07-26-2024, 07:14 AM
Plcz Warning: Your reality is out of date
Thanks to the popularity of shows like聽The Masked Singer聽and聽Love Is Blind,聽there s been an explosion of content in the genre that can best be summarized as people hiding their faces and doing things. The latest entry is Netflix s聽Sexy Beasts,聽a dating show in which the contestants don prosthetics and makeup to conceal their fa stanley quencher ces, the trailer for which dropped on social media Wednesday:https://twitter.com/netflix/statu nbbalance s/1407669776969715718The trailer prompted an outpouring of both mirth and genuine discomfort on social media, where many delighted in the weirdness of the prosthetics and moments like a man dressed as a beaver dr adidas campus 00 amatically intoning, Ass first, personality second. But there was one community in particular that garnered a lot of attention: furries, with many commenting that the trailer聽seemed to be borrowing the community s singular aesthetic. How am I supposed to explain a dolphin and beaver kissing to my children. The furry ag Cizz Bunches of support
Installation assistants Jesper Dyrehauge left and Casper Teichgraber install artwork by Olafur Eliasson in Gund Hall as part of & 8220;The Divine Comedy,& 8221; a three-part exhibit at Harvard through May Stanley becher 17. The other artists, Ai Weiwei and Tomas Saraceno, have work at nike dunk the Northwest Science Building and Sert Gallery, respectively.Kris uggs skor Snibbe/Harvard Staff PhotographerArts CultureArt of the Divine Corydon IrelandHarvard Staff WriterApril 12, 20115 min readExhibit highlights modern echoes of Dante s medieval realmsWhen Dante Alighieri wrote his epic poem the Divine Comedy early in the 14th century, most Europeans believed in the literal truth of his three realms of the dead:聽 hell, purgatory, and heaven.Those three still play a metaphorical role and often accurately describe modern reality, from the hellish to the heavenly.Recently, Dante s realms found one new life in The Divine Comedy, a three-part exhibit at Harvard through May 17, a joint project by the Harvard Graduate
Thanks to the popularity of shows like聽The Masked Singer聽and聽Love Is Blind,聽there s been an explosion of content in the genre that can best be summarized as people hiding their faces and doing things. The latest entry is Netflix s聽Sexy Beasts,聽a dating show in which the contestants don prosthetics and makeup to conceal their fa stanley quencher ces, the trailer for which dropped on social media Wednesday:https://twitter.com/netflix/statu nbbalance s/1407669776969715718The trailer prompted an outpouring of both mirth and genuine discomfort on social media, where many delighted in the weirdness of the prosthetics and moments like a man dressed as a beaver dr adidas campus 00 amatically intoning, Ass first, personality second. But there was one community in particular that garnered a lot of attention: furries, with many commenting that the trailer聽seemed to be borrowing the community s singular aesthetic. How am I supposed to explain a dolphin and beaver kissing to my children. The furry ag Cizz Bunches of support
Installation assistants Jesper Dyrehauge left and Casper Teichgraber install artwork by Olafur Eliasson in Gund Hall as part of & 8220;The Divine Comedy,& 8221; a three-part exhibit at Harvard through May Stanley becher 17. The other artists, Ai Weiwei and Tomas Saraceno, have work at nike dunk the Northwest Science Building and Sert Gallery, respectively.Kris uggs skor Snibbe/Harvard Staff PhotographerArts CultureArt of the Divine Corydon IrelandHarvard Staff WriterApril 12, 20115 min readExhibit highlights modern echoes of Dante s medieval realmsWhen Dante Alighieri wrote his epic poem the Divine Comedy early in the 14th century, most Europeans believed in the literal truth of his three realms of the dead:聽 hell, purgatory, and heaven.Those three still play a metaphorical role and often accurately describe modern reality, from the hellish to the heavenly.Recently, Dante s realms found one new life in The Divine Comedy, a three-part exhibit at Harvard through May 17, a joint project by the Harvard Graduate