Tag: ‘hate
Hate Giving Blood? Not Anymore, With This Mixed Reality Experience – CNET
I hate Asterigos considerably less than most soulslikes
I’ll try not to bang on about it, but in the interests of transparency, it’s important to stress how much I loathe most soulslikes. Even the name, to be frank. So when I say that I don’t love Asterigos Colon Curse of the Stars, it’s not as damning as it may sound.
You’re Hilda, a stabby lass who, for reasons, must investigate and lift a curse from a big ol’ fantasy city. By exploring its districts and stabbing lots of weird dudes. Aiding you is a network of semi-suspicious locals, and the kind of immortality that makes death more annoying than anything. It’s a hybrid, really, of a Souls-ish game and a more traditional hack and slash action RPG. Regular attacks don’t consume stamina, and instead of finding or buying weapons, you start out with a complete set, and swap their movesets in and out as needed. I respect that it picks and chooses soulsy elements instead of tracing over the whole design.
Details of Prince Harry’s bombshell book Spare leak – and William and Kate get brunt of hate
I bought the gadget the experts hate (and I love it)
Nimco Ali accuses Suella Braverman of ‘normalising hate of black people on Twitter’ with her rhetoric
The best phone grips and stands for people who hate phone cases
Grips, wallets, skins — and even a few cases — for people who can’t stand putting a case on their phone.
I’m a plus-size model – trolls hate it when I post cellulite and rolls but I share them anyway, they’re spectacular
MOST lingerie and swimwear models aren’t willing to share photos of their cellulite, body rolls, and stretch marks online.
But one true role model is as fearless as she is beautiful, and she shut down her haters with a post full of positivity and self-love.
London shared some of the cruelest comments she’s received from online trolls[/caption]
Model and influencer Nelly London often shares behind-the-scenes snaps from photoshoots on Instagram, along with outtakes and fun video clips from her career.
A recent post from the curve model revealed the cruelest criticism from viewers and gave her a chance to respond in kind.
London paired photos of herself from her “least-flattering” angles with comments that had been left on her photos.
“You don’t do yourself any favors, do you?” chided one anonymized commenter. “This angle is TERRIBLE. You look square.”
“Oh, dear, this isn’t a good angle for you,” wrote another person in faux-concern. She paired her comment with the cry-laughing emoji.
Some people disguised their cruel feedback in backhanded compliments.
“You actually have a great figure when you’re fully stretched out,” said one.
Another offered, “It looks nice when you breathe in.”
London addressed the “wonderfully kind” commenters directly in the caption of the post, and challenged the notion that the photos represent her “worst” angles.
“Here’s the thing, they’re not actually the worst,” London wrote. “They’re actually pretty f***ing spectacular.”
“You see those lines, the scars, the texture, those incredible details that are just so intricate,” she continued.
“It blows my mind that this is MY body, capable of holding all that beauty so effortlessly.
Critics made snarky posts about London posting her ‘worst angles’ online[/caption]
“We are humans, we are three-dimensional beings, we look different all the time, we shift and we mold and we are fluid,” the pro model explained.
“As much as we might wish we could exist only from our ‘best’ angle, we can’t, and I’m so glad.”
Her fans flooded the comments section with praise and gratitude. Many said London’s content helped them learn to love themselves.
“People’s negative comments are honestly just a reflection of their own insecurities,” wrote one of London’s followers.
“My body looks like yours and yet when I look at you, I think ‘Wow, she is beautiful,’” another person confessed.
She resolved to follow London’s example. “Time to extend the same kindness to myself,” she pledged.
A few commenters claimed London “opened herself up” to cruelty just by posting on the internet, but were quickly shouted down.
“People are not entitled to be mean just because it’s anonymous or on the internet,” a supporter argued. “Basic human decency is still a thing.”
The critics’ comments were no match for the people who London had impacted positively with her posts over the years.
“Your content is always sooo positive and loving,” a follower commented. “You’ve definitely impacted my self-love journey.”
‘We would hate for another family to go through this’: Relative of lake victim warns of open water dangers
I hate wearing bras so I designed a top you could wear without one
A BUSINESS owner says she created a top with built-in padding so you don’t have to wear a bra again.
Natalie Rogers Soto is a TikToker with more than 540,000 followers on the platform and also runs her own clothing business, Klassy Network.
A TikToker created a ‘brami’ with built-in padding so you don’t have to wear a bra[/caption]
On her account, Natalie is always showing off new products from her fashion line in the form of outfit hauls and “Get Ready With Me” videos.
One of her videos features a “brami” top that she created.
A brami is a piece of clothing that combines elements of a bra and a camisole.
“I’ve always hated wearing a bra with tops like this but now you don’t have to!” Natalie wrote in the caption of her TikTok.
READ MORE FASHION
Natalie modeled a long-sleeved wrap brami available on her website that comes with built-in padding.
“A wrap top with built-in padding so you don’t have to worry about what bra to wear,” read the description of the item on Natalie’s website.
The video received thousands of views with plenty of comments from viewers asking for their own brami.
“I’d lovveee a square neckline brami,” wrote one viewer.
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“YOU ATE,” wrote a second.
A third viewer wrote: “to a want but a NEED.”
Meanwhile, an influencer with big boobs said she could never wear strapless tops because her breasts would sag – here is the cheap hack she found to fix that.
Also, a plus-sized fashion vlogger found a clear winner between Kim Kardashian’s shapewear line Skims and Spanx – she says the top choice smooths better and doesn’t roll.
‘I’ve always hated wearing a bra with tops like this but now you don’t have to,’ said business owner Natalie Rogers Soto[/caption]