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‘We can be weirdos too’: the Black mermaids creating their own fantasy worlds
Dressed in a purple and turquoise seashell bra and an iridescent green tail, the professional mermaid Carrie Wata swam through a hula hoop that a group of children held underwater in a pool at a birthday party outside of Atlanta, Georgia. The birthday girl was astonished to see that Wata was a Black mermaid. “You look like me,” Wata recalled the girl saying. Her mother had previously told Wata that the child was insecure about her hair and brown skin tone.But throughout the party, Wata said that she saw the child become more self-assured as she mimicked Wata’s moves, swimming through the hula hoop and flipping her tail underwater as well
Devon council urged to halt demolition of historic mill buildings
The wooded banks of the River Lemon, which tumbles through the town of Newton Abbot from the heights of Dartmoor, has long been a hive of activity, the site of corn and wool mills and tanneries that have employed thousands of people over the centuries.But demolition crews are about to move in to clear a collection of mill buildings and make way for housing despite an outcry from local people and national conservation organisations which argue the historic structures should be saved and repurposed.The National Trust and Save Britain’s Heritage are among a host of bodies that say it would be better on cultural and environmental grounds to preserve and convert the buildings rather than raze them.Nature campaigners are also worried that the loss of Bradley Lane Mills will endanger creatures including bats that roost in five of the buildings, swifts that nest there and eels that live in the leat running through the plot.Teignbridge district council, which owns the site, has been accused of rushing through the demolition, which is scheduled to begin on 6 January, because it needs to use money allocated from the UK government’s future high streets fund quickly or lose it
Pouring champagne and ironing knickers: my day serving the matriarchy as a topless male waiter
“Mum”, a drag mistress sporting a severe blonde bob, dresses me in a black tuxedo jacket and tie, chest and belly exposed – then puts me to work ironing knickers. Later, I’m handed a feather duster with which to polish an array of white porcelain dicks – alternately girthy, proud, veiny and shrivelled – protruding from the rich green velvet drapes (Peter Lundberg’s 91 Penises).This is the price of entry to the Museum of Old and New Art’s Ladies Lounge – if you’re a man.The nipaluna/Hobart museum reopened the lounge last week for a one-month victory lap, after a sex discrimination complaint first won by New South Wales man Jason Lau was overturned in lutruwita/Tasmania’s supreme court. Operating since 2020 as a space for women to luxuriate in their own company, the lounge is now allowing men to enter on select days – provided they remove their shirts and serve the matriarchy inside
Janey Godley remembered by Nicola Sturgeon
20 January 1961 – 2 November 2024The former first minister hails the talents of the Scottish comedian and actor who made people laugh in the darkest of times, not least with with her parodies of the politician’s Covid briefingsVery early in the pandemic, somebody in my office said, “Have you seen these voiceover videos of your Covid briefings that Janey Godley is doing? They’re really, really funny.’” So I watched a couple of them and they really, really were.Obviously, Covid was such a hard and dark time for everybody, and for me as first minister, it was stressful, but after finding out about Janey’s voiceovers, I remember quite quickly getting into this kind of pattern: after I did the briefing every day, half an hour later I’d go to see if Janey had posted anything – she used to post her videos quickly – just to lift my spirits and cheer me up. They always made me laugh.Janey took the – excuse my language – piss out of me on many occasions, yes, but that’s par for the course
‘A Model Murder’: the 1954 trial that gripped Sydney takes to the stage
In 1954, when the 22-year-old Sydney model Shirley Beiger went on trial for the alleged murder of her live-in lover, hundreds of spectators, many of them women, queued outside Darlinghurst’s courthouse with sandwiches, Thermos flasks and even babies, hoping for a seat.“They were yelling, ‘God bless you, Shirl,’” says the award-winning theatre maker Sheridan Harbridge. “They were fully behind her and what she’d done.”The playwright and director is speaking to Guardian Australia while seated by the dock where Beiger stood trial 70 years ago. In January the courthouse will be the setting for A Model Murder, a theatrical recreation of the trial that draws on court transcripts
Michael Mosley remembered by Dr Phil Hammond
22 March 1957 – 5 June 2024 His former TV colleague recalls an exhilarating advocate for self-help with a zeal for exposing health scandalsI met Michael Mosley in 1995, when he asked me to audition to present a TV series he was creating called Trust Me, I’m a Doctor. He wanted someone who wasn’t afraid to take down their own profession and I seemed to fit the bill. I liked him immediately, and we discovered we had a lot in common: raised abroad, the privilege of private school and Oxbridge and driven by escaping the fate of our fathers (mine died at 38 by suicide, Mike’s in his early 70s from the complications of diabetes). And we’d both married wonderful GPs to keep us on track.Michael had stopped being a doctor and he needed someone who still was to take the flak
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