she’s about to do something @provider
the delete.
legends supporting legends.
Who this girl in the back of the room?
Who this girl in the back of the room?
Who this girl in the back of the room?
It's the groove, it's the Yoncé groove.

Nice, know what I’m getting my girl for Christmas lmfao
Wayyyy better poster
Es Devlin:
“Redlining, I had only learnt about through Compton Super Bowl Half Time Show. Beyoncé had been thinking about that a lot herself, completely independently. Her mother, Miss Tina, grew up in Galveston on that kind of funny spit of land in Texas. Interestingly enough, Florence Welch, her great grandparents came from Galveston as well – obviously big, white, wealthy oil barons who had a big house.
They both come from the same place, but obviously a completely different experience. Beyoncé’s mother, as a Black girl, wasn’t even allowed on the beach. While, you know, the stories in Florence’s family are about horses being trapped in the stables when the flood came. And Beyoncé’s very curious. She’s a big researcher, she loves poetry. She wants to dive in and she’s very hungry for meaning. She’s got kids; she doesn’t want to bother unless it means something.
Beyoncé was interested in country; I think she had had a really bad experience at a country music award show, and she wanted to research its African-American roots. She discovered that 50 per cent of cowboys were Black, in the 19th and early 20th century, and country music, of course, has been largely appropriated.
She wanted to reappropriate Americana and country music from a Black perspective, hence the cowboys and why they are wearing red. They are her eliding those two ideas of redlining in those towns and the cowboys. She made a series of extraordinary films during the lockdown not out yet.”
The last part 👀
@atthepyramids WAKE UP