White Granny Bbc

White Granny Bbc




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White Granny Bbc

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.
Sounds perfect
Wahhhh, I don’t wanna



Bbc Valley Resort



Leave your husband's or boyfriend's at home. Get breed here. By a BBC of your choosing.








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Honey I’m glad. That I got you vacation time. At the Bbc valley resort. Wow you have been there. For two days. And twenty five black guys. Have been breeding you. I’m sure that I will see you. Very happy and pregnant. When you get home.

As a Caucasian female, I have never dated interracially, yet at 55, the idea really intrigues me for a multitude of reasons. I have only worked in a corporate environment and never really had much contact with educated, black males there. I know that sounds terrible and I am very open as a person. I really don't buy into the black man sexuality myth and wonder why young, white women do. The photos of couples that I see are usually of thug looking black guys with ditzy white girls that I would never let my own son date! How about some intelligent white women of various ages and smart, sexy black men, wearing their pants all the way up where they should be, so that we can see their bodies, and who really are good their partners? That would intrigue me again and mean much more than just a physical attraction.
As a Caucasian female, I have never dated interracially, yet at 55, the idea really intrigues me for a multitude of reasons. I have only worked in a corporate environment and never really had much contact with educated, black males there. I know that sounds terrible and I am very open as a person. I really don't buy into the black man sexuality myth and wonder why young, white women do. The photos of couples that I see are usually of thug looking black guys with ditzy white girls that I would never let my own son date! How about some intelligent white women of various ages and smart, sexy black men, wearing their pants all the way up where they should be, so that we can see their bodies, and who really are good their partners? That would intrigue me again and mean much more than just a physical attraction.
As a Caucasian female, I have never dated interracially, yet at 55, the idea really intrigues me for a multitude of reasons. I have only worked in a corporate environment and never really had much contact with educated, black males there. I know that sounds terrible and I am very open as a person. I really don't buy into the black man sexuality myth and wonder why young, white women do. The photos of couples that I see are usually of thug looking black guys with ditzy white girls that I would never let my own son date! How about some intelligent white women of various ages and smart, sexy black men, wearing their pants all the way up where they should be, so that we can see their bodies, and who really are good their partners? That would intrigue me again and mean much more than just a physical attraction.
What exactly is the point of this post??
lippy is going to get in trouble if she asks if this is a man or a woman...hit me with your best shot...fire away:smt083
Misleading Intro -

Regurgitated Sterotypes -

Insufferable Ignorance -

All adds up to someone mightily daft enough to sign up just for this foolhardiness.

Figure some folks would have better things to do with their time.

Then I am reminded that ever so often one of these clowns show up on here before scurrying away.
As a Caucasian female, I have never dated interracially, yet at 55, the idea really intrigues me for a multitude of reasons. I have only worked in a corporate environment and never really had much contact with educated, black males there. I know that sounds terrible and I am very open as a person. I really don't buy into the black man sexuality myth and wonder why young, white women do. The photos of couples that I see are usually of thug looking black guys with ditzy white girls that I would never let my own son date! How about some intelligent white women of various ages and smart, sexy black men, wearing their pants all the way up where they should be, so that we can see their bodies, and who really are good their partners? That would intrigue me again and mean much more than just a physical attraction.
I never thought of Moe from the Three Stooges as hot.
then you need to look a bit harder, that kinda shit i have heard out the mouths of certain people, fact is there are nice bm and ww couples, but i guess they dont exsist because you dont see them , that logic you pretty much gave away in the squirting thread
thanks for finally considering us old lady.:smt026






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'Disarmingly intimate' photos of women
(Image credit: Susan Meiselas / Magnum Photos )
An exhibition at the Rencontres d’Arles festival features work by three female photographers who each capture revealing and rarely seen images of women.
When you look at them today, you realise how topical and relevant they are now – Clara Bouveresse
You see the variety of bodies, the flesh, the skin, the hair, the wrinkles, the scars – Clara Bouveresse
Heyman’s images show us, again and again, how rarely women are portrayed as they really are in the media, even now
The US photographer Susan Meiselas first began shooting women who took their clothes off for a living in 1972, when she was in her mid-20s. Travelling around New England, she’d encountered the country fairs that toured rural parts of the northeastern US; many had a ‘girl show’ tent, where women danced in striptease acts. Meiselas was fascinated. Over the course of three summers, she haunted the fairgrounds, befriending dancers and sneaking backstage to capture what their lives were really like . She also recorded hundreds of hours of interviews. In order to blend into the crowd and get the shots she needed, she sometimes dressed like a man.
The book Meiselas eventually produced, Carnival Strippers (1976), has become a classic . Unsparing but sympathetic, both humane and abjectly sad, it showed a world many at the time preferred to ignore: one in which women danced nude for handfuls of dollars, in tawdry, spit-and-sawdust tents erected in one-horse towns. Yet perhaps the most remarkable thing about the work is that Meiselas gives the story a complicating twist. We might expect a sob story – a tale of exploited, objectified women in an exploitative, objectifying industry. Yet Meiselas finds nuance in the biographies of the women who danced, along with remarkable amounts of self-awareness and courage. One says that performing is her path to financial independence; another that the carnival has given her a home when she had nowhere else to go.
“It was a complex story, and I wanted to show it in its complexity,” Meiselas tells BBC Culture. “Not everyone was expecting that.”
Forty-three years after it came out, Carnival Strippers is the centrepiece of an exhibition at this year’s Rencontres d’Arles photography festival . Entitled Unretouched Women , it reunites Meiselas’s photo essay with two other books from the same period by American female photographers, both canonical in their way. One is the publication that gives the show its title, The Unretouched Woman (published the same year, 1976), in which Eve Arnold, a pioneering photojournalist, compiled portraits she had taken of women around the world over the previous quarter-century. The third is Abigail Heyman’s Growing Up Female (1974), which describes itself as “about women, and their lives as women, from one feminist’s point of view”.
All three books were their authors’ first: a chance to make their own creative selections and tell the story in their own terms, rather than dealing with the whims of magazine picture editors (usually male). And in their different ways, all three paint a portrait of a tumultuous and convulsive era. Second-wave feminists were campaigning for issues such as a
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