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Trans YouTube Star Gigi Gorgeous Talks LGBTQ Issues With Key Community Figures

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Transgender YouTube star Gigi Gorgeous is celebrating Trans Awareness Week in true Gigi fashion: by hosting a brunch at her home with a handful of key LGBTQ influencers to discuss their own journeys as queer people.


The brunch included Press Secretary for the Human Rights Campaign Sarah McBride, gay YouTuber Kingsley, reality show personality EJ Johnson and international trans model Andreja Pejic.


The group spends most of the video taking questions from fans on a range of topics including their first times being sexual, anti-trans bathroom bills and what their hopes are for the LGBTQ community over the next five years.


Check out the video above or head here for more from GiGi Gorgeous.

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When Your Confronted with Art, It Speaks to Everybody

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Art has been with us through the ages; painting, architecture and sculpture have always been the epitome of art rarely if ever making room for 'pretenders' to their throne. Deep in the basement of our 19th and 20th Century art museums you might find the stirring on the peripheral of the art world a scrappy underdog, one called fashion. Fashion has a subterranean feel to the traditionalists, frivolous in its expression but there is an irony as the aesthetic principles of fashion are far from trivial. Deep aesthetics, refined principles and exquisite techniques that are criteria for traditional art pieces are adhered to by the couturiers and emerging brands around the world. Clothing has finally become seen as not only forms of self-expression or red carpet looks, but works of art themselves.
 
We are firmly in the 21st Century, yet the acknowledgement of fashion as a manifestation of art is relatively a recent postscript in the long history of art. The late Alexander McQueen blew open the sealed hallowed doors of The Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2011 when the Costume Institute unveiled his Savage Beauty exhibit, and that year's Met Ball. In honoring his predecessors like Yves Saint Laurent, Margiela, and Galliano, it was inevitable that a showcase of one of the world's most boundary pushing and "bad boy" fashion designers would inspire both the emerging and current artists as well as fashion designers. The sheer numbers of visitors descending on The Met stunned those staunch traditionalists, tangibly reinforcing the paradigm that today we are open to embrace the artistic sensibilities of fashion. "Fashion is still considered more in the female domain as opposed to painting, and I think that is why people are quick to dismiss fashion as art," stated Andrew Bolton.

Millennials have not only embraced fashion as an enthusiastic manifestation of art but there is no question as why wouldn't fashion represent art anymore like there once was.  There are more words written on twitter in the last two years than have ever been scribed in all books ever printed. Our ability to process so much, in such a staccato fashion is astonishing, we absorb so much today that we can embrace painting, architecture, sculpture and fashion without any of them being eclipsed by the popularity of one form of art over another.
 
The artistic expression of our modern designers can communicate their passion on multiple platforms, such modern day fashion notable art evangelists like Tom Ford, Olivier Rousteing, Riccardo Tisci, Hedi Slimane, and Anthony Vaccarello. Then you have the new and emerging designers and brands, Demna Gvasalia of Vetements, Jerry Lorenzo of Fear of God, Kanye West with Yeezy, Virgil Abloh of Off White, and John Targon and Scott Studenberg of Baja East. In creating their lines whether it's for the runway or e-commerce, each of these designers are now viewed as artists and rightfully so. You can take Tom Ford with his work as a screen-writer and director of the amazing films A Single Man and his new thriller Nocturnal Animals, where the majority of the costumes are designed and created by Tom Ford himself. His work is art in every form. From his eponymous brand, his screen writing, directing capability, and grooming products he embodies every aspect of an artist. Then you have John Targon & Scott Studenberg, the designer's and co-founders of Baja East, a brand that has eradicated gender lines in fashion and brought to forefront gender blurring and sexual fluidly through clothing to every generation. For Baja East's latest show, their Spring 2017 collection which they housed in a parking garage on Bleeker street, they collaborated with Winc; the world's first personalized wine club (a company that has also partnered with designer Jonathan Simkhai and Yes Way Rose), to create a red wine blend that their friends and consumers would drink. It's the label on the bottle that brings art and fashion together, as it was taken from a print from their most recent collection. So not only is this dynamic duo being seen as artists, they are making their designs and lifestyle readily accessible in different forms to their audience. Artists are always building new gateways, Baja East's blends perfectly to their demographic.

Domingo Zapata, the world renowned painter who produces Neo-Expressionist paintings as well as sculpture, has a unique and distinctive way of incorporating fashion into his works and collaborations. His art adorns the walls of the likes the Gansevoort Hotels, Provocateur, The Plaza Hotel and the Freedom Tower in New York City. The New York Post has proclaimed Zapata to be the "new Andy Warhol, with starlets begging for a sitting." It is the way he blends fashion into is works that brings him to a league of his own. His collaboration with Alice and Olivia and the CFDA, A + O X DOMINGO ZAPATA opened the doors to more collaborations for him, furthering the fusion between his art and fashion and only with more to come.

Let me introduce myself to you. My name is Brendan Brown and I am the founder and creative director of the Mr. BGB brand. Which may bring you to wonder why Domingo Zapata and I are collaborating with one another. When you have the pleasure of meeting someone organically whose artistic vision you have valued for years (after seeing one of his bullfighter paintings hanging above the bar at Cipriani Downtown back in 2013) and as a person their visions and goals are exactly what you imagined, you never know how far or deep these opportunities can take you. I am excited to share that Domingo and I are going to be working on some exciting projects that fuse fashion and art together and we look forward to sharing these concepts with you all in the near future.

Please check out my blog at www.MrBGB.com and www.dzapata.com for the future collaborations and products, as well as @MrBGB & @DomingoZapataOfficial on social media for behind the scenes and sneak peeks of what is to come.

"Sometimes you have to leave room for mistakes and keep the possibility open for something magical to happen." ~ D. Zapata

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Ashley Graham Gets Her Very Own Barbie Whose Thighs Touch

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To call 2016 a big year for Ashley Graham would be an understatement. There were the magazine covers, the runways, the television shows and now, to cap things off, a coveted spot on Glamour’s Women of the Year list (along with Simone Biles, the creators of the #BlackLivesMatter movement and others).


But of all these accolades, which Graham told The Huffington Post makes her want to “pinch herself,” there’s one she may have expected least of all: The 29-year-old supermodel was presented with her very own Barbie at Glamour’s Women of the Year Awards in Los Angeles on Monday night. 


Graham was honored for her activism toward inclusivity in fashion and for being strong influence on young women ― but she never dreamed of getting her own Barbie. “Does any little girl imagine they’re going to have a Barbie made in their likeness?” she asked. 



The iconic gift comes after Mattel debuted three new body types along with a range of skin tones and hair for Barbie back in January, something Graham said she would have benefited from as a young girl.


“I never really thought that I didn’t look like her growing up, I just thought she was perfect,” Graham said, adding, “If I had a Barbie that was my size, I would have thought my size was normal. Young girls now get to grow up seeing that their bodies are normal, which I think is so empowering and encouraging to the younger generation.”



Graham, who is known for proudly flaunting her figure and regularly reminding us that #thickthighssavelives, told The Huffington Post that in the process of constructing her Barbie, she gave just one condition.


“All we did was take 360 degree photos of my body to send to them, and afterward we fleshed out some details. The color of my hair, a few details on my face like beauty marks and full eyebrows. The number one prerequisite, though, was that her thighs touched. I was like, ‘Guys, we can make this Barbie, but if her thighs don’t touch, she’s not authentic.’”


Graham’s continued message of self-love for young women and the power of believing in yourself feels more poignant than ever on the heels of what many believed would be an election resulting in the nation’s first female president.


“One election shouldn’t make you feel that you can’t be who you want to be. This is the time for us to band and stand together to make change and continue to be role models for one another,” Graham said.


We think it’s safe to say that Graham ― and her Barbie ― are living up to that challenge. 



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'Tattoo Tights' Make Your Legs Look Inked In The Realest Way

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A cool pair of tights is one of the best ways to warm up in winter weather.


And whether or not you’ve always wanted to get inked, “tattoo tights” are worth trying on for size. This trend is especially popular with Etsy vendors, who both hand-paint and print regular legwear for an oddly realistic tattoo result.


Designs range from flowers and birds to sketches and Maya Angelou prose, from pale skin tones to colors.








Tattoo tights are mostly available from just a handful of online vendors, whose lack of diverse “nude” color options leaves a lot to be desired in the way of matching darker skin tones. Silvana Ilieva, founder of Tatul tights, plans to add more colors to her line soon, she told HuffPost.


We can’t wait. 

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Gwen Stefani Is Not Playing Games In This Elaborate, Midriff-Baring Ombre Gown

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When you’re a Woman of the Year, you’ve got to go big or go home.


Gwen Stefani pulled out all the stops Monday night at Glamour’s Women of the Year party in a jaw-dropping Marchesa gown with a peplum, larger-than-life full skirt and a bare midriff created by criss-crossing halter straps. 



Stefani was named “The Icon” for decades of showing “how to summon strength through self-expression,” the magazine wrote, and was joined by a slew of notable attendees at the bash in Los Angeles.


Fellow recipient Simone Biles looked gorgeous in a blue and black fitted dress, while Tracee Ellis Ross wowed in red metallics. Vogue editor Anna Wintour even took off her sunglasses for the occasion.



Check out the many noteworthy looks and attendees at Glamour’s Women of the Year awards below. 



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Worried About Spending Money? Blame It On Election Stress.

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Election stress may be messing with you in all kinds of ways, from triggering overeating to contributing to poor sleep to lowering productivity. But it’s not all bad, especially if you’re on a budget. All that worry and anxiety might actually help you rein in your spending, according to new research.


A study published in October in the Journal of Marketing Research found that people under stress are more inclined to save money. When faced with a spending decision, a stressed-out consumer will opt to purchase necessities because they’re more likely to restore a feeling of control than nonessential or luxury goods.  


In a series of experiments, volunteers who had been put under stress were asked to make a decision about how to spend $250, with one group being asked to spend on everyday essentials and household goods, and the other group spending on nonessentials like entertainment. While neither group spent all of the $250, the group buying “essentials” spent more money. In a second experiment, when the participants’ sense of personal control was restored, they were willing to spend more money.


What explains this behavior? When you’re under stress, the body’s levels of the stress hormone cortisol rise, causing you to go into survival mode (also known as “fight or flight”). When this happens, you’re likely to focus your attention on doing whatever you can to overcome the current threat to survival. This plays out in consumers spending more money on items they deem to be “necessities” ― in other words, products that restore a sense of control. 


“The type of stress you have determines which consumer products are thought to be necessities,” Kristina Durante, a marketing professor at Rutgers Business School who researches the effect of hormones and consumer behavior, told The Huffington Post. “For example, stress related to starting a new job led consumers to feel that expensive clothes were a necessary expenditure because it gave them a greater sense of control of the stress.”


For some people, however, stress can lead to the exact opposite behavior: impulse buying and retail therapy. More research is needed to determine why some people spend less under stress and others spend more, Durante said. 


The bottom line is to be aware of how you react to stress and whether you’re under stress when making important purchase decisions. 


“Perhaps in times of stress,” she said, “it could help to reflect on how much control we really do have over our lives before making our way to the shopping mall.”

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The first Toyota Century in the United States, ever!

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Just when you think your Bentley or Rolls-Royce is a rare luxury car, a very unique sedan from the far east makes its appearance in the collector's scene. One of the most rare Japanese luxury cars, the very first Toyota Century ever imported into the United States has arrived on the shores of sunny Florida! Thanks to importer "Obsidian Automotive", Toyota's flagship luxury car has finally graced the soil of Hometown, USA and with it, bringing all of its true JDM royalty inspired greatness.

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Boldly styled yet respectfully quaint, the 2000 Toyota Century features several unique features that separate it from the crowd. Starting with the exterior remaining true to its heritage, the Century has remained relatively the same design of distinction over the decades since its release in 1967. The first generation Century spanned from origination up until 1997, with both generations only being produced in the Higashi Fuji plant in Susono, Shizuoka.

This is the only rear wheel drive V12 production vehicle available in Japan, and due to high taxes on large displacement vehicles, not many people own one making them a vehicle of true class distinction. These are extremely rare even in Japan, with yearly production numbers averaging less than 200. So yeah, it's a rare car. But what makes it so special?

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Since the Toyota Century is only intended for the Japanese market, it is one of the only true Japanese cars. Most other models are global platforms, so they are produced to comply with the English language. However, this is not the case with the Century. The Century features all Japanese writing throughout the vehicle, and several design cues that are implemented to satisfy the needs of the Japanese culture. This is as JDM as it gets, yo.

So if you're into rare Japanese cars and love the elite "Yakuza boss" type feeling in a vehicle, this is a car you'll love to check out. Click the video below and prepare to transport yourself into Japan circa 1990's! But beware, you may end up falling in love with a car you'll most likely never be able to own. If you even see one of these in person, consider yourself lucky. There's only one in the entire country right now, and its in the following video.

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Ivanka Trump's Brand Is 'Discussing New Policies' In Light Of Promotional Misfire

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Ivanka Trump’s brand on Tuesday admitted that adjusting to a world in which Donald Trump holds the Oval Office is going to be tricky.


The company was criticized this week after sending out a “style alert” about a $10,800 bracelet ― the Metropolis diamond bangle to be precise ― that Ivanka Trump wore in an interview with “60 Minutes.” The bangle, sold by Ivanka Trump Jewelry, is “Ivanka’s favorite,” the alert sent to journalists noted.


“This notification was sent by a well-intentioned marketing employee at one of our companies who was following customary protocol, and who, like many of us, is still making adjustments post-election,” Abigail Klem, president of the Ivanka Trump brand, said in a statement provided to The Huffington Post.  “We are proactively discussing new policies and procedures with all of our partners going forward.” 






The company pulled off a similar move during the Republican National Convention, promoting a dress Ivanka Trump wore during her speech, but didn’t address the criticism it received at that time.


The dress sold out quickly.






However, now that her father is the president-elect, the Trump businesses are under a whole new level of scrutiny. The level of potential business conflicts for the president-elect is unprecedented in American politics, as The Washington Post recently wrote. 


Paul Light, a New York University professor of public service, who’s an expert on presidential transitions and government reform, told The Huffington Post that what Ivanka Trump’s brand did may be fine legally, but it looks “tacky.”


“Presidents represent the nation, as do their spouses and children,” Light wrote in an email. “The White House is not a shopping mall.”





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Misty Copeland Sends A Strong Message To Dancers Of Color Who Came Before Her

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Starting Dec. 1, Misty Copeland will reprise her role as Clara in the fan-favorite ballet “The Nutcracker.” For three shows in Costa Mesa, California, she will return as American Ballet Theater’s first African-American dancer to play the role.


Copeland talked about the many successes of her career ― and the pressure that comes with breaking boundaries ― in a recent cover story for Self Magazine’s December issue


“I want to show the ballet world it’s possible to do all these things and not be rail-thin or have blond hair,” Copeland explained. Adding: “I feel like I’m representing not just the little brown girls but all African-American dancers who have come before me who were never promoted because of the color of their skin.”



Copeland, who is set to release her book Ballerina Body this spring, also talked about the ways in which issues related to body image and identity have impacted her experience in the dance world.



“I didn’t go through puberty until I was 19, and I was already a professional,” she said. “So everyone’s expecting your body, as your instrument, to look a certain way. [...] Being told to lose weight, and being African American, not having anyone else around who looked like me, caused me so much doubt.”




In a previous interview with The Huffington Post, Copeland noted that the ballet world’s perspective on diverse bodies is changing, but not quickly enough.


I think it’s slow to progress, but at the same time, having the platform that I have to reach a broader audience ― it’s definitely waking up the ballet world,” she said. “It’s forcing them to have to address the lack of diversity, and not just with skin color and ethnicity, but body types as well.”



The issue of Self Magazine will be on newsstands on Nov. 22. You can also read the article online. All photos By Raf Stahelin; style by Akari Endo-Gaut.

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5 Stores That Offer Early Bird Black Friday Deals For Smart Shoppers

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Every year, Black Friday sales send shoppers across the country into a shopping-obsessed frenzy, all in the name of scoring the best possible deal.


Well, some stores aren’t waiting until Black Friday to start offering amazing deals. If you want to skip the crowds and still snag some killer discounted merchandise, these early bird sales are for you. Why disrupt your peaceful Thanksgiving family time when you can just shop the sales online ahead of time?


 


Walmart



Walmart offers shoppers the opportunity to sign up for email notifications to get deal previews ahead of time. Not to mention, the website has already listed several sponsored deals like $39 vacuum cleaners, $99 Android smartphones, and $299 Xbox Ones.


 


Home Depot



Home Depot is already featuring an amazing online sale on appliances. You can shop stainless steel refrigerators and washers and dryers for up to 40% off, saving you hundreds or even thousands of dollars. The sale also includes amazing deals on microwaves, vacuums, steam mops, and dishwashers.


 


Amazon



Amazon is featuring an online countdown event that rolls out Black Friday deals ahead of time. Head over to the website to shop deals like $79 (refurbished) Kindles, sales on power tools and more. 


 


Kohl’s 



At Kohl’s you can earn $15 cash for every $50 spent. Yes, you’ll be paid to shop. You can also print this coupon to get an extra 15% off on purchases from Monday, Nov. 21 until the end of Black Friday. On top of these savings, Kohl’s is launching amazing deals online, days before Black Friday, featuring items like $99 FitBits and cutting edge flatscreen televisions for $349.


 


Old Navy



Old Navy is offering 50% off of the entire store. Yes, you read that right. The super sale will run from 6 a.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 23 (the day before Thanksgiving) until midnight on Black Friday. The only catch? It’s in-store only, so make sure you locate your nearest Old Navy.


So what are you waiting for?





The Huffington Post may receive a share from purchases made via links on this page.


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Feast Your Eyes On Mariah Carey's Predictably Glittery MAC Collection

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Mariah Carey fans who have spent years praying to the glittery gods for a Mimi makeup line: Today is your “One Sweet Day.”


The singer’s collaboration with MAC Cosmetics has evolved from one measly lipstick to an entire collection that is, of course, bedazzled with tons of sparkle.


The 23-piece range includes brushes, eyeshadows, lipsticks and more, all aptly named after Mariah-isms and song titles.  



Debuting online starting Dec. 8 and in stores Dec. 15, it will be available through Jan. 26 (or more likely, when it sells out). Carey joins a long list of exciting collaborations the cosmetics company has put forth this year, including one inspired by Selena Quintanilla and another with Taraji P. Henson.


We’re going to reward ourselves for refraining from making a single “All I Want For Christmas Is You” reference (until now) by ogling these shiny, shiny products for the rest of the day. Check out the entire line below. 



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Madonna Has Been Age-Shamed Again -- This Time For Her Hands

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Once again, the media and internet have age-shamed Madonna, 58. A photo showing her wrinkle-free face with her not-so-wrinkle-free left hand has blown up into a nasty bit of ageism.


Isn’t it about time folks got a grip? 


The NY Daily News ran the photo with the caption “Madonna’s hands did all the talking during her attendance at the UFC 205 event at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 12, 2016.”


The Daily Mail jumped on the bashing bandwagon with “Madonna was ultimately unable to disguise her 58 years while watching the UFC fight in New York this weekend, as in showing off her collection of rings she revealed her aging hands.”


The Telegraph weighed in on the Material Girl’s mitts with “Hands, unlike infinitely lift-able, peel-able, Botox-able faces, are notoriously treacherous. To those who like to keep people guessing as to their real ages, the dowager digits will always give them away.”


Age-shaming seems to follow Madonna wherever she goes. She has been shamed for wearing eclectic outfits with people chest-beating how she isn’t dressing age-appropriately. But you can’t keep a good woman ― or a nasty woman ― down. In September, she posted to Instagram a bunch of provocative throwbacks, captioning each one with “acting my age.”


Loving Madonna ― and her hands.

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You'll Need An Appointment To Get Nike's New Self-Lacing Sneakers

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Ladies and gentlemen, the future is finally back.


Nike first announced its upcoming self-lacing sneaker in March, and Wired reported on the shoes’ jaw-dropping capabilities in the video above in October. But now we have even more information on the seemingly magical HyperAdapt 1.0, which will be available for purchase Dec. 1.


Before you Marty McFly to your local Nike store for a pair of your own, be forewarned: You won’t be able to get your hands on a pair without a hefty wad of cash ― $720 ― and an appointment.





The super cool sneaks contain a sensor that automatically starts the self-lacing mechanism when you insert your feet, plus two buttons to loosen or tighten the laces to the wearer’s desire. The lacing system works off a rechargeable battery and the shoes boast an LED light to display how much battery is left.


As Wired explains in the video above, the sneakers are said to be ideal in an athletic event like a marathon or basketball game, when every second spent tying and re-tying shoes is crucial. Or, you know, when you want to impress your friends. 



In a statement released last week, Nike revealed that the shoe will initially be available at two locations in New York City’s Soho neighborhood starting Dec. 1: the Nike store and the Nike+ Clubhouse.


“Consumers can learn about and trial the product at a retail price of $720,” the statement reads. 


Those wishing to book an appointment can visit the Nike website or the Nike+ app. A spokeswoman for the brand told The Huffington Post that more information will become available later next week, and all new developments will be posted to the Nike news site. The brand also stated that “a small group of NIKE+ app users” will have early access to the shoes on Nov. 28, before a wider release in two colorways later in December. 






At $720, we’ll stick to tying our sneakers the old fashioned way for now. But they are pretty darn epic. 

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Woman 'Paralyzed With Fear' After Finding Mouse Sewn Into Zara Dress: Lawsuit

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It wasn’t a surprise freebie she might have hoped for.


A New York City woman is suing fashion retailer Zara after allegedly finding a dead mouse sewn into a dress’ hem and contracting a “rodent-born disease.”


In court documents filed Friday, Cailey Fiesel claims she found the rodent’s rotting carcass after noticing “a disturbingly pungent odor” while wearing the dress on Aug. 16.


She noticed what she believed to be a loose string brushing against her leg. When reaching for it, she felt “an unusual bulge” and a tiny paw scraping against her skin, her lawsuit claims.



“I froze — I was paralyzed with fear,” the 24-year-old told The New York Post on Monday. “I was in complete shock. My eyes saw that it was a mouse but my brain told myself it can’t be.”


Fiesel said she immediately took off the dress that she had purchased for $40 from a Greenwich, Connecticut, store in July. She said she later developed a large rash that was diagnosed as a “rodent-born disease.”


Her suit blames the international retailer for inflicting “significant personal injuries and emotional distress.” Among other charges, it also accuses the company of failing to inspect the dress for defects, “including infestation with rodents.”


She seeks unspecified damages, according to the suit, “in a sum that will fairly and adequately compensate her for the damages and injuries she has suffered.”


Zara stands by its products, according to a statement obtained by TMZ.


The company’s website says “Zara USA has stringent health and safety standards, and we are committed to ensuring that all of our products meet these rigorous requirements.”


Neither Fiesel nor Zara immediately returned a request for comment. 


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My Journey Through The Amazon With The Team Of 'Years Of Living Dangerously'

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Over the course of ten days in June 2016, I traveled to the Brazilian Amazon to film an episode for “Years Of Living Dangerously,” the National Geographic documentary series about climate change. You can watch my full story on Wednesday, November 16th at 10 p.m. ET on the National Geographic Channel. To listen to an audio version of this piece, click the player below.





June 1: Cristalino Eco-Lodge, Cristalino State Park, Mato Grosso State, Brazil


Today was not my typical workday. It was over 95 degrees, humid, and I was following a man holding a machete that I had never met into the jungle. My outfit included padded shin guards to protect me from snakebites. As I walked, the former miner-turned-environmentalist guide named Francisco was giving me a quick safety briefing: don’t veer off the path, don’t go in the nearby river with open cuts and don’t feed the monkeys, no matter how cute. “Why can’t I swim with open cuts?” I asked. “Because open cuts can get infected and because the cuts also attract piranhas.he explained. No, this was definitely not my typical workday.


Where was I? I was walking through a dense forest on the Cristalino Reserve in the Brazilian Amazon. The guide at the front of our group, the one wielding a machete, was helping to clear our path of low-hanging vines, thorny branches and fallen logs. Suddenly, he stopped. “I want to show you something,” he said, as he guided me towards an absolutely massive tree that six or more adults could encircle. “This tree is about 800 years old,” he tells me. “It has lived through more of the world than any of us ever will.”


Our destination was a 165-foot tall observation tower that allowed me to climb up through the forest’s layers, past the canopy, for a bird’s-eye view of this small piece of the Amazon. Until now, I had been so focused on the beauty of our hike – and on avoiding snakes – that I hadn’t focused on my fear of heights. The tower is sturdy, but it vibrated and shook a little as I slowly made my way to the top. As I climbed, it helped to focus on the fact that someone was waiting for me up there, a renowned Brazilian scientist named Antonio Nobre who I’ve been a fan of and wanted to meet for some time. 



Even if you live in New York, you are benefiting indirectly from the invisible functions the Amazon performs to sustain the Earth.
Brazilian scientist Antonio Nobre


Once I made it to the top of the tower, I looked around and saw mist coming up through the trees. I heard the amazing sounds of the forest; the Macaws along with lots of other kinds of birds I’d never seen before flew over me. It was breathtaking! It’s easy to feel entirely remote up there and surreally disconnected from the rest of the world beyond the tree line. Yet, Nobre explained how misguided – and ultimately damaging – that type of thinking can be. He pointed out how the things that happen here significantly impact the rest of the world.


He explained to me that, “Even if you live in New York, you are benefiting indirectly from the invisible functions the Amazon performs to sustain the Earth. There are all of these invisible systems that are critical to the environment and have an immense impact. The forest is providing all of these crucial services to us for free; we don’t have to pay for them. We gain the benefits, but because they are invisible, we unfortunately tend not to value them as much as we should.” 


He explained that one of the functions of the rainforest is to be the  “lungs of the world,” absorbing greenhouse gases. In addition, the forest absorbs groundwater through its roots and releases it in invisible streams – what Antonio called flying rivers - that help in cooling the Earth’s atmosphere. “When they do this,” he says, “same way as when you’re sweating then cool down, trees cool down the surface. They’re like air conditioners.”


“If you lose the Amazon,”he told me, “you lose a critical function of the rainforest that moderates the world’s climate by pumping and filtering ― cleaning and breathing for the entire planet.”


June 3: Alta Floresta, Mato Grosso State, Brazil


I now had a better idea of just how much is at stake in the fight to protect the Amazon. Next up was to find out what’s driving its destruction. Especially because I had heard that after decades of decline, overall rates of Amazon deforestation are on the rise again.


To learn more, I went to nearby Alta Floresta, or “High Forest,” a city that was covered with trees when founded in 1976, but now, sadly, is almost entirely deforested. In the past, the government encouraged people to come to the Amazon and exploit it. The city’s progression from a forested area to a deforested one in the 1980s and ‘90s made it notable, albeit in a negative way. The nickname reflects its high deforestation rates: “Falta Floresta” or “Lacking Forest.” Alta Floresta’s story, I discovered, is not unique in this region, and even as some have made efforts to reforest some of its cleared areas, newer cities and towns are driving deforestation around it.


To get a better sense of why this is happening, I met with Paulo Adario, the Brazilian director of Greenpeace’s Amazon program, who took me up in a small plane to fly over the region. This perspective was different from Cristalino, where I’d gotten the impression that the forest stretched on forever. As we moved further and further away from the reserve’s borders, I realized how mistaken I was in my impression of an infinite forest; the landscape below was a mosaic of large cleared areas cut out of the forest. The extent of this devastation was heartbreaking.



Adario told me that we were actually in the middle of the “Arc of Deforestation,” a crescent shaped belt of largely deforested land that passes through Brazil’s northern Mato Grosso and southern Pará states where nearly half the world’s tropical deforestation takes place. Protected areas like Cristalino and indigenous reserves like the nearby Xingu National Park represented some of the most effective buffers against encroaching deforestation, though even they are not immune to illegal activity on their lands. What is driving these trends? “People don’t deforest because they hate trees,” Adario told me. “They deforest because they can make money.” There are many causes: mining, logging, infrastructure projects like roads and mega-dams to name a few. What is the number one reason for deforestation in Brazil? Adario pointed out of the plane’s window to some white blobs: Cattle. “They are responsible for 65 percent of all deforestation in the Amazon…and 14.5 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions,” he told me.


I had a flashback to my family’s dinner table growing up in Rio Grande do Sul in the south of Brazil. Eating meats and especially beef. They were a central part of our daily meal routine. Meat is still a staple in Brazilians’ diet and around the world. On this trip I have learned we cannot continue to eat the same way. If we don’t make changes, the future generations won’t have the same abundance of natural resources.


June 5: Novo Progresso, Pará State, Brazil


Being with Adario in Alta Floresta revealed how much we already know about what’s driving deforestation in the Amazon and endangering our climate. The flyover showed we also know where the worst destruction is taking place, both legally and illegally. Unfortunately, deforestation is back on the rise. The logical next question is why can’t we stop it?


To find out more, I’ve crossed the border from Mato Grosso State to neighboring Pará to visit a place that many consider the prime example of Brazil’s “Wild West” – a frontier town called Novo Progresso or “New Progress,” which was elevated to the category of Municipality  only in 1991. The city is located on the roadside of BR-163. This roadway is of fundamental importance for the flow of Brazilian production. It is right at the edge of the rain forest’s borders. Novo Progresso, which has about 25,000 inhabitants, appears to have many legalized timber companies in its surrounding areas. As we drove along BR-163, I saw many of them on both sides of the road. I don’t understand how that is even possible – how can they authorize the operation of timber companies inside of protected areas?


Business in remote Novo Progresso, a place I’d never heard of, seems to be booming. Given what I’m seeing, the industries driving the growth are the same ones Adario said are placing the most pressure on this irreplaceable forest. In the battle to save the Amazon, it is clear that Novo Progresso is on the front lines, divided between those whose living depends on exploiting the forest and those whose living revolves around defending it.


I went to meet one of the defenders of the rainforest. We turned off the city’s main road and onto a dusty side street; we stopped in front of a single-story building with a guarded perimeter. We had arrived at the local outpost of Brazil’s environmental police, IBAMA. Inside, there were several armed men dressed in camouflage lounging on wooden benches. I was one of very few women there, but not for long. I was told that the “Blonde Devil” was to arrive soon. It appeared she was coming straight from a raid on an illegal logging camp.


Maria Luiza Souza, known by those she chases as the “Blonde Devil,” is a senior IBAMA official in charge of surveillance operations for the region. Her accomplished reputation precedes her. Her success has not only earned her notoriety and her nickname, it has also shockingly earned her a price on her head. Bravely, despite the repeated threats to her life, Souza refuses to back down.


“Why is it so hard to stop illegal deforestation, especially when we often know where it’s happening?” I asked her.


“We are blind during the rainy season in the Amazon,” she told me. “Why; because it’s too cloudy for the satellites to capture quality images of the forest.  During this period, the deforestation runs rampant.” She explained, “That even when armed with good imaging, the remoteness of many Amazon locations means it can take hours, or even days, for law enforcement officials to arrive on site. This can give criminals a sufficient head start to do their damage and disappear without getting caught.”


“There is no accountability,” Souza continued. “Criminals see that they can profit from crimes without big consequences... so they continue them… [and] there’s still demand. There’s a market for buying illegal cattle... and illegal timber from the Amazon. As long as there’s [cheap] supply, people will buy it.”


“I first came to Novo Progresso in 2007 and nothing has improved in this city. Nothing,” Souza replies. “The environmental crimes don’t improve the city, they don’t improve living conditions in Novo Progresso. Nothing stays for the community. They are plundering the Amazon [and] Novo Progresso has not developed at all. It should be called Novo Regresso,” she finished.


Despite the fact that IBAMA needs more resources to cover the vast territory, it was clear that Souza and her IBAMA team continue doing critical work to reduce the region’s criminal activity and defend the Amazon from illegal destruction. It was clear after speaking with her that IBAMA enforces the laws put in place by the government but would benefit from the additional support of more environmental police. There are two other points to be considered in this fight:  law enforcement needs to hold criminals accountable and there needs to be policy incentives to promote less destructive industries overall.



Brazil’s economy is struggling and its government is under fire. As a result, budgets are being slashed and compromises are being made.



June 7: Brasilia, Federal District


I arrived from the Amazon to Brasilia, Brazil’s capital, triggering a bit of culture shock. After days of high heat and higher humidity, dirt roads and lush forests, the city’s dry savanna climate, famous modernist architecture and sweeping boulevards felt like an entirely different world.


It is a tense time for my country. Brazil’s economy is struggling and its government is under fire. As a result, budgets are being slashed and compromises are being made in an effort to restore short-term growth and national stability. The country is at a crossroads for how to move forward and jumpstart its economy once again. What does this all mean for the Amazon? As we drove by the beautiful architecture of Brasilia and the National Congress buildings, I wondered how many of the country’s political leaders have visited the rainforest.


To find out more, I arranged to meet with Senator Katia Abreu from the state of Tocantins, a major player in the negotiation of the country’s new forest code. A rancher herself, she is the former president of Brazil’s Confederation of Agriculture and Livestock as well as the country’s former Minister of Agriculture, a role she held until just three weeks before my arrival.


Brazil made a commitment at COP21, in Paris, to halt all illegal deforestation by 2030. Given that the forest is under siege now and it’s only 2016, this seems a long way off, so I ask her: “Why wait until 2030? Why not now?”


“Because you need tools to reduce deforestation,” she told me. “It is not the case that you say ‘stop’ and suddenly, with a magic wand, everything stops…we fight against it every day. We made a promise for 2020, and now a new promise for 2030. It is a promise we are striving to keep.”


I told her that I saw a lot of clear land and that I was shocked with the size of the devastation. I asked her if it is possible for Brazil to grow without having to cut more trees. She says yes, but then she explained “Brazil carries a huge responsibility on its shoulders.” Abreu continued telling me that the Food and Agriculture Organization expect Brazil to increase its production 40 percent by 2050 ― more than any other country ― to feed the world’s growing population.   “Meats and soy are the most important products in our commercial balance,” she told me. “In general, not only the meat industry but all segments of agriculture, of Brazilian agribusiness, have saved Brazil in this [economic] crisis…”


I learned agriculture is important for Brazil and more soy will be needed to feed more cattle to combat world hunger. How can the expansion in production be managed so that it will put less pressure on Brazil’s forests and not endanger the indigenous and riverside communities that live and depend on the rainforest?


June 8: Memorial of Indigenous Peoples, Brasilia, Federal District


The Memorial of Indigenous Peoples in Brasilia is a round, spiral structure that the famed architect Oscar Niemeyer created from inspiration he found in the traditional village structures of the Yanomami Indians in Brazil’s north. The memorial is a symbolic tribute to Brazil’s diversity and wealth of indigenous cultures. Today, the memorial serves as a grave reminder of the highest stakes possible in the fight to protect the Amazon ― human stakes.



I walked slowly past the memorial’s displays of indigenous artifacts as I spoke with Sonia Guajajara, the national coordinator of Brazil’s Association of Indigenous Peoples. She is a key spokeswoman for the country’s indigenous movement.


“Look Gisele,” she told me, “here in Brazil, we live under enormous pressure from the development model that’s been adopted. It’s based on the expansion of agribusiness, the planting of crops like soy, and on animal agriculture that uses huge expanses of pasture to raise livestock… Everything is in the name of increasing production to expand the economy, not considering the lives and the social rights of the people living there.”


The perception throughout Brazil that indigenous and environmental interests can’t be aligned with national economic goals has elevated tensions between indigenous communities, activists, loggers and ranchers in the Amazon to deadly levels.


Last year, Sonia’s indigenous territory, Arariboia, suffered from a forest fire that burned more than half of its 413,000 hectares. It was a massively destructive blaze – and it may have been arson. Ninety percent of Brazil’s forest fires are caused by human actions, intentionally set in areas of conflict to force people to vacate protected land.


“We are living in a moment of great global transformation,” says Sonia, “where all those who do not incorporate themselves into this system are seen as an inconvenience and embarrassment because of our age-old and harmonious relationship with nature, where land is a sacred good and not merchandise, where rivers represent life, and the forest is our protector. In the name of economic development, all of this is threatened.”


As a self-described “conscious citizen,” Sonia says her mission is to get people to care about the Amazon, indigenous people and their rights. This made me think about my own role as a conscious citizen. How can I inspire others to care – and do – more to help the incredible people I’ve met and places I’ve seen here? I want to show that environmental conservation does not slow or impede economic development and that we need to find sustainable ways to use the forest’s richness without destroying it.



We cannot pretend it isn’t happening and that we have nothing to do with it.



June 10: Boston, Massachusetts


Back with my family and friends in Boston, I have so much on my mind. I have been humbled by the opportunity to have this experience and learn so much. I wanted to tell them about the Amazon’s overwhelming importance to the earth and the beauty. Before this trip, I would have focused on the physical beauty, its rich biodiversity, describing the colors, sounds, foliage and animals that I was fortunate enough to witness. Beauty is so often thought of as only something visible. I realized that the Amazon forest goes much beyond its physical beauty. There are invisible treasures, the interconnected systems, like Nobre’s flying rivers that give life to all other treasures. Everything I’ve learned on this trip to the Amazon further affirms my central belief, that we – and everything around us – are connected. Just as the Amazon rainforest is connected with the world’s climate, the foods we choose to eat connect back to it and its long-term sustainability, too. Every choice we make has consequences and we are the only ones responsible for them and the only ones who can change them. We cannot pretend it isn’t happening and that we have nothing to do with it.


I recall something Sonia Guajajara said in Brasilia, “people think that because they are living in the United States, in Europe, or on any other continent, they believe they are separate, that they have nothing to do with what happens here [in Brazil]. The world is round, isn’t it? It spins. What happens here happens to everyone. The importance of having the forest preserved, conserved, is that it is going to benefit everybody.”


If we willingly ignore how interconnected we are, the Amazon’s incredible treasures will disappear and so, too, will life as we know it.


We can’t let that happen.



Gisele Bündchen is a Brazilian-born model and Ambassador for the UN Environmental Program, who can next be seen as a correspondent for the National Geographic documentary series Years of Living Dangerously on Wednesday, November 16th at 10 p.m. ET on the National Geographic Channel.

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Princess Diana's Extensive Wardrobe Is Going On Display At Kensington Palace

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Royal enthusiasts should start planning a trip to London early next year. 


Kensington Palace announced Tuesday that a new exhibit featuring Princess Diana’s extensive wardrobe will go on display Feb. 24. Titled “Diana: Her Fashion Story,” the show was commissioned to celebrate Diana’s life, 20 years after her death in August 1997. 


According to a press release from the palace, the exhibit will include a range of looks “from the more romantic outfits of her first public appearances...



..to the glamorous ones she embraced in later life as she became ever more confident about her style.”



Some of the pieces confirmed for the show include the Emanuel blouse Diana wore in her 1981 engagement portrait:



The Victor Edelstein gown she wore to a White House visit in 1985:



And a famous tartan Emanuel suit Diana wore in Venice, Italy. A “rare survival of the princess’s daywear,” it was recently back in the spotlight when it went up for auction in June. 



Curator Eleri Lynn said style plays a crucial role in telling Diana’s story.


“[E]very fashion choice she made was closely [scrutinized],” Lynn said in a statement. “Our exhibition explores the story of a young woman who had to quickly learn the rules of royal and diplomatic dressing, who in the process put the spotlight on the British fashion industry and designers.” 


There’s no denying Diana’s glamorous evolution over the years, and fans will surely flock to the palace to see it in real life. Sitting atop our wish list is this Catherine Walker gown:



As well as her unforgettable, Jackie O.-esque pink Versace suit:



Lynn said it’s Diana’s fashion transformation that in part will draw people to come see the pieces and connect them, in some way, to their own lives.


“We see her growing in confidence throughout her life, increasingly taking control of how she was represented, and intelligently communicating through her clothes. This is a story many women around the world can relate to,” she said.


Ticketing information is not yet available, but we’re already making plans. Is it Feb. 24 yet?


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This Country Has Gone To The Birds, And This Bird Has Gone Donald Trump

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A golden pheasant in China is a viral sensation thanks to a shimmering head of yellow feathers that is strikingly similar to the hair of president-elect Donald Trump.


The 5-year-old bird, named “Little Red,” lives at the Hangzhou Safari Park in the Zhejiang Province, according to Shanghaiist.


For your convenience, the People’s Daily shared a side-by-side image of Trump and the bird. The publication also flaunted some serious pun game:






“I had not noticed the likeness in the past because I had not paid particular attention to the pheasant’s hairstyle,” the bird’s caretaker told the Daily Mail. “But after Trump was elected President of America, I start seeing more pictures of him and I think the pheasant looks a little bit like him.”


Of course, Little Red isn’t the only Trump doppelganger roaming around the animal kingdom. Political junkies and animal lovers alike may recall a yellow flannel moth caterpillar that gained popularity for its resemblance to Trump’s famous hair





For any readers who can’t get enough Donald Trump lookalikes, there’s a Trump-hair pastry out there with your name on it.


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This Shopping Spreadsheet Is A One-Stop Way To Boycott The Trumps

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Brand and digital strategist Shannon Coulter made waves back in October for co-creating the #GrabYourWallet hashtag, which encouraged shoppers to stop supporting businesses that work with Donald or Ivanka Trump or carry their clothing and accessories lines. 


Now the hashtag has its own handy spreadsheet that shoppers can use to avoid such businesses as the retail holiday season heats up. 






Most of the retailers in question are familiar: Amazon, Marshalls and Bed Bath and Beyond all appear on the list. Macy’s, which cut ties with Donald Trump in July 2015 for his racist remarks and reaffirmed that decision just last week, still earned a spot for carrying items from Ivanka’s line


Coulter told The Huffington Post the #GrabYourWallet movement has seen increased interest since the election. “Particularly in the wake of Trump’s selection of Steve Bannon as chief strategist, more and more people are committing to not doing business with companies that do business with the Trump family,” she said.


The spreadsheet takes the movement a step further by providing phone numbers and e-mail addresses for retail representatives, so that members of the public can voice their concerns.


In addition, it suggests alternative “Trump-free” places to shop, and provides suggested language for those unsure of what to say to a given company’s buyers or execs.


The viral spreadsheet was released just as Ivanka Trump came under fire for promoting a $10,800 bracelet she recently wore on a televised interview with “60 Minutes.” Coulter had a pointed response: 






Coulter also said she and other organizers are “discussing the possibility of doing a big phone banking push” for Black Friday and Cyber Monday, as well as plans to “celebrate Small Business Saturday in a big, big way.”


We have a feeling there will be many an edited holiday wish list to come.


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Hurry! Early Black Friday Deals Have Already Started On Amazon

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Stores are already starting to roll out early bird Black Friday deals and Amazon is no exception. In fact, Amazon is hosting a countdown to Black Friday and featuring some of the best steals online right now.


Here are some highlights that are sure to make you run and grab your wallet. You’ll want to move fast, though. These deals are selling fast and are only offered for a limited time.


 


Kindle Paperwhite


$79.99 (originally $109)



 


Kindle Voyage


$119.99 (originally $169)



  


All-New Echo Dot (2nd Generation) & Bose SoundLink Mini II Pearl


$213.99 (originally $248)



 


Amazon Echo


$119.99 (originally $170)



 


Amazon Fire TV with Alexa Voice Remote


$64.99 (originally $89)



More stories that help you shop your favorite brands:


You’ll Need An Appointment To Get Nike’s New Self-Lacing Sneakers


7 Brilliant Trader Joe’s Finds That Make Healthy Cooking WAY Easier


Victoria Beckham For Target Is The Designer Collaboration You Should Put On Your Calendar Now


 


Fire HD 10 Tablet


$159.99 (originally $199)



 


 


Furbo Dog HD Wifi Cam, 2-Way Audio, and Treat Tossing


$186 (originally $249)


 



 


Casio Protek Watch


$70.99 (originally $250)



The Huffington Post may receive a share from purchases made via links on this page.


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These Buttons Want You To 'F**k Up' Bigots

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A lot of people have been wearing safety pins lately to show that they’re allies to immigrants, people of color, the LGBTQ community, Muslims, women and others who feel targeted and marginalized in the wake of the recent election.


There are certainly other, more active ways of showing your support for these groups than wearing a pin, but one person decided to revamp the pin idea ― with a much less ambiguous message.


Writer and editor Margaret Killjoy is selling 1″ buttons that “help you make clear your intention to, you know, fuck up bigots.”


They look like this:



Killjoy is selling them for $1 each plus shipping from their Etsy shop, Birds Before the Storm, and has also provided a PDF template for those who happen to have a button maker and want to make one in the comfort of their own home.


“A friend of mine posted [online], ‘I don’t care if you wear a safety pin or not. I just want you to fuck up bigots.’ I wholeheartedly agreed,” Killjoy told The Huffington Post.


“I want to encourage people to stand up for one another and not be bystanders to oppression, whether that oppression is individual or systemic... I want people to have one another’s backs.”


Killjoy, who uses the pronouns “they/them,” told us that they are a trans-feminine genderqueer person who is harassed somewhat regularly and that they’d “feel safer realizing that other people will say something when people harass me for my gender presentation.”


They noted on Etsy, “This isn’t about allyship, this is about solidarity.”



Killjoy said the reaction to the buttons has been “almost universally positive.” They’ve been backlogged with orders since first posting the buttons online on Sunday.


“I assumed a button that advocates fucking someone up wouldn’t really reach too many people outside my immediate circle of friends,” Killjoy told us. “But these are the times we live in: we will have to intervene directly to keep one another safe.”


If the f-bomb on the buttons turns you off, there’s also a safe-for-work version that says,  “I will do my best to stop any bigot who messes with you.


“I’m scared as hell of how all of this is going to play out. But making these buttons has given me something to focus on, a way to hopefully be useful,” Killjoy said. “I hope everyone else is finding things to be involved with that help them feel useful in all of this.”

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