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All I need now is a navy with a red logo and I'm set for life
and a lint roller my mans
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All I need now is a navy with a red logo and I'm set for life
Lol. It shook right off. That was from some dress my girl had laying on the floor before I took the pic.and a lint roller my mans
Lol. It shook right off. That was from some dress my girl had laying on the floor before I took the pic.
Last time I made a lint roller joke, I got sonned.
Average Supreme hypebeast isn't the intended market for the resellers. DJ Khaled is
Clarks is fire!! @1978S
One of my favorite Wallys, however, when I bought them on release day I sized down .5 because the 2012 Supreme crocodile Wallys fit huge when I bought those. Bad idea. Thought maybe the Supreme/Clarks collabs ran big in general but nope....was just the crocodile ones. I went to Un DS these Maples a few weeks ago and they're too small so I gotta let em go.
Want to see what Marvin Gaye apparel is looking like
And the Dr. Seuss tee is gonna be a Grinch tee
Read the first part of that sentence I did not expect that to sentence to end where it didYou outta your damn mind if you think Khaled is fitting on that bike.
If you do not show up for an instore release are you banned for the season or indefinitely?
Want to see what Marvin Gaye apparel is looking like
And the Dr. Seuss tee is gonna be a Grinch tee
I’ll be in NY this weekend, is it worth checking out the supreme store? They still have bags in stores?
I became famous in my late teens and then spent most of my young adult life listening to people say that I was fat and gross and unattractive. It’s only in the last four years, writing and directing my movie Mid90s, that I’ve started to understand how much that hurt and got into my head.
I really believe everyone has a snapshot of themselves from a time when they were young that they’re ashamed of. For me, it’s that 14-year-old overweight and unattractive kid who felt ugly to the world, who listened to hip hop and wanted so badly to be accepted by this community of skaters.
For this magazine, I asked twelve people I respect and admire if they can relate to this in their own way and how they’ve learned to love themselves. The interviews are all centered around the question of, “What is that snapshot for you?” They turned into some of the most meaningful conversations I’ve ever had.
I hope you enjoy this magazine.
— Jonah