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Los Angeles, CA (BlackNews.com) - Interracial relationships are viewed as a positive step towards smoother race relations by some; as "sellout" behavior and a denial of racial heritage by others. Interracial marriages more than doubled between 1980 and 1995. Black/White marriages increased an estimated 96% overall, with marriages between of Black women and White men increasing 171%.
Swirl Society was formed specifically for Black women and White men. Too many times other sites offering similar aspects over time become spammed, cluttered and to be honest far too expensive and no longer have a singular purpose. According to Shon Anthony of Los Angeles, "Swirl was formed out of an idea to find happiness for Black women and White men looking for the same thing."
In today�s society, online dating has become as integral part of North American culture as the Internet itself. However, as the modern equivalent of traditional dating services, (internet) dating has had to overcome the stigma of "lonely hearts" and other negative images. Though interracial dating sites are not the only way to meet singles of other ethnic groups, they have certain advantages. There in lies one of biggest advantages of using a specialty interracial dating site: you can browse hundreds of personal ads of people with the same interest, which is to date someone outside their own race.
Swirl Society is a site where White men and Black women can feel free and safe to email, talk to and date. It�s a colorful world out there, so why limit yourself.
Miss Anthony's short term goal is to inform "Black American women to know there is a place out there to meet nice decent men from here in America as well as other parts of the world that are interested in them." Swirl Society is a place to chat, post on forums, write their own blogs, create events and express themselves through the profile page features and a lot of other features.
Anthony wants everyone to tell a friend and pass the website on. According to Shon Anthony, "I want Swirl Society to become a credible trusted site without interruptions, confrontations or negativity, its all about finding your true love." Source
I LOVE the goals Ms. Anthony has set for her site !!
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www.swirlsociety.net
I don't even have the energy today to go into how postal the above statement makes me. *ALL* Black Women are NOT looking for thugs. Take the wheel...I'm done.There is a glorification in the Black community by Black women to date these thug scumbags and try to dismiss good brothas out there.
We can't win for losing.
A guy kills a family and it's the black woman's fault. So every wrong deed committed by a black man is our fault? Who in the world would desire a people who don't have a responsible bone in their bodies?
Anyone who can count knows there are more black women than black men. Yet, we are coached to accept any black man in every shape or form, working or non-working, and even share them.
Reject the inappropriate ones and we are accused of being too fussy. Take them in any form, and we all "love 'em thugs."
That's stupid.
This social issue is then compounded by black men who assume they are "good," who upon facing some rejection, bitterly complain that all black women want thugs.
"Good" must mean illogical thinkers.
Apparently, these guys lack the ability to realize that not all black women would, should, or even could find them attractive. Above all though, who we want, who we end up partnering with is really none of their business.
How is it that we can accept that not all black men want us, but these guys are unable to understand ALL black women aren't there solely for their selection (or denigration)? Isn't this typical black male chauvinism, narcissism, selfishness, and vanity?
No matter who we are or what we do, we are supposed to wait (often in vain) for them.
These guys seriously, and I mean seriously, need to check themselves.
Bonet and her boyfriend of two years, actor Jason Momoa, have 14-month-old daughter Lola. The actress also has 19-year-old daughter Zoe Kravitz with rocker Lenny Kravitz.
Bonet, 40, has no plans to find out whether a son will be joining the two daughters.
"When my friends ask me, I say, 'I really don't know,'" she says. "I love the mystery and I trust the mystery about it. It adds a whole other component at the end." Source
A deeply moving drama built around longtime character actor Richard Jenkins, The Visitor is a simmering drama about a college professor and recent widower, Walter Vale (Jenkins), who discovers a pair of homeless, illegal aliens living in his New York apartment. After the mix-up is resolved, Vale invites the couple--a young, Syrian musician named Tarek (Haaz Sleiman) and his Senegalese girlfriend (Danai Gurira--to stay with him. An unlikely friendship develops between the retiring, quiet Vale and the vital Tarek, and the former begins to loosen up and respond to Tareks drumming lessons as if something in him waiting to be liberated has finally arrived. All goes well until Tarek is hauled in by immigration authorities and threatened with deportation. His mother, Mouna (Hiam Abbass), turns up and stays with Vale, sparking a renewed if subdued interest in courtship. But the wheels of injustice in immigration crush all manner of hopes in post-9/11 America. Vale soon realizes his unexpected capacity for anger over Tareks plight, and the positive changes to his personal life that emerged from a deep involvement with his friend and Mouna, might be the only legacy he takes from this experience. Writer-director Thomas McCarthy has created a wonderfully measured story about change and renewal, and put it all on the shoulders of Jenkins, a largely unheralded but masterful performer whose time for renown has surely come. --Tom Keogh Source
The studio was described as “amazing!” My source said the studio blew his mind. “This [party] was so elegant and sophisticated and high end. You wouldn’t understand how much money he put into this thing!,” gushed my source.Photo Credit : MediaTakeOut.com
“When they get a load of the magnitude of [the studio], people are going to be flocking here and not going to Hollywood to film movies! That’s what this man has done! My mouth literally dropped when I went out there and looked. He had fire works going off. You would have thought it was like the World Series! He had lights throughout the woods reflecting on the lake.” Source : Sandra Rose.com
ABC is getting ready for the release of its new series, "Life on Mars" which will hit the small screens on October 9 with the release of the show's promotional video. The footage is exceptional for its inclusion of Chris Cornell's brand new single "Ground Zero" which will appear on his November 4 solo album "Scream".
Lining up Jason O'Mara, Harvey Keitel, Jonathan Murphy, Michael Imperioli and Gretchen Mol as the main cast, "Life on Mars" is a cop drama adapted from the successful British series of the same name. The first episode is titled "Out Here in the Field" where NYPD Detective Sam Tyler is trying mightily to understand what's just happened to him and how he can get back "home" .
He finds himself in 1973 in the cultural hotbed of New York City during the tumultuous times of the Vietnam War, Watergate, women's lib and the civil and gay rights movements - without a cell phone or computer - suddenly hurtled back in time, ripped from 2008 after being hit by a car while chasing down a criminal. Source
Doesn't this fall under the "funny because it's true" category though? I can understand why people would find it offensive, I can...But I'm a fat girl, and I absolutely get hit on by black men far, far more than my skinny friends do. Sure not ALL black men like bigger white girls, but I found this bit hilarious. Especially the part about knowing you've put on a few when more black guys start hitting on you. It's kind of true for me, as someone whose weight fluctuates!
But then, I just love Chris Rock, so I am clearly biased. (Pinky says: hhmm...sounds like a "Becky" if I've ever heard one.")
I'm sorry, but I'm just over this stereotype. I'm a black woman, who is engaged to an awesome white man. I've dated every race and ethnicity under the sun, but I think it's mainly been white men and women in my dating history. This joke is just old and played. (Pinky says: Child, yes, these jokes are played out.)
I'm a white guy and my girlfriend is black. We certainly don't look to the media or the mainstream for positive reinforcements or to validate our relationship; but I was hoping CR might have something funny to say on the subject. Overall it was pretty weak; (and sadly he didn't point out that plenty of same-race relationships fail), but seemed to go to point to shore up material for his screed against black women (who seem to suffer from having opinions, etc). I was bored and disappointed. (Pinky says: THANK YOU !!!)
i had an 8-year relationship with a black man and as a white woman, i gotta say i can totally laugh at this (even at myself, when rock says "black men will get with anyone"). in college i put on about 10-15 pounds and a black man i worked with approached me and said i had put on some weight and i was "looking good". i was mortified, i thought i looked terrible. it's funny that he thought quite the opposite. (Pinky says: SMH)
I saw him at a small place here in New York before the show at the Apollo, and that bit above did NOT go over well with a large table of black women. The bouncer even came over to them at one point to tell them to be quiet. I have to say, he just seemed angry, and some of the jokes were really dark and not that funny. I am one of the least PC people ever, but there were a few times when I was like, ummmm.... really? (Pinky says: Oh, do tell, some Black women didn't sip the Kool Aid at his show ?) Source
Whether in Nollywood or Hollywood, it is rare to find women, especially Black/African women, in executive film roles such as producers and directors. Nollywood A-list Actress Stephanie Okereke bucks the trend with the debut of her first film called "Through the Glass," in which she wrote, produced and directed. "Through the Glass" is about phobias we have in entering committed relationships. It also cuts to the core by addressing some of the reasons we have such phobias, for example, childhood pain. Okereke recently released a trailer of "Through the Glass" and the response has been lots of excitement and buzz! Amidst all the excitement, Ladybrille caught up with the A-list actress for an exclusive all access granted on the making of "Through the Glass." http://www.throughtheglassmovie.com/ source