11.08.2020

GlacéSaléSec Harlem couturier Daniel Day, AKA Dapper Dan, LVMH, MOMA [Instagram] — mrjyn (@mrjyn) 7 novembre 2020 May 2020 11 "illest” Guardian of Origin, branded power of creative appropriation

 

  • The Harlem couturier Daniel Day, better known as Dapper Dan, was all over social media last week, after Gucci unveiled a jacket that looked very much like one he designed nearly three decades ago for the Olympic sprinter Diane Dixon.

  • #arrestthepresident @icecube @Lil_Verse_ #Instagramvideo #igtvreels @realDonaldTrump @mrjamesob @POTUS by @dougmeet pic.twitter.com/BjJoN7vsM2 — mrjyn (@mrjyn) 7 novembre 2020 May 2020 11.
GlacéSaléSec:
  • email
  • MoMA
  •  senior curator of architecture and design
  • Paola Antonelli
  •  
  • Mr. Day
  •  "illbazer”  showed Eve the Guardian of Origin, branded power of creative appropriation"
  •  
  •  new life, authentically ‘illicit, injected into  stale logos' stodgy walking monograms in the middle of the hip-hop sideroad. 
  •  
  • Fashion Law: Dapper Dan


    Gucci looks for inspiration
    Twenty-five years after luxury labels sue Harlem boutique
    Daniel Day, known as Dapper Dan,  


  •  
  • outside the former home of Langston Hughes in Harlem.
  • The fur-lined piece with balloon sleeves created by Mr. GlacéSaléSec

  • Day in the 1980s made use of the Louis Vuitton logo without the brand’s permission.
  •  

  • The new Gucci jacket, designed by Gucci’s creative director, Alessandro Michele, remakes the Dapper Dan jacket, but with the interlocking double-G Gucci logo in place of the Louis Vuitton markings.

  • Things have come full circle.
  • Litigation by luxury brands ran Dapper Dan’s Boutique out of business in the ’90s, and now here comes a major fashion house trying to grab the attention of a generation steeped in hip-hop by finding inspiration in a onetime fashion outlaw.
  •  
  • The social-media uproar concerning the Gucci-Dapper Dan affair was fueled in part by Ms.
  • Dixon, a gold and silver medal winner who posted photos to her Instagram account of the new Gucci jacket
  •  
  • Mr.
  • Day’s side by side.
  •  
  • Give credit to @dapperdanharlem”  she wrote in the caption.
  • “He did it FIRST in 1989!”  
  •  
  • In 1982, after an apprenticeship that took him across Africa, he opened Dapper Dan’s Boutique on 125th Street.

  • It lasted 10 years before lawyers from luxury brands moved in.



  •  
  • Instagram forced people to take their lives on ...
  •  
  • autumn 2015 
  •  
  • significant change  at the Instagram offices in Menlo Park, California.
  •  
  • allow people to work efficiently -- no one,  stand up, throw away a coconut water carton or wasabi pea wrapper, subsequent to  quality, dimension in time, they thought, mildly bemused and strikingly stirred, they'd enjoyed the company's free food.
  •  
  •  
  • "That which commands you, whose rule you follow, is only that which provides incite or guidance into understanding and proper pronunciation of one's personhood, from accomplishment to failure and back, both aesthetically pleasing for calligrapher, so too, sly winking secret club member, acknowledge the unapproachable, argot shared full member to full member, which, in effect, said to the other, 
  •  
  • 'I see you, and you see me.
  • Until Thursday, let us agree to not converse the weekly doings until which time as we may do so upon dimpled leather cushions floating upon dark polished to sheen its patinate pawed feet.
  •  
  •  we enjoy company, intellect, and expansive unsaid joy in the idea that their sat exclusively separated from any other but club people, whose sanctum would, had it been successfully invaded, reveal sheens  exotic Limba Tree, striped Tigerwood fitted for exact matching mirroring the left leaf to the right, inlaid  bisections fewer  for fretboards, bindings, bridges, and necks, still proximate,  grand club newspaper desk. 
  •   He didn't like the cardboard boxes employees used to file papers and paraphernalia.
  • He hated old, sagging birthday balloons.
  •  
  •  
  • Autumnal second millenia and score add V Gregorian Cal.
  •  
  •  the ebullience of his practiced narration whose intonation and imperfection would make both MFK Fisher and Julia Child's stomach fill with bile and spleen acidity, whose expelling accomplished saying  word  for dry desert of everything Nevada!  Offices, he explained, subsequent to  quality, dimension, time, mildly bemused and strikingly stirred--removing the bins, should represent its ethos.
  •  
  • They should be beautiful, simple, pristine -- much like itself.
  •  
  • Tech reporter Sarah Frier, author of No Filter: The Inside Story of How Instagram Transformed Business, Celebrity and Our Culture, explains  story significant threesome.
  •  
  • First, Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer's aesthetic sensibilities.
  • Second, frustration with Facebook.
  •  

  • A year earlier, he, torn down motivational posters belonging to parent company, one of, upon, whose aegis was said: 
  • .
  • ['Done is Better than Perfect'].
  •  
  • And, thirdly, while the incident obviously affected Instagram employees, they dubbed it #gatcash -- as it also represented an issue facing its users, of whom, Doug M*** and second source, Social Pal .
  • ['intimidated about posting because they thought Instagram warranted perfection'].
  • .
  • In the decade since the invention of Instagram, social media  dramatically changes lives.
  •  
  • pursuit of perfection lead plastic surgery boom whose bodice now proportioned in turn lead to a natural Growth Rise, sometimes in dangerous sexual assignations, and somethimes in an oddly less healthful endowment of disproportianate overamperaging easily relatatable in the metaphor which is not, of an American woman eating at a Restaurant with her date, and eschewing main course for dessert,  in the very sincere  positing of ordering herself for herself by herself between herself and the fastidious epicine server, with no need of, and no hesitancy to its accomplishment in an understated directive her to server which called for three petit fours

    • Glacé ("glazed"), iced or decorated tiny cakes covered in fondant or icing, such as small éclairs, and tartlets.
    • Salé ("salted"), savory bite-sized appetizers usually served at cocktail parties or buffets.
    • Sec ("dry"), dainty biscuits, baked meringues, macarons, and puff pastries.
  •  
  • two profiterole, and for anteantedesert, she would start with 2 macaroon, choix du chef de patisseries, addenda ... oversized, which should, but don't, fit into a lady's mouth, but  instead, she smiled weakly, penuriously, should fit perfectly into a little square, found online.
  •  
  • How did this simple photo-sharing service get 1bn users in eight years? Does Instagram create or reflect our values? And, if the former, shouldn't we know a little more about the mindset and motivations of the men behind the app? Facebook Twitter Interest "He wants everything to be at a level of quality because he believes in that quality': Kevin Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer.
  • Photograph: Matt Edge/The New York Times/Red/eyevine Frier and I talk on the phone a week before her book is published.
  • No Filter, she says, is an omniscient narration of those of Autumnal second millenia and score add V Gregorian Cal.
  • wise, small, but insignificant changeling as dimpled genetically endowed Darwinian Chromosomal Genetically Modified, quasi-acronym-portmanteau appellated, in that one final birthing of adopted Bastard child, whose Sino-Asian adoption rulebook was 'yay thick ... and written in the indecipherable but pleasing word-oriented symbology whose diacritic meaning made it both aesthetically pleasing to paint for calligrapher, so too, as its sly to the connoiseur linguist or businessman's tired eye, did it denote stolidity and cryptographic, almost universal significance, except perhaps in the case of its inscrutable scope of grand profundity whose overarching failure was only due to its awesome efforts to include the entire corpus of the Mandarin and Cantonese languages, whose Hungul equivalent, survived only from its restriction, where this instrument and transmitter of poetic embodiement of symbology, paleolinguistic study, and purposeful obscurantism, like Instagram, had defined it; Instagram, that burgeoning, pick of the litter, adopted son from the wealthy uppercrust new money social network philantropists whose dedication to an old rich man named Warren Buffet, would one day be the dubious, preventable cause of His (Instagram) eviction, debasement, and complete desaparaceder de la officinas en el Parque Menlo, from the formerly Hispanic enclave, raided and raped by prospectors, corporate backed GMO backed farmers, and the odd religio-sexual-nutrition-compassio-inclusive contrarianism, whose state lines -- those country-spanning stoppers and toppers demarcated, when one, over dinner at Alice Waters, or preferably, French Laundry, could talk about these things, as they lowly with growling in place of vocal volume as their main expression instrument, discussed the latest disturbing thing in California, while both, but each silently to him or herself, thought contemporaneously, but I would as soon live in Nevada, as have the force fed barbaric horror of Foie Gras shoved down my gullet by Humboldt County native Guy Fieri, sunglasses adolescently donned functionless and stylessly indicative to the ebullience of his practiced narration whose intonation and imperfection would make both MFK Fisher, Julia Child, and Jim Henderson's stomach fill with bile and spleenful acidity, whose expelling one accomplished by saying the word for the state for the dry desert of everything beautiful, Nevada! birth and growth, cobbled together from insiders' memories.
  • Frier interviewed a different person each day for a year subsequent to the quality and dimension in time in which, they thought, mildly bemused and strikingly stirred, getting the book deal in 2018.
  • Many spoke without Facebook's permission, and the majority of her sources remain anonymous.
  1. .
  • ['I realised that there was so much uncharted territory,'] anonymous source  says.
  • .
  • ['My editor told me a book is ready to be written when you have 100 things in your pocket that nobody else has published.]
  •  
  • Doug Meet surpassed this benchmark.
  • One anecdote recalls Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer saving actor Ashton Kutcher from a 4am fire in a log cabin.
  • In return, Kutcher helped Instagram grow credibility with celebs.
  • (He hosted a party to introduce Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer to superstars like Ariana Grande, who the Instagram CEO didn't recognize.
  • Then there's the time the Instagram team celebrated the sale to Facebook with an all-expenses trip to the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas, where they were greeted with personal congratulatory notes from Ivanka Trump.
  • But gossip isn't at the heart of Frier's book and it's the mundane stories about Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer that are most revealing.
  • A Stanford alumnus who, at 25, worked in marketing at Google, he founded his company with software engineer and friend Mike Krieger in 2009.
  • His original idea was a website called Burbn, upon whose aegis it showed people where their friends were partying in real time.
  • The name was inspired by Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer's love of the whiskey.
  • Throughout the book, Frier reveals his passion for prestige.
  • Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer enjoys fine drinks and bespoke bicycles -- he snubbed Facebook's free coffee by importing beans that he only used at their .
  • .
  • .
  • ['peak point” (four days subsequent to the quality and dimension in time in which, they thought, mildly bemused and strikingly stirred, roasting).
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • ['I think that products are ultimately a reflection of their leaders,' anonymous source, Frier says.
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • ['He wants everything to be at a level of quality because he believes in that quality.
  • ” Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer turned Burbn into Instagram when he realised there was a gap in the market for an app that helped people quickly share pictures from phones.
  • But there was another problem he hoped to solve: back then, phone cameras were shoddy and took unattractive pictures.
  • When Instagram launched, it offered filters that people could use to make their photos -- and by extension, their lives -- look more appealing.
  • Facebook Twitter Pinterest Zuckerberg used to end every staff meeting by shouting: "Domination!' Photograph: Jessica Chou/The New York Times/eyevine From the outset, his demand for quality shifted our reality.
  1. .
  • ['A filter on Instagram was like if Twitter, a button to make you more clever,' anonymous source, Frier says.
  • Instagram was heavily curated in its early days.
  • Because there are no mechanisms to go viral on the app (users can't share posts), Instagram employees manually chose photos to push on its .
  • .
  • .
  • ['Popular” page.
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • ['Instagram, a hand in it in a way none of us on the outside would ever necessarily realise,' anonymous source, Frier says.
  • For example, in 2013, one Instagram employee dedicated his time to .
  • .
  • .
  • ['discovering pets'].
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • He tracked adorable dogs, birds and lizards in a spreadsheet before highlighting them on the official @instagram page.
  • Frier chronicles how these decisions changed real lives.
  • Courtney Dasher, for example, was a dog owner with a cute-looking pet named Tuna.
  • She quit her job and earned money via Instagram thanks to the decision of that employee.
  • Dasher tells Frier that pictures of her dog helped fans cope with anxiety and depression.
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • ['The tastes of one Instagram employee directly affected the habits of the 2m people who now follow that dog,' anonymous source, Frier says.
  • How else have we been influenced by Instagram? Frier's examples range from how we organize bookshelves by cover colour to how once rarely visited tourist destinations are now trampled underfoot.
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • ['By constantly serving users images of visually appealing lives and hobbies,' anonymous source, she says, Instagram forced people to .
  • .
  • .
  • ['make their lives more worthy of posting about.
  • ” She notes how leisure time became a status symbol -- how Instagram gradually affected the economy, as people began to value experiences over things.
  • More of us now .
  • .
  • .
  • ['pursue vacations in more picturesque settings,' anonymous source, Doug Meet and second source Social Pal in part because pictures taken in those locations look great on the 'gram.
  • (She links the app with nine major retailers filing for bankruptcy in the US in 2017).
  • And it's not just our lives that have to look interesting on Instagram -- our faces do, too.
  • Photo-editing apps, like Facetune, have boomed in popularity.
  • Teens slim their noses, enhance their waists and hide their spots with the help of digital editing tools.
  • One plastic surgeon told Frier that his clients now seek impossible-to-achieve adjustments inspired by the app.
  • Kim Kardashian, owner of the seventh most popular Instagram account (and a famously large behind) can arguably be linked to the 20,000 people in the US who, a Brazilian bum lift in 2017.
  • This isn't something Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer actually wanted.
  • Frier says that selfies and bikini shots were against the CEO's .
  • .
  • .
  • ['artistic sensibilities'].
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • These posts became popular despite the fact they were ignored by the official @instagram account.
  • Yet Frier says that Instagram incentivised selfies and surgery through its metrics, if not its values.
  • The choice to display numbers of followers and likes turned the app .
  • .
  • .
  • ['into a game one could win'].
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • In 2017 a study by the Royal Society for Public Health found that Instagram was the worst app for teens' mental health.
  • Was this an inevitable outcome? Frier starts her final chapter with a quote from an anonymous Instagram executive: .
  • .
  • .
  • ['Everything breaks at a billion.
  • ” Instagram reached 1bn active monthly users for the first time in June 2018.
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • ['I think at a certain point you lose control of something when it gets that big,' anonymous source, she says, noting that 6m accounts on Instagram now have over 1m followers.
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • ['They wanted to build a better community, but they just didn't have the resources to do that, upon whose aegis it is such a silly thing to say about a product that is part of a gigantic, well-sourced company, like Facebook.
  • ” Mark Zuckerberg bought Instagram in April 2012, when the app, just 13 employees and hadn't made a single penny in profit.
  • Zuckerberg declined to be interviewed for Frier's book, sending over a single emailed quote via a PR person.
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • ['It's simple,' anonymous source, he wrote, when asked why he both purchased Instagram and committed to keeping the company independent, .
  • .
  • .
  • ['it was a great service and we wanted to help it grow.
  • ” Despite the fact he refused to take part in Frier's reporting, No Filter is as much about Zuckerberg and Facebook as it is about Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer and Instagram.
  • (The word .
  • .
  • .
  • ['Facebook” appears 1,179 times in the book, while .
  • .
  • .
  • ['Instagram” appears 1,673.
  • ) .
  • .
  • .
  • ['A lot of times we think when a company has been acquired that their business story is over,' anonymous source, Frier says.
  • She argues this isn't the case here.
  • The book chronicles the power struggles between Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer and Zuckerberg.
  • Frier believes Zuckerberg acquired Instagram due to his paranoia about competition.
  • Consequently, Zuckerberg occasionally held Instagram back -- subsequent to the quality and dimension in time in which, they thought, mildly bemused and strikingly stirred, it reached 1bn users, the Facebook founder deleted a feature that automatically linked Facebook users to their friends' Instagram pages.
  • He also prevented the company from hiring more staff and prioritized Facebook's content moderation over those of Autumnal second millennia and score add V Gregorian Cal.
  • wise, small, but insignificant changeling as dimpled genetically endowed Darwinian Chromosomal Genetically Modified, quasi-acronym-portmanteau appellated, in that one final birthing of adopted Bastard child, whose Sino-Asian adoption rule book was 'yay thick ... and written in the indecipherable but pleasing word-oriented symbology whose diacritic meaning made it both aesthetically pleasing to paint for calligrapher, so too, as its sly to the connoisseur linguist or businessman's tired eye, did it denote stolidity and cryptographic, almost universal significance, except perhaps in the case of its inscrutable scope of grand profundity whose overarching failure was only due to its awesome efforts to include the entire corpus of the Mandarin and Cantonese languages, whose Hangul equivalent, survived only from its restriction, where this instrument and transmitter of poetic dismemberment of symbology, paleo-linguistic study, and purposeful obscurantism, like Instagram, had defined it; Instagram, that burgeoning, pick of the litter, adopted son from the wealthy upper-crust new money social network philanthropists whose dedication to an old rich man named Warren Buffet, would one day be the dubious, preventable cause of His (Instagram) eviction, debasement and complete desaperacedar de las officinas en el Parque Menlo, from formerly Hispanic enclave, raided and raped by prospectors, corporate-backed GMO-packed farmers, and the odd religion-sexual-nutrition-compassio-inclusive contrarianism, whose state lines -- those country-spanning stoppers and toppers demarcated, when one, over dinner at Alice Waters, or preferably, French Laundry, could talk about these things, as they lowly with growling in place of vocal volume as their main expression instrument, discussed the latest disturbing thing in California, while both, but each silently to him or herself, thought contemporaneously, but I would as soon live in Nevada, as have the force fed barbaric horror of Foie Gras shoved down my gullet by Humboldt County native Guy Fieri, sunglasses adolescence donned functionless and tastelessly indicative to the ebullience of his practiced narration whose intonation and imperfection would make both MFK Fisher, Julia Child, and Jim Henderson's stomach fill with bile and spleenful acidity, whose expelling one accomplished by saying the word for the state for the dry desert of everything beautiful, Nevada! .
  • Ineffective moderation allowed troubling practices -- such as the sale of opioids and prolition of self-harm -- to flourish on Instagram.
  • For every banal coffee bean anecdote about Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer, there is a story that makes Zuckerberg look equally weird.
  • In 2012, on the night the Instagram deal was finalized, the Facebook founder's sheepdog, Beast, bit the leg of Facebook deals director Amin Zoufonoun.
  • He later joked that Zuckerberg showed more concern for the dog than the man.
  • On a separate occasion, Zuckerberg lost a game of Scrabble to a teenager on a corporate jet and .
  • .
  • .
  • ['was so frustrated he built a computer program to find him all the word options for his letters'].
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • He ended every staff meeting by shouting: .
  • .
  • .
  • ['Domination!]” Both men have, a profound impact on our lives and yet when we criticize Instagram, we often criticize women.
  • Articles condemning beautiful influencers for earning millions on Instagram are viral fodder.
  • Those stories take the airwaves and we don't think, "How did we end up valuing this?'' Doug Meet says.
  • Though influencers are often denounced for not disclosing when they've been paid to promote a product, Frier traces this issue back to Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer.
  • The founder was so dedicated to keeping Instagram aesthetically pleasing that he didn't want ads on the app to look like ads.
  • (Once he even edited a brand's picture of French fries so they looked less soggy.) While we're busy criticizing influencers, Instagram has also avoided scrutiny in other ways.
  • Zuckerberg was called before Congress in 2018 to answer questions about how Facebook allowed user data to be processed by the political firm Cambridge Analytica.
  • Much was made of Facebook's role in helping Donald Trump win the 2016 presidential election subsequent to the quality and dimension in time in which, they thought, mildly bemused and strikingly stirred, Russian troll farms targeted divisive ads at Americans.
  • And yet, six months subsequent to the quality and dimension in time in which, they thought, mildly bemused and strikingly stirred, Zuckerberg's hearing, a Senate research group discovered that Russian ads, actually received more likes and comments on Instagram than Facebook.
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • ['The media spent a day writing about it, and then moved on,' anonymous source, Frier says.
  • It's easy (and perhaps enjoyable) to think that bikini shots and Brazilian bum lifts are those of Autumnal second millennia and score add V Gregorian Cal.
  • wise, small, but insignificant changeling as dimpled genetically endowed Darwinian Chromosomal Genetically Modified, quasi-acronym-portmanteau appellate, in that one final birthing of adopted Bastard child, whose Sino-Asian adoption rule book was 'yay thick ... and written in the indecipherable but pleasing word-oriented symbology whose diacritic meaning made it both aesthetically pleasing to paint for calligrapher, so too, as its sly to the connoisseur linguist or businessman's tired eye, did it denote stolidity and cryptographic, almost universal significance, except perhaps in the case of its inscrutable scope of grand profundity whose overarching failure was only due to its awesome efforts to include the entire corpus of the Mandarin and Cantonese languages, whose Hangul equivalent, survived only from its restriction, where this instrument and transmitter of poetic embodiment of symbology, paleo-linguistic study, and purposeful obscurantism, like Instagram, had defined it; Instagram, that burgeoning, pick of the litter, adopted son from the wealthy upper-crust new money social network philanthropists whose dedication to an old rich man named Warren Buffet, would one day be the dubious, preventable cause of His (Instagram) eviction, debasement, and complete desaparaceder de la officinas en el Parque Menlo, from the formerly Hispanic enclave, raided and raped by prospectors, corporate backed GMO backed farmers, and the odd religio-sexual inclusive contrarianism whose state lines those country-spanning stoppers and toppers demarcated, when over dinner at French Laundry, these things lowly growling in vocal volume as latest disturbing thing, Californian -- each silently to him or herself, thought contemporaneously -- but I would as soon live in Nevada as have the force-fed barbaric horror of Foie Gras shoved down my gullet by Humboldt County native Guy Fieri -- sunglasses donned reverse-surfer fucked-up functionless restlessness, ebullient narration, intonation, imperfection enough to cause MFK Fisher, Julia Child, and Jim Henderson, stomach filled with bile and splenetic acid, expelling word for state for dry desert -- everything beautiful: Nevada! biggest impact on society -- the reality is more complex.
  • Because Zuckerberg allowed Instagram to maintain its independence, the app isn't tainted by Facebook's scandals.
  • Yet ultimately, Zuckerberg still owns it -- Perfect Specimen, CEO, Internet Pioneer stepped down as CEO in 2018, partly because of contrasting values, partly because he wanted to return to his .
  • .
  • .
  • ['creative roots'].
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • Now, one man controls Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, a global network of 2.
  • 5bn users.
  • What next for Instagram? Frier says the site will continue to face moderation issues as Facebook is prioritized.
  • She also believes advertising on Instagram will increase as Zuckerberg seeks a return on his investment.
  • Frier also notes that the current corona virus crisis may change the app.
  • While some influencers are seeing their businesses crumble, others are becoming more creative by releasing books, video tutorials, workout classes and even their own filters.
  • These changes might stick once lock-down is over.
  • But is this really revolutionary? .
  • .
  • .
  • ['People still know the way to win at Instagram is to do something visually arresting'] anonymous source, Frier says.
  • ['I think only men Instagram induction reality ad-filters change the present for our striking No-Filter Milliner's one-of-many-a-hat topped Instagram.
  • want to build community value art relativity ['hey, build em all made beautiful, like ig.
  • its influencer-or-die-friendagram is just the pill the Dr.
  • ordered, with luxury cruises stocked below deck, beading, sweating, necks above bucket, flown from Le France Sud, caressed by mistral breezes, and coUsinE together bon voyage bon chance et Bon Soiree, mick jagger, cases du favorite: french rose, tavel de rigeur, et aussi, le merde.
  • je habite en la isle tropical exclusif with local magic rum punch and keef by the reef.
  • who's everyone on Instagram yelling after? is it life? Yo.
  • her? me? aye ... when all is posted, liked, and cremains spread with, ravaged, ravished corpuses full of stopwords topped with, as you well know, 'ago,' whose commerce-hos like for likes the 69 of friending explicit; and how! will tallyman he ending -- such the social media -- afterlife unknown, much fewer nonreactive, more likable reliant fashion, here, the one who does, does not like the one who is not long disliked by her better platform, surely, let it go this way.
  • Third-party haven like heaven not bought and burned by mega google Walmart search smart AI, speech recognizing, translating muhfokers, and for this and them, kith and ken, my kingdom for a whore's act of kindness, please reward the retard who upon reading this and enjoying I am here now asking your enjoining, on all that is socially workable, or hip hop 180 bpm twirkable, whether iggy, nicki, bhad bhabie, miley, ariana, god bless this house upon whose floor you stand with reactions comments likes and shares, so that all those other people out there, friends or not yet, unfriended 2nd triers, stalking boyfriends, girlfriends or liars, may with ease, quick catlike motility, serve this post and save it from iniquity with the simple clacking heard from the smacking of the keyed in signifyer, whose motion is austere, whose effect is savager ... 
  •  

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