Continuing to drag sexual predator, Diplo, until the Kpop community realizes how toxic & predatory he is... Diplo was on Christmas vaction THIS YEAR with RFK jr, Trump's Secretary of HHS... RFK jr is Trump supporter, a Zionist, an anti-vaxxer, HIV/AIDs denier & propagandist...
Trump: "Iranians are among the most evil people ever. They cut babies' heads off, chop women in half."
Trump is using the same "babies" lie they used for Gaza. It was false then. It's false now. This is how they are selling a new war
My upstairs neighbor got a kitten and told me if I hear thumps it's the kitten leaping after her ribbon toy and now when I hear little thumps above me in my living room it makes me smile 😊
Connor Storrie on how Heated Rivalry 'opened an essential conversation about vulnerability and queerness in sport—an arena traditionally perceived as hostile to both.'
“I think that’s beautiful,” Connor says. “It’s a subtext, a purpose of creation. Rachel Reid wrote this story in a very specific genre, consciously and intentionally. She’s said herself she wanted to address homophobia in hockey and spark conversation. And Jacob was very vocal about wanting to create a gay love story that wasn’t tragic. Not about people being torn apart, about lives destroyed without a happy ending. It’s important to return to Rachel’s intention and how Jacob translated it to screen. They’re brilliant. And it makes me so happy that it resonated. I receive so many messages, especially from queer people, who feel seen through Ilya. Who feel validated as bisexual. Who genuinely connect to that narrative. This could have remained just a sweet love story with a twist. But it’s incredibly moving how deeply it echoed, how many people globally saw themselves in it.”
Art, in any form, has always carried a potential for social change—even when it arrives late, after our patience has worn thin. Time spent in collective struggle, connection, questioning, and even micro-shifts in consciousness always counts. “I think the role of art is to present an experience, and the conversation we have around it is what creates change. It’s a delicate line. Art that tries to be didactic can backfire. Heated Rivalry wasn’t created as a pretentious lecturing. It simply shared an experience so people could understand a different position. That honesty is what drew people in. You can connect to a story on a human level. That’s why it matters. Not because it’s over-intellectualized or academic. It’s about specific human experiences you can witness and understand, even if you don’t identify with them, and that make you think. I’ve heard conversations about hockey, sport, sexuality from people who played sports and realized, statistically, at least one person they knew probably went through something similar. That’s the most you can hope for—that you’re part of something strong enough to make people reflect on their own experience.”
🔗 Read more here: https://t.co/5cXp09arCu