WELL THIS HAS BEEN A FUCKING TRIP OF A FIVE MONTHS
ASK ME ABOUT IT SOMETIME, BECAUSE I WON’T FUCKING TELL YOU
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one of my friends found radiooooo which is a site that streams music from any country from any decade (well, most countries/decade combos work) and we’ve been digging going on a quest to find what is rad
so far the following is good
50s/60s/70s/80s russia
70s cambodia
20s japan
80s ethiopia
80s india
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Zuma, Goldendoodle (12 w/o), Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu, CA • “He doesn’t like when other dogs bark – he’ll stop and sit in awe.” Dogs of @nbcheartbeat
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👼💀
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Correlation perhaps
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this embodies my existence
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In the first five minutes of the film, the throughlines of Cher’s wardrobe are established: bright or rich colors, plaids, and some variation on the four Fs: feathers, fuzz, fur, or frills, which all tend to highlight her fussy nature and princess-like attitude. (…)
Her entire wardrobe suddenly changes almost exclusively to romantic pinks and lavenders as she tries to make herself into a better person, a person worthy of Josh. There are no frills here, no ruffles or feathers, no plaids or thigh-highs, no bright or rich colors. Pastels—and especially pinks—are not just the colors of romance for Cher, they’re the colors of maturity and growth as well. (…)
This final bit of costuming illustrates why Clueless has had such long-lasting impact and has inspired fond memories for an entire generation of viewers. Clueless isn’t a film about vapid mean girls or trendy fashion or even about young women pinning all their hopes and self-esteem on finding love. It’s Cher Horowitz’s coming-of-age story, plain and simple.
- ‘Clueless’ style: a fashion analysis of the best teen movie of all time by Tom and Lorenzo
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Over the 400 years since Shakespeare’s death, the pronunciation of English has changed so much that we’re not getting the full flavor, or full meaning, of Shakespeare’s poetry.
David and Ben Crystal, a father and son team, have recreated what they say is Shakespeare’s original pronunciation, or OP, as they call it — how Shakespeare’s plays would have been sounded around 1600.
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Jason Isaacs visits the Wizarding World of Harry Potter.
I like how he casually walks there and nobody pays him any attention because he is unrecognizable without his blond wig ^^.
Bonus:
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