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So this video is old. I mean, it was posted on April 9, which is basically a few days off from being three weeks ago, which is an awfully long time in internet years. If this were a meme ya’ll be slapping the cyber space retard on the back for having a go at least. But this is not a meme. Not to discredit memes as powerful signifiers of creativity in the 21st Century (which is an entirely different discussion and sounds awfully too much like a topic for an essay I probably should be writing right now), but this video is fairly major.

Tavi Gevinson gave a talk for TEDxTeen at the start of the month on feminism. She’s endearingly awkward and speaks with this American drawl that makes me want to change my high-pitched chipmonk tenor. As editor-in-chief of Rookie Magazine, Tavi’s created a digital publication for young girls that focuses on real-life issues, and features contributions from the likes of Zooey Deschanel, Miranda July, Joss Whedon, Dan Savage and Lesley Arfin (!!!). After becoming somewhat of a darling of the fashion world a few years ago, the sartorial as ever teenager has shifted gears in her blogging career and leans towards a more feminist stance. She still blogs about fashion, but her posts offer more of a critique of popular culture’s influence on fashion than a vomitrocious visual essay of whatever is trending on Tumblr. Did I mention she’s only 15? When I was 15, I’m fairly certain I was smoking cigarettes in my closet and skipping school to go hang out at Maccas. True story. Sorry ma! Tavi makes me wish I was cool at 15. Tavi makes me wish I were cool now.

Anyways, here’s the video. It’s gloriously candid and cute but serious and poignant all at the same time.

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This is Tati. She has an awesome way with words and is a boss on her ukelele. Occasionally she sings drunk, and is probably still better at writing lyrics than the majority of the population. Enjoy!

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This video made my day! Watch it for some warm and fuzzy feelings.

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Occasionally, I come across a video that makes me rethink all the whinging that I do. This is one those times. For example, I hate it when my laptop is running out of battery and my charger is up stairs. I hate it when I run out of soy milk. I hate it when I miss the bus on a sunny day and could probably walk to wherever I’m going anyway.  All of these things are minor inconveniences, but they have a signficant impact on a person’s mood. But sometimes, I have a moment where I realise all that shit is negligible. I am occasionally, for want of a better pop culture reference, the epitome of White Girl Problems.

A few weeks ago I broke my foot. I snapped the shaft of my left 5th metatarsal, putting me out of work for a week, stopping me from finishing university for the year (hooray! Summer School! Not!), and don’t even get me started on how hard it is to accessorise a moon boot!

The other day I came across this video on TED Talks. Have you heard of TED Talks? You can watch thousands of lectures on any topic imaginable – technology, equality, business, the arts, and my favourite, inspirational talks. After watching Amy Purdy talk about loosing both her legs, but still managing to learn to snowboard and make the Olympics, I can’t of felt like a bit of dingus. I can barely get on a bicycle without having foot-snapping flash backs!

Watch this video of Amy Purdy talking about living beyond your limits, overcoming obstacles and seeing a silver lining in every dark and stormy cloud. Pretty kick-ass stuff.

Featured image by IK-YD

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I love South of Nowhere. For those not familiar with teen TV shows, SoN is a teenage drama produced by the now defunct US Television Network, The N. At 23, I am probably way to old to resonate with anything coming-of-age. But when a mainstream television channel produces a show where the main plot subverts the hetero-normative Hollywood standard, I go out and buy streamers and dance, spirit finger style. And then I blog about it.

In a nutshell, SoN is your classic fish-out-water plot, but the small-town-girl-meets-big-city-living drama is a little more complex than the boy-meets-girl scenario that usually eventuates (think the latest rendition of 90210, or the OC). SoN is so good because it’s girl-meets-girl, and the whole saga gets developed over a very nice but not too monotonous 3 seasons. They also are admittedly quite cute, but let’s set the aestheticism a while for a side and give snaps for The N normalising lesbian relationships.

So if, like many SoN fans, I have a huge celebrity crush on Gabrielle Christian, how on earth did this short movie fly under my radar?

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3ChcZhbTZE]

Has anyone seen it in its entirety?

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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJzSj0f2zrk]

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