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mr-walkingrainbow · 3 years
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How I saw that one scene in the begining of season 4 ep 3 of the good Doctor
handsome fireman with chest exposed : Ha ha, flirting, I'm handsome, I'm a flirting handsome fireman.
Morgan reznick actually in the show : Heh heh, cool, smiles back.
Me, Audibly, Out loud, speaking for Morgan : No thanks, I'm GAY!
*Bonus
Morgan Legit in the show later on : I've watched Wicked 50+ times. Also I'm a theater nerd.
Me whispering in pure awe and worship :
~ L e s b i a n ~
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Season 4 of The Good Doctor needs to have:
Claire and Audrey both getting the support they need as they grieve, both from one another and the rest of the characters
Claire continuing her therapy
Morgan soul searching and finding a new passion in medicine
Shaun and Lea actually having healthy discussions about the shit they did to each other in 3x16-18 and mutually apologizing
Glassman finally accepting Lea and no longer being so petty towards her
Carly, even if it’s just one or two scenes here and there. She’s still supposed to be head of Pathology. Breaking up with Shaun doesn’t mean she doesn’t exist.
Claire and Morgan helping each other as they cope with their respective loss
GOOD THINGS HAPPENING FOR CLAIRE AND LASTING BECAUSE OUR GIRL DESERVES A BREAK
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LINES HAVE BEEN CROSSED ON THE MIDSEASON RETURN OF ABC’S ‘THE GOOD DOCTOR,’ MONDAY, JAN. 13 “Fractured” – Following his father’s death, Shaun must deal with the effects his intimacy with Lea will have on his relationship with Carly. Meanwhile, the team operates on a patient who is refusing all anesthesia during surgery for fear of relapsing, on the midseason return episode of “The Good Doctor,” MONDAY, JAN. 13 (10:00-11:00 p.m. EST), on ABC. Episodes can also be viewed the next day on ABC.com, the ABC app and Hulu. The series stars Freddie Highmore as Dr. Shaun Murphy, Antonia Thomas as Dr. Claire Browne, Nicholas Gonzalez as Dr. Neil Melendez, Hill Harper as Dr. Marcus Andrews, Richard Schiff as Dr. Aaron Glassman, Christina Chang as Dr. Audrey Lim, Fiona Gubelmann as Dr. Morgan Reznick, Will Yun Lee as Dr. Alex Park, Paige Spara as Lea Dilallo and Jasika Nicole as Dr. Carly Lever. Guest starring is Milauna Jemai Jackson as Kerry Gaston, Moises Arias as Luca Jones, Kelly-Ruth Mercier as Dr. Donna Malkin, Adil Zaidi as Nurse Mag Dhanoa and Elfina Luk as Nurse Villanueva. “Fractured” was written by Mark Rozeman and directed by Gary Hawes.
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rubes6 · 2 years
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The entourage of Marie-Antoinette Katoto confirms to me that the player would be on the departure. That's not all Sara Däbritz , Sandy Baltimore, Aminata Diallo and Lea Khelifi are also likely to leave. There is a chance to retain them but it will be necessary to be persuasive.
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saucyboulette · 5 years
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PSG Féminines walk around Reykjavik, Iceland, before tonight’s UWCL clash.
Source: PSG Féminines on Facebook
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Because I'm predictable, Bates Motel + 13/15 :)
Haha, I’ll tag you in it when it’s posted. Thanks for sending it in, lovely 😊
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anastocio · 2 years
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vimeo
BANTU WAX from Roberto Colombo on Vimeo.
Serene and chaotic; untouched and urban; rich, poor, old, new, sacred, sexy, wise, fast and funny — Africa: the continent some thought to be static was just unshakable.
Since its birth, Bantu has been made In Africa, by Africans, sustainably & fairly, and that will never change. What has changed is Africa...
With over 1 billion people, more than half under 20 years of age —Africa today is quite literally the future of the world — and the future of the world is made in Africa.
Inspired by Africa’s transition from Dark Continent to Bearer of Light, tales of the mermaid goddess of oceans Mami Wata, and a passion for surfing, Bantu merges the rich history of African art and textiles with Africa's deeply rooted surf culture.
Bantu is real beach-wear from the real Africa. 
Directed by Lea & Roberto Colombo Edit by Will Town @ Modern Post Colour by Joseph Bicknell @ Company 3 Animation by ANA Projects Sound Mixing by Daniel Lidchi Creative by Look Studios Creative Director Brendan Dunne Styling by Isabella Meija-Bruton Featuring Babou Gueye, Ibra Samb, Yoro Ciam, Papa Diallo
Shot on Location in Dakar, Senegal
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nerdyjoq · 2 years
Video
vimeo
BANTU WAX from Roberto Colombo on Vimeo.
Serene and chaotic; untouched and urban; rich, poor, old, new, sacred, sexy, wise, fast and funny — Africa: the continent some thought to be static was just unshakable.
Since its birth, Bantu has been made In Africa, by Africans, sustainably & fairly, and that will never change. What has changed is Africa...
With over 1 billion people, more than half under 20 years of age —Africa today is quite literally the future of the world — and the future of the world is made in Africa.
Inspired by Africa’s transition from Dark Continent to Bearer of Light, tales of the mermaid goddess of oceans Mami Wata, and a passion for surfing, Bantu merges the rich history of African art and textiles with Africa's deeply rooted surf culture.
Bantu is real beach-wear from the real Africa. 
Directed by Lea & Roberto Colombo Edit by Will Town @ Modern Post Colour by Joseph Bicknell @ Company 3 Animation by ANA Projects Sound Mixing by Daniel Lidchi Creative by Look Studios Creative Director Brendan Dunne Styling by Isabella Meija-Bruton Featuring Babou Gueye, Ibra Samb, Yoro Ciam, Papa Diallo
Shot on Location in Dakar, Senegal
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empressofkalumina · 4 years
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Adèle will be part of a panel discussion with Nadège Beausson-Diagne, and Rokhaya Diallo.
ABOUT THE EVENT (some excerpts via google translate, you can read the whole thing on the link provided)
Paul B. Preciado
A NEW HISTORY OF SEXUALITY
October 15 - 19, 2020, at 5:00 p.m.
Large hall, Small hall, Cinema 2, Forum - Center Pompidou, Paris
Free admission, limited seating available
Every year since 2017, the Center Pompidou has offered a guest intellectual the opportunity to develop a thought project. For the year 2020, the institution is pleased to welcome Paul B. Preciado: philosopher and curator, he is one of the most important contemporary thinkers in the studies of gender, sexual politics and the body. On this occasion, Paul B. Preciado offers a public and performative seminar around a new history of sexuality, more than forty years after the fundamental work of Michel Foucault. Started last March and interrupted by the coronavirus pandemic, the seminar returns in compact form from October 15 to 19, and is transformed into a “revolutionary cluster.”
“When we started the seminar at the Center Pompidou at the beginning of March, my objective was to make a new history of sexuality after Foucault, with Foucault and against Foucault. This new transfeminist, queer and anti-colonial history, starting from an analysis of the patriarchal and colonial infrastructure of modernity and intends to reflect on the ongoing transformations of technopolitical devices of violence and control of the living, but also on the different modalities of subjectivation critical. The first session was a huge constituent assembly of bodies against the norm. Then all of a sudden the virus and containment arrived. The sessions planned for the seminar have been suspended. The management of the virus has not only caused a health and economic crisis, but also a political and aesthetic crisis. 
On the one hand, inequalities and forms of control and violence against sexual, racial and migrant minorities were amplified during the crisis. The unexpected interruption of the rhythms of production and consumption of neoliberal capitalism has allowed us to experience another life. The death of George Floyd in the United States at the hands of the police, and the trial of Adama Traoré in France quickly generated waves of protests, followed by an international movement of criticism and demand for the restriction of racial violence and institutional sexuality, both on the part of the police and other state administrations, inequalities and forms of control and violence against sexual, racial and migrant minorities were magnified during the crisis.
In this context, I decided to modify the initial program and move from a new, more theoretical, solo story of sexuality to a choral narration of the current revolutionary process. It is now a question of appealing to a multiplicity of politically active voices and bodies, in writing, philosophy, cinema, dance, contemporary art, theater, music ... which participate in the dismantling of the patriarchal and colonial infrastructure of society.
Here are the voices and bodies of the CLUSTER:
Sarah Diehl comes to speak to us about the new reproductive emancipation movements and the responses to neofascist sexual policies in Poland, Hungary, as well as in other apparently democratic contexts. Maria Galindowill share with us the challenge of the struggles of indigenous sex workers in Bolivia. François Vergès, Elsa Dorlin and Elisabeth Lebovici will help us read this process of emancipation in the context of a longer history of decolonization of feminism and queer struggles. Nadège Beausson-Diagne, Adèle Haenel and Rokhaya Diallo invite us to proliferate anti-patriarchal and anti-racist strategies within cinematographic and audiovisual representation in France. Shu Lea Cheang presents a performance that criticizes gender, gender and racial discrimination in rape trials. Kengne Téguía denounces the supremacy of the valid body and calls for an urgent critical organization of feminist, trans and anti-racist movements with disabled minorities. Virginie Despentes, Yseult and Melissa Laveaux, with writing and music, give shape to anger and summon the forces of poetry as engines of transformation of desire. And Volmir Cordeiro and Pol Pi make the body wounded by patriarchal and colonial violence dance and begin to compose a dance for the coming revolution.” ---Paul B. Preciado
With:
Nadège Beausson-Diagne, actress
José Celestino Campusano, director
Shu Lea Cheang, artist
Volmir Cordeiro, choreographer
Virginie Despentes, writer and director
Rokhaya Diallo, journalist
Sarah Diehl, writer, filmmaker and activist from Berlin
Elsa Dorlin, philosopher
María Galindo, writer, artist and co-founder of the feminist collective Mujeres Creando in Bolivia
Adèle Haenel, actress
Mélissa Laveaux  singer and Canadian composer
Elisabeth Lebovici, art historian, journalist and art critic
Pol Pi, Brazilian choreographer
SMITH, photographer, filmmaker and visual artist
Kengné Téguia, artist
Françoise Vergès, political scientist
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tabloidtoc · 5 years
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Star, March 11
Cover: Justin Bieber Suicide Watch 
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Page 1: Miranda Lambert’s new husband is a cheating bad boy 
Page 2: Contents, Khloe Kardashian and Ashley Graham
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Page 3: Gwen Stefani and dog, Milo Ventimiglia, Rita Ora 
Page 4: Miley Cyrus may have tied the knot with Liam Hemsworth, but she is anything but settled down 
Page 6: Pamela Anderson will marry Adil Rami in a romantic summer ceremony, Chrissy Metz has gone off her weight-loss plan, Spot the Stars -- Jenna Dewan, G-Eazy, Geoffrey Zakarian, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Christina Milian, Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez, Paris Hilton 
Page 7: Fame by A.J. Benza -- As sexual misconduct allegations pile up Ryan Adams may have to cut his April tour short and self-release his own album, John Mayer thrown for a loop by Katy Perry’s engagement to Orlando Bloom, WWE star Paige of Fighting With My Family could have been dropped after she flunked her third drug test and fell victim to a leaked sex tape 
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Page 8: Wendy Williams feeling betrayed by her cheating husband and her talk show staffers who hate her 
Page 10: Star Shots -- Bobby Cannavale and Rose Byrne with their sons, Heidi Klum, Ramona Singer and Jill Zarin and Luann de Lesseps, Chloe Grace Moretz 
Page 12: Sienna Miller and Russell Crowe in costume for The Loudest Voice, Bella Hadid, Olivia Munn 
Page 13: Bailee Madison and Peyton List, Hugh Jackman 
Page 14: NeNe Leakes, Kim Kardashian and Chris Appleton, Matt Dillon 
Page 15: David Beckham with kids Romeo and Harper at Victoria Beckham’s fashion show in London, Halle Berry 
Page 16: Norman Reedus, Jamie Bell and pregnant Kate Mara and dog, Drew Barrymore 
Page 17: Taylor Kinney, Diane Keaton 
Page 20: Rebecca Romijn, Owen Wilson 
Page 21: Rebel Wilson and Priyanka Chopra Jonas and James Corden, Paris Hilton, Jake Gyllenhaal 
Page 22: Justin Timberlake, Elsa Pataky 
Page 23: Kendra Wilkinson and daughter, Trisha Yearwood 
Page 24: Normal or Not -- Sofia Richie and Scott Disick, Anna Kendrick and Ben Richardson
Page 25: Shaquille O’Neal and Hamidou Diallo, Jenna Dewan and daughter, Michael B. Jordan 
Page 26: Fashion -- Best of the Week -- Juana Acosta, Margot Robbie, Diane Kruger 
Page 27: Viola Davis, Cate Blanchett 
Page 28: Hot Sheet -- Melissa Gorga, Casey Cott 
Page 30: Cover Story -- Pals fear depressed Justin Bieber may end it all 
Page 32: It won’t be long before Jennifer Lawrence and Cooke Maroney welcome a baby 
Page 33: Camilla Duchess of Cornwall was horrified when Prince Charles downgraded her usual form of transportation and made her take a taxi, Rami Malek treats girlfriend Lucy Boynton like a queen 
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Page 34: Victoria Beckham turned to BFF Kate Beckinsale for advice on how to sex it up in the bedroom, Chris Pratt’s son Jack and ex Anna Faris are obsessed with stepmom-to-be Katherine Schwarzenegger, Love Bites: Lady Gaga and Christian Carino split, Lil Xan and Annie Smith are having a baby, Kaia Gerber cozying up with fellow model Wellington Grant, Kylie Jenner denied rumors that she and Travis Scott are engaged 
Page 36: For Kelly Clarkson life would suck without Reba McEntire 
Page 40: The celebrities were once the other woman -- Leann Rimes, Claire Danes 
Page 41: Alicia Keys, Kendall Jenner 
Page 42: Natalie Portman, Julia Roberts, Britney Spears 
Page 43: Angelina Jolie, Miranda Lambert, Gisele Bundchen 
Page 46: Burning Questions -- Why Jussie Smollett staged his attack, Teresa Giudice cheating on husband Joe, Blac Chyna and Soulja Boy have split already
Page 47: Jamie Lynn Spears’ baby daddy Casey Aldridge was found passed out behind the wheel of his car and charged with possession of oxycodone and lorazepam and Xanax and drug paraphernalia 
Page 48: Wicked Whispers -- Kanye West has started leading Sunday sermons at his guard-gated mansion, Ariana Grande and Sam Smith crying over their exes at Nobu Malibu, Lea Michele, Erika Jayne 
Page 49: Julianne Hough is over the moon at the money she’s making on America’s Got Talent which is $15 million for a three-year stint, Alec Baldwin didn’t lose his temper when tourists took his picture during lunch at the Polo Lounge, Blind Item 
Page 50: Double Takes -- Gwen Stefani vs. Jessica Biel 
Page 52: Style -- Pink -- Rihanna, Vanessa Hudgens, Zoe Kravitz, Emily Blunt
Page 53: Jennifer Lopez, Regina King, Rosy-Hued Eyelids -- Yara Shahidi, Emmy Rossum, Sophia Bush, Skyler Samuels 
Page 54: Beauty -- Miranda Kerr 
Page 56: Home -- Jessica Alba 
Page 58: Entertainment -- Leaving Neverland 
Page 59: Q&A with Luann De Lesseps 
Page 60: Sounding off with the cast of Russian Doll -- Natasha Lyonne, Rebecca Henderson, Chloe Sevigny, Ritesh Rajan 
Page 70: Wait, There’s More -- Jameela Jamil slams Karl Lagerfeld and upset Cara Delevingne, Khloe Kardashian betrayed by Tristan Thompson with Kylie Jenner’s BFF Jordyn Woods, Wise Words from Macaulay Culkin 
Page 72: Kate Walsh as host of the 21st Costume Designers Guild Awards
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tasksweekly · 5 years
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[TASK 138: SENEGAL]
In celebration of Senegalese Independence Day on April 4th, there’s a masterlist below compiled of over 190+ Senegalese 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 character 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:
Germaine Acogny (1944) 3/4 Senegalese, 1/4 Yoruba Nigerian - dancer and choreographer.
Marie-Madeleine Diallo (1948) Senegalese - actress and radio host.
M’Bissine T. Diop / Mbissine Thérèse Diop (1949) Senegalese - actress.
Anna Deavere Smith (1950) African-American [including Angolan, Cameroonian, Congolese, Ghanaian, Igbo Nigerian, Ivorian, Senegalese], British, remote Scandinavian, Finnish, Russian, Italian, Greek - actress and playwright.
Angela Bassett (1958) African-American [including Bantu Angolan, Beninese, Cameroonian, Congolese, Ghanaian, Ivorian, Malian, Nigerian, Senegalese, Togolese] - actress.
Karine Silla (1965) Senegalese / Breton - actress and filmmaker.
Toni Braxton (1967) African-American [including Beninese, Cameroonian, Congolese, Ghanaian, Ivorian, Nigerian, Senegalese, Togolese] - singer-songwriter, pianist, actress, tv personality, and producer.
Julia Sarr (1970) Serer Senegalese - singer.
Coumba Gawlo Seck (1972) Senegalese - singer.
Coumba Gawlo (1972) Senegalese - singer-songwriter, dancer, and composer.
Jenny B / Giovanna Bersola (1972) Senegalese / Sicilian - singer.
Nadège Beausson-Diagne (1972) Senegalese / Ivorian - actress, singer, and columnist.
Viviane Chidid (1973) Senegalese / Mauritanian, Malian - singer.
Jessica / Jessica Folcker (1975) Senegalese, Swedish - actress.
Aïssa Maïga (1975) Senegalese / Malian - actress and producer.
Fatou N'Diaye (1980) Senegalese - actress.
Estelle / Estelle Fanta Swaray (1980) Senegalese / Grenadian - singer, songwriter, record producer, and actress.
Penda Diouf (1981) Senegalese - actress and playwright.
Sister Fa / Fatou Diatta (1982) Senegalese - rapper.
Moona / Awa Mounaya Yanni (1983) Senegalese - rapper.
Safia Flowers / Jazz Schmahl / Safietou Schmahl (1983) Senegalese / German - singer.
Gabourey Sidibe (1983) Senegalese / African-American - actress.
Amina Pankey / Amina Buddafly / Amina Schmahl / Aminata Schmahl (1983) Senegalese / German - singer.
Aminata Niaria (1985) Senegalese - model.
Issa Rae (1985) Senegalese / African-American - actress, writer, director, and producer.
Marie Fuema (1987) Senegalese / Congolese - model.
Lorena Cesarini (1987) Senegalese - actress.
Anna Diop (1988) Senegalese - actress.
Maréma / Marième Fall (1988) Senegalese - singer.
Nianga Niang (1988) Senegalese - model.
Jessi M'Bengue (1989) Senegalese, Ivorian / Algerian - actress, model, and songwriter.
Jillian Hervey (1989) African-American [including Beninese, Cameroonian, Ghanaian, Togolese, Senegalese], English, Welsh, Irish, Finnish, Portuguese - singer and dancer.
Elizabeth Lejonhjärta (1990) Senegalese, Sierra Leonean, Gambian / Sami, Tornedalian, Swedish - model, blogger, social media personality, and writer.
Bruna N'Diaye (1990) Senegalese - mode.
Jenna Thiam (1990) Senegalese, English, French / Armenian, Belgian - musician.
Victoria Lejonhjärta (1990) Senegalese, Sierra Leonean, Gambian / Sami, Tornedalian, Swedish - model, blogger, social media personality, and writer.
Penda Ly (1991) Senegalese - model and Miss Senegal 2012.
Lea Soukeyna (1992) Senegalese - Instagrammer (leasndiaye).
Nar Codou Diouf (1993 or 1994) Senegalese - model and Miss Senegal 2017.
Fatou Jobe (1994) Senegalese - model.
Rose Bertram / Stephanie Bertram-Rose (1994) Senegalese, Angolan, Portuguese / Belgian [possibly Flemish] - model.
Mame Thiane Camara (1995) Senegalese - model.
Lily Maroune (1995) Senegalese, Mauritanian, Lebanese, French - Instagrammer (africancountess).
Aissatou Filly (1996) Senegalese - model and Miss Senegal 2018.
Khoudia Diop (1996) Senegalese - actress and model.
Awa Santesson-Sey (1997) Senegalese / Swedish - singer.
Ndeye Astou Thiam (1998) Senegalese, Malian - actress and model (Instagram: nastou_thiam)
Diarra Sylla (2001) Senegalese - singer, dancer and YouTuber.
Diarra Bae (2001) Senegalese - singer.
Mouna N’Diaye / Maimouna N'Diaye (?) Senegalese - actress and comedian.
Amy Mbengue (?) Senegalese - singer.
Candee Zarah Rue (?) Senegalese, Nigerian, Ethiopian, Onondaga, Cherokee, Sephardi Jewish - youtuber.
Abdoulaye NGom (?) Senegalese - actor.
Sophie Schmahl (?) Senegalese / German - singer.
Michelle Joseph (?) Senegalese - actress.
Titi / Ndeye Fatou (?) Senegalese - singer.
Magali Delion (?) Senegalese / German - model.
Queen Biz (?) Senegalese - singer.
Chabaa Fatiimaah (?) Senegalese - model and actress.
Aadjahrew (?) Senegalese - model and Instagrammer (aadjahrew).
Caprice (?) Senegalese - Instagrammer (mari.caprice).
Naomi Olivia (?) Senegalese - Instagrammer (naomilobouhet1).
Joyri Ward (?) Senegalese - Instagrammer (joyriward.
Baby Dabish (?) Senegalese - Instagrammer (baby_daba).
Khadiija Sall (?) Senegalese - Instagrammer (khadiijasall).
Marouche Diop (?) Senegalese - Instagrammer (marouchediop).
Adama (?) Senegalese - Instagrammer (adama_style_).
_itsamn (?) Senegalese - Instagrammer (_itsamn).
Aissatou Diop (?) Senegalese - Instagrammer (aissatuu_d).
Amy Soft (?) Senegalese - model and YouTuber (Instagram: amyy.soft).
Halima (?) Senegalese - model and actress (Instagram: _halima_7).
Rokhaya Niang (?) Senegalese  - actress.
Mariana Ramos (?) Senegalese - singer.
Anta / Anta Ndiaye (?) Senegalese / French - singer.
Fania Niang (?) Senegalese - singer.
Windela (?) Senegalese - model (Instagram: iamwindela).
Senegalesebarbie (?) Senegalese - model (Instagram: Senegalesebarbie).
Anyekuos_ (?) Senegalese - model (Instagram: anyekuos_).
Aya Gueye (?) Senegalese, Spanish - model (Instagram: a.y.a.gueye).
Alima Chimere (?) Senegalese - model (Instagram: aalima_chimere).
Arame Fall (?) Senegalese - model, actress and singer (Instagram: fallarame).
Mamita Garmi Diop (?) Senegalese, French - model (Instagram: mamitagarmi_).
Sparkle (?) Senegalese - model (Instagram: sparkletatiana).
Amsa (?) Senegalese - YouTuber (Amsa pour Elles).
Kinee Diouf (?) Senegalese - model.
Veronique Boubane (?) Senegalese - model.
Awa Diallo (?) Senegalese - model.
M:
Mor Thiam (1941) Toucouleur Senegalese - drummer and entertainment consultant.
Olu Dara / Olu Dara Jones / Charles Jones III (1941) African-American [including Beninese, Cameroonian, Congolese, Ghanaian, Ivorian, Malian, Yoruba Nigerian, Senegalese, Togolese] - singer, guitarist, and cornetist.
Idrissa Diop (1949) Senegalese - singer and musician.
Wasis Diop (1950) Senegalese - singer.
Mansour Seck (1950) Senegalese - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Abdoulaye Diakité (1950) Bambara Senegalese - drummer.
Souleymane Faye (1951) Senegalese - singer.
Idris / Edrissa Sanneh (1951) Senegalese - DJ and sports commentator.
Baaba Maal (1953) Senegalese - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and composer.
Modou Diop / Mamadou Diop (1954) Senegalese - singer, guitarist, and djembe player.
Cheikh Lô (1955) Senegalese - singer.
Thione Seck (1955) Senegalese - singer.
Ismaël Lô (1956) Senegalese / Nigerien - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and harmonicist.
Mola Sylla (1956) Senegalese - musician.
Omar Pene (1956) Senegalese - singer and composer.
Ismaila Sané / Ismaila Sané Badiane (1956) Senegalese - singer, percussionist, dancer, and choreographer.
Jimi Mbaye / Mamadou Mbaye (1957) Senegalese - guitarist, author, composer and singer.
Moussa Sène Absa (1958) Senegalese - filmmaker, actor, screenwriter and producer.
Youssou N’Dour (1959) Wolof Senegalese / Serer Senegalese - actor, singer-songwriter, and percussionist.
Meïssa Mbaye (1959) Senegalese - singer.
Fallou Dieng (1960) Senegalese - singer.
Courtney B. Vance (1960) African-American [including Cameroonian, Congolese, Ghanaian, Ivorian, Nigerian, Senegalese] - actor.
Mbaye Dieye Faye (1960) Senegalese - singer and percussionist.
Curtis Walker (1961) Senegalese - actor, comedian, and writer.
Ameth Male / Mohamed Maal (1963) Senegalese - singer and musician.
Solo Cissokho (1963) Senegalese - musician.
Don Cheadle (1964) African-American [including Angolan, Bamileke Nigerian, Ewondo Nigerian, Tikar Beninese, Masa Beninese, Guinean, Liberian, Senegalese] - actor, producer, director, and writer.
Alioune Mbaye Nder (1964) Senegalese - singer-songwriter.
MC Solaar / Claude M’Barali (1969) Senegalese / Chadian - rapper.
Didier Awadi (1969) Senegalese - rapper.
Gee Bayss (1970) Senegalese - rapper.
Diogal / Diogal Sakho (1970) Lebu Senegalese - singer.
Ablaye Cissoko (1970) Senegalese - singer, kora player, and composer.
Black Thought / Tariq Luqmaan Trotter (1971) African-American [including Mandinka Senegalese, Mende Sierra Leonean] - rapper.
Latyr Sy (1972) Senegalese - singer and percussionist.
Keyti / Cheikh Sène (1972) Senegalese - rapper.
Tam Jo / Tamsier Aviance / Tamsier Joof / Tamsier Joof Aviance (1973) Serer Senegalese / Serer Gambian - actor, model, dancer, radio presenter, choreographer, and author.
Baay Sooley / Souleymane Diagne (1973) Senegalese - rapper and dancer.
Nas / Nasty Nas / Nas Escobar / Nasir Bin Olu Dara Jones (1973) African-American [including Beninese, Cameroonian, Congolese, Ghanaian, Ivorian, Malian, Nigerian, Senegalese, Togolese] - rapper-songwriter, actor, and producer.
Pape Diouf / Pape Cheikh Diouf (1973) Senegalese - singer.
Foumalade / Malal Tall (1974) Senegalese - rapper, songwriter and performer.
Dadoo / Mamadou Daniel Camara (1974) Senegalese - rapper.
Faada Freddy / Abdou Fatha (1975) Senegalese - singer and rapper.
Fafadi (1975) Senegalese - singer and musician.
Tété / Niang Mahmoud Tété (1975) Senegalese / Martiniquais - singer and guitarist.
Lord Alajiman / El Hadj Mansour Jacques Sagna (1975) Senegalese - rapper.
Booba / Élie Yaffa (1976) Senegalese / Mosellan, Belgian, German, French - rapper.
Papis Loveday (1977) Senegalese - model.
Omar Sy (1978) Senegalese, Mauritanian, Fula - actor and comedian.
Disiz / Disiz la Peste / Disiz Peter Punk / Sérigne M'Baye Gueye (1978) Senegalese / Belgian - actor and rapper.
Lory Money (1978) Senegalese - singer.
Seckou Keita (1978) Senegalese / Malian - drummer and kora player.
Youssoupha / Youssoupha Mabiki (1979) Senegalese / Congolese - rapper.
Simon Bisbi Clan (1979) Senegalese - rapper.
Sefyu / Youssef Soukouna (1981) Senegalese - rapper.
K-ID / Rayane Fakih (1983) Senegalese - rapper.
Djibril Gueye (1983) Senegalese - actor.
Karim Ouellet (1984) Senegalese - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
I$$A / ISSA / Issa / Amadou Issa Diop (1984) Senegalese - singer-songwriter and producer.
Matador / Babacar Diagne (1984) Senegalese - rapper.
Lefa / Karim Fall (1985) Senegalese / French - rapper and dancer.
Wally Seck (1985) Senegalese - singer.
Barack Adama (1985) Senegalese - rapper.
Momo Dione (1986) Senegalese / Guinean - actor.
Moussier Tombola (1987) Senegalese - comedian.
Amadou Ly (1988) Senegalese - actor, producer, and writer.
Le1f / Khalif Diouf (1989) Senegalese / African-American - rapper and producer.
Ahmed Sylla (1990) Senegalese - actor and comedian.
Willy Cartier (1991) Senegalese, Vietnamese / French - actor, model, and dancer.
Alpha Dia (1992) Senegalese - model.
Mor Money (1992) Senegalese - YouTuber.
MHD / Mohamed Sylla (1994) Senegalese / Guinean - rapper.
Sheck Wes / Wes / Kid Khadi / Khadimou Rassoul Cheikh Fall (1998) Senegalese - rapper-songwriter and model.
Malick Bodian (1998) Senegalese - model.
Cheikh M'Baye (?) Senegalese - actor and model.
Élage Diouf / El Hadji Fall Diouf (?) Senegalese - singer-songwriter and percussionist.
Rémi Jegaan Dioh (?) Serer Senegalese - singer, guitarist, composer, and author.
Toumany Kouyate (?) Senegalese - singer, kora player, and composer.
Nuru Kane / Papa Nouroudine Kane (?) Senegalese - singer-songwriter, bassist, and guimbri player.
Mamadou Diouf (?) Serer Senegalese - musician and writer.
Salam Diallo (?) Senegalese - singer.
Bu Baca / Bu Baca Diop / Babacar Maurice Diop (?) Senegalese - singer and drummer.
Mamadou Lamine Maïga (?) Senegalese - singer.
Issa Cissokho (?) Senegalese, Malian - saxophonist.
Oumar Diaw (?) Senegalese - actor.
Aïyb Dieng (?) Senegalese - drummer and percussionist.
Metzo Djatah (?) Senegalese - singer.
Elzo JamDong / Elhadji Diallo (?) Senegalese - singer.
Nitdoff / Mor Tallah Gueye (?) Senegalese - rapper and producer.
Mohamet Mbaye (?) Senegalese - model (Instagram: swaggy_mo)
Abraham Bassene (?) Senegalese - model (Instagram: bossdollarss)
N’Dango D (?) Senegalese - rapper (Daara J).
Aladji Man (?) Senegalese - rapper (Daara J).
Alla Seck (?) Senegalese - singer.
El Hadji Faye (?) Senegalese - singer.
Eric M'Backe N'Doye (?) Senegalese - singer.
Kabou Gueye (?) Senegalese - singer.
Mar Seck (?) Senegalese - singer.
Rane Diallo (?) Senegalese - singer.
El Hadj N'Diaye (?) Senegalese - singer.
Musa Dieng Kala (?) Senegalese - singer.
Assane Ndiaye (?) Senegalese - singer.
Mokhtar Samba (?) Senegalese - drummer.
Lucky Diop (?) Senegalese - singer and musician.
Assane Mboup (?) Senegalese - singer.
Ifa Damon Gning (?) Senegalese - model.
Problematic:
Chris Rock (1965) African-American [including Angolan, Beninese, Congolese, Guinean, Liberian, Nigerian, Senegalese], some English - actor, comedian, producer, director, and writer. - Anti-East Asian “jokes”, sexist “jokes”, and used the word “r****d*d”.
Akon / Aliaune Damala Badara Akon Thiam (1973) Toucouleur Senegalese - defends Bill Cosby.
Miss Bank$ / Azealia Banks (1991) African-American [including Ivorian, Ghanaian, Cameroonian, Congolese, Nigerian, Senegalese] - singer-songwriter, rapper, and actress - Homophobic and racist tweets.
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35milimetross · 5 years
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15 Festival de Sevilla: Críticas Sección Oficial
Desde viernes 9 hasta el sábado 17 de noviembre, Sevilla acogerá la 15ª edición de su Festival de cine europeo (SEFF), en el que más de 200 películas de variadas temáticas podrán ser vistas por el público.
Uno de los puestos informativos sobre el Festival de Sevilla repartidos por toda la ciudad
Esta semana, la ciudad andaluza de Sevilla se viste de gala para celebrar su Festival de cine anual, el SEFF, que en este 2018 cumple nada más y nada menos que 15 años desde su primera edición. Para esta ocasion tan especial, la ciudad hispalense acogerá a algunos de los cineastas europeos más importantes, reconocidos y transgresores, como el veterano Roy Anderson o la francesa Mia Hansen-Løve.
En total, este año el Festival cuenta con 19 películas en su Sección Oficial, ademas de 400 proyecciones, 200 películas, 116 estrenos nacionales y 35 estrenos mundiales. Una oferta cinematográfica muy variada a la que resulta casi imposible consimir en su plenitud y en la que el cine andaluz cobrará gran protagonismo.
35 Milímetros asistirá a esta esperada cita una vez más. En este artículo podreís encontrar las reseñas de algunas de las cintas que se enmarcarán dentro de la Sección Oficial a concurso (además de alguna otra más) que nuestro compañero Francisco Pintado, estará viendo en Sevilla. Actualizadas de forma diaria en la medida de lo posible.
Touch me not
Para estupor de muchos, Touch Me Not se hizo con el Oso de Oro en la Berlinale. Y quizás sea así porque, más que una película, tenemos aquí una experiencia emocional en torno a la intimidad, el cuerpo y la sexualidad, que también derriba barreras entre ficción y realidad, autoayuda y provocativo análisis. Laura es una mujer madura incapaz de dejarse tocar y de disfrutar del sexo, que recurre a diversas y poco convencionales terapias. Su historia se cruza con la de otros cuerpos lejos de lo normativo: Tudor, obsesionado por su expareja, y Christian, que a pesar de su atrofia de la espina dorsal, vive su sexualidad sin límites. Y la propia directora, a la vez gran hermano del conjunto y parte de él.
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La ciudad oculta
Después de colarnos en el Edificio España, simbólico edificio madrileño (y de paso ser censurado por el Banco Santander y convertirse en referente del nuevo cine español), Víctor Moreno nos conduce a un viaje sensorial y casi lisérgico por el subsuelo de la ciudad: el vasto entramado de galerías, túneles, tuberías, alcantarillas, redes de transportes, estaciones subterráneas, zonas de ocio y consumo que bullen bajo nuestros pies. Una realidad tan escondida que casi parece irreal, en una sensual fusión de antropología y ciencia ficción que nos invita a reflexionar sobre qué esconde la idea de progreso en la que se cimenta nuestra sociedad.
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Idrissa, crónica de una muerte cualquiera
Poco o nada sabemos de los miles de migrantes que viven en nuestras ciudades. Si las noticias sobre el caso del mantero senegalés Mame Mbaye abrieron una ventana a esas vidas, Idrissa va un paso más allá: no se trata solo de contar una historia, sino del uso efectivo del cine como herramienta de acción y cambio. El guineano Idrissa Diallo, de 21 años, falleció en una celda de un Centro de Internamiento de Extranjeros de Barcelona. Un hecho del que nadie se hizo responsable y que se pretendió silenciar, y con el que el activista y cineasta Xavier Artigas (Ciutat Morta) construye un relato colectivo tan sangrante como esperanzador.
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Obra sin autor
Florian Henckel, ganador de un Oscar por La vida de los otros, regresa con un film épico y enérgico sobre el fascismo, el arte y el amor inspirado en la vida del pintor Gerhard Richter. Un reflejo de la complejidad de la Alemania del siglo XX que parte de la famosa exposición de “arte degenerado” organizada por los nazis en 1937, y que sigue las evoluciones de Kurt Barnert, incipiente artista que escapa de la cuadriculada RDA de los sesenta. Enamorado, sin saberlo, de la hija de quien en nombre de la limpieza étnica nazi sembró la tragedia en su familia.
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Pearl
Músculo, sudor, sacrificio. Faltan 72 horas para el campeonato mundial de culturismo, para el que Lea Pearl ha entrenado duramente bajo la pedregosa mano de su entrenador Al (Peter Mullan), cuando su expareja reaparece trayendo consigo al hijo de ambos, de seis años. Lea hace cuatro que no ve el niño. El mundo del culturismo femenino (con su fascinación visual, sus desafíos al cuerpo y a la idea de feminidad) se entrecruza así con el del melodrama de la mano de Elsa Amiel, en su debut tras ser ayudante de dirección de Bertrand Bonello, Noémie Lvovsky y Mathieu Amalric.
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Atardecer
Laszlo Nemes (ganador del Oscar y del Gran Premio del Jurado de Cannes por El hijo de Saúl) se llevó el Premio Fipresci en Venecia con Atardecer. La joven y atormentada Irisz Leiter llega pisando fuerte al Budapest de 1913, en las semanas previas a la I Guerra Mundial, en plena decadencia del Imperio Austrohúngaro. Decidida a rescatar el malogrado negocio de sus padres, pronto descubre que hay más que rascar en su pasado familiar de lo que cree. Una película que es a la vez thriller, experiencia sensorial, drama de época y obra de marcado carácter político, un nuevo tour de force de la mano de Nemes.
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Todos los caminos (Sección Special Screenings)
Concienciar sobre el síndrome de Rett: ese es el objetivo del actor Dani Rovira (Ocho apellidos catalanes), que junto a Paco, padre de Martina, de 5 años, que padece esta rara enfermedad congénita, y que protagoniza una lucha extraordinaria para incentivar la investigación; Germán, bombero, y Martín entrenador personal emprenderá un emocionante viaje en bicicleta desde Barcelona a Roma. Una película de Paola García Costas, autora del documental Línea de meta, candidato al Goya en 2015.
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Alegría, tristeza (Sección Special Screenings)
Un “drama luminoso” protagonizado por Roberto Álamo, Manuela Vellés, Pedro Casablanc, Carlos Bardem y Andrés Gertrudix. Alegría, tristeza, miedo, rabia. Emociones que ya no sabe identificar en sí mismo –ni en los demás– Marcos, un bombero que sufre un bloqueo tras un shock (íntimamente ligado con la historia reciente de España) que deshizo su familia. Con el afán de poder volver a cuidar a su hija y reincorporarse a su trabajo, termina internado en un centro, con un largo camino que recorrer a través de su mente.
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La entrada 15 Festival de Sevilla: Críticas Sección Oficial aparece primero en 35 Milímetros.
from WordPress http://35milimetros.es/15-festival-de-sevilla-criticas-seccion-oficial/
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The last 4 episodes have made me go for certain Shea was endgame and happy about it, to certain Shea is endgame and kind of sad about it. I’ll explain:
The biggest criticism of Lea as a character is she’s just a manic pixie dream girl, because in season 1, that was true. (But I still loved her even then because tropes exist for a reason, they can be fun sometimes!) Lea got much more development in season 2, but that’s not saying  much since she’d only gotten 2-3 lines of characterization in season 1. The writers still barely scratched the surface of who she is outside of Shaun’s friend/roommate. We got a little more perspective on her family, her life in Hershey, her interests, and her job. It broke her out of the MPDG trope and started molding her into her own person. It was a start.
Lea has barely been in season 3. I remember seeing a comment saying how Carly being Shaun’s girlfriend had basically made Lea’s role in the show irrelevant, and I don’t disagree, because the writers always wrote Lea as Shaun’s love interest and not her own person. But, I still had hope that if/when Shaun and Lea became a couple, that would lead to more development for Lea, especially after 3x16. 
Then, 3x17 backtracked the one aspect of Lea’s character that has been fully fleshed out since we first met her: that she’s a caring person who doesn’t see Shaun as less than because he has autism. Are we suppose to think Lea has secretly viewed Shaun with prejudice this whole time and we fell for a trick? Or is this new? Did the writers even think through what this means for her character, or just went with it because they wanted to explore what Shaun’s reaction would be? I have no idea, but I was still holding out hope for more Lea development as the Shea storyline progressed, until 3x19.
I keep seeing people say how sweet beautiful the way Shaun talked about Lea showing him how to enjoy life and making him “more” was. How that proved how much Shaun loves her. It’s strange to me. Like, did we listen to the same words? 
Shaun didn’t say anything about Lea as a person that makes him love her. He listed things she does for him that’s caused his personal growth. Nothing about Lea’s personality, insight, or even physical appearance. 
The critic who brought the MPDG trope to audience’s attention described this character’s purpose as “to teach broodingly soulful young men to embrace life and its infinite mysteries and adventures." AND SHAUN JUST ADMITTED THAT’S HOW HE SEES LEA. So any character development Lea got in season 2 that helped her out of the trope was just killed. 
The optimistic side of mw wants to say that this will be explored. Shaun will learn to truly love Lea for who she is and not just what she gives him. That Shaun and Lea will grow together and use their experiences to cultivate a healthy relationship. But, come on, this is TV. They’re going to be thrown together without proper communication and Shaun wanting a MPDG instead of Lea as a person will never be addressed.
(This is without even getting into my thoughts on 3x18, which was such a hard episode to watch. I went into it questioning if I still liked Lea and left it deciding that I don’t like Shaun anymore. Season 3 has been a trip.)
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thepaisley · 2 years
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BANTU WAX from Roberto Colombo on Vimeo.
Serene and chaotic; untouched and urban; rich, poor, old, new, sacred, sexy, wise, fast and funny — Africa: the continent some thought to be static was just unshakable.
Since its birth, Bantu has been made In Africa, by Africans, sustainably & fairly, and that will never change. What has changed is Africa...
With over 1 billion people, more than half under 20 years of age —Africa today is quite literally the future of the world — and the future of the world is made in Africa.
Inspired by Africa’s transition from Dark Continent to Bearer of Light, tales of the mermaid goddess of oceans Mami Wata, and a passion for surfing, Bantu merges the rich history of African art and textiles with Africa's deeply rooted surf culture.
Bantu is real beach-wear from the real Africa. 
Directed by Lea & Roberto Colombo Edit by Will Town @ Modern Post Colour by Joseph Bicknell @ Company 3 Animation by ANA Projects Sound Mixing by Daniel Lidchi Creative by Look Studios Creative Director Brendan Dunne Styling by Isabella Meija-Bruton Featuring Babou Gueye, Ibra Samb, Yoro Ciam, Papa Diallo
Shot on Location in Dakar, Senegal
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artwalktv · 2 years
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vimeo
Serene and chaotic; untouched and urban; rich, poor, old, new, sacred, sexy, wise, fast and funny — Africa: the continent some thought to be static was just unshakable. Since its birth, Bantu has been made In Africa, by Africans, sustainably & fairly, and that will never change. What has changed is Africa... With over 1 billion people, more than half under 20 years of age —Africa today is quite literally the future of the world — and the future of the world is made in Africa. Inspired by Africa’s transition from Dark Continent to Bearer of Light, tales of the mermaid goddess of oceans Mami Wata, and a passion for surfing, Bantu merges the rich history of African art and textiles with Africa's deeply rooted surf culture. Bantu is real beach-wear from the real Africa.  Directed by Lea & Roberto Colombo Edit by Will Town @ Modern Post Colour by Joseph Bicknell @ Company 3 Animation by ANA Projects Sound Mixing by Daniel Lidchi Creative by Look Studios Creative Director Brendan Dunne Styling by Isabella Meija-Bruton Featuring Babou Gueye, Ibra Samb, Yoro Ciam, Papa Diallo #surfafrica #afrosurf
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hiddenwashington · 3 years
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Face ideas for the following females: Jade west Carly Shay Sam Puckett Lea diallo Lexie grey April kepner Sam Puckett Morgan Reznick
no problem, sunshine! for april, we can recommend aja naomi king, alexandria daddario, crystal reed, emily van camp, gemma chan, kylie bunbury, janet montgomery, teresa palmer, sonam kapoor and alisha wainwright. for lexie, lily james, zoey deutch, jeanine mason, conor leslie, victoria pedretti, samara weaving, kennedy mccann, louriza tronco, rachel hilson, camila mendes, ana de armas. for morgan, yael grobglas, ana de armas, emily bett rickards, candice patton, teresa palmer, emily vancamp, gemma chan, katheryn winnick, aja naomi king, or summer bishil. for lea, allison williams, lily collins, alexandra daddario, cobie smulders, alia shawkat, mackenzie davis, bridgette lundy-paine, lindsey morgan, alicia vikander, or willa holland. for carly, ana de armas, ana golja, auli’i cravhalo, sofia carson, crystal reed, or danielle rose russell. for sam, we can see billie lourd, jung sinsoul, hailee steinfeld, nana komatsu, lindsey morgan, malese jow, zendaya, and kathryn newton. and for jade, we can see zoe kravitz, victoria moroles, lucy hale, madison mclaughlin, lyrica okano, fivel stewart, or china anne mcclain!
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