Culture

Pre-Spice Girls Geri Halliwell dressed as sci-fi character Barbarella: Best photo of Solla Pietro | Photography

Pre-Spice Girls Geri Halliwell dressed as sci-fi character Barbarella: Best photo of Solla Pietro | Photography

πŸ’₯ Read this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian πŸ“– πŸ“‚ **Category**: Photography,Art and design,Culture,Geri Horner,Spice Girls πŸ’‘ **What You’ll Learn**: A A month or so after I got into music photography, a friend of mine who was a fashion designer called me to tell me she knew a girl who was going to be in this huge girl group. I was very skeptical β€” it's the kind of claim you hear a lot while working as a photographer β€” but we ended up arranging to do the shoot at my house.My friend choreographed the shoot, which was based…
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Twists in the story: Gaga’s African hair braiding explores the immigrant experience during a day at the salon | stage

Twists in the story: Gaga’s African hair braiding explores the immigrant experience during a day at the salon | stage

πŸš€ Read this awesome post from Culture | The Guardian πŸ“– πŸ“‚ **Category**: Theatre,Stage,Culture,Women's hair,Beauty,Life and style,Fashion,Lyric Hammersmith βœ… **What You’ll Learn**: IIt's an uncomfortably hot morning in Harlem, New York, as two women open the doors of a braiding salon. It seems like a day like any other, as a group of hairstylists turn their clients' complex visions into reality. But, according to playwright Jocelyn Bioh, by nightfall β€œwe end up in a very different place from where we started.”Bioh's Tony Award-winning 2023 play Jaja's African Hair Braiding takes theatergoers for 12 hours at the salon of the same…
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Catherine Opie: To Be Seen review – a bizarre collection of tattoos, fake mustaches and little kids in tutus | Photography

Catherine Opie: To Be Seen review – a bizarre collection of tattoos, fake mustaches and little kids in tutus | Photography

πŸ’₯ Discover this trending post from Culture | The Guardian πŸ“– πŸ“‚ **Category**: Photography,Art and design,Culture,National Portrait Gallery,LGBTQ+ rights,US news,World news πŸ’‘ **What You’ll Learn**: CAtherine OBE did for the butchers what Hans Holbein the Younger did for the Tudor nobility. Since graduating in the late 1980s, in the midst of the AIDS crisis, Opie has painted portraits of her community, friends, and family, drawing on the harsh realism, saturated colors, and dramatic tonal contrasts of 16th-century portrait painters. Many of Opie's most famous photographsβ€”included in her new exhibition at the National Portrait Galleryβ€”deliberately use these devices, an advertisement that…
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We had no future. So we made a future for ourselves: the untold history of the Welsh reggae soundsystem | Reggae

We had no future. So we made a future for ourselves: the untold history of the Welsh reggae soundsystem | Reggae

πŸš€ Explore this awesome post from Culture | The Guardian πŸ“– πŸ“‚ **Category**: Reggae,Music,Culture,Wales,Cardiff,Race,UK news βœ… **What You’ll Learn**: β€œGrowing up as black people in Wales in the 1970s, we felt isolated from the rest of humanity,” says Lawrence β€œTylo” Taylor. β€œThere was nothing for black youth.”Although Cardiff is home to one of the oldest black communities in the UK, dating back to the 19th century, it can be a difficult place. β€œWhen you were kids, the police would mistreat you, call you a black bastard,” Tylo says. "There was pure racism at school, and teachers would target and belittle…
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Broken Glass Review – Arthur Miller’s shattering drama chills with new political resonance | stage

Broken Glass Review – Arthur Miller’s shattering drama chills with new political resonance | stage

πŸ’₯ Read this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian πŸ“– πŸ“‚ **Category**: Theatre,Stage,Culture,Arthur Miller,Young Vic πŸ“Œ **What You’ll Learn**: SSome might say that Arthur Miller's 1994 play is performed less often for good reason. "Broken Glass" is about the unhappy marriage of an American-Jewish couple in Brooklyn and also about America's inaction in the face of growing Nazi terrorism. You see the play trying to tie these two parts together – and yet this production becomes terrifyingly hypnotic and resonant.It's 1938, and Sylvia Gilborg (Pearl Chanda) is a housewife whose legs suddenly and mysteriously stop working after she reads…
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‘A woman of her time, in the worst way’: The industry, Ghislaine Maxwell and the Epstein scandal | television

‘A woman of her time, in the worst way’: The industry, Ghislaine Maxwell and the Epstein scandal | television

✨ Read this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian πŸ“– πŸ“‚ **Category**: Television,Culture,Television & radio πŸ“Œ **What You’ll Learn**: CWho is Yasmine Qara Hanani? It's a question that has haunted the traumatized industry heiress since the series began in 2020. "Who did she marry?" Henry Mock, Jasmine's new, down-on-his-luck aristocratic husband, wonders about his ambitious, cruel bride in the age of Lady Macbeth.The season 4 finale solves the mystery with a shocking Epstein-inspired story. As the Tender scandal escalates, and the wannabe payment processor/bank is exposed as a front for Russian intelligence, the former Mrs. Muck breaks off her…
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From MTV Cribs to The Bachelor Mansion: What Reality TV Houses Reveal About Viewers | Reality TV

From MTV Cribs to The Bachelor Mansion: What Reality TV Houses Reveal About Viewers | Reality TV

πŸ”₯ Discover this must-read post from Culture | The Guardian πŸ“– πŸ“‚ **Category**: Reality TV,Television,Books,Culture,Television & radio,US television,Architecture,Art and design πŸ’‘ **What You’ll Learn**: HHouses have always been at the center of reality television. Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous paved the local way in the 1980s with its semi-documentary look at the real lives of the wealthy. It worked so MTV Cribs could operate, and in September 2000, Cribs became what critic Sam Jacob called "the most popular architectural media of all time." The Ozzy Osbourne episode of the hit show was best known for her tumultuous (and sometimes…
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β€œI owe Iron Maiden an English A level!” The great literature our writers discovered through pop music | music

β€œI owe Iron Maiden an English A level!” The great literature our writers discovered through pop music | music

πŸš€ Check out this must-read post from Culture | The Guardian πŸ“– πŸ“‚ **Category**: Music,Pop and rock,Books,Culture,The Cure,The Smiths,Adam Ant,Nick Cave,Iron Maiden,The National,Samuel Taylor Coleridge,Joe Orton,Oscar Wilde,World Book Day,Poetry,Fiction πŸ“Œ **What You’ll Learn**: Penelope Farmer Trans TherapyI first heard Charlotte's song The Cure Sometimes when I was a teenager, and it was like waking up from a dream. With a dissonant guitar ringing like church bells and vague lyrics about getting ready for bed, it jolts a childhood memory of reading Penelope Farmer's ghostly 1969 book of the same name. As a child, I found it surreal: on Charlotte's first…
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Review of Chasing Freedom by Simukai Chigudo – A powerful memoir of postcolonial anxiety | Biography and memoirs

Review of Chasing Freedom by Simukai Chigudo – A powerful memoir of postcolonial anxiety | Biography and memoirs

πŸ’₯ Explore this must-read post from Culture | The Guardian πŸ“– πŸ“‚ **Category**: Autobiography and memoir,Politics books,Books,History books,Culture πŸ’‘ **What You’ll Learn**: TJoining Zimbabwe's "Born Free" generation meant receiving a promise: that your life would no longer be shaped by colonial rule. Skin color will not dictate the right to vote, learn, or work. For Simukai Chigodo, born in 1986, six years after independence, this promise was stamped on him from the beginning: β€œYour name, Simukai, means stand,” his father, a former liberation fighter, tells him.However, as Chigodu reflects in his compelling memoir, the end of colonial rule does not…
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How did Crash achieve the most shocking win in Oscars history?

How did Crash achieve the most shocking win in Oscars history?

✨ Explore this insightful post from BBC Culture πŸ“– πŸ“‚ **Category**: βœ… **What You’ll Learn**: However, as much as Crash presented a flawed cross-section of a Los Angeles community β€œcrashing together,” as Graham Waters, Don Cheadle's weary cop, puts it in the opening minutes, many felt that it too often prioritized the viewpoints of white characters. "[They] β€œThey have an inner nature, and they deal with all these brown characters who are just stereotypes,” Demby says, pointing in particular to Dillon's crooked cop character, who stops and assaults Newton's character Christine in front of her husband Cameron during a stop-and-frisk…
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