Obama’s one-liners during his speech at the White House Correspondents Dinner.
I love our president.
I would like to watch this.
Obama’s one-liners during his speech at the White House Correspondents Dinner.
I love our president.
I would like to watch this.
David Bowie, Prince and George Michael are all pop icons who died in 2016. But there is something else that connects them: They all helped to redefine the concept of masculinity in pop culture.
Cultural critic Wesley Morris has been thinking about how these artists performed gender and sexuality. He recently wrote in The New York Times that in today’s climate, “The Princes and the George Michaels seem as radical as ever.”
Morris joined NPR’s Ari Shapiro to discuss how Bowie, Prince and Michael called upon their audiences to reimagine what it is to be a man.
Photo: Courtesy of the artist
This weekend, Blac Chyna, Queen of the Petty Kingdoms, Breaker of Kardashian Rules, Protector of the Dream, and Owner of Lashed Bar (has anyone been there?), stole away in the dead of night, clutching only her daughter and Rob’s Eggos.
Rob be like
Chyna be like
Kris be like
The Kardashian girls be like
The GIF set we’ve all been waiting for.
Watch Common play 3 new songs (and an oldie) with Robert Glasper and Bilal in the @whitehouse library.
These two, gorgeous inside and out 😍😍😍 #staypeculiar
Tim Burton immortalized outside the Chinese Theatre as Winona Ryder looks on. We got to see his adaptation of @ransomriggs’s Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children right after and it was everything! Get ready to #staypeculiar on September 30!
Borrowed @carmelai’s copy of Another Brooklyn by @jacqueline_woodson, which traveled with her to Italy and is now my sunny San Francisco #read.
“People who see us from the outside think that our greatest struggle is the disability. It’s not. Our greatest struggle is that we’d fallen out of love with each other. I lost a lot of my independence when Tatiana was born. I fell into a depression. He was working a lot. We grew distant. I didn’t think I could ever love him again. Two years ago I prayed one night, and said: ‘God, you’ve done so much. Please grant me one more miracle and make me love him again.’ The first change came from me. He’s always been the easygoing one, so I had to change first. I started trusting more. I tried to be more forgiving and understanding. I started to cook for him and organize things around the house. And he started spending more time at home. We started enjoying each other’s company. We talked about things other than diseases. And we started going out together– just like this. It was like I suddenly met a friend, who became my best friend, who became my love. And our life started over again.”
(São Paulo, Brazil)