(via crillmatic)
That dress though.
People have criticized the show for not having more black characters, but others think the show is just being true to the context of an ad agency in the mid-sixties. Do you have any thoughts? And since you’re playing the first black employee, do you feel pressured to have a lot of opinions about this?
I did not feel a lot of pressure. I am happy to be a part of the show. I know that this show hasn’t had an African-American in the office and I know that comes with a lot of responsibility as to how I portray this woman, but I can’t think about that. I can only go in and do what I think this woman would do. I try not to think, Oh, I have to represent every single black person in the world that was there in the sixties. I have to tell this one woman’s story and what that was for her. I’m kind of on the fence because as a black actress, there aren’t a lot of roles out there for us, and so you see a great show and it’s like, Oh wow, I would love to be on that show. Oh, but there are no black people on it. So that part is frustrating and I understand that, but at the same time I don’t expect to be a part of everyone’s story if it’s not true to the story that they’re trying to tell.
douglass-forgot-the-chitterlings:
WELL DAYUM TARAJI!!!
my twin looks beautiful here!!!
Um….
WOW.
Good.
Googley.
Moogley.
HAYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY GOOD MURNTING
GET IT AUNTIE TARAJI!
O Magazine: Viola Davis channels Marilyn Monroe
I never saw any images of beauty that resembled me.

(via blkgirlblogging)
“Uhura” comes from the Swahili word UHURU meaning “freedom”. Uhura was pretty much the first ever black main character on American television who was not a maid or a domestic servant in 1966. TV network NBC refused to let Nichelle Nichols be a regular, claiming Deep South affiliates would be angered, so Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry hired her as a “day worker,” but still included her in almost every episode. She actually made more money than any of the other actors through this workaround, and it was kept secret from the other actors, but it was still a humiliating second-class status. The network people made life hard for Nichols, constantly trying to pare down her screen time, purposefully dropping racist comments in her presence and even withholding her fan mail from her.This deplorable state of affairs led Nichols to make the decision to quit after the 1st season, but then she happened to meet the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. who pleaded with her to stick with the show because as a Black woman she was portraying the first non-stereotypical role on television. I had a crush on Uhura as a kid. LOL.
I will re-blog 60 billion times….
WOW.
Thepinupnoire: Hey that’s me! Thanks for reblogging :) Angelique Noire
A Senegalese woman crosses the street in her brightly coloured gown
African swag cannot be fucked with.
WERK!
(via thegoddamazon)

“Few things blend together as perfectly as the worlds of music and fashion, so it’s no wonder that we find singer and bassist for UK band The Noisettes, Shingai Shoniwa, so explosive. This English-Zimbabwean stunner definitely steals the spotlight from her bandmates with her beautifully melancholic voice, commanding stage presence and unique fashion sense. While there are certainly a myriad of reasons to love her, here are the three reasons we simply can’t get enough of Shingai Shoniwa.”