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allmybirdsofparadise

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About allmybirdsofparadise

  • Rank
    Newbie
  • Birthday 08/18/1996

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    UK
  • Fan Since
    2012

Recent Profile Visitors

525 profile views
  1. The "you gon' jump if A. G. made it" part reminds me so much of another song but I can't place it. Anyway, obsessed.
  2. Lol, that’s fair but I’m actually defending her. People can think she’s annoying or not fuck with her music but there’s blatant hypocrisy when it comes to who is granted the grace to learn and grow from their teenage mistakes.
  3. I have no idea how recent it is but I just saw on Twitter that Anne Hathaway was stanning Get Free (aka the greatest song of all time) during a press interview. Taste! I need Anne to star as a disillusioned drifter trying to find solace in the great open country road for one of Lasso's music videos.
  4. Ooh, na-na-na Tell me whatcha doin' to me Ooh, na-na-na Tell me whatcha doin' to me Ooh, na-na-na If control is my religion Then I'm headin' for collision Lost my 20-20 vision, please (Tell me whatcha doin' to me)
  5. Not me writing an essay I promise I have a life!
  6. No one’s intelligence should be insulted by pretending the negativity surrounding Camila is merely that her new lead single and sound isn’t being received well. It’s everything she does and it’s reaching look at that bitch eating those crackers like she owns the place territory. It's true that a lot of it is the belief that her revamped sound and look is inauthentic, a perfectly fair criticism if that’s how you perceive it. I’ve never been a fan of her music and really dislike the way she blatantly ripped off the excellent art design for Caroline Polachek’s Pang. Given her notable plagiarism and lack of artistic identity, the collective eye rolling from Charli’s fanbase is understandable. But the crux of the overwhelming negativity is the claim that she’s a racist due to her past use of the n word and the racist edgelord memes she reblogged as a teenager. Apparently she publicly apologised for this and completed a “racial healing course.” What I find interesting is the hypocrisy I’ve observed among pop music fans. Let’s take Slayyyter as an example, a similar case where it was discovered her teenage self had used racial slurs on Twitter. She apologised, donated to black trans charities, and acknowledged that she’s matured a great deal in the years since her edgelord behaviour. Camila has shared similar sentiments. One is afforded the grace to learn and grow, while the other is forever defined by her teenage self. In Twitter, Reddit, and forum posts about Slayyyter’s new projects, you’d be hard pressed to find any mention of her past racism. Whereas Camila’s are bursting at the seams with reminders. A more extreme example is Azealia Banks. She's made (and continues to make) so many racist, homophobic, transphobic comments. Some truly heinous things, but a good number of these same people hand wave it away and continue to support her anyway. I see a lot of Slayyyter fans ruthlessly going after Camila for her past behaviour — the brass balls on them to be so confident is incredible. The reality is we have no way of knowing if either of them are truly sorry for their past racism or if they’re just sorry because they were caught. Slayyyter’s fanbase believes her apology was sincere because they need to believe it was sincere if they want to continue enjoying her projects and supporting her publicly. You could argue that Slayyyter’s apology is presumed sincere because she donated to black charities, but do you actually believe that would make a difference if Camila did the same? I honestly don’t think it would. Past racism aside, Camila is seen as generally unlikable while Slayyyter is seen as pretty charming. It’s a lot easier to write someone off if you never liked them to begin with. But you can't have it both ways -- either change and growth are possible or they're not. The idea that your character should be forever defined by the behaviour of your teenage self is a frightening notion, but if you genuinely believe that it should be if the context of that behaviour is racism, then it should apply to everyone, including the people you’re a fan of.
  7. Is this the part where I'm supposed to pretend the album cover is horrible because she's become a pop punching bag as of late?
  8. "French Exit" is beginning to click in all the right places
  9. I'm crossing my fingers and toes for a Kacey duet. Their "I'll Be Home for Christmas" performance is already a classic in this household rental flat.
  10. I like this album a lot more than I thought I would (and it seems many who expected to love it really don't). Listened on the way to work and it genuinely put me in a great mood. I’m a sentimental sap so of course my favourite is “Happy for You.” I really like “These Walls” too. “Anything for Love” would’ve been a standout had they not halted it after 2 minutes. Absolutely baffling decision. It switches gears, ready to take you on a glorious odyssey, only for it to just abruptly end. I'm so frustrated with this trend. No trial, straight to the electric chair for that one! “Houdini” only gets more excellent with time and it deserved a massive video. The ~ lethargically rehearsing with my dancers ~ treatment is such an insult to its potential. EDIT: "Falling Forever" has me by the neck. How loooooooooooooooooooooooooong
  11. The Seth Meyers interview was cute
  12. The Alchemy is so good. I can't get enough of that chorus. Clara Bow is another favourite and I love that she closed the album with this: "You look like Taylor Swift In this light We're loving it You've got edge she never did The future's bright ... Dazzling"
  13. I will never understand the obsession with that bald tosser. Us dinosaur Lana fans remember the rampant misogyny he was piling on her in the early days. He's also just a shit reviewer. You've watched one video, you've watched them all.
  14. I double featured yesterday with The First Omen/Abigail and they were both excellent. The First Omen really surprised me. I had little excitement for it but walked out in awe. A brilliant slow burn that is genuinely unsettling and excels in all areas. The homage to the subway scene in Possession (1981) was the cherry on the cake. Abigail was a blast from start to finish -- campy vampire flicks are finally back!
  15. I find it hilariously sad that people who claim to hate her/her music sought out the album leak immediately. Like even a casual fan like myself can't be arsed with that nonsense, it can wait until tomorrow. They're all foaming at the mouth trying to come up with the wittiest tweet for likes but it's giving stan behaviour. They're obsessed with talking about her.
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