Grateful to have spent time with this old chap in London last summer. 🥹 (although this picture is from a month before the pandemic hit the US)
Fuck you, algorithm!!! How you like me now!!! 😂
Throwback to my at-home rehearsal for @lipsyncbattle 🤓
I miss this and I miss these peepholes 🥲 @romeflynn @conradricamora @amirahvannofficial @jackfalahee
Fuck you pay us! 🔥
Solidarity with the workers of the world! 👊🏼
It’s hard as hell to make a living being a full time actor. I’ve been on over 100 episodes of TV in the past 10 years and this year, I just lost my health insurance. And I’m one of the lucky ones in this industry. If *I’m* worried about being able to sustain being a full time actor (and I am!) long term, there are wayyy too many people in precarious economic circumstances while corporations are making more money than ever.
Capitalism unabated will bleed every single one of us dry. But it doesn’t have to be like this. The history of unions is one that I never learned about in school in a meaningful way. And for a long time I was stuck in the myths of individualism thinking that simply working more and harder could protect me from exploitation. But solidarity through unions is exclusively how workers have won any single damn thing at all. We cannot fight these battles alone. We must stand strong in solidarity with all of the unions exerting their power over corporate greed and exploitation. Corporations are nothing without their workers and we are here to MAKE THEM REMEMBER THAT SHIT.
Happy Birthday @thebursin ! I love you my kind, passionate, and supportive friend! Almost 20 years of friendship and love. 🥰 Miss you and can’t wait to see you next and have more adventures whenever that that ends up being! 💜💕💜
Also pictured @jessefleece and Trevor lurking lol
Daddy says, “SAG-AFTRA members, vote ‘yes’ on a strike authorization!” 💁🏻♂️
Also, you can vote online instead of waiting for postcards, go to sagaftra.org ❤️🔥
Daddy says, “SAG-AFTRA members, vote ‘yes’ on a strike authorization!” 💁🏻♂️
Also, you can vote online instead of waiting for postcards, go to sagaftra.org ❤️🔥
Hehe ☺️ @nobodysausage
Let us support abortion funds and independent clinics.
🙏🏼💜🙏🏼 @abortionfunds Feel free to tag any others below!
I’ve felt so overwhelmed and devastated by the attacks on abortion access this past year. Sometimes when feeling frozen from the overwhelm, any step forward is the right step.
“It’s been one year since the Supreme Court handed politicians the power to ban abortion. Since then, 20 states have banned all, or some, abortion: 1 in 3 women — and even more trans and nonbinary people — are blocked from abortion care in their state. Everybody should have the right to control their own bodies, and Planned Parenthood won’t stop fighting to get people the care they need. Learn more and take action at BansOff.org. @plannedparenthood #BansOffOurBodies “
Let us support abortion funds and independent clinics.
🙏🏼💜🙏🏼 @abortionfunds Feel free to tag any others below!
I’ve felt so overwhelmed and devastated by the attacks on abortion access this past year. Sometimes when feeling frozen from the overwhelm, any step forward is the right step.
“It’s been one year since the Supreme Court handed politicians the power to ban abortion. Since then, 20 states have banned all, or some, abortion: 1 in 3 women — and even more trans and nonbinary people — are blocked from abortion care in their state. Everybody should have the right to control their own bodies, and Planned Parenthood won’t stop fighting to get people the care they need. Learn more and take action at BansOff.org. @plannedparenthood #BansOffOurBodies “
“A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety” by @sarahjaquetteray
Deeply grateful for the wisdom within this book. If you’re feeling hopeless and burned out because of climate change, I can’t recommend this book enough.
“Cognitive psychologists recognize the importance of being aware that we are part of a team. ‘People easily feel helpless if left on their own when confronted with the severity of the coming climate disruptions,’ Stoknes observes. But ‘participating in a community or group that works for a common cause is a good remedy (the only one, actually) for this toxic helplessness and passivity.’
When my students recognize that they are all in the same boat and that they *need* to rely on each other, to express vulnerability about their anxiety and dread, and to cultivate community morale, they become the change they want to manifest in the world. They spread that uplift to other classes. Not feeling alone is probably the most important prescription for long-term resilience. When our classes start with building community before learning content, we all have far more energy and passion about the subject matter when we finally get there…
Practice green consumerism because it feels right- because you *wish* to- not because you’ll feel guilty if you don’t. Don’t let green consumerism make you complacent. When you limit your arena of social change to what you buy or don’t buy, you can lull yourself into thinking that’s enough. Remember that the pollution and resource costs of a pen pale in comparison to the impacts of industries. Although we wield power as consumers, we have greater impact as citizens, community members, and social-change agents who can do much more than not buy plastic cutlery or pens.
I find myself responding resentfully to environmental messages that ask me to feel guilty. Kimmerer’s non-built based pathos helped me overcome my own affective dissonance with respect to guilt. That is the model we should use in encourage others to become climate activists. ‘Make justice and liberation feel good,’ insisnts adrienne maree brown. Humans will come back over and over again to feel pleasure.'”
My Booklist:
bit.ly/mcgreads (link in bio)
#McGReads
“A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety” by @sarahjaquetteray
Deeply grateful for the wisdom within this book. If you’re feeling hopeless and burned out because of climate change, I can’t recommend this book enough.
“Cognitive psychologists recognize the importance of being aware that we are part of a team. ‘People easily feel helpless if left on their own when confronted with the severity of the coming climate disruptions,’ Stoknes observes. But ‘participating in a community or group that works for a common cause is a good remedy (the only one, actually) for this toxic helplessness and passivity.’
When my students recognize that they are all in the same boat and that they *need* to rely on each other, to express vulnerability about their anxiety and dread, and to cultivate community morale, they become the change they want to manifest in the world. They spread that uplift to other classes. Not feeling alone is probably the most important prescription for long-term resilience. When our classes start with building community before learning content, we all have far more energy and passion about the subject matter when we finally get there…
Practice green consumerism because it feels right- because you *wish* to- not because you’ll feel guilty if you don’t. Don’t let green consumerism make you complacent. When you limit your arena of social change to what you buy or don’t buy, you can lull yourself into thinking that’s enough. Remember that the pollution and resource costs of a pen pale in comparison to the impacts of industries. Although we wield power as consumers, we have greater impact as citizens, community members, and social-change agents who can do much more than not buy plastic cutlery or pens.
I find myself responding resentfully to environmental messages that ask me to feel guilty. Kimmerer’s non-built based pathos helped me overcome my own affective dissonance with respect to guilt. That is the model we should use in encourage others to become climate activists. ‘Make justice and liberation feel good,’ insisnts adrienne maree brown. Humans will come back over and over again to feel pleasure.'”
My Booklist:
bit.ly/mcgreads (link in bio)
#McGReads
“A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety” by @sarahjaquetteray
Deeply grateful for the wisdom within this book. If you’re feeling hopeless and burned out because of climate change, I can’t recommend this book enough.
“Cognitive psychologists recognize the importance of being aware that we are part of a team. ‘People easily feel helpless if left on their own when confronted with the severity of the coming climate disruptions,’ Stoknes observes. But ‘participating in a community or group that works for a common cause is a good remedy (the only one, actually) for this toxic helplessness and passivity.’
When my students recognize that they are all in the same boat and that they *need* to rely on each other, to express vulnerability about their anxiety and dread, and to cultivate community morale, they become the change they want to manifest in the world. They spread that uplift to other classes. Not feeling alone is probably the most important prescription for long-term resilience. When our classes start with building community before learning content, we all have far more energy and passion about the subject matter when we finally get there…
Practice green consumerism because it feels right- because you *wish* to- not because you’ll feel guilty if you don’t. Don’t let green consumerism make you complacent. When you limit your arena of social change to what you buy or don’t buy, you can lull yourself into thinking that’s enough. Remember that the pollution and resource costs of a pen pale in comparison to the impacts of industries. Although we wield power as consumers, we have greater impact as citizens, community members, and social-change agents who can do much more than not buy plastic cutlery or pens.
I find myself responding resentfully to environmental messages that ask me to feel guilty. Kimmerer’s non-built based pathos helped me overcome my own affective dissonance with respect to guilt. That is the model we should use in encourage others to become climate activists. ‘Make justice and liberation feel good,’ insisnts adrienne maree brown. Humans will come back over and over again to feel pleasure.'”
My Booklist:
bit.ly/mcgreads (link in bio)
#McGReads
“A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety” by @sarahjaquetteray
Deeply grateful for the wisdom within this book. If you’re feeling hopeless and burned out because of climate change, I can’t recommend this book enough.
“Cognitive psychologists recognize the importance of being aware that we are part of a team. ‘People easily feel helpless if left on their own when confronted with the severity of the coming climate disruptions,’ Stoknes observes. But ‘participating in a community or group that works for a common cause is a good remedy (the only one, actually) for this toxic helplessness and passivity.’
When my students recognize that they are all in the same boat and that they *need* to rely on each other, to express vulnerability about their anxiety and dread, and to cultivate community morale, they become the change they want to manifest in the world. They spread that uplift to other classes. Not feeling alone is probably the most important prescription for long-term resilience. When our classes start with building community before learning content, we all have far more energy and passion about the subject matter when we finally get there…
Practice green consumerism because it feels right- because you *wish* to- not because you’ll feel guilty if you don’t. Don’t let green consumerism make you complacent. When you limit your arena of social change to what you buy or don’t buy, you can lull yourself into thinking that’s enough. Remember that the pollution and resource costs of a pen pale in comparison to the impacts of industries. Although we wield power as consumers, we have greater impact as citizens, community members, and social-change agents who can do much more than not buy plastic cutlery or pens.
I find myself responding resentfully to environmental messages that ask me to feel guilty. Kimmerer’s non-built based pathos helped me overcome my own affective dissonance with respect to guilt. That is the model we should use in encourage others to become climate activists. ‘Make justice and liberation feel good,’ insisnts adrienne maree brown. Humans will come back over and over again to feel pleasure.'”
My Booklist:
bit.ly/mcgreads (link in bio)
#McGReads
“A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety” by @sarahjaquetteray
Deeply grateful for the wisdom within this book. If you’re feeling hopeless and burned out because of climate change, I can’t recommend this book enough.
“Cognitive psychologists recognize the importance of being aware that we are part of a team. ‘People easily feel helpless if left on their own when confronted with the severity of the coming climate disruptions,’ Stoknes observes. But ‘participating in a community or group that works for a common cause is a good remedy (the only one, actually) for this toxic helplessness and passivity.’
When my students recognize that they are all in the same boat and that they *need* to rely on each other, to express vulnerability about their anxiety and dread, and to cultivate community morale, they become the change they want to manifest in the world. They spread that uplift to other classes. Not feeling alone is probably the most important prescription for long-term resilience. When our classes start with building community before learning content, we all have far more energy and passion about the subject matter when we finally get there…
Practice green consumerism because it feels right- because you *wish* to- not because you’ll feel guilty if you don’t. Don’t let green consumerism make you complacent. When you limit your arena of social change to what you buy or don’t buy, you can lull yourself into thinking that’s enough. Remember that the pollution and resource costs of a pen pale in comparison to the impacts of industries. Although we wield power as consumers, we have greater impact as citizens, community members, and social-change agents who can do much more than not buy plastic cutlery or pens.
I find myself responding resentfully to environmental messages that ask me to feel guilty. Kimmerer’s non-built based pathos helped me overcome my own affective dissonance with respect to guilt. That is the model we should use in encourage others to become climate activists. ‘Make justice and liberation feel good,’ insisnts adrienne maree brown. Humans will come back over and over again to feel pleasure.'”
My Booklist:
bit.ly/mcgreads (link in bio)
#McGReads
“A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety” by @sarahjaquetteray
Deeply grateful for the wisdom within this book. If you’re feeling hopeless and burned out because of climate change, I can’t recommend this book enough.
“Cognitive psychologists recognize the importance of being aware that we are part of a team. ‘People easily feel helpless if left on their own when confronted with the severity of the coming climate disruptions,’ Stoknes observes. But ‘participating in a community or group that works for a common cause is a good remedy (the only one, actually) for this toxic helplessness and passivity.’
When my students recognize that they are all in the same boat and that they *need* to rely on each other, to express vulnerability about their anxiety and dread, and to cultivate community morale, they become the change they want to manifest in the world. They spread that uplift to other classes. Not feeling alone is probably the most important prescription for long-term resilience. When our classes start with building community before learning content, we all have far more energy and passion about the subject matter when we finally get there…
Practice green consumerism because it feels right- because you *wish* to- not because you’ll feel guilty if you don’t. Don’t let green consumerism make you complacent. When you limit your arena of social change to what you buy or don’t buy, you can lull yourself into thinking that’s enough. Remember that the pollution and resource costs of a pen pale in comparison to the impacts of industries. Although we wield power as consumers, we have greater impact as citizens, community members, and social-change agents who can do much more than not buy plastic cutlery or pens.
I find myself responding resentfully to environmental messages that ask me to feel guilty. Kimmerer’s non-built based pathos helped me overcome my own affective dissonance with respect to guilt. That is the model we should use in encourage others to become climate activists. ‘Make justice and liberation feel good,’ insisnts adrienne maree brown. Humans will come back over and over again to feel pleasure.'”
My Booklist:
bit.ly/mcgreads (link in bio)
#McGReads
“A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety” by @sarahjaquetteray
Deeply grateful for the wisdom within this book. If you’re feeling hopeless and burned out because of climate change, I can’t recommend this book enough.
“Cognitive psychologists recognize the importance of being aware that we are part of a team. ‘People easily feel helpless if left on their own when confronted with the severity of the coming climate disruptions,’ Stoknes observes. But ‘participating in a community or group that works for a common cause is a good remedy (the only one, actually) for this toxic helplessness and passivity.’
When my students recognize that they are all in the same boat and that they *need* to rely on each other, to express vulnerability about their anxiety and dread, and to cultivate community morale, they become the change they want to manifest in the world. They spread that uplift to other classes. Not feeling alone is probably the most important prescription for long-term resilience. When our classes start with building community before learning content, we all have far more energy and passion about the subject matter when we finally get there…
Practice green consumerism because it feels right- because you *wish* to- not because you’ll feel guilty if you don’t. Don’t let green consumerism make you complacent. When you limit your arena of social change to what you buy or don’t buy, you can lull yourself into thinking that’s enough. Remember that the pollution and resource costs of a pen pale in comparison to the impacts of industries. Although we wield power as consumers, we have greater impact as citizens, community members, and social-change agents who can do much more than not buy plastic cutlery or pens.
I find myself responding resentfully to environmental messages that ask me to feel guilty. Kimmerer’s non-built based pathos helped me overcome my own affective dissonance with respect to guilt. That is the model we should use in encourage others to become climate activists. ‘Make justice and liberation feel good,’ insisnts adrienne maree brown. Humans will come back over and over again to feel pleasure.'”
My Booklist:
bit.ly/mcgreads (link in bio)
#McGReads
“A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety” by @sarahjaquetteray
Deeply grateful for the wisdom within this book. If you’re feeling hopeless and burned out because of climate change, I can’t recommend this book enough.
“Cognitive psychologists recognize the importance of being aware that we are part of a team. ‘People easily feel helpless if left on their own when confronted with the severity of the coming climate disruptions,’ Stoknes observes. But ‘participating in a community or group that works for a common cause is a good remedy (the only one, actually) for this toxic helplessness and passivity.’
When my students recognize that they are all in the same boat and that they *need* to rely on each other, to express vulnerability about their anxiety and dread, and to cultivate community morale, they become the change they want to manifest in the world. They spread that uplift to other classes. Not feeling alone is probably the most important prescription for long-term resilience. When our classes start with building community before learning content, we all have far more energy and passion about the subject matter when we finally get there…
Practice green consumerism because it feels right- because you *wish* to- not because you’ll feel guilty if you don’t. Don’t let green consumerism make you complacent. When you limit your arena of social change to what you buy or don’t buy, you can lull yourself into thinking that’s enough. Remember that the pollution and resource costs of a pen pale in comparison to the impacts of industries. Although we wield power as consumers, we have greater impact as citizens, community members, and social-change agents who can do much more than not buy plastic cutlery or pens.
I find myself responding resentfully to environmental messages that ask me to feel guilty. Kimmerer’s non-built based pathos helped me overcome my own affective dissonance with respect to guilt. That is the model we should use in encourage others to become climate activists. ‘Make justice and liberation feel good,’ insisnts adrienne maree brown. Humans will come back over and over again to feel pleasure.'”
My Booklist:
bit.ly/mcgreads (link in bio)
#McGReads
“A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety” by @sarahjaquetteray
Deeply grateful for the wisdom within this book. If you’re feeling hopeless and burned out because of climate change, I can’t recommend this book enough.
“Cognitive psychologists recognize the importance of being aware that we are part of a team. ‘People easily feel helpless if left on their own when confronted with the severity of the coming climate disruptions,’ Stoknes observes. But ‘participating in a community or group that works for a common cause is a good remedy (the only one, actually) for this toxic helplessness and passivity.’
When my students recognize that they are all in the same boat and that they *need* to rely on each other, to express vulnerability about their anxiety and dread, and to cultivate community morale, they become the change they want to manifest in the world. They spread that uplift to other classes. Not feeling alone is probably the most important prescription for long-term resilience. When our classes start with building community before learning content, we all have far more energy and passion about the subject matter when we finally get there…
Practice green consumerism because it feels right- because you *wish* to- not because you’ll feel guilty if you don’t. Don’t let green consumerism make you complacent. When you limit your arena of social change to what you buy or don’t buy, you can lull yourself into thinking that’s enough. Remember that the pollution and resource costs of a pen pale in comparison to the impacts of industries. Although we wield power as consumers, we have greater impact as citizens, community members, and social-change agents who can do much more than not buy plastic cutlery or pens.
I find myself responding resentfully to environmental messages that ask me to feel guilty. Kimmerer’s non-built based pathos helped me overcome my own affective dissonance with respect to guilt. That is the model we should use in encourage others to become climate activists. ‘Make justice and liberation feel good,’ insisnts adrienne maree brown. Humans will come back over and over again to feel pleasure.'”
My Booklist:
bit.ly/mcgreads (link in bio)
#McGReads
“A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety” by @sarahjaquetteray
Deeply grateful for the wisdom within this book. If you’re feeling hopeless and burned out because of climate change, I can’t recommend this book enough.
“Cognitive psychologists recognize the importance of being aware that we are part of a team. ‘People easily feel helpless if left on their own when confronted with the severity of the coming climate disruptions,’ Stoknes observes. But ‘participating in a community or group that works for a common cause is a good remedy (the only one, actually) for this toxic helplessness and passivity.’
When my students recognize that they are all in the same boat and that they *need* to rely on each other, to express vulnerability about their anxiety and dread, and to cultivate community morale, they become the change they want to manifest in the world. They spread that uplift to other classes. Not feeling alone is probably the most important prescription for long-term resilience. When our classes start with building community before learning content, we all have far more energy and passion about the subject matter when we finally get there…
Practice green consumerism because it feels right- because you *wish* to- not because you’ll feel guilty if you don’t. Don’t let green consumerism make you complacent. When you limit your arena of social change to what you buy or don’t buy, you can lull yourself into thinking that’s enough. Remember that the pollution and resource costs of a pen pale in comparison to the impacts of industries. Although we wield power as consumers, we have greater impact as citizens, community members, and social-change agents who can do much more than not buy plastic cutlery or pens.
I find myself responding resentfully to environmental messages that ask me to feel guilty. Kimmerer’s non-built based pathos helped me overcome my own affective dissonance with respect to guilt. That is the model we should use in encourage others to become climate activists. ‘Make justice and liberation feel good,’ insisnts adrienne maree brown. Humans will come back over and over again to feel pleasure.'”
My Booklist:
bit.ly/mcgreads (link in bio)
#McGReads
Let @malakaibayoh make your day and send you to another realm 🥹🥲🥰
Repost @violadavis
@sagaftra members vote YES on a strike authorization by June 5! You can vote online, even better! 🔥💜🔥
Repost @itsmattbush
97.91% voted YES!!! It was a historic turnout and a historic level of support! I’m so proud of my fellow actors! 🔥💜🔥
“In a powerful show of solidarity, SAG-AFTRA members have voted 97.91% in favor of a strike authorization ahead of negotiations of the TV/Theatrical Contracts, with nearly 65,000 members casting ballots for a voting percentage of 47.69% of eligible voters.
The strike authorization does not mean the union is calling a strike. SAG-AFTRA begins negotiations on June 7 with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. The affirmative vote on the authorization empowers the union’s National Board to initiate a strike if the AMPTP won’t reach a fair deal with the union. The current SAG-AFTRA TV/Theatrical Contracts expire at midnight on June 30, 2023.”
The actors’ fight is the writers’ fight is the workers’ fight. 🔥❤️🔥🔥❤️🔥