Experience Tumblr Like Never Before
Space Cola for my work experience the past two weeks :)
I love cherry cola
Speedpaint‼️ ik ppl like watching these (me. I like watching them.)
Intro post ˚ ༘♡ ⋆。˚
🐞🐞🐞🐞🐞🐞🐞🐞🐞🐞
The Kennedys ( Bobby is my favorite! )
Old Hollywood (40s-50s) I love Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn, James Dean, Gregory Peck, etc etc!
Old musicians like Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Buddy Holly, Johnny Cash, Elvis, etc! also a huge Lana fan clearly
drawing (specifically clone high ocs, one of my fav shows!)
listening to music of course
collecting!! (barbies, memorabilia, vintage collectables)
writing fanfiction (I take requests :3)
kennedyposting and girlblogging 😜😜😜
republicans…
any ana accounts
people that ship the kennedys together. EW!!!
✿ I don’t really have many boundaries on here, just please no creepy behavior obviously. I’m always open to conversation, I’m very chatty! feel free to talk to me whenever, I promise I don’t bite
one direction
selena quintanilla
sharon tate
once upon a time in hollywood
valley of the dolls
chanel no.5 perfume
the beatles
leonard cohen
and plenty of other stuff I probably just forgot :D
and last but not least, here’s me!!! 🌹🌹
My collection of limited edition marvel coke cans :D
They don't have these in my country so I collected them while on vacation
I found this gem at my local supermarket today, not sure if this is early or late promotional material or if it just happened to be there.
Birthday haul!!!
#NumaGalaxiaMuitoMuitoDistante #StarWarsOImperioContraAtaca #MaratonaStarWars #EpisódioV #EleEEu Ele#FolgaNoDomingo #Pipoca #Coca_Cola (em Pinheiro,rio Das Pedras)
#NumaGalaxiaMuitoMuitoDistante #StarWarsOImperioContraAtaca #MaratonaStarWars #EpisódioV #EleEEu Ele#FolgaNoDomingo #Pipoca #Coca_Cola (em Pinheiro,rio Das Pedras)
I miss my Coke Zero so much 😩.. why don’t I have any 😿‼️what the fucj !!!
I don’t think some people realize this is a critique lmao. I love the description of the woman imagining she’s driving on the road it really highlights the fleeting/unstable feeling she’s trying to capture and how the generation’s youth finds comfort in it 😌
A woman drives fast along the California freeway with the radio screaming, delirious with grief. She does this every morning, dressing quickly in her Beverly Hills home so as to leave no time to think. Changing lanes is like a dance the way she's trained herself to do it, seamlessly and to the beat. She walks barefoot into gas stations, rinsing down pills with warm Coca-Cola and chatting mindlessly with the attendants. Her marriage is over. Her showbiz career is dead. Her child has been taken away. She is known to cry at parties or get carried home; close friends have come to believe she's insane. It is only on the freeway, when the music is loud, that she can forget what's become of her life. To fall asleep she imagines herself on the road: "The Hollywood to the San Bernardino and straight on out, past Barstow, past Baker, driving straight on into the hard white empty core of the world."
How chic the story sounds the way Joan Didion tells it in her 1970 novel Play It as It Lays. The woman is a trainwreck but a sharp and glamorous one, numbing out on pills as a critique of moral rot in 1960s Tinseltown. Books are great that way. Played out in real life in the year 2007, the tale loses its cool; now the woman is a punchline whose endless personal disasters keep a burgeoning new media economy afloat. It seemed that every week, or sometimes even every day, brought a hysterical new headline regarding the downward spiral of America's pop princess. ("HELP ME!" "INSANE!" "OUT OF CONTROL!") "We serialize Britney Spears. She's our President Bush," said TMZ founder Harvey Levin in a gruesome Rolling Stone cover story from early 2008, which began with Britney wailing in a San Fernando Valley shopping mall as a crowd closed around her with their Sidekick smartphones brandished. "I don't know who you think I am, bitch," 26-year-old Spears snarled to a shopgirl approaching for a photo. "But I'm not that person."
...
"Do you feel out of control in your life?" asks an interviewer off-screen in Britney: For the Record, the MTV documentary on Spears' "post-breakdown" life released at the end of 2008. That February, she had been placed against her will under the conservatorship of her father and former business manager, which would last for the next 13 years. "No, I don't feel it's out of control. I think it's too in control," Spears answers without pause. "There's no excitement. There's no passion. It's like Groundhog Day every day." The camera pulls in close as she wipes away her tears. "When did you last feel free?" the man asks later. "When I got to drive my car a lot," she wistfully replies. "I haven't been able to drive my car."
Meaghan Garvey, "Blackout Album Review"