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How The Dictionary Became The Hilarious Election Watchdog We Needed

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This election season has had a big impact on the way we talk.


At least, that’s the claim Merriam-Webster made in a recent blog post. “The 2016 presidential campaign has its own distinctive vocabulary,” the dictionary wrote. That vocabulary has included: unproud, locker-roomdeplorablestamina, among many other words that have very real definitions but have taken on new and engorged meanings when bandied about by politicians.


In fact, the dictionary has shared a nearly 40-term list comprising words that Americans have questioned feverishly online shortly after a figure like Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump uttered it aloud to the public. Some of them have literal meanings that fit already; others are taking on new figurative ones. For an example, see the phrase “go nuclear,” literally defined as “to acquire or to utilize nuclear weapons or nuclear power.” Its figurative meaning, increasingly relevant in the 2016 presidential debate era? “To become furious; to resort to drastic measures in an attempt to undermine an opponent.”


“That’s right: this election is so negative that it’s affecting what some words mean,” the nameless Merriam-Webster blogger concluded.






Merriam-Webster has become the unlikely ― and, at times, hilarious ― election watchdog we never knew we needed. Its Twitter account churns out commentary before, during and after debates, dissecting lexicon and reporting online look-up spikes as they happen.


If you wondered what Mike Pence meant when he used the word “feckless,” Merriam-Webster saw you. If you wondered whether or not Trump said “bigly” or “big league,” Merriam-Webster was there for you.


But who, exactly, is the public face of Merriam-Webster? Who is the evil genius behind tweets like these:














Though they ― BTW, we’re using the singular version of the pronoun here ― did not divulge their name, the Merriam-Webster social media editor recently consented to a short email exchange with The Huffington Post. When asked about their background, the anonymous interview subject responded: “Our social media manager has an MA in English and taught college English for a number of years.”


They described their social media voice as such: “Our Twitter account sounds like the actual people in our office talking about language, and our goal is to share the passion and fun and help people love language as much as we do!”


What this description leaves out is the editor’s penchant for cleverly deployed snark. Earlier this year, BuzzFeed ran a piece headlined “People Can’t Get Over The Dictionary’s ― Yes, The Dictionary’s ― Savage Clapback.” The short post outlined how Merriam-Webster responded to Slate editor Gabriel Roth’s indictment of the dictionary’s tendency to take a less strict approach to classifying words, comparing the dictionary to a lax parent.


The tweeted response takes the form of six simple, patronly words.






Merriam-Webster’s lax attitude stems from the fact that it is a descriptivist dictionary, which means “it records the language as it’s used,” Merriam-Webster’s social media editor (MWSME) explained to HuffPost, rather than adhering to age-old meanings reflective of different times and contexts. It would, to use a popular reference point, accept that the word “literally” can be used to mean “figuratively.”


“It’s worth noting that all professionally edited dictionaries are, by nature, descriptivist: They describe the language, not legislate or approve it,” they said. On the other hand, “all professionally edited dictionaries are also prescriptivist to a certain extent: they offer varying degrees of information and advice about how to use the words they enter.”


During this election season, Merriam-Webster has flexed its descriptivist muscle to the amusement of many. With 137,000 followers on Twitter and several articles devoted to its growing influence across the web, it’s embraced not only public debates ― but the power of the internet to shape the way we talk.


Instead of restricting itself to the confines of a printed tome, it’s stretched its authority to realms of social media, articulate clapback after clapback. 






While the true identity of the MWSME still remains a mystery, they did leave us with some helpful parting words, for us all to ponder as this election comes to a close. 


The next time a politician forces you to Google the definition of “demagogue,” remember: “Language is an organic entity, so predicting its movements is almost as impossible as trying to control a herd of cats with your mind.”

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Everyone Thought Of Janet Jackson When Trump Called Clinton 'Nasty'

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Nasty boys? Nah, 2016 is the year of the “nasty woman.”


A moment during the third presidential debate where Donald Trump referred to opponent Hillary Clinton as “such a nasty woman” quickly gained traction on social media. All of a sudden, Janet Jackson’s 1986 hit “Nasty” had a new life.


If you’re unfamiliar with the lyrics, in the song, Janet reminds listeners that her name ain’t baby, it’s Janet — “Miss Jackson, if you’re nasty.”


Some notable names took that pop culture reference and ran with it. 


























Now that we’re finished with the presidential debates, get your crew and dance on over to the polls in November.





Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly
incites
political violence
and is a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-911_565b1950e4b08e945feb7326"> style="font-weight: 400;">serial liar, href="http://www.huffingtonpost
.com/entry/9-outrageous-things-donald-trump-has-said-about-latinos_55e483a1e4b0c818f618904b"> style="font-weight: 400;">rampant xenophobe,
racist, style="font-weight: 400;">misogynist and href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-stephen-colbert-birther_56022a33e4b00310edf92f7a"> >birther who has
repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from
entering the U.S.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Donald Trump's Clueless Debate Answers Spawn #TrumpBookReport Tweets

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It began, like so many viral hashtags, with a single tweet. 


In this case, St. Louis Alderman Antonio French fired off a tweet highlighting how unprepared Donald Trump sounded when discussing foreign policy during Wednesday night’s presidential debate with Hillary Clinton






That crack caused #TrumpBookReport to trend as Twitter users wondered what would happen if the Republican presidential nominee ― who has said he’s too busy to read many books ― really was a teen giving a report about a book he hadn’t read.


Here are some of the best:  






















































































Donate below to support the groups Donald Trump has insulted.





 

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly
incites
political violence
and is a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-911_565b1950e4b08e945feb7326"> style="font-weight: 400;">serial liar, href="http://www.huffingtonpost
.com/entry/9-outrageous-things-donald-trump-has-said-about-latinos_55e483a1e4b0c818f618904b"> style="font-weight: 400;">rampant xenophobe,
racist, style="font-weight: 400;">misogynist and href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-stephen-colbert-birther_56022a33e4b00310edf92f7a"> >birther who has
repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from
entering the U.S.

Get the latest in Entertainment news and video. Download HuffPost’s news app.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

When Haunted Houses Turn The American Dream Into A Nightmare

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A year ago, my then-boyfriend and I were looking for an apartment in Brooklyn. We lived in Manhattan, but wanted to retreat a bit from the bustle of the East Village. Selfishly, I wanted an apartment that was newer and easier to clean than our crumbling old walk-up. That’s how our realtor ended up directing us to 123 on the Park, a massive edifice on the southeast edge of Prospect Park.


Flashily renovated, lavishly appointed with amenity after amenity and right on the park, the rental property was a real estate dream. And because it was fairly distant from Manhattan, the price for a one-bedroom was surprisingly low. Yet, my boyfriend and I felt something was amiss. The way the fortified brick structure loomed over the rest of the neighborhood seemed unwelcoming, and the residence was so quiet the agent showing us around actually commented on it. “It’s so well-insulated; it sounds like no one lives here. But it’s actually full!” he told us brightly and unconvincingly.


Later, we wandered around the neighborhood. Although the few residents we saw in 123 on the Park were young white couples and families, most of the neighbors were black. Everyone was friendly, but it was obvious that we newcomers were harbingers of gentrification. The property itself stood self-consciously in the midst of the neighborhood, like a spaceship sent down by hostile aliens bent on eventual takeover. Our unease only grew.


We didn’t take the apartment. I moved with my boyfriend, now fiancé, to another neighborhood. We forgot all about the building, or at least its name. Then I picked up Colin Dickey’s new book, Ghostland: An American History in Haunted Places, and found myself reading about a building that reminded me so strongly of the one we’d viewed, it sent a chill up my spine:



In Brooklyn the former Caledonian Hospital, overlooking the south side of Prospect Park, was transformed in 2014 into a luxury rental property, and almost immediately the ghosts moved in. Stories of strange smells, unexplained sounds, and other haunted phenomena began to emerge, and three doormen quit over the course of six months. [...] The managing director of the property group that manages the building confirmed to local papers that there was high staff turnover and that there have been issues in renting units.



It took me just a few minutes on Google to confirm that it was the very apartment building that had given us the creeps ― though we hadn’t heard any ghost stories. Dickey dug deeper than the rumors of ghosts to unearth a somehow more heartbreaking origin story than I expected: citing a Gothamist investigation by Lauren Evans, he reports that “she was told by employees that the ghost rumors had been started by neighbors, who were concerned that the high-priced apartments would drive up their own rents.”


“In landscapes such as New York City, where real estate and issues of gentrification are already fraught,” Dickey concludes, “it doesn’t much matter if the ghosts are real or not; what matters is the financial leverage they may provide.”



Ghostland constantly circles back to the real estate of hauntings. The book motors along like a road trip tracing a map of creepy Americana: the House of Seven Gables, the Winchester Mystery House, the Lemp Mansion, the Biltmore Hotel, and on and on. As he wends his way through the landmarks and their histories, Dickey thoroughly and convincingly explores the many underpinnings of ghost stories and hauntings ― as manifestations of our collective guilt, anxieties, obsessions and historical losses; and as practical schemes for money-making, land acquisition, or controlling groups of people. But the value of property resonates with particular force in this American history of hauntings. What’s more American, after all, than owning your own house? (Maybe upgrading to a bigger house, with a two-car garage.)


From Salem to Brooklyn, from the Reconstruction-era South to contemporary New Orleans, hauntings have been and continue to be remnants of, or wielded in the battle for, land. One of the earliest, most iconic ghost stories by an Anglo-American author, The House of Seven Gables by Nathaniel Hawthorne, centers on a real mansion in Salem, which he imbued with a lurid, fictional backstory: Colonel Pyncheon wants the land, but it’s owned by Matthew Maule. Pyncheon disposes of this impediment by accusing Maule of witchcraft. Maule is executed, Pyncheon takes the land, and the mansion is built ― and haunted by vengeful spirits. At its heart, the haunting of the House of Seven Gables is the residue of a real-estate dispute.


As Dickey documents, property conflicts may been a primary motivation in the actual Salem witch trials: 



One of the first girls who claimed to be afflicted, twelve-year-old Ann Putnam, initially accused the servant Tituba, as well as two other women, Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne. At the time, Osborne was involved in a property dispute with Putnam’s parents [...] Ann Putnam would a few weeks later also name Rebecca Nurse as a tormentor. Like Osborne, Nurse was involved in land disputes with the Putnams. While some of the women accused during the crisis were marginalized ― servants, widows, or otherwise impoverished women without community support ― Nurse was a well-respected figure in the community, pious and well-liked by many. What was happening in Salem was no longer the traditional model of witchcraft persecution, in which primarily the defenseless were targeted. It was now clear there was money to be made and land to be gained.



Salem has long since converted its sordid past into a different sort of practical haunting: an attraction. Like other famously haunted towns (and buildings), Salem capitalizes on its ghostly reputation to draw in tourists, who flock to the Massachusetts landmark to see reenactments of witch trials and take haunted walking tours. In the inverse of 123 on the Park’s ghost rumors, spots like New Orleans and the Lemp Mansion in St. Louis play up their paranormal aura in order to make their location more appealing ― and more profitable.



With tourists come tourism dollars, and a convincing ghost tour can transform an ugly old house into a money machine. This was discovered, argues Dickey, by the owners of Savannah’s Sorrel-Weed House, a particularly colorful spot on the city’s ghost tours. Historian Tiya Miles looked into the history of the mansion and found no basis for the currently circulated story, which features the suicides of a plantation owner’s wife and the enslaved woman, Molly, with whom he was having an affair. “Miles hypothesizes,” writes Dickey, “that the Molly legend was concocted by brothers Stephen and Philip Bader sometime after they purchased the house in 1996 and began renovations.”


Unless an owner wants to convert her home or business into a haunted hotel or ghost mansion, selling tickets at the door, rumors of a haunting are likely to have a more negative impact, steering people clear of an area. Ghost stories have long been used in America, for good or ill, to circumscribe movement. Dickey points to slave narratives compiled by the Works Progress Administration in the 1930s, which collected vestiges of ghost stories from the time of slavery. “In these stories, ghosts terrify, but embedded in the terror are cautionary tales,” he writes. One woman remembered being told, as a child, to keep away from a covered wagon that would appear in isolated areas of Tallahassee, where she lived. The children were told that it was inhabited by a ghost who hated young ones. But this ghost story was circulated only to keep them away from a dangerous spot: “[T]he wagon was in fact owned by a slave hunter, who would steal children and take them to Georgia to be sold, and [...] her parents and other adults had invented the Dry Head and Bloody Bones ghost as a means of protecting them.” 


Later, the Ku Klux Klan would use similar ― if far more stagey ― tactics to terrorize freedmen and try to maintain control of their newly emancipated workforce, Dickey explains. “[T]hese freed slaves were still vital to the economy and could not be allowed to migrate to the North,” he writes. “Just as slave owners had prevented blacks from escaping prior to the Civil War, it now became equally imperative to discourage this movement among liberated slaves, a job taken up by the Klan. It was an enforcement that relied heavily on the presence of ghosts.”


The Klan didn’t settle for stories, visiting black people at night covered in sheets (a get-up that hinted at the eventual uniform of white hooded robes) to intimidate them, attack them and allegedly even play tricks to make themselves appear more ghostly. For example, “a skeletal hand would be inserted in a robe so that when a Klansman offered to shake someone’s hand, they would get instead a disembodied hand.”


The Klansmen, claiming to be ghosts of Confederate soldiers, sought to give the impression that “moving north was futile, since spirits of the Confederate dead could follow them anywhere.” Despite Emancipation, nothing in the social order should be seen as changed; the formerly enslaved people should remain exactly where they were, tilling the land of white plantation owners. Without their free, or at least cheap, labor, the economy and the value of the plantations would collapse.



On the other hand, a haunting can be the last recourse of the powerless, an attempt to bring the field back down to a level they can play on. That’s what Dickey explores in his penultimate chapter, Hillsdale, USA,” where 123 on the Park appears. People in the neighborhood didn’t want their rents to skyrocket as the area grew gentrified, so they spread doubts about the livability of the seemingly luxurious property. What’s more, he points out, potential renters have tried to bargain down the monthly rate, due to the ghosts plaguing their new home. Sometimes a haunting is a means to keep people away, but it can also be a means to get a precious commodity at a bargain. (A deeper dive into the Brooklyn haunting in the New Yorker last year noted that such bargaining gambits have been unsuccessful, as “management’s official position is that ghosts do not exist.”)


Dickey also recalls viewing a foreclosed house with his wife thaovergrown, filthy, and bulbous with bizarre additions. On the wall, in pencil, were the words “A murderer lived here.” They dubbed it “The Happy Murder Castle.” Unable to find any evidence of a murderer who lived here, he concludes, “Those penciled words were, like the black mold, likely an attempt to make [the previous owners’] home as unappealing as they could, an albatross around the neck of the bank that had taken it from them.” Reducing the value of the house might not have done them much good at that point, but it might have soothed the sting of losing their slice of the American Dream.


It’s not entirely as simple as making up a ghost story, of course. In Ghostland, Dickey neatly dissects not just the historical, but the visual and atmospheric elements that evoke a haunting ― off-kilter aspects that come together to create a sense of what we call the “uncanny.” More specifically, he refers back to Sigmund Freud’s concept of unheimlich, or “unhomely”; in a haunted house, Dickey writes, we literally face “that which should be homey, should be welcoming ― the place one lives inside ― but which has somehow become emptied out of its true function.” This sense of wrongness can arise when a home is abandoned, but also when it’s constructed without regard to normal architectural and aesthetic standards. A house made of a jumble of different styles, with labyrinthine passages inside and a bafflingly illogical layout, feels slightly off, unwelcoming, “without concession to humanity.” The Happy Murder Castle, with its weird outgrowths, was one such place; the House of Seven Gables, too, has an overpowering number of gables crammed onto its structure.


Or take 123 on the Park, a gargantuan rental building out of all proportion to its neighbors both in scale and in gloss ― after all, it used to be a hospital, a very different sort of structure. In the area, it felt misplaced in some way that felt difficult to pin down. Within, the impression only increased. The amenities felt stuffed into airless spaces as if to check off boxes for renters with high expectations ― yoga room, gym, recreation room ― regardless of whether the appointed room suited the purpose. We viewed a playroom for children, decorated with colored-pencil wallpaper and located in the bowels of the artificially lit basement. It certainly seemed to be intended for kids, but perhaps designed by someone who’d only encountered children in Toys ‘R’ Us catalogues. 


123 on the Park already emanated an unhomely quality that likely made it a perfect target for ghostly rumors. In large part, that had to do with the leap forward into luxury rentals that stuck out against the rest of the neighborhood ― a grandiose display of fixings and finishings meant to tempt deeper pockets. This incongruity would certainly be felt more deeply by longtime residents than by new ones lured to 123 on the Park by the flashy renovations and park view.


As the ghost rumors mounted, the New Yorker piece reveals, “A number of residents were beginning to wonder if they might be at fault. Perhaps the spirits were ‘anti-gentrification ghosts’ conjured by locals.” Like so many territorial usurpers of the past, gentrifiers might easily block out the unease of living in a fortified mansion among people whose homes we are rapidly helping make too expensive for them to live in. A haunting, though: That’s harder to ignore. 



Americans, perhaps more than anyone, want only to have their own little patch of real estate ― the perfect New York apartment, a starter house, a mansion, a few acres of land. It’s the distilled heart of the national ethos. And yet, as Dickey argues, there’s really no forgetting the fact that the land belonged to others before European settlers swept in and manifest destiny-ed their way across the continent. “Embedded deep in the idea of home ownership ― the Holy Grail of American middle-class life ― is the idea that we don’t, in fact, own the land we’ve just bought,” he writes, in a section on Indian burial ground hauntings. 


The quintessentially American way to battle this anxiety, of course ― aside from those persistent myths about haunted Indian burial grounds ― is to defiantly lay ownership to our land, to flaunt our ability to fulfill our desires through our property.


A viral Zillow listing depicting a hideously decorated home ― also an art project by Nikolay Synkov ― has been knocking around Reddit for some time, drawing mockery. This week, on Slate, Osita Nwanevu defended the idiosyncratic house as “A Distillation of the American Dream.” “In 2001, the Synkovs bought an 11-room house at 24 Brentwood Drive in the tony town of Avon, Connecticut,” Nwaneyu writes. “They promptly set about gutting it. For four years, Synkov would work 40-hour weeks leading a team of at least seven, including his children, in the fulfilment of a remarkable vision [...] By the end of Synkov’s work, the house would be nearly double its original size.” In addition to its rambling size, its grotesque decor and weirdly chimeric rooms had led Reddit commenters to deem it “a recreation of hell” and “the set of a horror movie.” It’s the essence of unhomely. Nwaneyu has a point, though. The Synkov family came to America from Russia, bought a home, and imprinted themselves completely on it. It’s the dream of American home ownership.


Now that the house is on the market, that complete level of ownership might be more of a liability than an advantage. Nikolay Synkov, the patriarch and architect behind the house, has found no takers, despite numerous price reductions since 2013. Though there’s no apparent ghost story, it seems haunted, as many commenters suggest. The family’s presence is felt not only in every room, but in every square inch. There’s no standard “homely” aspect to it that could comfortably accommodate to the next family’s specific patterns. If, as Dickey documents with other patched-together homes, it’s the American way to take our pieces of land and build them up, turn our homes into grandiose extensions of ourselves, it’s also the almost inevitable result that the places we live are misshapen and forever haunted by our attempts at total ownership. 


Of course both the American dream and haunted America are closely knit into the fabric of real estate: We’re a nation of house-hunters. And, as the neighbors of 123 on the Park knew all too well, there’s never enough space to share peacefully.


Ghostland: An American History in Haunted Places
by Colin Dickey
Viking, $27.00
Published October 4, 2016

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Step Inside The Technicolor Dream World Of Brazilian Love Motels

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A woman reclines on her back, literal waterfalls running off her naked body. An arrowed sign above her reads, “Las Vegas,” indicating that visitors should turn left. It’s not an ad for a strip club, like you might’ve seen while driving through a number of American cities, but a Brazilian love motel, an establishment meant for couples to retreat for a few nights or a few hours. 


It’s estimated that there are over 5,000 love motels in Brazil, a business that accounts for at least 300,000 jobs. A New York Times article investigates the ritzier among these establishments ― love motels with plunge pools, 4D movies and helicopter rides on offer. But art director Vera van de Sandt and photographer Jur Oster were interested in the country’s more quotidian getaways ― the love motels that could be found in more rural areas, built in the ‘70s and ‘80s, speckled across Brazil.


Van de Sandt wrote in an email to The Huffington Post that she’d heard about the love motels ― their “round beds, dance poles, neon lighting and sometimes special themes” ― and decided to book a flight and begin the project of cataloging them, without ever having been to Brazil before.



“Even though I never actually went inside one of these motels, I was fascinated by the phenomenon,” van de Sandt said. She’d read an article on The Huffington Post in 2013 about the hotels being revamped into less overtly romantic accommodations, to free up space for visitors attending the 2016 Olympics. 


“What a waste!” she said. Aware of impending renovations or closings, she resolved to work on a series of photos that would preserve these expressive spaces. The result, completed over the course of two trips to Brazil, was a series of photos that employed only natural light to capture the hotels’ moods and atmospheres. A stiff bed lies beneath a mirrored ceiling; a neon pink staircase belies simple accommodations.


“We thought they were only meant for cheating and prostitution, but along the way we found out that the love motels meet a [different] social need,” van de Sandt said. “Young people often live with their parents until they marry, and large families often live together in small houses. In general, people have little privacy so love motels are mostly cheap, sheltered places where couples can relax and be together. Besides that, many couples find motels, with their Jacuzzi’s and flat-screen televisions, exciting and fun.”


Van de Sandt said the more she explored these spaces, the more she grew to appreciate their purpose.


“These rooms often look like film sets from a long-gone past and that is precisely why we wanted to capture them before they would disappear,” she said. “We hope that people who see our photos can make up their own story about what happens in these kind of motel rooms.”


Photos from Love Land Stop Time: Capturing Brazilian Love Motels.


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All Hail These 21 Nasty Ladies From Art History

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The most laughable moment of Wednesday’s third and final presidential debate came when Republican nominee Donald Trump declared, “Nobody respects women more than me.”


Less than an hour later, the alleged sexual predator proved himself by calling opponent Hillary Clinton “such a nasty woman” not quite so under his breath while she was discussing her healthcare plan.


The words had barely left Trump’s mouth before the nasty women of the world got to work. Within minutes, Twitter was surging with #nastywomen jokes, women were plotting their nastiest Halloween costumes, and people were redirecting nasty-centric domain names to Hillary’s website. Needless to say, the nasties of the world know just who they’re voting for. 


In honor of this impromptu celebration of nasty women ― those who rule the world with their strength and sass ― we’ve compiled some of art history’s nastiest muses. From Mary Magdalene to Joan of Arc to all the artistic subjects who prefer to be rendered in the buff, these are some of the most powerful, lewd and crude queens to ever hang on a museum wall. 


Behold: Here are 21 such subjects. At least in our imaginations, these painted ladies are definitely voting HRC. 


She so nasty she didn’t bother wearing clothes to the picnic. 



She so nasty she gets lost in the beauty of her own reflection.



She so nasty she’s got some split ends but they’re being taken care of. 



She so nasty she’s about to shred this lute. 



She so nasty she rocks a blue bow ― and nothing else. 



She so nasty she’s just waiting to destroy you. 



She so nasty she Joan of Arc.



She so nasty she’s waving her butt around. No regrets and no apologies.



She so nasty she prefers receiving her floral bouquets in the nude. 



She so nasty she reads Cornhill Magazine cover to cover. 



She so nasty she takes her puppy out without a leash and without clothes.



She so nasty she jams out on two lyres at once. 



She so nasty she literally decapitating this fool Holofernes. 



She so nasty she doesn’t wear clothes to the dark wood. 



She so nasty she drinks wine and plays with swords at the same damn time. 



She so nasty she looks almost like a sexy ant woman. 



She so nasty she plays with snakes. 



She so nasty she’s practicing her Supta Baddha Konasana pose. 



She so nasty she’s Mary Magdalene.



She so nasty she’s getting ready to break into some of that absinthe after work.



She so nasty she gave you life! 


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Artist Explodes Racial Stereotypes In Shape-Shifting Photographs

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Artist Genevieve Gaignard grew up in the town of Orange, Massachusetts. Her mother was white, her father black ― one of the first black men to live in the small town. “I was always really aware that we were different,” Gaignard explained in an interview with The Huffington Post.


While Gaignard was well aware of her biracial identity, most of her classmates and neighborhood acquaintances simply saw her as the pale-skinned, redheaded child she was. They assumed, in other words, like the majority of Orange citizens, that Gaignard was white. “I passed along with everyone else,” she said. “I blended in.” 


As a kid, Gaignard spent a lot of time in her room. “I was shy, quiet, in my own little world,” she recalled. She would listen to the radio, make collages and plaster magazine cutouts on her wall. She’d also obsessively look into the lives of celebrities like Mariah Carey and Alicia Keys, women who also were both black and white. She studied how they defined themselves, the spaces they occupied and the ways they existed in the world. “I would think, ‘Oh, they get to be black,’ or, ‘They’re kind of passing as white,’” Gaignard said. “I would search for images of their parents, trying to get clues. It’s interesting how media or the industry often decides where someone will fit in.” 



With no outside force to define her, Gaignard was left, like so many young people, feeling undefined. “It was this not knowing how to identify,” she expressed. “Not feeling black enough, not feeling white enough, that was the struggle.” 


After a stint in cooking school, Gaignard enrolled in community college and eventually found herself at Massachusetts College of Art and Design, where she became interested in photography. Her main inspiration was Diane Arbus, a photographer captivated by the fringes of polite society, enamored with the world’s outsiders, others and freaks. “She saw their flaws ― the things that aren’t usually seen as attractive or beautiful ― as their most amazing qualities,” Gaignard mused. “And I guess I had a sense of relating to the subjects that she photographed.”


Following in Arbus’ footsteps, Gaignard began to photograph the world around her. She chronicled her family, the people in her town, and eventually, she started experimenting with putting herself in front of the lens. The simple gesture stirred up questions within the artist that had long gone unanswered. “Is this my space?” Gaignard said. “Where do I fit in the world? This idea of passing — do I pass in this space?”


It wasn’t, however, until Gaignard was working toward her MFA at Yale, among other artists of color who incorporated aspects of race into their work, when she fully realized her capacity to use art to tell her story. “My experience as a person of color is different than others. I have something to say,” she said. “The stuff I say now sort of addresses a lot of the feelings I had as a child.”



Now, Gaignard most often photographs herself, although, because of her ability to camouflage with wigs, makeup and clothing, the average viewer might not recognize the recurring protagonist. In each image, Gaignard embodies a different woman, although she’s more of a stereotypical embodiment of otherness than a fully fleshed out character. The images playfully tease out the multiplicity that exists within all of us, while confronting the mainstream resistance to accept such ambiguity, especially when it comes to race. 


Many of her photographic performances, Gaignard explains, begin with an object ― the right wig, dress, or pair of high heels. The artist often scours thrift stores hunting for inspiration, a practice not all that different from many women shopping for a special occasion or a big night out, carefully curating the woman they want to become, if just for a night. 


In her photo “Extra Value After Venus,” Gaignard dons an American flag bathing suit beneath a black tank top that reads, “Thug life.” With long, dark hair, gold hoop earrings and a watermelon bandana, Gaignard presses her body against a wall adorned with an American flag, a McDonald’s fries carton and soda in her grip. What words would you use to describe such a woman? Gaignard dares the viewer to respond. Where does she come from? In which spaces does she belong? How much of her is me? How much of her is you? 



There is an element of drag culture in Gaignard’s practice, both in the act of performing femininity and the kitschy style in which the performance is executed. In part, this predilection toward camp was inspired by Gaignard’s mother, who grew up in Baltimore and often attended John Waters’ parties and movie premieres. “I really got into ‘Hairspray,’” Gaignard explained, “both for its subject matter and also because its lead character is a larger woman ― and a star. My work addresses that too. It’s about race, but it’s also about embracing the fact that you’re not this ideal the media puts out.”


Gaignard’s photos reject simplicity in any and every form. Through fashioning imprecise personas, often formed through stereotypes and as such both real and fictitious, she alludes to the omnipresent influence of race without ever declaring a straightforward argument or critique on the subject. But the work is more than race, addressing issues of femininity, body positivity, identity and belonging with the ease of trying on different outfits. 


“There’s a lot of back and forth,” Gaignard said. “I’m the subject, I’m the photographer. I’m literally passing as a character, while actually not being all that far from the character that is being portrayed. These are all just facades for the girls who can’t really verbalize what’s going on inside.”


The artist’s most recent exhibition, “Smell the Roses,” is now on view at The California African American Museum. The venue itself brings Gaignard tremendous pride. “It’s huge for a girl who has often felt just on the outside of being allowed to embrace her blackness.”


“Smell the Roses” is on view until Feb. 12, 2017 at The California African American Museum.


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These Stunning 'Airportraits' Show The Beauty Of Flight At Airports Around The World

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What if planes flew in flocks like birds? We’re talking hundreds of planes, in the air at the same time, using the same runway. What would that look like?


Something like this:



Mike Kelley created composites of planes at airports around the world for a stunning and oddly relaxing series called “Airportraits.” An architectural and aviation photographer based in Los Angeles, Kelley took photos at airports in 10 cities including Amsterdam, Tokyo, Zurich and London to accomplish “the most insane thing I have ever done, without question,” he says.


Kelley hung out at airports, camera on tripod, and captured hundreds of planes taking off or landing. He then created a composite image as if the planes were all in the sky simultaneously. As Engadget puts it, it’s “eight hours of air traffic in one image.”



The project took nearly two years. A lot of planning and strategy was required to arrange flights and access to various airports, then take thousands of photographs at each one. Then there was all the time spent in post-production, arranging the photos and editing them to look as realistic as possible. 


Kelley racked up more than 74,000 air miles on 25 flights to complete the series. He described the process in a blog post as “arduous, to say the least:”



“From some locations I had thousands of pictures that needed to be culled, color corrected, extracted, and composited. For a few locations, I had weather that changed throughout the day (e.g. Frankfurt) from sunny to cloudy and back again. I had to think of a way to put these together that respected the weather and location, showed the aircraft realistically, and looked relatively believable.”



But why? To highlight what Kelley calls “the inherent beauty in aviation, something that’s easy to forget as air travel has become a touch more mundane in recent years.”


Basically, he just really loves airports.


See the rest of the series below.


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'America's Got Talent' Star Woke NYC Up On Spirit Day With A Song

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America’s Got Talent” finalist Brian Justin Crum kicked off Spirit Day in New York Thursday with an intimate live performance.


Appropriately, the 28-year-old wore a purple shirt underneath a sleek leather jacket as he crooned Michael Jackson’s “Man in the Mirror” to a crowd of LGBT advocates and media professionals, who were enjoying breakfast at the Kellogg’s NYC Cafe in Times Square. 


In honor of the occasion, the eatery also debuted its official “Spirit Day Bowl” ― a mix of Frosted Flakes, blueberries, blueberry jam and lemon zest. The dish was created by the Kellogg Company as part of its Spirit Day partnership with GLAAD.


As in previous years, supporters were encouraged to wear purple in solidarity with bullied LGBT youth and, as such, Kellogg’s products also “went purple.”


Crum, who came in fourth place on “America’s Got Talent” in September, told The Huffington Post that it was “an honor” to perform in New York on Spirit Day, which is observed Oct. 20. 


“I’m a gay man who grew up an overweight, flamboyant kid. It breaks my heart that kids are still being tormented and tortured in school for just being who they are,” he said. “I’ve seen so many kids’ lights dimmed from the hate from other people.”


The California native, who is currently recording an EP, said he wanted to use his success in the entertainment industry to show bullied LGBT youth “that you can come out on the other side and you can achieve every dream you’ve ever had if you just focus and work hard.”


Check out photos from the Oct. 20 event below. You can read more about Spirit Day here


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The Most-Searched Debate Terms Are A National Cry For Help

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Many powers are actually unavailable to the president, at least in countries like the United States, but the power to set the national tone isn’t one of them. President Theodore Roosevelt famously called the presidential platform “the bully pulpit”; when the White House speaks, people listen. 


As our two White House hopefuls spoke during Wednesday’s third and final presidential debate, the nation hung on every word. Any political debate has the potential to get into territory unfamiliar to the average listener ― arcane policy details, for example ― but in case anyone wasn’t clear on this, the debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump set a far more apocalyptic and potentially authoritarian tone. 


Merriam-Webster took note of spikes in lookups on their online dictionary during the debate, and the results are nothing less than a tragic expression of our collective horror and confusion:


Rig


Lookups for “rig” spiked 3,000 percent after Trump used the term.  


Hombre


Lookups for “hombre” rose 120,000 percent after Trump used the word, and topped out at 150,000 percent over average. (The full context for that: during an answer about immigration, he responded, “We have some bad hombres here and we’re going to get them out.” Got it.) 


Debunk


“Debunk” lookups shot up 6,600 percent after both candidates used it to dismiss claims made during the debate. 


Sleazy


Both spellings of “sleazy” trended; lookups for the less common spelling, “sleezy” were up 10,700 percent.


 As a far preferable version of Trump might say:







Election rigging, lie debunking, throwing around insinuations that Latino immigrants are criminal elements and opponents are “sleazy” (and, lest we forget, “nasty”) ― these are the standout moments that have sent Americans to Google for more information.


By now, even our dictionary lookups are staring back at us reproachfully. Is it too late now to just search ombré instead?

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Thank God Kendall Jenner Is Here To Explain The History Of Performance Art

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Do you know what performance art is? Because Kendall Jenner does. Sort of.


In a recent video for W Magazine, the supermodel pays homage to a few decades of performance art by cheekily reenacting memorable pieces by Yoko Ono, Marina Abramovic and the like. Along the way, she admits that her soul (no name provided) is an artist.


The video ― narrated by curator RoseLee Goldberg, who’s kind of a big deal in the performance art world ― is not quite as bad as Jenner’s attempt to impersonate a ballerina. (At least this one seems self-aware.) But it does feature a near-nude Jenner flailing in blue paint like a beached porpoise. So.


You can read the entire article that accompanies the video here (Jenner and her pal Gigi Hadid were apparently “transformed” by artists Lizzie Fitch and Ryan Trecartin for the cover, a celebration of W Magazine’s 10th anniversary).


Or you can watch the entirety (read: a very small portion) of performance art history in four easy GIFs starring Jenner, Hadid, and a shredded $10,000 dress. Kendall + Karl 4ever.


Yoko Ono’s “Cut Piece” (1965)








Yves Klein’s “Anthropometries” (1960)








Saburo Murakami’s “Passing Through” (1994)








Marina Abramović and Ulay’s “AAA AAA” (1978)








For a more comprehensive ― but equally silly ― history of performance art, check out our brief survey of confusing performance art here.

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To Be Young, Gay And Black: The Beautiful Importance Of 'Moonlight'

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Moonlight” is a lyric poem in three stanzas. It’s a movie for everyone who’s ever clung to shards of hope in the midst of dejection. It’s a tale of breathtaking simplicity and heartrending intricacy. And it may be the most important thing to appear on a big screen this year. 


It’s an annual tradition for film festivals to produce a smattering of titles that rise above the cinematic void. Rarely are they received as rapturously as “Moonlight,” the coming-of-age drama written and directed by Barry Jenkins (”Medicine for Melancholy”). The praise has been unanimous and warranted. 


“Right before the movie premiered at Telluride, I kind of made a note to myself that I was proud of the film and proud of the work that we did, and I’m going to try to just live in that headspace,” Jenkins said during a conversation in New York two weeks ago. “It’s still the same film it was a month ago and the same film it was when we wrapped on set. I try to remember that and keep it all in perspective because the truly important thing is to get the film out to the community.”



Based on an unproduced, semi-autobiographical play by Tarell Alvin McCraney, “Moonlight” is the story of Chiron, an introvert living in the Miami projects with his crack-addicted mother (Naomie Harris). Kids pick on him because he’s more effeminate than the other boys. “What is a faggot?” he asks Juan, a neighborhood drug dealer (Mahershala Ali) who shows compassion for Chiron. Juan and his girlfriend, Teresa (Janelle Monáe), become surrogate parents. Chiron escapes to their orderly home for the food and comfort he is often denied. He struggles to understand his sexuality and his poverty, and he has nowhere else to turn. “My mama does drugs?” he asks Juan, and we melt with sympathy. 


“Moonlight” comprises three chapters. In the first, Chiron (Alex R. Hibbert) is a grade-school boy who’s been branded with the nickname Little because he is smaller and daintier than the others. In the second division, Chiron (Ashton Sanders) ages into a teenager, able to fight back but keener to avoid confrontation, including that of his mother, who makes him hand over cash to feed her addiction. It’s in this phase of the film that Chiron realizes his only friend Kevin (Jharrel Jerome) might be gay, too ― what that means exactly, he still isn’t sure. But Kevin won’t defend Chiron outside of their private enclave, and the violent homophobia continues. In the third division, Chiron (Trevante Rhodes) has become a hardened drug dealer himself, pumped-up muscles and fake grills concealing a truth he’s determined to bury. Loneliness radiates off of him.



“Moonlight” is soulful. Jenkins and his cinematographer, James Laxon, linger on rare moments of intimacy: hands sinking into the beachside sand, blood stained on Chiron’s cheek, food being grilled during a third-act moment so alive that I can’t possibly spoil it here. A dirge about suffocating masculinity and masked identities, “Moonlight” is built with remarkable beauty and melancholic vitality. It is also ― nine months after the second consecutive list of Oscar nominations featured no performers of color ― a movie without any prominent white faces. It’s a rare Hollywood project that lends well-rounded credence to minorities without the preachiness of a soapbox or the chains of a slavery narrative. 


I want to let the film’s actors speak to that, via a series of individual conversations we had earlier this month. They can do so far better than I.



From Mahershala Ali, a former college-basketball star who established an acting career with signature roles on “House of Cards” and Luke Cage”:



In terms of portrayals [that] are supposed to reflect black men, there’s always been those people who’ve had exceptional careers. ... You look at Denzel Washington and Forest Whitaker and Morgan Freeman, Will Smith even ― there’s been some folks who’ve had a certain degree of authority and dominion in Hollywood. But those are the exceptions and not the rule. ... You’ve got to think, there are hundreds of movies that come out every year. There are hundreds of actors, so how black men are represented is actually fairly limited.


What has been challenging over a career of 15 years or 16 years now is feeling like you find yourself as a black man having to elevate the work and make it three-dimensional, bring something special to it because you’re not the one being written for. You’re the one who’s there to support the narrative of the other person, and that person is not black. Therefore you end up seeing black people framed in a certain way that is very limiting.


Subconsciously, at a certain point, I think we all are not aware that people of color have the same capacity for a full human experience as white people. That’s what makes this movie so special, because of how these characters are framed so three-dimensionally, how emotionally intelligent the characters are, how Barry masterfully explores the language of silence. You have the opportunity to see people of color having an experience that is very similar to what you would see in one of these other films that are full of A-listers that pop up in the fall and winter that are considered award-worthy films. I think that, in part, is why “Moonlight” is resonating with people a certain way. It’s pointing the camera at people who have not had the same emotional and psychological space. ... If there were hundreds of those, then you would lose the term “black actor.” It would just be “well, he’s an actor,” because people have to get use to seeing us have the same range of experiences. ... We can also begin culturally to have an open acceptance and encourage people to be whoever they need to be on their terms. I think that’s what it’s about.




From André Holland, the “Selma” and “The Knick” actor who plays the adult Kevin: 



For me it comes back to that moment when Naomie’s character says to Juan, “You gonna tell him why kids pick on him all the time? You gonna tell him why?” There’s a certain part of Chiron that he can’t hide. He can’t hide who he is, whereas I think Kevin, for whatever reason, knows how to perform whatever he thinks masculinity is in a way that gives him a mask to the world. But Chiron doesn’t have the luxury of a mask. As a result, he’s had to retreat into himself in order to survive, whereas Kevin is able to go outward in order to survive. But at the end of the day, they’re just performing different versions of who they think the world wants them to be. 




From Janelle Monáe, who is making her live-action film debuts in “Moonlight” and December’s “Hidden Figures”:



“Moonlight” is so important for humanity to see. It’s important to understand what it’s like to be a young, black male discovering that he’s gay and he’s living in an impoverished background or neighborhood, and what it’s like for him not to have support from his entire community on what his sexual orientation is. And I think when you also compare that to what women have been experiencing, to what immigrants have been experiencing ― the Other. I think it’s time that we all continue to embrace the things that make us unique, even if it makes others uncomfortable. We should choose freedom over fear. That’s what I think watching this movie will help us come to the conclusion of.



(Read more with Monáe here.)



And from writer-director Barry Jenkins:



To me, the main character is retreating into himself. Time is passing and of course he has to evolve with the times, but it’s a fucked-up evolution because he’s basically drifting further and further away from the truth of himself. I like to think he’s fortifying himself, building up this exterior. Then I think, by the time we get to the third story, he’s literally built a wall of muscle and these fucking fronts. He’s basically hid himself behind this wall, and that wall is meant to be in the image of what society teaches us is the proper version of black male masculinity. ... And black male drug dealers are more than just black male drug dealers. All these people have stories.



If you see one movie this year, make it “Moonlight.” It opens in limited release Oct. 21 and expands to additional cities in the coming weeks.

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Michael Moore Preaches The Hillary Clinton Gospel In 'TrumpLand'

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As a 62-year-old straight, white man who lives in a state with a Republican governor, Michael Moore fits squarely within the demographic of Donald Trump supporters. (You know, if you knew nothing else about him.) His surprise new documentary, “Michael Moore in TrumpLand,” though, is nothing short of a love letter to Hillary Clinton


While we’ve seen Clinton’s opponent stand at podiums all over the country bellowing hateful rhetoric throughout the election season, “TrumpLand” shows Moore at a podium of his own in a conservative Midwest town, bellowing a message of unity. Adopting the cadence of an evangelical preacher, an outsider come from someplace else to spread his political gospel, Moore ends with a call to action: It’s OK to hate Clinton, but you need to vote for her. 


“You can see at the beginning there’s a lot apprehension in the room,” Moore said after a recent screening of the film, which will soon be available online.



“TrumpLand” opens on Ohio residents talking about the November election. One voter, a man in a tank top, claimed to prefer Trump because “he didn’t get it handed down to him like [Clinton did] from her parents.” A shot outside a theater revealed its marquee: Trump Voters Welcome.


“This is about reaching out to the people. I live in Michigan, and so, I know. I know. You see Trump signs everywhere. It’s astounding,” Moore said.


Inside the theater, in front of a group with mixed political dispositions and ages in Bloomington, Ohio, he launches into his act, which is a sort of standup routine woven with heartfelt stories. Moore reveals the depth of his respect for Clinton while trying also to spread it on a stage lined with black-and-white photos of her younger days. 


Surprisingly, the filmmaker’s topical jokes seem to land among the crowd. As a satirical representation of Trump’s past comments, Moore has Mexican (or “Mexican-looking”) audience members, who had been segregated in an upper tier of seats, surrounded by a prop wall. Also-segregated Muslim (or “Muslim-looking”) audience members were placed under “drone surveillance.” Joking that white men at Trump rallies sound like “dying dinosaurs,” he makes an exaggerated sad-dinosaur noise and skewers American men’s stubborn refusal to cede the leadership roles they’ve historically held. Not long ago, women couldn’t hold property, Moore reminds the crow. America hasn’t been capital-G “Great” for a lot of people over its 240 years. 



One of the more unexpected moments comes when the filmmaker screens a clip from the time of President Bill Clinton’s impeachment hearings. Trump, then in his 40s, is asked whether he has any dating advice for Hillary. In a softer tone of voice than we’ve heard him use to refer to any Clinton recently, Trump kindly says she doesn’t need his advice and predicts the couple’s marriage will survive. It’s an olive branch to the Trump sympathizers in the room, a warm image of the candidate in the days before he would think to call her a “nasty woman” on a national stage.


“TrumpLand” doesn’t do much for voters looking to be swayed by hard facts. But, for those who oppose the Democratic candidate due to a vague sense of dislike and disgust, Moore paints an image of a woman who has continued to work hard for issues despite decades of often sexist reaction by voters and media.



“It doesn’t get acknowledged, if you were an early feminist, what you put up with and what you went through,” Moore said. 


Before and after the Ohio performance, the filmmaker’s crew polled audience members. While the performance may not have convinced every Trump supporter to vote for Clinton in November, he says that some were swayed to third parties ― although his goal was to win undecided voters and Bernie Sanders supporters over to Clinton’s side.


But Moore’s support for the Democratic nominee hinges on whether she will make good on her campaign promises. If she doesn’t, he joked after the screening, we might see him running for president in the next election on a platform of universal remote controls.


Kanye-Moore 2020, anyone?


Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly
incites
political violence
and is a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-911_565b1950e4b08e945feb7326"> style="font-weight: 400;">serial liar, href="http://www.huffingtonpost
.com/entry/9-outrageous-things-donald-trump-has-said-about-latinos_55e483a1e4b0c818f618904b"> style="font-weight: 400;">rampant xenophobe,
racist, style="font-weight: 400;">misogynist and href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-stephen-colbert-birther_56022a33e4b00310edf92f7a"> >birther who has
repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from
entering the U.S.

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Artists Share Illustrations To Condemn Violence Against Women In Latin America

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Following the rape and murder of 16-year-old Lucia Perez in Mar del Plata, a coastal town in Argentina, earlier this month, tens of thousands of women protested gender-based violence across the country on Wednesday.


They marched toward Buenos Aires’ Plaza de Mayo on “Black Wednesday,” dressed in mourning clothes and carrying signs expressing solidarity with Perez and condemning the killing of women. 


Organized by a group known as #NiUnaMenos or “Not One Less,” the protests also spread to other Latin American cities, where violence against women is a similarly pressing issue. A recent report revealed that Latin America has seven out of the 10 countries in the world with the highest murder rate of women.


Artists are also stepping up to call for an end to violence against women. This week, they have contributed to the protests by sharing illustrations with the campaign’s slogans, namely: #VivasLasQueremos, or “We Want Them Alive,” #NiUnaMenos or “Not One Less,” and #NiUnaMás, or “Not One More.” 


Scroll down to see some of their artwork. 





A photo posted by Sil Chibi (@silchibi) on





A photo posted by s A i M. (@xsimonesepulveda) on







A photo posted by Juan Manuel (@jotanaim) on





A photo posted by J O H A N A (@johalucatti) on





A photo posted by La Mirona (@la_mirona) on









#NiUnaMenos #MiercolesNegro #VivasLasQueremos Dibujo por @ppiiiiqq

A photo posted by Tomas Coxe (@tomicoxe) on




This post originally appeared on HuffPost Mexico. It has been translated into English and edited for clarity. 

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Over 25 Million People Have Watched This Garage Door Open And Close

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As a professional face painter and graphic designer, Amanda Destro Pierson has always loved Halloween.


“It is my favorite holiday because I love to dress up,” she told The Huffington Post. “My husband loves dressing up with me because I usually make us into something really fun.”


Pierson and her husband Andrew have transformed into Jack Skellington and Sally, a devil and angel, and Frankenstein’s monsters. 



But her dress-up ambitions go beyond costumes. “I’ve always wanted to buy a house, so I could decorate it for Halloween,” she said. “More than for other holidays because making your house a little creepy is so much fun!”


This year, Pierson, who lives outside Cleveland with her family, turned her creepy dreams into reality. Behold, her “Monster House.”





Last week, she posted a video on Facebook showing the creative way she decorated her garage door, and it quickly went viral, with over 25 million views and counting.


Pierson told HuffPost she was inspired by some Halloween decorations she saw on Pinterest and thought they would work well on her garage. “Also, I didn’t want to have to get up on the roof this year to hang decorations,” she said. Putting together the creepy creation took about 10 hours, five of which were spent painting the pieces.  



Following the viral success of her video, Pierson created a Facebook page called My Monster House to inspire people to create their own “Monster Houses” for Halloween. She is also working on some “My Monster House” kits to sell online next year. 


Pierson said Andrew and her 13-year-old stepdaughter Kylee “love” the decorations.


“My husband goes along with my creative whims because he knows it makes me happy, but when the attention started pouring in he was floored,” she explained. “We both were.”



She said Kylee was also amazed by the number of video views. “She told my husband she thinks I’m really smart,” said Pierson. 


As for the neighbors, they haven’t really said anything to the family about their unique decorations. “But the other night a group of Boy Scouts selling popcorn saw us come home and came running up our driveway to talk about the monster,” Pierson noted. “They were really excited about it and wanted to see its mouth open and close. I made them promise to come back on Halloween to trick-or-treat.”


Can we come too?

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How To Preserve The Male Ego And Prevent World Destruction

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The male ego must be nourished and tended to ― and no one knows that better than the ladies of JustBoobs Sketch comedy group.


In a new parody video, the group coaches the women of the world on how to preserve and protect the fragile male ego. JustBoobs Sketch, which is made up of comedians Melissa Rojas, Elizabeth Bond, Kate McDaniel and Stephanie Carrie, hits the nail on the head with this sardonic depiction of fragile masculinity (and what could happen if you don’t tend to it like a delicate flower). 


“As you may have noticed in your own life, threatening the delicate male ego can have dyer consequences,” Carrie says in the video. (All jokes aside, toxic masculinity often does turn violent and usually towards women.) 


The group gives a few examples of what happens when the male ego gets bruised, including: 1) “The Lakers started to suck the minute the number of female Fortune 500 CEOs hit 4 percent;” 2) “The stock market crashed when the first woman did the Charleston in public;” and 3) “Half a glacier melted when Johnny Depp was cast across from a love interest his own age.”


Below are just a few tips from the informative video (funded by the Rich Insecure Dudes Foundation) about how you can care for the male ego:








As Bond says: “Take one for the team, lock feminism in a drawer in the back of the closet and cover it in piles of diet pills, chastity belts and shame.” 


Because who really needs feminism, right? 


Head over to YouTube to watch more from JustBoobs Sketch.

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This 'Bookshelf House' Is Every Book Lover's Dream Home

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For book lovers, there’s no such thing as too many books. Unfortunately, there is such a thing as too little storage. When your nightstand is piled high with books that may very well fall and crush you in your sleep, it’s time to reevaluate.


If you’re looking for storage inspiration, look no further than this “Bookshelf House.” Located in a suburb outside of Paris, the home utilizes books as the main decor element. Frankly, it’s a bookworm’s paradise.



The home got its bookish upgrade from designer Andrea Mosca, who received one major request before commencing work: He had to incorporate a massive bookshelf.


“After some tests, I decided to imagine a standard bookshelf element that could populate the space, playing different roles when needed,” Mosca told The Huffington Post. 


The bookshelf acts both as a railing for the staircase and as a separation wall. Bookshelves continue onto the second floor, where they divide the home office from the hallway.



Throughout the renovation, Mosca worked to create a brighter, more modern space. Now, the Bookshelf House is flooded with natural light. Check out more photos of this book lover’s dream home below.






H/T DesignTaxi

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Dating App Donated $1 To Planned Parenthood For Every Instagram Like On This Photo

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The Bumble Hive stands with Planned Parenthood.


On Thursday morning, feminist-leaning dating app Bumble posted a picture to Instagram that read: “For every like this post gets, Bumble will donate a dollar to Planned Parenthood.” The post received 28,747 likes by the time the campaign ended at 3pm on Thursday.


“This isn’t a political post,” the caption reads. “Our team is a mixing pot, some of us are Republicans, some are Democrats, some are Independents, and some aren’t even from America. But every single one of us knows how important it is for women to have safe and affordable healthcare.” 


The dating app, which only allows women to send the first message, has been hailed as a “feminist Tinder.” A spokesperson for the female-created and led company told The Huffington Post that the post was inspired from the discussion of late-term abortion during Wednesday night’s presidential debate. 


The spokesperson said that Bumble’s team is primarily made up of women, who understand and value the fundamental rights of women. While the team’s opinions vary regarding the presidential election, they all agree on the vital importance of Planned Parenthood: 



We feel strongly that having access to reproductive and female healthcare is very important. One team member pointed out that Planned Parenthood saved her life in college, as she did not have access to health insurance and used planned parenthood for her yearly exam. They detected early stages of cervical cancer, and were able to change the course of her health. It’s too often that women will go years without exams because they can’t afford to be seen, and Planned Parenthood is accessible and affordable healthcare for women. 



Below is a mock illustration of Bumble’s check for $28,747 to Planned Parenthood that the dating app posted in a blog Thursday afternoon.



According Bumble’s blog post, the check will be posted on Instagram stories so people can be sure the team isn’t “playing around.”


“We feel Planned Parenthood is a natural extension of empowering women to take care of their bodies, giving them the right to accessible health care, as well as the ability to make the best choices for them,” the Bumble spokesperson said. “This isn’t about one particular women’s health matter, it’s about providing women with access to all of the proper healthcare ―  reproductive healthcare included ― that they need.”


Women helping women helping women? All we have to say is:  






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Kurt Vonnegut Once Said Nobel Laureate Bob Dylan Was 'Worst Poet Alive'

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By now, you probably know that Bob Dylan won the Nobel Prize for Literature. And the reaction has been ... interesting


Many have reached out and expressed their happiness for the “Like A Rolling Stone” singer:










Quite a few others have been less than enthusiastic:










Hell, Dylan himself hasn’t officially said anything about the award. For a short time, his website featured “Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature” at the top ... but it has since been taken down.


All of this pales in comparison, however, to what the late Kurt Vonnegut said about Dylan, years before the musician won the Nobel. In an epic interview conducted in November 1991, Vonnegut had some choice words about Bob Dylan’s lyrical stylings.


When asked about his taste in music (FYI: the author doesn’t like rap), Vonnegut said this:



The Beatles have made a substantial contribution. Bob Dylan, however, is the worst poet alive. He can maybe get one good line in a song, and the rest is gibberish.



Daaaaaamn, Vonnegut. 


Hustler is apparently publishing the interview in the upcoming December issue, which you can read here. If only Vonnegut were alive to watch (and probably heckle) Dylan at the Dec. 10 Nobel ceremony. You know, if Dylan shows up. 


So it goes ... 


(h/t Consequence of Sound)


CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that the interview with Vonnegut was published in the November 1991 issue of Hustler. It was conducted in November 1991, and will be published in Hustler’s December 2016 issue.

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I Had My '10 Minutes Of Fame' For Sexual Assault And You Can Have It Back

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During Wednesday night’s presidential debate, Donald Trump denied accusations of sexual assault against him by, in part, suggesting that the women accusing him were seeking their “their 10 minutes of fame.”


You don’t have to have experienced the attention that public rape accusations can bring to realize it’s not the kind of attention anyone would ever want. But, in a way, I have experienced it.


In 2011, I was launching a website with publishing legend Jane Pratt, who had previously created Sassy and Jane Magazines. The very first first piece that I published on the new site was an interview with my adolescent rapist, written after he had attempted to friend me on Facebook. 


I was assaulted by a group of teenage boys when I was 14, and I’d spent the following decade both blaming myself for it, and attempting to destroy myself with drugs and alcohol. Then three years sober, at 28, I was working through the trauma for the very first time in therapy, and I had questions about what had happened to me.


At the time, the notion of being contacted by a perpetrator through social media was fairly new, and I found myself in the unique position of being able to ask those questions directly of one of the men involved in my assault.


So after a lot of input from my therapist, I had a conversation with him, which ended up being intensely therapeutic, if only because he verified my memories and justified my pain. I wrote about it because I wanted to show the thinking behind sexual assault, and that those who commit it are not monsters, but people we know and interact with every day. 


Although I didn’t name my assailant, I effectively went public as a victim of sexual assault the day that article was published. 



The scale of the reaction was not, of course, in line with what happens when a woman comes out about being assaulted by a presidential candidate or major celebrity. But as the story began to be picked up by other media outlets, I was asked to appear on various radio and television programs to speak about my experience. The culmination was probably when I flew to LA to appear on “The Dr. Phil Show.”


But even before that, my story started to serve as a lightening rod for people’s (mostly ignorant) opinions about rape. People felt free to question the veracity of my story ― to try to poke holes in the details or criticize my tone. 


“This story just doesn’t ring true,” wrote one Daily Mail commenter on The Daily Mail’s coverage of my story.


“Sounds like she was a willing participant to at least some degree,” wrote another. 


“How do you know he raped her?” wrote yet another. “Just because she said so?”


One of my favorite comments from that time said, “While I 100% understand that there is really no grey area when it comes to rape, this isn’t really a case of ‘man attacks random woman on the street, rapes her, and leaves.’ This is more of a ‘girl is drunk with a bunch of men she KNOWS and says ‘no, stop’ but they don’t listen.’” 


This is, of course, the literal definition of rape. 



After I went on NPR to discuss my story, several commenters suggested that because I had laughed during my segment, I obviously hadn’t really been raped. 


Strangers critiqued my tattoos and “provocative poses” in the photos that writers grabbed from my Facebook for their articles, and accused me of trying to get attention for the website I worked for by making up a false rape claim. They questioned whether I had been drinking or using drugs while I was assaulted. I was told that if I had “really” been raped I would have “sent my rapist to jail” rather than writing about it, never mind the fact that this was a 14-year-old crime and that very few rapists are ever actually prosecuted, even when there is much more evidence than I had readily available. 


Today, some of these comments are so wrong-headed that they seem almost comical to me, but at the time, dealing with this kind of backlash was a legitimate danger to my mental health.


So when I received a request from “The Dr. Phil Show” to fly from New York to LA to film a segment on my story, I had extreme reservations. I knew Dr. Phil was known for his “tough love” approach and I was afraid of what his angle might be. The producers also wanted to reach out to my assailant, which I refused. 


While I believed strongly in speaking out about my rape as a way to help other women, the thought of going on television to do so made me queasy. I decided to do so only because the very fact that so many people were questioning my story made me realize how important it was to tell the truth about what rape really looks like most of the time.


For the most part, women are raped in situations like mine, by men they know, not by strangers jumping out of the bushes with a weapon. But the prevailing cultural narrative of rape as a dark-alley scenario persists, teaching women to blame ourselves when we’re raped on a date, by a friend, while we’re drunk, when we didn’t “fight hard enough.” 



Everything about your life, your appearance, your history, and the way you process trauma becomes open to vitriol and criticism, because some people will still use any excuse not to believe women.



I talk and write about my rape because women need to be able to identify these commonplace experiences as rape, and because they need to know that it isn’t their fault. Sometimes I do this at the expense of my own well-being. 


Luckily, my experience appearing on Dr. Phil was everything I could have hoped for. He was respectful, not too sensationalistic, and he gave me the perfect opportunity to spread my message by asking what I would tell a 14-year-old girl who was in my situation. The messages I received from women who were helped by seeing my episode when it aired ultimately justified the decision for me. 


Video from my segment doesn’t seem to be online anymore. Still, as you can see from my face in the screenshot at the top of this post, I was so rattled I felt like I was going to vomit the whole time. I had an actual panic attack in the green room when I was asked to sign some last-minute paperwork that included a clause saying the producers could bring on any additional guest without informing me. A producer had to come down to personally assure me my rapist was not in the building. 


Talking about sexual assault in our society is traumatizing. There’s no other word for it. By doing so, you open yourself up to a barrage of hate and put yourself on public trial. Everything about your life, your appearance, your history, and the way you process trauma becomes open to vitriol and criticism, because some people will still use any excuse not to believe women. 


And yet every time someone steps forward to accuse a famous man of assault ― whether it’s Bill Cosby, Woody Allen, or the pro-athlete of the week ― they’re accused of doing it for the attention. 


My “10 minutes of fame” felt like one long panic attack. I wouldn’t wish that kind of attention on anyone. 


So no, Donald Trump, I don’t believe that any woman comes out about sexual assault because she wants the attention.


We do it despite the attention, even when it hurts. 


Donate below to support the groups Donald Trump has insulted. 





 Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

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