moontouched-moogle:

pkjd:

Mahou Shoujo Ore TV anime PV and key visual. Coming Spring 2018.

-Synopsis-

“This story is about a 15-year-old girl who is a newbie idol in love with her best friend’s brother who is also a popular idol. But she runs into a scary yakuza guy and finds out that her mother was an ex-magical girl, and the yakuza was her mascot. Her love interest gets kidnapped by demons that look like burly men with cute squirrel heads. So she contracts the yakuza to become a magical girl, which in this story means she turns into a handsome guy in a magical girl outfit. On top of that, her love interest shows an attraction toward her magical guy form. Her best friend turns out to be in love with her and also becomes a magical cross-dressing guy to save her life.

Thus, their manager, who is a magical girl geek, then decides to turn them into an idol unit.”

-Staff-

  • Director: Itsuro Kawasaki
  • Character Designer: Yukiko Ibe
  • Animation Production: Pierrot+

-Cast-

  • Saki Uno – (CV:  Ayaka Ohashi / Kaito Ishikawa)
  • Sakuyo Fukage – (CV:

    Sachika Misawa / Wataru Hatano)

Source: http://magicalgirl-ore.com/

banana-cake:

hussyknee:

goldenpoc:

agavehoney:

afrorevolution:

How Shea Butter is made is the Northern Region of Ghana 

Video by Hamamat Mantia  

Her ig : @iamhamamat 

Her skin is proof

But she’s like so adorable

She looks like a butterfly.

To the people concerned that family businesses in the third world utilizes the labour of their young children – yes, yes they do. And so did yours when y’all lived on farms or during the industrial revolution when worker’s rights and child care hadn’t been invented yet. Labourers here bring their children to work and they sometimes help their parents, because there is not much else to do. That is different from children who help in family-run businesses. Which is again different from child sweat shops and child begging rings.

The fact that you either see no difference or that you think you are qualified to tell which one this is from a 30 second clip is *infuriating*. For all you know, this child goes to school and leads a happy life but happily pitches in to help churn butter when he can, especially for an opportunity to be on TV.

In any case, if you, First World consumers, decide to condemn this woman, this documentary and decide to boycott this painstakingly, proudly made shea butter, around which an entire way of life is constructed in Ghana? You could starve this child, his family, bankrupt their business and drive the economy of this country deeper down a hole, thanks to your so-called “ethics”.

Caring is not the same as outrage. Caring means respect and learning and understanding where you can safely interfere and join activism where it is needed. The Third World has enough and more anti-child-labour grassroots activists who already ask for funds and political backing from international aid agencies.

Outrage means you see this video of a beautiful black woman showcasing her cultural heritage and their country’s labour of love in one of their arterial industries, and you spit in it for not meeting your idealized First World standards. You again relegate her voice, her struggling country and proud heritage into something subpar, inadequate and wanting.

You don’t care. You only want to feel good about yourself without doing any of the work. It’s hurting the very people you say you want to save. Please shut up and sit down.

^^^