Ode to My Pantry: Miso
Embrace the miso rainbow through soups, sauces and whatever else you can dream up.
Embrace the miso rainbow through soups, sauces and whatever else you can dream up.
You’re eating Tofurkey somewhere new this year? What the hell are you going to wear?
A book in our language.
Ali’s Team Pick: Ever want the entire text of a book on a tee shirt? How about on a poster? Me too! This is a thing I want! And Litographs can give it to me!
In which Santana Lopez returns and everybody screams for grease lightnin’.
“At the end of the day, they just want to be heard.”
This week on NSFW Sunday: debate over porn, BDSM, a gallery of studs from V Magazine, and the end of monogamy.
Drop the mic and walk off the stage.
“Imagine how wonderful it would be to take a class on French lesbian poetry in university, but wait, who’s that British man in a suit, aspirating your French lesbian poetry textbooks into his bag-free vacuum cleaner?”
Basically, trackpad shortcuts aren’t just super duper time savers when you’re using a Mac. They’re also an opportunity for me to talk about one-finger, two-finger, three-finger and four-finger gestures with an audience who will get the joke.
Winter, worm sex and weirdos.
“If I wear my heart on my sleeve – and I do these days, much to the shock and dismay of a butch gone prematurely tender – then the sleeve itself is my masculinity.”
This week we’re tackling how to have a first lady date, deal with homophobic parents and what books to buy.
Are you NaNoWriMoing? If you are, you’ve got something in common with Lesbianagers Kate and Nita!
Topics include serial television programs, Mr. Rogers, Disney’s Animal Kingdom, caffeine, underground new york city, boomtown North Dakota, marching band hazing, murder and so much more!
Spoiler alert: you can use vinegar for everything.
Turning this post into a NaNoWriMo support group in T minus 10 minutes. (Also, about 65 things relevant to your queer literary interests. Also, so many events this month!)
Last Spring, a school district in Utah removed a book after 25 parents signed a petition for its removal. But decisions about access to age appropriate reading material shouldn’t be left up to 25 parents, so the ACLU is suing.
It’s a moving picture show on the internet.
I bought tiny dreamcatcher earrings from a Navajo woman when I recently drove through Navajo Nation on a road trip. Am I unconsciously promoting cultural appropriation because I like the way webs and feathers look dangling from my ears?