【asian schoolgirl swimsuit eroticism 55】
2025-06-26 23:48:01
816 views
881 comments
Rambling Through Rio,asian schoolgirl swimsuit eroticism 55 and Other News
On the Shelf

Kurt Klagsbrunn, Dama acompanhando a corrida no Jockey Clube(detail), Rio de Janeiro, 1945. Image via Aperture/Museu de Arte do Rio
- Today in zits: if you like to spend your free time watching grotesque pimple-popping sessions on YouTube, you’re not alone. (I may or may not have dedicated an hour to zit vids in the very recent past.) Sandra Lee, a dermatologist, has turned her science into art, posting “extraction” videos and picking up 850,000 subscribers along the way: “Sensing an untapped audience, Lee began posting more videos of things popping from the skin, and her audience gradually grew … Her online fans didn’t seem to mind the ick; in fact, many of them relished it. Some fans reported that their mouths inexplicably watered when they saw a particularly juicy pop; others claimed that they found the videos so soothing that they used them as a sleep aid. Lee began setting videos to punnily titled music, like Duke Ellington’s ‘Just Squeeze Me (But Please Don’t Tease Me).’ ”
- “Milking the rest of it,” a new poem by Dorothea Lasky, is rich in bodily fluids, too: “Turn the faucet on / Turn the breast on / Emptied completely of milk / With the tiny hoses in a row … ”
- The photographer Kurt Klagsbrunn captured the people of midcentury Rio as no one else could: as a stranger. Ali Pechman writes—“A Jewish Austrian refugee, he arrived in the city in 1940 and photographed its people and places until 1960, the year the government decamped for Brasília … He took no less than 100,000 photographs of his new city. The austerity of his early pictures quickly gives way to crowded street scenes with a focus on character, whether a trolley fish seller, a carnival samba dancer, or a Carioca walking her dog in Copacabana. A chic young journalist eyes the camera suspiciously as two white-coated waiters dote on her; a grisly greengrocer looks on tiredly from inside his shop … The photographer’s own off-kilter sense of humor is never out of sight.”
- Today in critical shrugs: a critic shrugs. That critic is Barry Schwabsky, who understands the degree to which his role is in flux: “I have to admit that the critic’s loss of power doesn’t worry me much. I don’t see my job as mainly that of making or breaking artists’ reputations, or of informing collectors or curators what they ought to buy or exhibit. If they don’t listen to me, fine; I have other responsibilities toward art … If there is a crisis in art criticism, it has to do instead with an inner transformation in the nature of art itself. What if art no longer requires a public—that is, someone like the active spectator Duchamp spoke about? That would be a conundrum, for the critic would no longer have a position from which to evaluate art. It’s not impossible, and it’s not even a new idea: Back in 1966, for example, Allan Kaprow called for “the elimination of the audience”—for participation rather than a merely “empathic response.” In recent years, in great part as a result of their revulsion toward the financialization and globalization of art, more and more artists have been taking this idea seriously, avoiding the audience and instead working only with participants, with collaborators and communities.”
- Meanwhile, in China: everyone is really into this rom-com about a mermaid. It’s called, appropriately enough, The Mermaid, and it’s just become China’s highest-earning film of all time. How, you ask? One word, my friend: environmentalism. “The Mermaid is not pure escapist entertainment. The ills it addresses—environmental pollution and rampant speculation against the backdrop of a widening income gap—are impossible-to-ignore facts of everyday experience for a Chinese audience. The film opens with a montage of documentary-style footage: sludge pouring from factory pipes, oil-smothered animals, dolphins being herded up for slaughter … It serves a cathartic function, providing an anxious Chinese audience with an opportunity to laugh at their daily injustices, pairing an everyday violation with a larger dose of fairy tale, one in which everything will work out in the end.”
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Researchers map the koala genome in the name of saving the species
2025-06-26 23:43'Scram!' TikTok just made it to Taylor Swift's Eras Tour
2025-06-26 22:10When does stalking a crush online go too far?
2025-06-26 21:53How to find and buy Fruit Stripe gum online
2025-06-26 21:51Popular Posts
CES 2024: This laptop's weird touchpad is for YouTube
2025-06-26 22:40The Art of the Cover Letter by A
2025-06-26 22:36UK restaurant which trademarked 'pho' responds to TikTok backlash
2025-06-26 21:49Bomb Envy
2025-06-26 21:36Featured Posts
Things AMD Needs to Fix
2025-06-26 23:36Staff Picks: Viruses, Villages, and Vikings by The Paris Review
2025-06-26 22:59Meet the smart mirror that doubles as a mindfulness coach
2025-06-26 22:24CES 2024: Asus Zenbook Duo is a gnarly dual
2025-06-26 21:51Wordle today: The answer and hints for March 2, 2025
2025-06-26 21:38Popular Articles
Amazon Prime Grubhub deal: Save $10 off orders of $20 or more
2025-06-26 23:31Redux: Her Ticking Wrist by The Paris Review
2025-06-26 23:12CES 2024: Clicks keyboard iPhone case hands
2025-06-26 22:09The Art of the Cover Letter by A
2025-06-26 22:02Tesla used car prices are cratering
2025-06-26 21:21Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (3713)
Reality Information Network
'Severance' Reddit theory may have answered the 'Cold Harbor' mystery
2025-06-26 23:06Wisdom Information Network
Redux: This Cannot Be the Worst of My Days by The Paris Review
2025-06-26 23:02Impression Information Network
When does stalking a crush online go too far?
2025-06-26 21:59Opportunity Information Network
Farewell to Ferlinghetti by John Freeman
2025-06-26 21:55Expressing Aspiration Information Network
Stop Preordering Video Games
2025-06-26 21:39