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#my sims: malaika
omgkayplays · 1 month
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sarahsimmerxo · 1 month
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Zuri Malaika ☆
Thank you to the talented CC Creators! ∙ Maddy Hair by @enriques4 ∙ Earrings, Necklace, Belly Button Piercing by @pralinesims ∙ Marzia Graphic Tee by @belaloallure3 ∙ Keyring & Cargo Pants by @rimings
Join my Sims Community Discord Server! JOIN HERE 💗✨
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servegrilledcheese · 4 years
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i think we may have a new lookbook model in our presence.
ft. @lamatisse‘s glorious new skintones. ang ganda po. 🥺️
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shockapella-sweet · 3 years
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Song Meme ^3^
Rule: List 10 songs that you’re currently obsessed with and tag 10 other people.
So I was tagged by @evieisstruck about five lifetimes ago – thanks for the tag, Evie! :D
I’ve been listening to a lot of songs, but these are the most recent ones that I’ve had on repeat:
Bole Chudiyan – Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham OST
Destiny – Malaika
Follow Me – Celtic Woman
I’m a Winner, Baby – RuPaul
Misty Mountains / Song Of The Lonely Mountain (From “The Hobbit”/Medley) – David Arkenstone (I love the fact that this composer’s surname is Arkenstone, considering the piece)
Now I’m That Bitch – Livvi Franc (I’m been replaying a lot of 2000s music, sue me XP)
Sweet Melody – Little Mix (ooh, I HATED this song initially, but it came on the radio while I was driving home from the doctor’s a few weeks back, so I rolled down my window, tried to outrace a 4x4 and JAMMED)
Teir Abhaile Riu – Celtic Woman
The Call (Remix) – Backstreet Boys ft. The Neptunes (I like this version better than the original, sue me times two)
The Voice (2017 version) – Celtic Woman
Honourable mentions: Sim Time Sim Place (Lemon Jelly Remix) – The Sims 2: Nightlife OST (I LOVE TS2′s soundtrack!) and Took The Night – Chelly (because who doesn’t love this song??)
Tagging: Whoever wants to do this meme! :)
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aslanjadecarlyle · 4 years
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Master List of Black Creators, Owners, & Public Figures
Master List of Black Creators, Owners, & Public Figures
DISCLAIMER: I am fucking whiter than white. I compiled this list to boost black creators and public figures, but if I am overstepping at all PLEASE let me know! 
Also, I tried to research these in a timely manner. If anyone in these lists is problematic or should not be supported, let me know. :)
(Of course, this is only a TINY portion! Feel free to add more names, businesses, and creators!)
——
Activists:
•Naomi Anderson
•Maya Angelou
•James Baldwin
•Lillie Mae Bradford
•Mari Copeny
•Frederick Douglass
•Ruth Ellis
•Erica Garner
•Alicia Garza
•Ernest Green
•Fannie Lou Hamer
•Frances Harper
•Langston Hughes
•Marsha P. Johnson
•Alberta Odell Jones
•Quincy Jones
•Martin Luther King Jr.
•Audre Lorde
•Bree Newsome
•Huey P. Newton
•Rosa Parks
-Bayard Rustin
•Sojourner Truth
•Harriet Tubman
•Madam C.J. Walker
•Ida B. Wells
•Malcolm X
Actors/Actresses & Directors:
•Yahya Abdul-Mateen II
•James Avery
•Angela Bassett
•Halle Berry
•John Boyega
•Levar Burton
•Nick Cannon
•Michael Clarke Duncan
•Zendaya Coleman
•Terry Crews
•Viola Davis
•Idris Elba
•Jamie Foxx
•Morgan Freeman
•Whoopi Goldberg
•Tiffany Haddish
•Skai Jackson
•William Jackson Harper
•Kevin Hart
•Steve Harvey
•Jennifer Hudson
•Ice Cube
•Spike Lee
•Phill Lewis
•Bernie Mac
•Eddie Murphy
•Keke Palmer
•James Pickens Jr.
•Chris Rock
•Will Smith
•Raven Symonè
•Denzel Washington
•Jesse Williams
•Chandra Wilson
•Oprah Winfrey
•John Witherspoon
Authors & Poets:
•Elizabeth Acevedo
•Tomi Adeyemi
•Kwame Alexander
•Maya Angelou
•Rena Barron
•Paula Chase
•Dhonielle Clayton
•Brandy Colbert
•Jay Coles
•Dana Davis
•Tanita S. Davis
•Sharon M. Draper
•Paul Laurence Dunbar
•Akwaeke Emezi
•Sharon G. Flake
•Kristina Forest
•L.R. Giles
•Whitney D. Grandison
•Nikki Grimes
•Justina Ireland
•Tiffany D. Jackson
•Kimberly Jones
•Claire Kann
•Kekla Magoon
•Janice Lynn Mather
•Tony Medina
•Candice Montgomery
•David Barclay Moore
•Britney Morris
•Bethany C. Morrow
•Greg Neri
•Nnedi Okorafor
•Tochi Onyebuchi
•Morgan Parker
•Junauda Petrus
•Ben Philippe
•Jason Reynolds
•Debbie Rigaud
•Ilyasah Shabazz
•Nic Stone
•Liara Tamani
•Mildred D. Taylor
•Angie Thomas
•Brian F. Walker
•Booker T. Washington
•Renée Watson
•Alicia Williams
•August Wilson
•C.E. Wilson
•Ashley Woodfolk
•Jacqueline Woodson
•Nicola Yoon
•Ibi Aanu Zoboi
Black-Owned Bookstores:
•Grassrootz Bookstore (Phoenix, AZ)
•Eso Won Books (Los Angeles, CA)
•Malik Books (Los Angeles, CA)
•Marcus Books (Oakland, CA)
•Shades of Afrika (Long Beach, CA)
•Shop At Matter (Denver, CO)
•Pyramid Books (Boynton Beach, FL)
•For Keeps Books (Atlanta, GA)
•Bunnie Hillard (Decatur, GA)
•Challenges Games & Comics (Decatur, GA)
•Semicolon (Chicago, IL)
•Wild Fig Books (Lexington, KY)
•Frugal Bookstore (Boston, MA)
•Loyalty Books (Silver Springs, MD)
•Loving Me Books (Detroit, MI)
•Source Booksellers (Detroit, MI)
•Mind’s Eye Comics (Burnsville, MN)
•Eye See Me (St. Louis, MO)
•Source of Knowledge (Newark, NJ)
•The Lit Bar (The Bronx, NY)
•Cafe Con Libros (Brooklyn, NY)
•Megabrain Comics (Rhinebeck, NY)
•The Schomburg Shop (Harlem, NY)
•Sister’s Uptown (New York, NY)
•Fulton Street Books (Tulsa, OK)
•Third Eye Bag (Portland, OR)
•Amalgam Comics (Philadelphia, PA)
•Harriett’s Bookshop (Philadelphia, PA)
•Uncle Bobbie’s (Philadelphia, PA)
•Turning Page Bookshop (Goose Creek, SC)
•Black Pearl Books (Austin, TX)
•The Dock (Fort Worth, TX)
•Loyalty Books (Washington DC)
•MahoganyBooks (Washington DC)
Other Black-Owned Businesses:
•228 Grant Street Candle Company (228grantstreet.com)
•Aamir Graphics (jaizthedesigner.mystrikingly.com)
•Ailey Extension (aileyextension.com)
•Aminah Abdul Jillil (aminahabdujillil.com)
•Anya Lust (anyalust.com)
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•Basbaas Foods (basbaassauce.com)
•Beauty Bakerie (beautybakerie.com)
•Beauty Stat Cosmetics (beautystatcosmetics.com)
•BedStuyFly (bedstuyfly.com)
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•Black Enterprise (blackenterprise.com)
•Black Girl Sunscreen (blackgirlsunscreen.com)
•Black Girls Run (blackgirlsrun.com)
•The Black Home (theblackhome.com)
•Black Pepper Paperie Company (shopbpco.com)
•Blavity (blavity.com)
•BLK MKT Vintage (blkmktvintage.com)
•Body Space Fitness (bodyspacefitness.com)
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•Bolé Road Textiles (boleroadtextiles.com)
•Briogeo (briogeohair.com)
•Brooklyn Circus (thebkcircus.com)
•Brooklyn Tea (brooklyntea.com)
•Brother Vellies (brothervellies.com)
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•Carlis Design Studio LLC (carlisdesignstudio.net)
•Castamira (castamira.com)
•CBAAF (comebackasaflower.com)
•Celsious (celsious.com)
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•Manual (manualphoto.com)
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•Peju Obasa (pejuobasa.com)
•People of Color Beauty (peopleofcolorbeauty.com)
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•Pottery by Osa (potterybyosa.com)
•Rebecca Allen (rebecca-allen.com)
•Red Bay Coffee (redbaycoffee.com)
•Reparations Club (rep.club)
•Riot Swim (riotswim.com)
•Rochelle Porter (rochelleporter.com)
•See Line Ceramics (seelineceramics.com)
•Sheila Bridges (sheilabridges.com)
•Sincerely, Tommy (sincerelytommy.com)
•The Sip (thesipsociety.com)
•The Sixes (thesixes.com)
•Slashed by Tia (slashedbytia.net)
•Sol Cacao (solcacao.com)
•Sol Sips (solsipsnyc.com)
•Something Unique Accessories (shopsomethingunique.com)
•T.A. (shop-ta.com)
•Tackussanu Senegal (tackussanusenegal.com)
•Tactile Matter (tactilematter.com)
•T&C Management Tax & Financial Services (https://xu625-feb5c6.pages.infusionsoft.net )
•Telfar (telfar.net)
•TLZ L’FEMME (tlzlf.com)
•Total Resistance (thetotalresistance.com)
•Tree Fairfax (treefairfax.com)
•UniBuyz (unibuyz.com)
•Unlimited Treasures Chest (utchest.com)
•Unsun (unsuncosmetics.com)
•Unwrp (unwrp.com)
•Uoma Beauty (uomabeauty.com)
•Urban One Inc. (urban1.com)
•Victor Glemaud (glemaud.com)
•Wales Bonner (walesbonner.com)
•Whetstone Magazine (whetstonemagazine.com)
•The Wrap Life (thewrap.life)
•Yam (yamnyc.com)
•xN Studio (osxnasozi.com)
•Yowie (shopyowie.com)
•Zafa Wines (zafawines.com)
•Zou Xou Shoes (zouxou.com)
Book Reviewers:
•Black & Bookish
•Black Books Matter
•Bookaddict4real
•Brazen Babe Reviews
•Doddy About Books
•Fine Point Scribbles
•Kaybee’s Bookshelf, A Literary Blog
•Literally Black
•Ms. Shabria Gxo
•Sometimes Leelynn Reads
Models:
•Adwoa Aboah
•Adesuwa Aighewi
•J. Alexander
•Karen Alexander
•Leomie Anderson
•Alanna Arrington
•Yasmine Arrington
•Tyra Banks
•Corey Baptiste
•Tyson Beckford
•Yasmin Benoit
•Akech Bior
•Minah Ogbenyealu Bird
•Maria Borges
•Adonis Bosso
•Cindy Bruna
•Naomi Campbell
•Dorothea Church
•Yaya DaCosta
•Agbani Darego
•Bruce Darnell
•Khoudia Diop
•Nadège du Bospertus
•Jourdan Dunn
•Selita Ebanks
•Paloma Elsesser
•Cora Emmanuel
•Staniel Ferreira
•Malaika Firth
•Diandra Forrest
•Imaan Hammam
•Winnie Harlow
•Beverley Heath-Hoyland
•Marsha A. Hunt
•Broderick Hunter
•Chanel Iman
•Beverly Johnson
•Toccara Jones
•Grace Jones
•Liya Kebede
•Jayne Kennedy
•Janet Langhart
•Shakara Ledard
•Precious Lee
•Noémie Lenoir
•Damaris Lewis
•Sessilee Lopez
•Donyale Luna
•Anais Mali
•Eva Marcille
•Denny Mèndez
•Jillian Mercado
•Ariel Meredith
•Lineisy Montero
•Muna
•Katoucha Niane
•Mayowa Nicholas
•Emanuela de Paula
•Lais Ribeiro
•Valentine Rontez
•Shaun Ross
•Kimora Lee Simmons
•Naomi Sims
•Joan Smalls
•B. Smith
•Arlenis Sosa
•Sal Stowers
•Duckie Thot
•Jasmine Tookes
•Eugena Washington
•Veronica Webb
•Alek Wek
•Jessica White
•Slick Woods
•Kara Young
Musicians:
•Aaliyah
•Akon
•Louis Armstrong
•Pearl Bailey
•Harry Belafonte
•Chuck Berry
•Beyoncé
•The Black Eyed Peas
•Blackstreet
•B.o.B.
•The Bobettes
•Soulja Boy
•50 Cent
•Chance the Rapper
•Ray Charles
•Chubby Checker
•The Chords
•Ciara
•The Clovers
•The Coasters
•Nat ‘King’ Cole
•Zendaya Coleman
•The Contours
•Sam Cooke
•Taio Cruz
•Andra Day
•Bobby Day
•The Del-Vikings
•Jason Derulo
•Destiny’s Child
•The Diamonds
•Bo Diddley
•Daveed Diggs
•DMX
•Fats Domino
•Dr. Dre
•The Drifters
•Earth, Wind, & Fire
•Missy Elliott
•Flo Rida
•The Four Tops
•Aretha Franklin
•Bobby Freeman
•Marvin Gaye
•Gloria Gaynor
•CeeLo Green
•Billie Holiday
•Whitney Houston
•Ice-T
•Sharaya J
•Janet Jackson
•Michael Jackson/The Jackson 5
•Kamille
•Alicia Keys
•Khalid
•Sean Kingston
•Eartha Kitt
•Lenny Kravitz
•Patti LaBelle
•John Legend
•Leona Lewis
•Lizzo
•The Marcels
•The Masqueraders
•M.I.A.
•Mickey & Sylvia
•MKTO
•The Monotones
•Nelly
•Ne-Yo
•The Penguins
•Leigh-Anne Pinnock (of the girl group Little Mix)
•The Platters
•Prince
•Otis Redding
•Little Richard
•Rihanna
•The Ronettes
•Diana Ross
•Darius Rucker
•Run-DMC
•Travis Scott
•Shaggy
•Tupac Shakur
•Nina Simone
•Shirley & Lee
•The Silhouettes
•Snoop Dogg
•Jimmy Soul
•Jordin Sparks
•The Supremes
•The Temptations
•TLC
•T-Pain
•Ty Dolla Sign
•Usher
•Bill Withers
YouTubers:
Jackie Aina
Alissa Ashley
Yasmin Benoit
Berleezy
Raye Boyce
Patricia Bright
Marques Brownlee
Alyssa Forever
GlamTwinz
GloZell
Bri Hall
Todrick Hall
Aysha Harun
Alonzo Lerone
Oneika the Traveller
Shanna Malcolm
Shameless Maya
MakeupShayla
Chris Smoove
Nyma Tang
TheAjayII
AdrianXpression
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citylightsbooks · 4 years
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5 Questions with Megan Fernandes, Author of Good Boys
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Megan Fernandes is a writer and academic living in New York City. She is the author of The Kingdom and After (Tightrope Books 2015) and the new book of poems, Good Boys (published by Tin House). Her work has been published or is forthcoming in the New Yorker, Tin House, Ploughshares, Denver Quarterly, Chicago Review, Boston Review, Rattle, Pank, the Common, Guernica, the Academy of American Poets, and McSweeney's Internet Tendency, among others. She is a poetry reader for The Rumpus and an Assistant Professor of English at Lafayette College. She holds a PhD in English from the University of California, Santa Barbara and an MFA in poetry from Boston University. She reads from her new book Good Boys with special guests at City Lights Bookstore on Tuesday, February 25th.
***
City Lights: If you’ve been to City Lights before, what’s your memory of the visit? If you haven’t been here before, what are you expecting?
Megan Fernandes: Of all the places I’m reading this Spring (and it’s probably not politic to say this), I am most excited to read at City Lights. I’ve never been, but I understood at a very young age that the bookstore symbolized possibility, spontaneity, digression, lostness, community, etc. As a teenager, I read a lot of Beat literature, my favorites being Dharma Bums, In the Night Café, and everything Ginsberg. I was compelled by their portraits of America’s expansiveness. And I also just think as an immigrant kid not born in the USA, the Beats gave me some sense of American geography. I went to Colorado for the first time last year and I had this memory of my first impression of Colorado as a place described in On the Road. When traveling across the country, I often have Ferlinghetti’s feverish, twitchy, carnivalesque poetics in my head. I also think in this indirect way, Beat literature shaped some of my thoughts around feminist thinking as I was conscious of my orientation as outside certain privileges of the “male, womanizing adventurer” often romanticized in Beat lit. I had to interrogate what it meant to feel intimacies with Ginsberg and Duncan who were destabilizing masculinities and cultural logics of hate. 
And so what I learned from City Lights and Beat lit is really something about the relationship between myth-making and counter-culture communities. I’m understanding the truly expansive network of the movement in so much more detail right now while reading an advanced copy of a fabulous new book called The Beats: A Literary History by Steven Belletto. 
What are you reading right now?
I’m reading a book called Dapper Dan: Made in Harlem, co-written by Dapper Dan himself and my good friend, Mikael Awake. It’s a history of Dapper Dan’s iconic work in fashion, of course, while being really intimate. And it’s just as much a history of his family’s internal dynamics and, through his family, New York City at large. In particular, 1970’s NYC is so vividly, brilliantly wrought in this book.
There’s this one section where Dap is at Iona College at a lecture on protohistory and the professor, a Czech immigrant, tells the class that “In order for man to have survived during those ancient times… he must have had powers that he doesn’t have now. The only people that could possibly still have these powers today are the black and brown people on the planet” and when Dap hears this, he is transfixed. He says: “This is one of the most esteemed scholars at Iona College telling a packed lecture hall that black and brown people were the only ones on the planet who still had spiritual powers. How come this was my first time hearing about that? I looked around. I was the only black student in the class. I wasn’t tired anymore. He had my full attention… I said to myself, This is what I need to know. This is how I need to formulate myself.” I’m loving how the book captures these intense moments of transformation. I love that word choice: formulate. What poetic agency is modeled in that word? I needed that word the moment I read it. 
Recently, I’ve also read Samiya Bashir’s Field Theories and Edgar Kunz’s Tap Out. Samiya wrote this legitimately weird and imaginative book that feels like it’s made out of the time-space continuum. Some cosmic materiality is really showing up in that book. I remember this line: “A body. A zoo. A lovely savannah. Walls of clear, clean glass” and I’m just on a ride with the musicality of her shifting assonance. Plus, I know that writers like June Jordan and Toni Cade Bambara are operating influences/specters of the book and you can feel that energy. Edgar’s book is more narrative and quieter, but so devastating. I sort of get what makes his speakers tenderize if that makes sense. I think it’s the same phenomena that tenderizes me, too.
Some of my favorite novels of recent years includes A Questionable Shape by Bennett Sims, The Small Backs of Children by Lidia Yuknavitch, Sonora by Hannah Lillith Assadi, and very recently, The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead.
What book or writer do you always find yourself recommending?
I think Jean Toomer’s Cane is the most beautiful book of the 20th century. I remember just being blown away by its call and response, the repeating imagery of sun and smoke and pines. That book is so stunning. Other astounding work that I always recommend includes Mebvh McGuckian’s Captain Lavender, Anne Carson’s The Autobiography of Red, Evie Shockley’s The New Black, Franz Wright’s Walking to Martha’s Vineyard, Eleni Sikelianos’ Body Clock, Jorie Graham’s The Errancy, Bhanu Kapil’s The Vertical Interrogation of Strangers, The Collected Poems of W.B. Yeats, and Galway Kinnell and Hannah Liebmann’s translations of Rilke. Those are my hard-hitters. Those books are why I became a poet. 
What writers/artists/people do you find the most influential to the writing of this book and/or your writing in general?
You know, I collected poems while I was writing and editing this book. And I think those specific poems created a kind of constellation around me, almost protective, that kept me writing. Some of those poems include “The Long Recovery” by Ellen Bass, “A Matter of Balance,” by Evie Shockley, “What lips my lips have kissed, and where, and why” by Edna St. Vincent Millay, “I am Not Seaworthy” by Toni Morrison, “Becoming Regardless” by Jack Spicer, “A New Bride Almost Visible in Latin” by Jack Gilbert, “To the Young Who Want to Die” by Gwendolyn Brooks and many, many others. Definitely O’Hara as well. He never leaves me. The most important poem of that little self-curated archive is Frank Bidart’s “Visions at 74” where he writes: “To love existence / is to love what is indifferent to you.” I remember reading that line and just losing it. I have been guided by so much of Bidart. And maybe my book is a little bit about how to sustain rage in the face of that which is indifferent to you, what cannot love you (both personally and abstractly). How do you sustain rage so as to not fall into despair?
I also listened to a variety of music while writing and editing. A mix between contemporary sad kid hip-hop, old school jazz and blues, gospel, 80’s bands, pop culture queens, 1970’s hypnotic modal vamp, classical Spanish guitar, electronic pop, really pretty varied. A few names that come to mind: KOTA the Friend, NoName, Vince Staples, Travis Scott, Miles Davis Quintet, Bessie Smith, Sam Cooke, The Knocks, Solange, Archie Shepp, Pharoah Sanders, Alice Coltrane, Big Mama Thornton, Miriam Makeba, Kamasi Washington, Thompson Twins, Misfits, Bowie, Talking Heads, Tears for Fears, Cher, Whitney Houston, Portishead, Goldfrapp, Memphis Slim, Dinah Washington, Alberto Iglesias, Gustavo Santaolalla, Holychild, Blood Orange, etc.
If you opened a bookstore, where would it be located, what would it be called, and what would your bestseller be?
My grandpa played violin on a ship that sailed between Tanga, Tanzania and Goa, India. I never had the chance to meet him. He died when my dad was sixteen, but I always thought about what that journey might have looked and felt like, its many hardships, but also the wonder of gazing out at the sea playing strings. For that reason, I’d love to open a bookstore that focused specifically on Indian Ocean diaspora and sold books exclusively by authors working, uncovering, or investigating the literature of that oceanic rim. I think there is something rich in thinking about books not necessarily focused on nation-statehood but thinking more about a kind of social-imaginary with a literature that is messy in its conceptualization and crosses, migrates, misses, and mythologizes across many cultures over generations. You could have sections on food, underwater exploration, piracy, long-distance intimacy, trade routes, empire, transnational feminism. I like the idea of a bookstore that is anti-genre and instead, organized by associative thinking and imagination. It would be a logistical nightmare. You would never find what you were looking for, but you might find something you didn’t know existed.
So yes, I’d vote for a little homegrown network of bookstores in India, East Africa, and actually, maybe one of them in Lisbon which is a city that has a long (and problematic) history with the Indian Ocean. I’ve spent a lot of time in Lisbon the past eight years of my life, spending time visiting family and researching the history of the Portuguese empire especially as it relates to my family history (my folks are third generation East African Portuguese colonized Indians). I have a lot of conflicting homelands which is a way of saying that there are times when I feel like I have nothing but a rootless present. That’s something I investigate in my work, that weird (a)temporality. And I’m drawn to the particular light of Lisbon which is quite unusual. I’d call the bookstore “Malaika” which means “Angel” in Swahili and is the favorite folk song of my parents who grew up in Tanzania. I like the idea of a bookstore in Lisbon with the name in Swahili run by a Goan-Canadian-American woman. That’s the world I grew up in… one of multiplicities. 
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shunga · 6 years
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Dust off my rusty sims making skills to try out one of those amazing skins from @thisisthem  💖
Meet my new model, Malaika ✨ 
Hair by @ebonixsims
Choker by @bestabsolutepraline
Top by me (x)
Skirt by me (WIP)
Shoes by me (x)
Poses by @boboohu & @catsblob
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omgkayplays · 9 months
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omgkayplays · 1 year
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omgkayplays · 8 months
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I can't get over how ethereal Malaika is
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omgkayplays · 11 months
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these lighting overlays are perfect for edits/portraits with dramatic lighting omg
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omgkayplays · 1 year
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I had to get a solo shot of Malaika because LOOK AT HER!
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omgkayplays · 1 year
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Oh, who is she?
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omgkayplays · 10 months
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omgkayplays · 4 months
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💌 Post 4 pictures from Pinterest that describe your OC. Send this to 3 other simmers to keep the chain going! <3
time to give everyone a peak into Malaika's, Eva's, and Áine's pinterest boards!
Malaika
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Eva
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Áine
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omgkayplays · 4 months
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Four, three, too fuckin' busy
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