moment someone realizes how valuable that diamond is they'll go to extreme lengths to either protect it or claim it as their own.
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