January 9th
11:03 AM
Via

tip. yo. waitress. i love this scene so hard. he beats down
3 white cis straight men without a huff. (daydreams this all the time) 



safelovedandgood:

brynncognito:

hairbowsandbullets:

kweerkunt:

rosa—sparks:

blueandbluer:

ladyoflate:

True Blood Challenge | 03. Favorite Quote (Season 1)

Never not reblog Lafayette.

I don’t even like this show — never made it past S1 — but for reals, this part of that episode made me cheer and clap. 

Lafayette for the win.

LaLa forever. The fact that Nelsan has not been recognized and received all the awards is just baffling to me.

Loves me some Lafayette. -swoon- This man is just… unf. 

YES.

I LOVE THIS. SO MUCH.

THIS CHARACTER AND THIS SCENE.

Oh Lafayette, I’d watch a show starring your gorgeous self any day.

December 20th
12:13 PM

[when a QTPOC sibling leaves a voicemail across state lines & time zones ending w/ “i love you & that’s what it is.”] today.

November 17th
5:16 PM
Via

darkjez:

ETHNIC NOTIONS

Ethnic Notions is Marlon Riggs’ Emmy-winning documentary that takes viewers on a disturbing voyage through American history, tracing for the first time the deep-rooted stereotypes which have fueled anti-black prejudice. Through these images we can begin to understand the evolution of racial consciousness in America.

Loyal Toms, carefree Sambos, faithful Mammies, grinning Coons, savage Brutes, and wide-eyed Pickaninnies roll across the screen in cartoons, feature films, popular songs, minstrel shows, advertisements, folklore, household artifacts, even children’s rhymes. These dehumanizing caricatures permeated popular culture from the 1820s to the Civil Rights period and implanted themselves deep in the American psyche.

Narration by Esther Rolle and commentary by respected scholars shed light on the origins and devastating consequences of this 150 yearlong parade of bigotry.Ethnic Notions situates each stereotype historically in white society’s shifting needs to justify racist oppression from slavery to the present day. The insidious images exacted a devastating toll on black Americans and continue to undermine race relations.

Ethnic Notions has quickly become a mainstay of university, high school, and public library collections. It is a basic audio visual text for American History, Sociology, Black Studies, Anthropology, Social Psychology, Media Studies, and any training program concerned with stereotyping and cross-cultural understanding.

Approaching a complex and delicate subject with great sensitivity, Ethnic Notions equips viewers to view media and other cultural representations with a more critical eye. It’s a direct challenge to those who say, “It was just a joke.”