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Lisa Bonet and Bill Cosby publicity photos for “The Cosby Show” (1984) 
Photos by Mario Casilli
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This paper is my order for Inside Out Microsoft Our Own Words
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Me in my blue T-shirt
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I’m so happy for them
(Source)
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huzur verici
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Me outside in my Wigs and Dress
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Me outside in my Wigs and Dress
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I call out Buck Angel out on He Transphobia. I call Him Terf and Transphobe. I used to look up to Buck Angel role model for Transgender Community not now. Buck Angel use Transgender Community to attack Transgender People like me. Buck Angel is Transgender Person like me. Buck Angel, Blaire White, Marcus DB, Caitlyn Jenner hate Transgender People like me & Transgender Community.
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Men in Dresses a photo essay on gender fluidity in London androgyny
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He is buying he first dress
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Anheuser-Busch's chief executive on Friday responded to the backlash against Bud Light's partnership with trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney, saying its intention wasn't to divide Americans.
"We never intended to be part of a discussion that divides people," CEO Brendan Whitworth said in a statement. "We are in the business of bringing people together over a beer."
The company had sponsored a post this month on Mulvaney's Instagram account that promoted Bud Light’s March Madness contest.
"Just found out this had to do with sports and not just saying it's a crazy month!" the 26-year-old TikTok star wrote as part of the post.
Some responded with anger, condemning the beer maker for sponsoring the trans woman.Videos were posted online showing consumers dumping cans and bottles of Bud Light in trash bins and down sinks. Some recorded themselves destroying cans of the beer. Mulvaney, a stage performer who rocketed to fame last year by documenting her gender transition in a TikTok series she calls "Days of Girlhood," has not directly responded to the backlash, but addressed the climate for LGBTQ+ people in the United States on the podcast "Onward with Rosie O'Donnell" on Tuesday.She said the environment has become more hostile and threatening since she started her transition in San Diego County during the pandemic."I had watched it get so much worse as my timeline has gone on," Mulvaney said. "I'm an easy target because I'm so new to this. Anything right now trans-related will be used against you."Many have noted that Bud Light and its parent company have long supported LGBTQ+ organizations and events."Including our community in marketing is nothing new, but what is new is the extreme right-wing politicization of a company's creative and business decisions," CEO Sarah Kate Ellis of GLAAD, one of the world's largest LGBTQ+ organizations, said in a statement.
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Dylan Mulvaney (born December 29, 1996) is an American actress, comedian, and TikTok personality. She is known for detailing her[a] gender transition in daily videos on the social media platform TikTok since early 2022. In October 2022, Mulvaney interviewed U.S. president Joe Biden at the White House for the social-media news organization NowThis News.
As of April 2023, she has more than 10 million followers on TikTok, while her video series, Days of Girlhood, has received over one billion views.
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Jazz Jennings Regret Transitioning
I Am Jazz star Jazz Jennings has recently been in the spotlight for expressing regret over her transition from male to female. The college student stated that she doesn’t feel like herself, which contradicts her mother’s urging to continue living as a transgender woman. Jazz Jennings’ narrative had a significant influence on the acceptance of transgender individuals in America. When Jazz was only 5 years old, her parents initiated the process of transitioning the child from male to female.Jazz became an iconic figure, starring on her own TLC reality show, I am Jazz, demonstrating the perspective that some individuals are inherently meant to be a different gender. This argument was reinforced by the fact that Jazz’s parents raised her as a girl from an early age. In the past few years, Jazz, 22, has gained attention in the media due to health issues that challenge the idea that medical interventions can effortlessly transition adults or children to the gender of their choice.Jazz’s vaginoplasty, which involved a flawed penile inversion procedure, was carried out when she was 17 years old. This resulted in the need for several corrective surgeries and a significant reduction in her sexual function.Jazz’s vaginoplasty was performed using stomach lining material due to insufficient tissue, which resulted in the “neovagina,” splitting apart shortly after the surgery. Over the course of several years, three corrective surgeries followed. As Jazz Jennings began expressing her gender identity in preschool — her mother was her biggest supporter and advocate. “‘I don’t care. I have my friends at school that like me, and if anybody else has a problem with it, I’m OK with that.’ This is like 4-year-old Jazz, so I gained my strength from her.” Jeanette Jennings told People.Jeanette Jennings stated that Jazz experienced her happiest time in life during the year after the first surgery. Nevertheless, she also acknowledged that her daughter became increasingly depressed afterward and faced difficulty getting out of bed in the morning. It’s worth noting that Jeanette Jennings has made millions from Jazz’s transition and gained fame as a result. Jeanette and a fellow mom started the Trans Kid Purple Rainbow Foundation when Jazz was 6 years old to help other parents transition their young children.“We said, ‘We need to do this. This is something that isn’t out there,'” Jeanette says. “A lot of people don’t know about transgender youth and when their kids are expressing themselves as the other gender. So we wanted to present something online where they could find us, go to ask questions and learn more and gain resources that could guide them into this world of being the parent of a trans kid or even find out: Is my kid transgender or not?”
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Jean-François Bouchard’s Transpose
“I didn’t want this to be sexual or shocking,“ he explained in a recent interivew with Canada’sNational Post. "I wanted this to be about the personal stories. I could have shot this in a far more shocking way — scars, things like that. But I didn’t want to take over the personal stories that are more important.”
Fittingly, the spare, deceptively powerful portraits are accompanied by personal statements from his subjects, a diverse group of young and middle-aged trans men with whom Bouchard, a cisgender (nontrans) man, worked after three years of research. A statement by subject Alex reads simply, ”[My] tattoo means strong because you have to be. Five and a half years of weekly injections, two surgeries, and I now finally feel comfortable in my body.“
(Source)
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Me in my green lingerie with my wigs 
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