#suggadaddy
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karensitacx · 6 years ago
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I wish someone would magically Venmo money to my account 😭 that would be a dream come true!!
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oursismyfavorite · 7 years ago
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ISO
sugar daddy 
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suggleeimagine-blog · 8 years ago
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Oh man... :D
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delige · 8 years ago
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Ready Stock, GOD BLESS. ✅✅✅ WHATSAPP : 📲 17866247313 MADE IN USA.. Wanna have perfectly smooth healthy skin without having to go through a whole process? FREE shipping. Try @deluge I 👌🏻👌🏻promise you won’t ever let it go. 😊😊 www.delugecosmetics.com 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻 #bodyblendz#peeling #suggadaddy #loveit #bloggerlife #blogger#coffeesrub #goodskin #instagood #instacool#beautyday #like4like #photooftheday #follow4follow#lovescrubs #photooftheday #healthybody#coffeescrub #blogger_de
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fishycynn-blog · 6 years ago
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arrivedercitristezzabr · 3 years ago
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Let me be your Suggadaddy my Latin beauty
You can be whatever you want.
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lalaxo · 4 years ago
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i want me a suggadaddy 🥺🥺
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faketextstuff · 4 years ago
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I apologize for not being around at all the past year. I've been dealing with some family health issues along with battling my depression. I was struggling on deciding if I should continue writing here or just give up. However my OCD will not allow me to leave things unfinished so if you all are still interested, I'd like to continue the Suggadaddy story and all the others I've promised you. Hope you are all well! I've missed you all!
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vivalapaz5 · 8 years ago
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Lighting up #Cathedrals for you all 👆#Basilicas 🏛#Churches 💒 #Temples 🕌 #Mosques 🕍 Sending you ✌️+ 💕+ #Prayers 🙌 Y'all gave me like #Tenthousand #Prayer #Petitions ✍🏼 when in #Rome 🇻🇦 #Prayers will be answered con #SuggaDaddy 💫 United in Prayers 🙏🏼always #VivaLaVida 🕊 If you need #Prayer ✔️Ya know I'll #Lightit up for you 👊🏻 (at Rome, Italy)
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lindyhunt · 6 years ago
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Everything That Upset the Internet This Week
What is the web-o-sphere angry about this week? A pop star who claimed her lyrics will solve racism, the meaning behind the MAGA hat and a Latina actress who’s being called “anti-black.” Here’s everything you need to know.
Ariana Grande Responds to “7 Rings” Backlash With a Fan Comment
THE STORY: Everyone from 2 Chainz to Soulja Boy to Princess Nokia has taken issue with the lyrics, beat and video for “7 Rings,” Ariana Grande’s recently released single about popping Champagne, splurging at Tiffany’s and being unapologetically rich.
“Does that sound familiar to you? ‘Cause that sound really familiar to me. Oh my god!” Princess Nokia said in a since-deleted video. “Ain’t that the lil’ song I made about brown women and their hair? Hmm… sounds about white.”
Grande then (seemingly in response) reposted a fan’s Instagram Story about why the “7 Rings” hair lyric—’You like my hair? Gee, thanks, just bought it…’—was justified: “White women talking about their weaves is how we’re gonna solve racism,” wrote the Instagram user. Grande added that she had “so much love” for the fan, finishing the sentiment with a signature Ari black heart emoji.
  View this post on Instagram
  This #PostAndDelete by #ArianaGrande has fans upset because they feel she’s missing the point of the backlash. Meanwhile, #ScooterBraun says #7Rings has hit a record on #Spotify (See previous posts)
A post shared by The Shade Room (@theshaderoom) on Jan 19, 2019 at 11:32am PST
Grande’s story was quickly taken down—but not before it was screen capped and shared across the web.
THE REACTION:
When black women wear weave it’s ghetto and trash and we’re bald but now miss Ariana says that corny ass line everyone and their mom is hype ab it. I love Ariana but bitch NO. @arianagrande
— oh k . (@xchancelorswife) January 19, 2019
Soo i show up to twitter seeing that Ariana grande said white women talking about weaves will end racism….. pic.twitter.com/5emt6Inrdz
— Amen & Gin (@_HeavensAngel_) January 20, 2019
@ArianaGrande please delete ur story and apologise. it was really insensitive. if it was meant seriously or sarcastically, it doesn’t matter, it was wrong of u to post something like that.
— lola (@styIesdrew) January 19, 2019
RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE RAGE: Grande slid into the comments section of The Shade Room’s post, leaving a heartfelt apology. “Hi hi,” she wrote. “I think her intention was to be like… yay a white person disassociating the negative stariotype [sic] that is paired with the word ‘weave’… however I’m so sorry my response was out of pocket or if it came across the wrong way. Thanks for opening the conversation and like… to everyone for talking to me about it. It’s never my intention to offend anybody.”
A quick delete, apology and statement of appreciation for the communal conversation when she missteps—she has this whole backlash response thing down to a formula, doesn’t she? Besides, was there really ever any doubt that Ariana Grande’s hair is real…
Fox News Compares Judging MAGA Hat to Blaming Rape Victims’ Outfits
THE STORY: So you know those MAGA hat-wearing Kentucky teens who taunted an indigenous elder at a Washington protest? Of course you do. They’ve been the centre of the news cycle for the past week: the clip went viral, different narratives were spun on each side of the political spectrum and Nicholas Sandmann, “The MAGA Hat Boy,” was invited to share his non-apology on the Today Show. And then, Fox News’ The Five hopped in on the conversation to state that judging these young boys based on their Trump-affiliated merch is comparable to judging a victim of sexual assault based on their outfit at the time of the crime.
“What kills me is the idea [that], if you’re wearing something, you had it coming. We’ve learned that that’s not what you say to people,” said host Greg Gutfeld.
THE REACTION:
Aren't the Fox viewers and pundits usually the people that would do that anyways?
— Area Man | UTE (@veggiescott) January 24, 2019
#FOXNews used rape victims to defend RACIST #MAGA teens
The MAGA hat is an open embrace of #Trumpism and everything he stands for — which is BIGOTRY, XENOPHOBIA, ETHNIC CLEANSING, CORRUPTION, and HATRED.
LIKE DONNING a SWASTIKA#MOG https://t.co/3Sx79N2cf2
— Michael O'Grady (@mog7546) January 24, 2019
What does a MAGA hat signify? Does a pair of “provocative clothes” scream racism, misogyny, and other bullshit? Just say you’re a rape victim-blamer and go.
— 권치용 | 秋 (@californiaaki) January 24, 2019
RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE RAGE: The commentators are right on one thing: you should never judge a woman’s choice of clothing when a violent crime is committed against her. What they’ve done here, however, is set up a false equivalence. The MAGA hat is not a meaningless piece of apparel—and as far as I’ve heard, a mini skirt or tube top isn’t widely perceived to express hateful views towards marginalized people. (A Zara jacket with the words “I REALLY DON’T CARE, DO U?” scrawled on the back, however, shares its message loud and clear.)
When people put on that red cap, they know the message they’re sending. It’s really no different than any other baseball hat: when you’re wearing a blue Maple Leaf on your forehead, you’re signalling to those around you that, for whatever reason, you’re a fan of Toronto’s hockey team. Wearing a MAGA hat aligns you with the president’s exclusionist policies and hateful rhetoric, and if you’re putting one on, you should know that—even if you’re a 17-year-old high school student.
Gina Rodriguez Addresses Accusations of Being Anti-Black With Tears
THE STORY: Back in November, Porter‘s “Women in Television” roundtable with actresses Gina Rodriguez, Gabrielle Union, Ellen Pompeo, and Emma Roberts went viral online. Pompeo was praised for calling out the lack of diversity in the room, while Rodriguez caught heat for commenting on the intersectional aspect of the gender pay gap in America.
“White women get paid more than black women, black women get paid more than Asian women, Asian women get paid more than Latina women,” Rodriguez said. “It’s like a very scary space to step into.”
Her statement sparked backlash, with many accusing the Golden Globe-winning Jane the Virgin star of being “anti-black” and pitting POC women against one another. Months later, during an appearance on Sway in the Morning, she broke down into tears as addressed the controversy.
“The backlash was devastating, to say the least,” said Rodriguez. “The black community was the only community I looked towards growing up. We didn’t have many Latino shows and the black community made me feel like I was seen. So to get anti-black is to say I’m anti-family.”
THE REACTION:
Listen @HereIsGina I really wanted to empathize I did but you’re just deflecting instead of being accountable. Instead of rationalizing what you said (re: white & asian community didn’t get offended) look at the moments that the black community DID. pic.twitter.com/nyjXMziuiu
— 🍯 COME GET YOUR HONEY 🍯 (@SUGGADADDY) January 23, 2019
Gina Rodriguez on Black Panther vs Crazy Rich Asians….she really is terrible pic.twitter.com/BYDIJS1bhh
— tk (@foswina) January 23, 2019
gina rodriguez: *is anti black, constantly puts black women down to favor “all women”, probably doesn’t know the difference between race and ethnicity*
gina rodriguez when she gets called out on it: pic.twitter.com/7RhSPp46Gu
— skinty (@KIMPOSSIHOE) January 23, 2019
RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE RAGE: Cancel culture is toxic, and it pushes people to become defensive. But regardless of intention, Rodriguez’s words hurt, and she should have done was listened to that and taken accountability for her comments—rather than making excuses.
“Gina Rodriguez is really really really really ignorant, socially unaware, dismissive with black issues, and entitled,” writes Twitter user @culieatumami, “BUT I don’t think she’s necessarily hateful. I think she needs to talk less and listen more.”
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alexisbbi · 7 years ago
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someone intrested to be my freckin suggadaddy and just send me money and buy me stuff wtf
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demonphannie · 8 years ago
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you bet dan is buying phil that cake. he's the suggadaddy now.
that is so satisfying.. buy phil more cakes dan if ur reading this
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delige · 7 years ago
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CHOCOLATE BODY SCRUB 100% NATURAL. Firm Skin*Anti-Aging* Moisturizing* Antioxidant* Stimulate Cell Renewal. Great for Spa’s or Home Use. Made with Real Cacao Nibs, Cocoa Powder, COCOA BUTTER, DEAD SEA SALT, PARABEN AND ALCOHOL FREE. 100% NATURAL. Ready Stock, GOD BLESS. ✅✅✅ WHATSAPP : 📲 17866247313 MADE IN USA.. Wanna have perfectly smooth healthy skin without having to go through a whole process? FREE shipping. Try @deluge I 👌🏻👌🏻promise you won’t ever let it go. 😊😊 www.delugecosmetics.com 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻 #bodyblendz#peeling #suggadaddy #loveit #bloggerlife #blogger#coffeesrub #goodskin #instagood #instacool#beautyday #like4like #photooftheday #follow4follow#lovescrubs #photooftheday #healthybody#coffeescrub #blogger_de
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baejiminjin · 7 years ago
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12th original moodboard |~| SO FAR AWAY |~| JUNGKOOK~JIN~SUGA |~| @hobitaki @kook-tae @jungkxook @wiseok @jinsasleep @sugaswagdaddy @suggadaddy @seokijn
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jessicakehoe · 6 years ago
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Everything That Upset the Internet This Week
What is the web-o-sphere angry about this week? A pop star who claimed her lyrics will solve racism, the meaning behind the MAGA hat and a Latina actress who’s being called “anti-black.” Here’s everything you need to know.
Ariana Grande Responds to “7 Rings” Backlash With a Fan Comment
THE STORY: Everyone from 2 Chainz to Soulja Boy to Princess Nokia has taken issue with the lyrics, beat and video for “7 Rings,” Ariana Grande’s recently released single about popping Champagne, splurging at Tiffany’s and being unapologetically rich.
“Does that sound familiar to you? ‘Cause that sound really familiar to me. Oh my god!” Princess Nokia said in a since-deleted video. “Ain’t that the lil’ song I made about brown women and their hair? Hmm… sounds about white.”
Grande then (seemingly in response) reposted a fan’s Instagram Story about why the “7 Rings” hair lyric—’You like my hair? Gee, thanks, just bought it…’—was justified: “White women talking about their weaves is how we’re gonna solve racism,” wrote the Instagram user. Grande added that she had “so much love” for the fan, finishing the sentiment with a signature Ari black heart emoji.
  View this post on Instagram
  This #PostAndDelete by #ArianaGrande has fans upset because they feel she’s missing the point of the backlash. Meanwhile, #ScooterBraun says #7Rings has hit a record on #Spotify (See previous posts)
A post shared by The Shade Room (@theshaderoom) on Jan 19, 2019 at 11:32am PST
Grande’s story was quickly taken down—but not before it was screen capped and shared across the web.
THE REACTION:
When black women wear weave it’s ghetto and trash and we’re bald but now miss Ariana says that corny ass line everyone and their mom is hype ab it. I love Ariana but bitch NO. @arianagrande
— oh k . (@xchancelorswife) January 19, 2019
Soo i show up to twitter seeing that Ariana grande said white women talking about weaves will end racism….. pic.twitter.com/5emt6Inrdz
— Amen & Gin (@_HeavensAngel_) January 20, 2019
@ArianaGrande please delete ur story and apologise. it was really insensitive. if it was meant seriously or sarcastically, it doesn’t matter, it was wrong of u to post something like that.
— lola (@styIesdrew) January 19, 2019
RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE RAGE: Grande slid into the comments section of The Shade Room’s post, leaving a heartfelt apology. “Hi hi,” she wrote. “I think her intention was to be like… yay a white person disassociating the negative stariotype [sic] that is paired with the word ‘weave’… however I’m so sorry my response was out of pocket or if it came across the wrong way. Thanks for opening the conversation and like… to everyone for talking to me about it. It’s never my intention to offend anybody.”
A quick delete, apology and statement of appreciation for the communal conversation when she missteps—she has this whole backlash response thing down to a formula, doesn’t she? Besides, was there really ever any doubt that Ariana Grande’s hair is real…
Fox News Compares Judging MAGA Hat to Blaming Rape Victims’ Outfits
THE STORY: So you know those MAGA hat-wearing Kentucky teens who taunted an indigenous elder at a Washington protest? Of course you do. They’ve been the centre of the news cycle for the past week: the clip went viral, different narratives were spun on each side of the political spectrum and Nicholas Sandmann, “The MAGA Hat Boy,” was invited to share his non-apology on the Today Show. And then, Fox News’ The Five hopped in on the conversation to state that judging these young boys based on their Trump-affiliated merch is comparable to judging a victim of sexual assault based on their outfit at the time of the crime.
“What kills me is the idea [that], if you’re wearing something, you had it coming. We’ve learned that that’s not what you say to people,” said host Greg Gutfeld.
THE REACTION:
Aren't the Fox viewers and pundits usually the people that would do that anyways?
— Area Man | UTE (@veggiescott) January 24, 2019
#FOXNews used rape victims to defend RACIST #MAGA teens
The MAGA hat is an open embrace of #Trumpism and everything he stands for — which is BIGOTRY, XENOPHOBIA, ETHNIC CLEANSING, CORRUPTION, and HATRED.
LIKE DONNING a SWASTIKA#MOG https://t.co/3Sx79N2cf2
— Michael O'Grady (@mog7546) January 24, 2019
What does a MAGA hat signify? Does a pair of “provocative clothes” scream racism, misogyny, and other bullshit? Just say you’re a rape victim-blamer and go.
— 권치용 | 秋 (@californiaaki) January 24, 2019
RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE RAGE: The commentators are right on one thing: you should never judge a woman’s choice of clothing when a violent crime is committed against her. What they’ve done here, however, is set up a false equivalence. The MAGA hat is not a meaningless piece of apparel—and as far as I’ve heard, a mini skirt or tube top isn’t widely perceived to express hateful views towards marginalized people. (A Zara jacket with the words “I REALLY DON’T CARE, DO U?” scrawled on the back, however, shares its message loud and clear.)
When people put on that red cap, they know the message they’re sending. It’s really no different than any other baseball hat: when you’re wearing a blue Maple Leaf on your forehead, you’re signalling to those around you that, for whatever reason, you’re a fan of Toronto’s hockey team. Wearing a MAGA hat aligns you with the president’s exclusionist policies and hateful rhetoric, and if you’re putting one on, you should know that—even if you’re a 17-year-old high school student.
Gina Rodriguez Addresses Accusations of Being Anti-Black With Tears
THE STORY: Back in November, Porter‘s “Women in Television” roundtable with actresses Gina Rodriguez, Gabrielle Union, Ellen Pompeo, and Emma Roberts went viral online. Pompeo was praised for calling out the lack of diversity in the room, while Rodriguez caught heat for commenting on the intersectional aspect of the gender pay gap in America.
“White women get paid more than black women, black women get paid more than Asian women, Asian women get paid more than Latina women,” Rodriguez said. “It’s like a very scary space to step into.”
Her statement sparked backlash, with many accusing the Golden Globe-winning Jane the Virgin star of being “anti-black” and pitting POC women against one another. Months later, during an appearance on Sway in the Morning, she broke down into tears as addressed the controversy.
“The backlash was devastating, to say the least,” said Rodriguez. “The black community was the only community I looked towards growing up. We didn’t have many Latino shows and the black community made me feel like I was seen. So to get anti-black is to say I’m anti-family.”
THE REACTION:
Listen @HereIsGina I really wanted to empathize I did but you’re just deflecting instead of being accountable. Instead of rationalizing what you said (re: white & asian community didn’t get offended) look at the moments that the black community DID. pic.twitter.com/nyjXMziuiu
— 🍯 COME GET YOUR HONEY 🍯 (@SUGGADADDY) January 23, 2019
Gina Rodriguez on Black Panther vs Crazy Rich Asians….she really is terrible pic.twitter.com/BYDIJS1bhh
— tk (@foswina) January 23, 2019
gina rodriguez: *is anti black, constantly puts black women down to favor “all women”, probably doesn’t know the difference between race and ethnicity*
gina rodriguez when she gets called out on it: pic.twitter.com/7RhSPp46Gu
— skinty (@KIMPOSSIHOE) January 23, 2019
RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE RAGE: Cancel culture is toxic, and it pushes people to become defensive. But regardless of intention, Rodriguez’s words hurt, and she should have done was listened to that and taken accountability for her comments—rather than making excuses.
“Gina Rodriguez is really really really really ignorant, socially unaware, dismissive with black issues, and entitled,” writes Twitter user @culieatumami, “BUT I don’t think she’s necessarily hateful. I think she needs to talk less and listen more.”
The post Everything That Upset the Internet This Week appeared first on FASHION Magazine.
Everything That Upset the Internet This Week published first on https://borboletabags.tumblr.com/
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