Tumgik
#bbc melanin
pharaohamenemhatiii · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Natural Assassin 🥷🏾
2 notes · View notes
karamel-ellie · 13 days
Text
I am a slut for black cocks
Tumblr media
74 notes · View notes
hoodblk · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
Pc: #keith powers
23 notes · View notes
yolo-5 · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Come grab it
6 notes · View notes
xosiren · 2 years
Text
WILLOW - curious/furious in the Live Lounge
6 notes · View notes
the-garbanzo-annex-jr · 4 months
Text
by Olivia Land
A BBC staffer is under fire for a string of antisemitic Facebook posts in which she referred to Jewish people as “Nazi apartheid parasites” and called white people a “virus.”
Dawn Queva, senior scheduling coordinator and playout planner at BBC Three, made many of the troubling, since-deleted posts over the last few months, Deadline revealed.
In one rant, Queva — whose profile appeared under the name Dawn Las Quevas-Allen — called Jewish people “Nazi apartheid parasites” and accused them of funding a “holohoax,” the outlet said.
She also made several posts criticizing Israel and Zionism — including one in which she referred to “a bunch of subcontinental European melanin recessive CaucAsian japhetic AshkeNazi who have no None zero zilch blood connection to the land of Palestine or Israel historically.”
Some of Queva’s disturbing posts go back nearly a decade: In 2014, she referred to Israel as “Israhell,” the Times of Israel said.
“The Zionist genocidal land squatting so called Jew’ irrespective of the fact that The UKKK and Amerikkka gave away land they had no god given right to a people who have no god given right to,” Queva added in another post, according to screenshots shared by Deadline.
Tumblr media
3Dawn Queva made many troubling, since-deleted posts, including one calling Jewish people “Nazi apartheid parasites”.
Queva — who previously worked for A+E Networks, UKTV and Disney, according to Deadline — also repeatedly took aim at white people, to whom she referred as a “virus” and a “mutant invader species,” the Telegraph wrote.
Several of her posts refer to Great Britain as the “UKKK,” in reference to the Ku Klux Klan.
In another update, she wrote that white people were a “barbaric bloodthirsty rapacious murderous genocidal thieving parasitical deviant breed.”
63 notes · View notes
beardedmrbean · 4 months
Text
A BBC staffer is under fire for a string of antisemitic Facebook posts in which she referred to Jewish people as “Nazi apartheid parasites” and called white people a “virus.”
Dawn Queva, Senior Scheduling Coordinator & Playout Planner at BBC Three, made many of the troubling, since-deleted posts over the last few months, Deadline revealed.
In one rant, Queva – whose profile appeared under the name Dawn Las Quevas-Allen – called Jewish people “Nazi apartheid parasites” and accused them of funding a “holohoax,” the outlet said.
She also made several posts criticizing Israel and Zionism – including one in which she referred to “a bunch of subcontinental European melanin recessive CaucAsian japhetic AshkeNazi who have no None zero zilch blood connection to the land of Palestine or Israel historically.”
Some of Queva’s disturbing posts go back nearly a decade: In 2014, she referred to Israel as “Israhell,” the Times of Israel said.
“The Zionist genocidal land squatting so called Jew’ irrespective of the fact that The UKKK and Amerikkka gave away land they had no god given right to a people who have no god given right to,” Queva added in another post, according to screenshots shared by Deadline.
Queva – who previously worked for A+E Networks, UKTV, and Disney, according to Deadline – also repeatedly hit out at white people, whom she referred to as a “virus” and a “mutant invader species,” the Telegraph wrote.
Several of her posts refer to Great Britain as the “UKKK,” in reference to the Ku Klux Klan.
In another update, she wrote that white people were a “barbaric bloodthirsty rapacious murderous genocidal thieving parasitical deviant breed”.
Several of her posts were removed or restricted by Facebook – including an early January incident in which her activity was restricted for bullying and hate speech, the Times of Israel said.
Queva then slammed the action as “anti black klu klux klan white/Zionist restrictions,” the outlet reported.
Queva appeared to respond to the reports about her previous posts on Friday, when she updated her Facebook wall with a video from the 1987 movie “The Garbage Pail Kids” alongside a caption that read “only those who live a lie hate the truth!”
She also commented below to add an infographic supposedly listing Jewish slave ship owners, as well as the infamous photo of Gordon, an escaped slave with a heinously scarred back due to years of abuse.
Queva’s disturbing posts are believed to have been circulated in BBC WhatsApp groups that formed in the wake of Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel.
The BBC was under scrutiny for its coverage of the attack and subsequent war – and Director General Time Davie has held “listening meetings’ in order to address the perceived bias in its work, Deadline explained.
There have also been recent reports that 22 employees at the national broadcaster have filed complaints about antisemitism in the workplace, the Telegraph added.
“We don’t comment on individual members of staff and we have well-established and robust processes in place to handle such issues, we do not tolerate anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, or any form of abuse and we take any such allegations seriously and take appropriate disciplinary action wherever necessary,” a BBC spokesperson told The Post.
16 notes · View notes
thepinkrelief · 4 months
Note
Bwc or bbc?
I don't have a true preference as I believe quality is quality but there is something that gets me drooling a bit more when I see a dick with some melanin 🫠
4 notes · View notes
hoodblk · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
Pc ; august alsina
18 notes · View notes
ifuckingloveryoshu · 2 months
Note
Hi I saw ur tags on my posts lol 🔥😭😭 thank you so much for liking my ryoshu and oc arts, but can I ask where did the name of yuzuki for ryoshu's daughter came from? I don't think hell screen mentioned her name?
Thank you for helping me get up this morning. Very short tldr but vauge answer: Hell Screen has been translated and adapted enough you could have read the a translation that keeps called Yoshihide's daughter, "Yoshihide's daughter"
If you read the Little Penguins Books Publishing, they did not use Yuzuki as the name from what I can see, but Yuzuki exist somewhere.
Lazily doing a half-baked investigation under read more.
I will never claim to know anything about translation and I had too little sleep to do things today. I'm also broke so I can't go cross refrence evey translation and adaptation of Hell Screen. I hope someone better than I can could look into this or help out. Ill come back to this maybe
This is absolutly not how you do research or go off of things but Penguin Publishing version reviews don't use the Yuzuki name so I'm thinking they don't use her name there. The Jay Rubin Translation doesn't use Yuzuki. I say that because I'm re-listening to this while cross refrencing a pdf I found. Im guessing their one in the same.
This archeologist/writer named matthewrettino uses Yuzuki when talking about Hell Screen
Haunted Places Ghost Stories did a reading on this and unrelated but they pronounce Monkehide how an american would so its, "MONKEY HIDE." But anyway, they use it. They just spell it liker Uzuki
Tumblr media
Portrait of Hell or Jingokuhen make Yoshihide Korean, apparently. I wanted to put that here, it''s not really important, just an example of an adaptation changing something. You have a story for so long and things get changed.
It's part of human history and how we tell stories, we like adapting things and giving thigs new meaning just like Ryoshu. She's not named Yoshihide but we're all thinking, "Yeah, she's Yoshihide, she likes art, she has fire, shes sadistic, that's Yoshihide." But she's not an old man, Yoshihide never spoke in acronyms, Yoshihide's not a woman. Jesus Christ was never white. He was born in Jerusulm in a dessert, it would be strange if he was white. Most people living in the middle east and closer to the sun normally have darker skin because they have more melanin in their skin to protect from the sun. The image has been passed around so much that, at least in our Eurocentric culture, I can't find the word for it, Jesus is commonly depicted as white. Yuzuki could have never had the name in the original language, or the inverse, she could have had a name but time let it go through the skin of its fingers and it was lost to oblivion. We just need to rediscover where it's orgin came from.
Meme - A unit of cultural information, such as a cultural practice or idea, that is transmitted verbally or by repeated action from one mind to another
The name Yuzuki might as well be a meme. If it wasn't in the orginal version of Hell Screen, it just exist now. That's why people are like, "Yuzuki, that's the name of Yoshihide's daughter. That sounds right!" Because idea's spread from text, imagry, music notes, whatever you have come to life like a spark of flame from a lighter and drift off from its starting point. The co2 particles relase into the air and up to the clouds, and when enough people emmit co2 at a rate thats unsustantable for our planet, big things happen. Really big things happen. Or you just scream so loud that no one hears you and much like the effects of smoking, damage your lungs.
I hope it doesn't feel like I'm pulling stuff out of my ass. I'll come back to this and when I have a solid answer, i'll tell you or reblog this. No worries.
2 notes · View notes
chocolatebrat · 3 months
Text
“I’m pathetic white boy for Melanin Goddess🙇🏻”
My brainwashed white boys love gooning to bbc 😈 go watch them on my loyalfans ⬇️
4 notes · View notes
Note
headcanon: you are white white. gets recipes from the bbc, spf 10 thousand white. Melanin runs at the sight of you.
HEY
8 notes · View notes
denimbex1986 · 6 months
Text
'We are so back. Sure, the next season of Doctor Who isn’t supposed to drop until sometime in spring 2024. But to help us transition into the upcoming era, we’re getting three-anniversary specials and a Christmas special this month. Returning showrunner Russell T. Davies is hitting the ground running. Last week’s special was an ensemble adventure involving the Doctor, Donna Noble, multiple members of Donna’s family, and of course, the deceivingly adorable Beep the Meep. In contrast, this episode rests almost entirely on the Doctor and Donna’s shoulders. Good thing they’ve got giant arms! (Or at least, their evil twins do.)
David Tennant and Catherine Tate are flexing their acting skills as both protagonists and antagonists because this adventure introduces a pair of villains that can copy bodies and memories. Perhaps these so-called Not-Things are distant relatives of the creature from “Midnight”? Either way, it’s a thoroughly creepy premise. But in classic RTD fashion, the episode bounces between tense moments and playful humor, making it fitting that its title is a nod to a war song that’s still jaunty enough to be performed by a children’s choir.
“Wild Blue Yonder” picks up with the TARDIS crashing into an apple tree near Isaac Newton, who has enough melanin to inspire some uninspired “Doctor Woke” think pieces. The Doctor and Donna deliver a punchline about gravity in unison, and Newton promptly misremembers this new word as “mavity.” The whole scene feels like an opening sketch from another beloved BBC export — one more pun, and Noel Fielding could’ve walked out and announced it was sci-fi week on The Great British Baking Show. But the tone instantly shifts when the flaming TARDIS drops the Doctor and Donna off on a spaceship at the literal edge of the universe.
Much like Doctor Who itself, the TARDIS is in the process of rebuilding itself. That inadvertently reactivates a feature that causes the TARDIS to dematerialize when it senses hostile action, taking the sonic screwdriver with it. The Doctor and Donna are stranded and aware that they’re in danger. Not ideal. Donna is understandably panicked by the gravity (or mavity) of the situation. The show takes the opportunity to helpfully remind us that even though Fourteen has a familiar face, he’s still a different Doctor. When Donna tries to brush the Doctor off, he kisses her hand and holds it on his chest, offering both physical and verbal reassurance. Yeah, some of his past regenerations could never.
After a scan fails to detect other life signs on the ship, the Doctor decides that he and Donna should split up and complete tasks in different rooms. They meet back up, but something’s off. They don’t usually let the other ramble for that long without interrupting with a bit of banter, do they? Sure enough, the not-alive Not-Things reveal themselves by complaining that their arms are too long, with the camera cutting to the astonishingly elongated proof.
At first, it’s easy to identify the Not-Things. They’re puffed-up, distorted versions of the Doctor and Donna that clog the hallway. But their duplication gets better with each try. And with the ship’s walls periodically shifting, the Doctor and Donna eventually find it difficult to distinguish between body bender and BFF. (By the way, a spaceship where passengers are completing tasks, moving through hidden passages, and having heated arguments over who is an impostor? Oh, RTD definitely played Among Us during lockdown.)
Despite their comically stretchy bodies, the Not-Things struggle to wrap their heads around the concept of nuance. Most concerningly, they’ve decided that the universe is only about fury, hatred, and violence. Their restricted system of thinking makes them falter when presented with any seeming contradictions. How can Donna think she’s both dumb and brilliant? Why is the Doctor suggesting that a superstition can also be true? At one point, the Not-Doctor’s tie disappears after he drops it on the floor. In one of the more unsettling moments of the episode, he realizes his mistake: “When something is gone, it keeps existing.” The episode constantly emphasizes that things don’t always fit into mutually exclusive binaries. It feels like a thematic extension of the last special, which presented a nonbinary solution to the meta-crisis: The DoctorDonna couldn’t survive, but the introduction of Donna’s daughter, Rose — a third party — saved her mom’s life.
Conveniently, the Doctor and Donna don’t actually have to think of a way to take the Not-Things down. The ship’s previous captain has already done that by programming the ship to turn itself into a bomb, slowly enough that the object-permanence-challenged Not-Things haven’t figured out what’s happening three years later. The captain also took her own life before her plan could be copied from her mind. Unfortunately, the Not-Things find it easier to duplicate targets who are thinking, whose blood is pumping. The Doctor can’t stop himself from realizing that a slow-moving robot on the ship is a bomb trigger, which means the Not-Things reach the same conclusion. The Doctor speeds up the countdown, and the TARDIS senses that the Not-Things won’t have time to stop the detonation. This means the hostile action is over, so the TARDIS comes back! The Doctor hops on board with the wrong Donna, and the console alerts him to a tiny mistake in her wrist length. Just as the bomb goes off, he ejects the Not-Thing and scoops up his real companion.
Safely back in the TARDIS, the Doctor seems to be on the precipice of an emotional milestone. Earlier on the other ship, Not-Donna accessed the DoctorDonna’s memories and forced the Doctor to think about the consequences of Chris Chibnall’s era, including the Flux and the fact that the Doctor no longer knows where he’s from. The conversation affected him so much that he stopped to kick a wall afterward. I’d make a joke about men doing anything instead of going to therapy, but it was honestly pretty satisfying to see the Doctor finally reckon with the emotional fallout, even if he has to take it out on an inanimate object. Look, half of creation was destroyed, and his entire understanding of Time Lord history was rewritten … he can have a little tantrum, as a treat. Plenty of fans certainly did.
It feels like the Doctor is thinking about opening up about all of this to the real Donna because he carefully asks if she, too, remembers his past 15 years. When she says she doesn’t, however, he falls right back into old patterns of avoidance. Donna even accuses him of timing the TARDIS’s landing so he doesn’t have to talk about what happened. He doesn’t deny keeping her at arm’s length — in that sense, even before the Not-Thing, the Doctor’s limbs have always been too long.
To be fair, the universe does enable his behavior. There’s always a distracting fire that needs to be put out somewhere, and this episode is no exception. When the TARDIS finally lands, Wilf is parked outside waiting for his granddaughter and his favorite alien. We barely have time to enjoy Bernard Cribbins’s sweet posthumous appearance before explosions and fights break out in the street. Wilf reveals that “everyone’s gone mad” and the “whole world is coming to an end.” As easy as that, the Doctor has another excuse to put off processing his feelings.
Cut for Time (Lord)
• The Doctor is so unserious for pretending to be dying after licking that filament. The music added a dramatic touch that helped with the payoff of that scene and several others, so props to the sound designer.
• I appreciate the parallels between the Doctor and Donna’s conversations with the Not-Things. When Donna is wondering what her family (Rose, Shaun, and Sylvia) would do without her, the Doctor is thinking the same thing about his loved one (the TARDIS). The Doctor is reminded of the Timeless Child, and Donna gets to recount her own emotionally fraught origin story (sleep with one eye open, Auntie Iris).
• I’ve heard that some people didn’t love the look of all the body stuff, but I, for one, am glad it didn’t look too realistic. I’d rather be laughing at the Not-Doctor melting into a backbend and galloping around on all fours instead of having nightmares. Incidentally, I can’t believe those giant hands weren’t CGI.
• The Doctor surprises himself by admitting that he finds Isaac Newton to be “so hot.” Perhaps we’ll explore that more with Ncuti Gatwa’s Doctor … also, does that mean the Fourth Doctor was bluffing about explaining gravity to Newton after dropping apples on his head? He just wanted to flex in front of Romana, lol.
• I didn’t expect to get so emotional about the dedication to Bernard Cribbins in the end credits! Hoping to see more of him in the next episode.
• It seems like the chaos on Earth might have to do with the salt superstition the Doctor invoked at the edge of the universe, and I’m worried about it.'
3 notes · View notes
Text
Buying Melanotan 2 Products
Tumblr media
Melanotan 2 is a synthetic peptide that works to tan your skin without causing burns. This is because it reactivates the melanocytes (the cells that produce melanin) in your skin. The melanotan 2 for sale also reduces your skin’s risk of sunburn and helps to heal damaged cells more quickly so you can achieve a better tan faster and more effectively.
But there’s a catch: buying melanotan 2 products from some unlicensed brands may contain unsafe ingredients, says the charity Safer Cosmetics. The BBC has uncovered reports of women with a range of potentially dangerous side-effects, including fungal infections and lesions.
It’s also a common problem for men who use it to get a tan as well as those who are using it to treat their erectile dysfunction. He warns that unlicensed melanotan injections can be sold from salons and gyms, with some people saying they are able to buy them in stores and online.
An investigation has revealed that a 27-year-old woman who had been using melanotan II for two months developed stage-one melanoma, a deadly form of skin cancer. Other users have reported that the product has caused a wide range of unwanted side effects, including itchiness, rashes and blisters.
The Association of Dermatologists has warned against melanotan 2, warning that it’s not only illegal but also has never been properly tested for safety or effectiveness, making it a risky option for anyone who wants to tan naturally. “It has been known to cause a range of serious side-effects, so we advise against it,” it says on its website.
Despite the risk, you can shop for melanotan 2 products which are still a popular alternatives to tanning salons. It’s widely available on the internet, from beauty salons and gyms who sell it under the counter, and is gaining popularity among young white women in particular because of its ability to deliver an instant, natural-looking tan.
However, the charity warns that melanotan products have not been rigorously tested and are often filled with harmful chemicals and other substances. This has led to a surge in the number of reports of negative side-effects.
Dosage & Administration Melanotan 2 is delivered in a vial that contains sterile, freeze-dried powder and sterile water to reconstitute it before consumption. It’s injected into the body through a needle – either intramuscular or subcutaneous. Once the injection is done, it’s absorbed into the bloodstream, where it spreads to virtually every part of your body. It’s best to choose an injection site that is easy to reach and comfortable.
The correct dosage of melanotan 2 depends on a number of factors, including your skin type and your body weight. This is why it’s important to work with your healthcare professional when deciding on the right dosage for you.
It’s a good idea to start by taking small doses, and gradually increasing them as you progress. It’s also a good idea to follow a regular treatment schedule to ensure the tan you’ve achieved is sustainable and lasting, rather than just fading away quickly. Visit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melanotan_II for more info on melanotan II.
0 notes
teknoloskop · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Yeni yazımıza göz atın https://www.teknoloskop.net/insanlari-genc-tutan-gen-kizil-gen/
İnsanları Genç Tutan Gen: Kızıl Gen
Tumblr media
Bilim insanlarının yıllardır gerçekleştirdikleri çalışmalarla insan hayatını bambaşka seviyelere taşıdıkları biliniyor. Hastalıklar, rahatsızlıklar  ve daha pek çok problem için çeşitli çözüm önerileri geliştiren bilim insanlarının son günlerde olumlu sonuçlar almaya başladıkları gençliğin sırrı noktasında esrar perdesi yavaş yavaş aralanmaya başladı. İnsanoğlunun yüzyıllardır yaşlanmaya karşı bir formül, bir çözüm geliştirme çabası içerisinde olduğunu görmekteyiz.
Beslenme, sağlıklı yaşam gibi faktörlere dikkat eden insanlar yaşlanma belirtilerini çok daha ağır hissedebiliyor olsa da günümüz şartlarında engellenebilen bir durum olmaktan halen uzak. Current Biology adlı bilim dergisi üzerinde yayınlanan bir içeriğe göre insanın ne kadar hızlı yaşlandığı vücudu mor ötesi ışınlardan koruyan genetik faktörlere bağlı bir durummuş. Bahsedilen genetik faktörlerin kızıl saçlara yansıdığı görülüyor.
Kızıl Gen Gençlik Geni mi?
BBC üzerinden açıklama yapan Dr. David Gunn 10 yıl boyunca görülmeyen iki arkadaştan birinin çok değiştiği birinin hiç değişmediğine vurgu yapmıştır. Yapılan araştırmalarada makyajsız 2693 kişinin resmi çevredeki insanlara gösterildi ve kaç yaşında oldukları konusunda tahmin yürütmeleri istendi. Tahminler gerçek yaşamlara indekslendi. Sonraki aşamada 2693 kişinin DNA’ları üzerinde incelemeler yapılarak yıllar geçse de genç görünmeyi başaran insanlardaki ortak farklılık ve benzerlikler incelendi. Elde edilen verilerin neredeyse tamamı melanin üretiminde önemli bir yeri olan MC1R genine işaret etmekteydi. Bu genin insan vücudunda farklı şekillerde ortaya çıkarak çoğu zaman kızıl saçlara neden olduğu biliniyor. Bilim dünyası bu yüzden bu gene “Kızıl Gen” ismini veriyor. Bu zamana kadar bilim dünyasında gerçekleştirilen çalışmalar neden bazı insanların çok çabuk yaşlanırken bazı insanların yıllar geçse de aynı kalmayı başardığını henüz tam olarak açıklayabilmiş değil ancak; kızıl gen denilen gen’in bu iş üzerinde etkisi olduğu kesin!
0 notes
humandiversity4 · 2 years
Text
RACE - DIFFERENT RACES
A race is a categorization of humans based on shared physical or social qualities into groups generally viewed as distinct within a given society. The term came into common usage during the 1500s, when it was used to refer to groups of various kinds, including those characterized by close kinship relations. By the 17th century, the term began to refer to physical traits, and then later to national affiliations. Modern science regards race as a social construct, an identity which is assigned based on rules made by society. While partly based on physical similarities within groups, race does not have an inherent physical or biological meaning. The concept of race is foundational to racism, the belief that humans can be divided based on the superiority of one race over another.
Social conceptions and groupings of races have varied over time, often involving folk taxonomies that define essential types of individuals based on perceived traits. Today, scientists consider such biological essentialism and generally discourage racial explanations for collective differentiation in both physical and behavioral traits.
Even though there is a broad scientific agreement that essentialist and typological conceptions of race are untenable, scientists around the world continue to conceptualize race in widely differing ways. While some researchers continue to use the concept of race to make distinctions among fuzzy sets of traits or observable differences in behavior, others in the scientific community suggest that the idea of race is inherently naive or simplistic. Still others argue that, among humans, race has no taxonomic significance because all living humans belong to the same subspecies.
Since the second half of the 20th century, the association of race with the discredited theories of scientific racism has contributed to race becoming increasingly seen as a largely pseudoscientific system of classification. Although still used in general contexts, race has often been replaced by less ambiguous and loaded terms: populations, peoples ethnic groups, or communities, depending on context.
WINNIE HARLOW
youtube
HARVARD REFERENCE
BBC News. (2016). Winnie Harlow “My Skin Doesn’t Define Me”. [Online]. Youtube. Last Updated: 21 November 2016. [Accessed 18 September 2022].
Winnie Harlow, is a Canadian fashion model and public spokesperson on the skin condition vitiligo. She gained prominence in 2014 as a contestant on the 21st cycle of the U.S. television series America's Next Top Model. She was diagnosed with the chronic skin condition vitiligo, characterized by depigmentation of portions of the skin, at the age of four. Vitiligo occurs when pigment-producing cells die or stop producing melanin — the pigment that gives your skin, hair and eyes color. The involved patches of skin become lighter or white. It's unclear exactly what causes these pigment cells to fail or die. Winnie Harlow never ceases to amaze us. She's made it her mission to represent people with skin conditions in the media, and last night she became the first model with vitiligo to walk the runway at the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show.
youtube
HARVARD REFERENCE
Vox. (2013). The Myth of Race. [Online]. Youtube. Last Updated: 13 January 2013. [Accessed 18 September 2022].
1 note · View note