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demiiwhiffin:

me after having one (1) productive day

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demiiwhiffin:

a beautiful black cat

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fuckrashida:

Anok Yai photographed by Brianna Capozzi for Alexander Wang. Styling by Haley Wollens. Makeup by Yumi Lee. Hair by Jawara.

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1980vibes:

date someone who will sit down and say “let’s fix this” instead of being a child and ignoring you.

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hotmeat89:

sometimes y’all say things that make me want to attack you like a feral wolf

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onebatch–twobatch:

ambermusicbox:

overherewiththequeers:

overherewiththequeers:

castielcampbell:

jaydenthorne:

No. Hollywood has an older man problem.

this is so gross

I wish I could remember the name of the actress who went ballistic after being told that, at 35, she was too old to play the love interest for the 55-year-old lead.

It was Maggie Gyllenhall.  And I stand corrected, she was 37.

Damn

As much as we like to hate on Scarlett, please look at her chart. Her first film with a love interest:

She was 16.

Her love interest? 46


Next movie:

She was 18.

Her love interest? 52

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berniesrevolution:

JACOBIN MAGAZINE


The university existed before capitalism, and has sometimes resisted obedience to the dictates of the capitalist market, pursuing not profit but truth and knowledge. But capitalism devours what it can, and as it extends its domination, it comes as little surprise that the modern university becomes increasingly subservient to what Ellen Meiksins Wood calls “the dictates of the capitalist market — its imperatives of competition, accumulation, profit-maximization, and increasing labour-productivity.”

In academia, that imperative manifests itself in visible ways: publish or perish, funding or famine.

Without public investment, universities are compelled to play by private sector rules, i.e., to operate like businesses. Businesses, of course, are all about the bottom line — and the health of the bottom line depends on profit maximization, which in turn depends on careful and constant evaluation of inputs and outputs. The result for academic science, according to researchers Marc A. Edwards and Siddhartha Roy in their paper“Academic Research in the 21st Century: Maintaining Scientific Integrity in a Climate of Perverse Incentives and Hypercompetition,” has been the introduction of a new regime of quantitative performance metrics, which governs almost everything scientific researchers do and has observable impacts on their work practices.

These metrics and benchmarks include “publication count, citations, combined citation-publication counts (e.g., h-index), journal impact factors (JIF), total research dollars, and total patents.” Edwards and Roy observe that “these quantitative metrics now dominate decision-making in faculty hiring, promotion and tenure, awards, and funding.” As a result, academic scientists are increasingly driven by a frenzied desire to get their research funded, published and cited. “Scientific output as measured by cited work has doubled every 9 years since about World War II,” note Edwards and Roy.

But quantity does not translate to quality. On the contrary, Edwards and Roy track the effect of quantitative performance metrics on the quality of scientific research and find that it has a detrimental effect. As a result of rewards systems incentivizing publication volume, scientific papers have become shorter and less comprehensive, boasting “poor methods and increase in false discovery rates.” In response to the growing emphasis on work citations in professional evaluations, reference lists have become bloated to meet career needs, with an increasing number of peer reviewers requesting that their own work be cited as a condition of publication.

Meanwhile the system that rewards increased grant funding with more professional opportunities results in scientists spending an outsize amount of time writing grant proposals and overselling the positive results of their research to catch the attention of funders. Likewise, when universities reward departments for ranking highly, departments are incentivized to “reverse engineer, game, and cheat rankings,” eroding the integrity of scientific institutions themselves.

The systemic consequences of increased market pressure on academic science are potentially catastrophic. As Edwards and Roy write, “The combination of perverse incentives and decreased funding increases pressures that can lead to unethical behavior. If a critical mass of scientists become untrustworthy, a tipping point is possible in which the scientific enterprise itself becomes inherently corrupt and public trust is lost, risking a new dark age with devastating consequences to humanity.” In order to maintain credibility, scientists need to maintain integrity — and hypercompetition is eroding that integrity, potentially undermining the entire endeavor.

Furthermore, scientists who are preoccupied chasing grants and citations lose opportunities for careful contemplation and deep exploration, which are necessary to uncover complex truths. Peter Higgs, the British theoretical physicist who in 1964 predicted the existence of the Higgs boson particle, told the Guardian upon receiving the Nobel Prize in 2013 that he would never have been able to make his breakthrough in the current academic environment.

“It’s difficult to imagine how I would ever have enough peace and quiet in the present sort of climate to do what I did in 1964,” Higgs said. “Today I wouldn’t get an academic job. It’s as simple as that. I don’t think I would be regarded as productive enough.”

(Continue Reading)

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ghostclvb:

bundyspooks:

In the movie American Psycho, Christian Bale based the main character on a Letterman interview featuring Tom Cruise in 1999. When asked about the inspiration behind Patrick Bateman, he replied: “Tom Cruise on David Letterman had this very intense friendliness with nothing behind the eyes.”

Every day of my life I think about this fact. Every single day.

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kvnhcng:

kvnhcng:

kvnhcng:

thotjoy:

thotjoy:

thotjoy:

Hi everyone, if you guys could please donate and/or share this it would mean so much to me. This would help me out so so much!

here’s an update as of August 4th:

image

thank you so much to everyone sharing and donating, please continue to share and donate if you can. last night i had an incredible chance to attend my first concert but it was incredibly difficult to do so and i actually ended up falling twice so i really need an accessible vehicle!

as of august 7th:

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thank you so much to everyone sharing this and donating! it means so much to me that you all want to help. please continue to share to help me gain my independence!

as of august 27th:

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we’ve passed 3k! thank you all so much, I can’t tell you how grateful i am, honestly. This absolutely means the world to me. I know some people struggle to find the link, I’m sorry about that. Here is the link: https://www.gofundme.com/vyqfze-help-me-get-an-accessible-van

I also have a paypal and a cashapp!

Paypal: ssciatta@yahoo.com

Cash app: $sciatta

as of september 23rd:

image

again, thank you all so much for the donations! i’ve also gotten donations through paypal and the cashapp and i really appreciate all of your help! i can’t say thank you enough!

as of november 2nd:

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i wanted to give an update since i haven’t in a while. we made some progress and i appreciate it so much! the updates are less frequent because the amount of notes kind of makes me…anxious kjgrvh but i truly appreciate everyone for spreading this and helping me!

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jumex:

The law of attraction is that you have to be attracted to me. That’s it

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barcarole:

Jean Cocteau in 1950.

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jeffbezosdivorcelawyer:

by far the funniest thing on this site is when people said “stupid is a slur, instead use [synonym for stupid]” and everyone thought it was super progressive

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vsfnpetblog:

image

He’s being polite

TT