New York City, 1974. 
hungry-hungry-harrison:

johnny, you’re so freaking cute. 

Getting off at 12 if I’m lucky. If somebody brings me a 6 pack I will fall in love with you.


"You mean the generation that paid three times as much for college to enter a job market with triple the unemployment isn’t interested in purchasing the assets of the generation who just blew an enormous housing bubble and kept it from popping through quantitative easing and out-and-out federal support? Curious." - When comments are better than the article, Atlantic edition (“The Cheapest Generation: Why Millennials arent’ buying cars or houses, and what that means for the economy”)

(Source: bostonreview)




atlasobscura:

The myths, loose biographical books, country ballads, the 1941 film starring Gene Tierney, all boil down to a real woman who was reckless while still presenting herself as a genteel lady. Belle Starr drank whiskey and would gallop her horse Venus (named for the goddess of love and victory) at breakneck speeds, but always while riding sidesaddle and sporting a tight black jacket. She knew Greek, Hebrew, and Latin and could daintily play piano, but wore a rawhide necklace of rattlesnake rattles and an Ostrich plumed man’s Stetson hat when she went out on the town. Men who didn’t treat her with respect, such as the cowboy in one story who didn’t bend to pick up her dropped hat, were threatened with the barrel of her six-shooter.
Belle Starr the Bandit Queen: How a Southern Girl Became a Legendary Western Outlaw
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