The world is going to sh*t. Social media has become a way of life for millions of 20 and 30-somethings across the world. And while 20-somethings yell “do it for the Vine” or “say what’s up to Snapchat,” social media sharing has gone too far – way too far. Recently, two young millennials made headlines […]
The Weeknd’s been having the best the year ever. Riding high off the success of Beauty Behind The Madness, The Weeknd stopped by BBC Radio 1’s Live Lounge to perform a medley of his number one hits. With “The Hills” and “Can’t Feel My Face” sitting at the number one and two spots on the […]
The Weeknd’s been having the best the year ever. Riding high off the success of Beauty Behind The Madness, The Weeknd stopped by BBC Radio 1’s Live Lounge to perform a medley of his number one hits. With “The Hills” and “Can’t Feel My Face” sitting at the number one and two spots on the […]
The Hills’ Whitney Port has come out swinging against her Instagram critics who say she looks hellish or ghostly without makeup on. Throughout her years as a reality star, Whitney’s persona was based upon her being Lauren Conrad’s soft-spoken and sweet friend. Port bluntly addressed the criticism that she has faced regarding her face on social media, however, and she’s not backing down. At all. In fact, she says she’s flaunting her makeup-free face more often than ever … ’cause she’s winning the battle with acne and haters! Writes the 30-year-old fashion designer and USC graduate: “Hi guys. So I don’t want to come off as preachy AT ALL!” “But lately, when I post a pic of myself without makeup on @instagram, people hate – telling me I look dead or anemic or whatever! Over it!” “I struggled with my skin A LOT growing up. I had terrible acne throughout high school and college and finally got it under control in my mid 20’s.” “I’ve learned that keeping it healthy and clear is mostly due to keeping it clean.” “I TRULY think the key to inner and outer beauty isn’t about all the things we can buy to cover up our skin,” she writes, but the opposite. To Port, it’s all about “how we can embrace our skin and keep it healthy.” “Clean skin is in. The more I keep it clean, the better condition it’s in.” “And when you do decide to put a little makeup on (I mean, we all do) our skin is a pure foundation for it to live on! So goodbye haters!” “I’m gonna embrace my bare, colorless, pale and ghostly skin because I don’t need to hide behind anything.” “I urge all you out there to not be afraid of showing that beautiful, bare face of yours to the world.” “Join me and tag all your clean skin selfies using the hashtag #OurCleanSkinIsIn Let’s do this!!!” Damn. Preach on, girl. And step off, Insta-haters. #Owned. View Slideshow: 22 Make-Up Free Star Selfies
Isabeli Fontana is in Maxim, despite being 100 years old…is still amazing. She’s one of the first Brazlian models abducted by the team at Victoria’s Secret, offering her the dream they sell these people with, that actually end up working out for most of them… She’s also one of the last underage girls to pose in her underwear for Victoria’s Secret because they abducted her when she was 16…. She’s done all kinds of modeling, all while being busty, which is a good thing because we like tits.. She’s also got kids, she’s been married a few times to rich guys, she was recently engaged to one of Bob Marley’s many sons until recently, and now she’s doing Maxim…all busty…which is a good thing because we like tits… The previous owners of Maxim were a bunch of lawyer assholes who emailed me everytime I’d post their picture, even when the pics were found on instagram, but they apparently sold their pile of shit, relevant in the 90s, magazine to some young Texan rich dude in his 30s, so let’s hope he’s not as fucking lame and useless as them, which based on the pics he’s pulled together since buying the magazine,using real models and photographers, he’s not… The post Isabeli Fontana for Maxim of the Day appeared first on DrunkenStepfather .
Hilary Duff is thick as fuck…..and she’s in a bikini, rocking what I assume is fake tits, but who cares all tits are tits, that’s the beauty of tits… It’s just like a recently divorced, rich as fuck, child star, turned mom, to go out there half naked for her very loyal fucking fans…the ind of fans you’d want a retraining order against, to feel like she’s still got it… And as someone who calls skinny girls fat, to piss off fat girls who are fat, and skinny girls who aren’t as skinny as the girl I call fat, I will say she’s looking strong, the kind of strong I’d want to wrestle, Ideally getting a headlock between her thighs, where she makes me head explode like a watermelon, because after experiencing that, I’d have lived enough, seen all I needed to see, ready to throw in the towel.. And I’m not even a Hilary Duff or a sturdy girl fan…but for some reason, I reason I call morbidly obese wife, I am right now… TO SEE HILARY DUFF IN A BIKINI and LOOKING HOT CLICK HERE The post Hilary Duff Solid in a Bikini of the Day appeared first on DrunkenStepfather .
I’m Creole. Which means I’m a Black person from New Orleans who’s got so many things mixed around in my family history that it’s easy to confuse me as a White guy. There’s a substantial population in Louisiana that looks just like me. They have curly hair, light eyes and aren’t much darker than a White person who spent a week in Barbados. I have three half-sisters. One is my complexion. Two are darker. I have cousins who are fair-skinned. I have cousins who are brown. I have uncles and aunts who have been called White their whole lives. So my house would look like it’s full of a racially ambiguous group of people every Thanksgiving. For that reason, I had no concept of race growing up. I did’t even know race was a thing because I didn’t differentiate myself from anyone as a kid. When I walked outside I saw all shades of people who look like they could be in my family. Then I moved to Mississippi. My family moved to Mississippi when I was six years old and my parents enrolled me into a private, all-Black school with a strong focus on Black pride and education about our history. So naturally I was hit with the big question on my first day of school: are you Black or White? It was the first time I’d heard the question and I had no clue how to answer. I mean, I used yellow crayons when I drew myself. And as I contemplated my answer, I looked around and saw that all the kids were considerably darker than I was. I felt like, for the first time ever, I was seeing skin color. I still didn’t understand race yet, but I saw people that I didn’t think looked like me. So I answered: “I’m White, I guess.” So for a whole school day, I was a barely-literate, elementary-aged reverse Rachel Dolezal. Then recess came, and word had spread that there was a White kid on the playground. This was 1992 and White Men Can’t Jump was fresh on everyone’s minds. Naturally, when I hit the basketball court, a few of the kids decided to chant that damned movie title at me. To no end. I can still picture the kid behind the basketball goal yelling “White men can’t jump” at me while I went up for layups. I didn’t want to be White anymore. That night my dad caught me crying to myself at the grocery store. “They yelled ‘White Men Can’t Jump’ at me at school today!” I remember crying to him about it. (My dad still thinks this story is hilarious, by the way, and will bring this story up within two minutes of talking to anyone I know.) That night, my parents explained to me that I am in fact Black. They showed me Eyes On The Prize . I watched videos of my dad speaking at his friends’ funerals. I saw how White people saw me. A flood of memories I didn’t know I had came swarming to the front my mind. I remember crying that night to my dad that I thought the KKK would come and kill him. Over the course of a few hours, I realized my Blackness and what that meant about my life in America. Again, I was six. For a lot of Black people, we sort of know about our Blackness from birth and don’t get that moment of clarity about our ethnicity all at one time. For others, we have this jarring moment where we have to apply these definitions to our existences all at once. Of course, as I learn about what Blackness truly means, I understand what it means to love myself and the blessings that come from being Black. I can still pull up these memories of discovering my Blackness like it happened yesterday. And I can’t imagine what Shaun King is going through right now as he’s had to relive similar moments in tandem with embarrassing skeletons in his family’s closet. According to King, he found out he was Black at the same time he found out that his dad wasn’t his real father. And he’s had to relive this moment in front of every Twitter account and Facebook status’ watchful eye. His race and family history has become a public spectacle that’s been picked apart for the last 72 hours. He’s had to justify his Blackness and relive a moment of trauma because of a desire to discredit his contributions to #BlackLivesMatter. (And I’m not sure this is even something conservatives try to dig up if not for Rachel Dolezal. So shout out to her for that. Thanks.) Being Black is beautiful and I wouldn’t have it any other way. My Blackness is a gift and I love every moment of it. But that moment you feel the weight of your Blackness all at once brings its own level of trauma. That’s why when I read Their Eyes Were Watching God I think about the moment Janie realizes she’s Black and how it defined the rest of her life: So when we looked at depicture and everybody got pointed out there wasn’t nobody left except a real dark little girl with long hair standing by Eleanor. Dat’s where Ah wuz s’posed to be, but Ah couldn’t recognize dat dark child as me. So Ah ast, ‘where is me? Ah don’t see me.’ Everybody laughed, even Mr. Washburn. Miss Nellie, de Mama of de chillun who come back home after her husband dead, she pointed to de dark one and said, ‘Dat’s you, Alphabet, don’t you know yo’ ownself?’ Dey all useter call me Alphabet ‘cause so many people had done named me different names. Ah looked at de picture a long time and seen it was mah dress and mah hair so Ah said: ’Aw, aw! Ah’m colored!’” (2.3-8) I’ve always felt that Janie spent the rest of the book looking to reclaim the beauty she’d felt she lost the moment she realized she was Black. The trauma of finding out she was perceived as inferior led her to look for that vindication and acknowledgement of her beauty. Unfortunately, Blackness in America comes with trauma. But the beauty of Blackness is the ability to love ourselves despite how we’re trained to feel about our skin color. Shaun King found out about his Blackness in what had to have been one of the most trying moments of his life. And he’s embraced it to become one of the foremost voices to remind this country that we matter. Because he’s learned – like I’ve learned – that Blackness isn’t a burden. It’s not a curse. It’s not something to hide. It’s something to be proud of. And the defense of our Black lives is as important as any goal we’ll ever have in our lives.
Trans-Bangers: 10 Stunning Transgender Women If there is anything we’ve learned this year, it’s been that you can do anything you put your mind to. Whether it be profession, gender and maybe even race, the possibilities are limitless nowdays. Since Bruce Jenner’s very public transition to Caitlyn, the media has used his image to bring further awareness and acceptance to the transgender community . LGBT rights have been a very hot topic this year, but don’t be fooled. The trans-life is nothing new and some of these bangers are killing it like you wouldn’t believe. Here we’ve compiled a list of some of the most beautiful trans-ladies on the scene…prepare to be amazed. Continue reading →
#39;I am doing this. I guess I am just going to get right to it,#39; she says at the start of the 19-minute video. #39;There is something that I want you to know – and that something is I#39;m gay.#39; Beauty vlogger Ingrid Nilsen (pictured) reveals that she is gay and has been attracted to women for as long as she can remember in emotional video she posted to her YouTube channel.A number of her previous boyfriends also appeared on her YouTube channel, including YouTube musician Luke Conard and