People Who Identify As Femme Share Photos Of Themselves For #WhatFemmeLooksLike

Though queer people are gaining more and more visibility in mainstream media and society, that doesn’t mean that the images we’re presented with are always accurate or representative of who we really are and how we live our lives. And sometimes we’re still disappointingly absent, especially when it comes to certain subsections of our community.

Case in point: The dearth of images that authentically capture what it means to be a femme. When we use the term “femme” we mean femme queer women but also femme queer men — and everything and everyone in between. Too often the representations of femme queer women are designed to please heterosexual men and representations of femme queer men are two-dimensional and offensive and all other representations rarely surface.

But fear not! Thanks to the hashtag #WhatFemmeLooksLike, we’re hoping to help change all that. Feast your eyes on the beautiful folks who offered up a shot of themselves and if you want to be part of this stunning group, tweet your own photo using #WhatFemmeLooksLike.

Also be sure to check out our other features, #WhatButchLooksLike, #WhatBiLooksLike, #WhatABearLooksLike, #WhatTransLooksLike and #MyQueerFamily.

Montana Teacher Who Served 1 Month For Rape Re-Sentenced To 10 Years In Prison

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — A Montana teacher was sentenced Friday to 10 years in prison in a notorious student rape case that dragged on for years and led to the censure of a judge who partially blamed the victim.

Stacey Dean Rambold, 55, was resentenced by a new judge exactly a year after he completed an initial one-month prison term for the crime. Rambold appeared to grimace as Friday’s sentence was read by Judge Randal Spaulding. He was then handcuffed and led away by deputies, pausing briefly to exchange words with family as he exited the courtroom.

Rambold pleaded guilty last year to a single count of sexual intercourse without consent in the 2007 rape of 14-year-old Cherice Moralez, a freshman in his Billings Senior High School business class. She committed suicide in 2010.

Rambold’s attorney had argued for a two-year sentence, pointing out that the defendant had no prior criminal record, underwent sex offender treatment and was considered by the state as a low risk to re-offend.

Spaulding indicated that the nature of the crime outweighed those factors.

“I considered your abuse and exploitation of your position of trust as a teacher, and specifically Cherice’s teacher,” Spaulding told the defendant.

The state Supreme Court in April overturned Rambold’s initial sentence, citing in part comments from Judge G. Todd Baugh, who suggested the victim shared responsibility.

Baugh was censured and suspended for 31 days. He’s stepping down when his terms ends in January.

Yellowstone County Attorney Scott Twito said he was pleased with the new sentence, which included five additional years of prison time that were suspended.

“The criminal justice system worked today,” he said.

John Moralez, the father of the victim, said he had hoped for a longer sentence, but added that 10 years was better than the one-month Rambold previously served.

During the hearing, Twito asked Judge Spaulding to reject attempts by Rambold’s attorney to make the victim’s conduct with her teacher a factor in the sentencing.

That included references by the defendant’s attorney to video-taped interviews of the victim recorded by law enforcement prior to her death. Those recordings, which have never been made public, had been cited by Baugh during his sentencing.

Under state law, children under 16 cannot consent to sexual intercourse.

“The last thing we want to do is sit here in the criminal justice system and say, ‘What is the age?’ It doesn’t matter. Fourteen is way too young,” Twito said. “There has to be punishment. … Punishment means prison.”

Rambold’s attorney, Jay Lansing, responded that there was no statute preventing the court from considering Moralez’s conduct. He pointed out that prosecutors had not objected to comments about the videotaped interview during Rambold’s first sentencing hearing.

Lansing requested for his client a two-year sentence in the custody of the Department of Corrections, with another 13 years suspended. That would have allowed Rambold to serve his time in a community setting rather than prison.

Rambold broke down crying during a brief statement to the court. He said he was sorry for his actions and had worked hard to make himself a better person. In a recent letter to the court, he lamented the international publicity the case attracted.

“No one can really appreciate and understand what it feels like to have so many people actually hate you and be disgusted by you,” Rambold wrote. “I do not mention this for the sake of sympathy, but it has been hard.”

It was uncertain if the new sentence would be appealed, Lansing said.

After the death of Moralez, the prosecution’s primary witness, Twito’s office in 2010 struck a deal with Rambold that initially allowed him to avoid prison altogether.

Rambold, however, violated that agreement by having unauthorized visits with relatives’ children and entering into a relationship with an adult woman without telling his counselor. As a result, the case was revived and Rambold pleaded guilty.

Two additional counts sexual intercourse without consent were dropped under the deal with prosecutors.

During last year’s sentencing, Baugh suggested Moralez had as much control over her rape as the defendant and said she “appeared older than her chronological age.” He gave Rambold a 15-year term with all but one month suspended.

That triggered an appeal from the office of Attorney General Tim Fox, and ultimately resulted in the case being reassigned to Spaulding.

House Sitter Suspected Of Stealing $100,000 Of Jewelry From Co-worker

A real estate agent who was house sitting for a co-worker may end up sitting in a jail cell after allegedly stealing $100,000 worth of jewelry from the home.

Andrew M. Bauer, 23, faces felony charges for the alleged theft, which happened while he was watching his co-worker’s home in Ladue, Missouri, according to KMOV TV.

The co-worker, Barbara Wulfing, told police that when she and her husband went on vacation in August, she had Bauer house sit. When she came back, $100,000 worth of brooches, pins, bracelets, rings, necklaces and earrings were missing, STLToday.com reports.

Bauer allegedly told investigators that he stole the jewelry and sold some of it to a jewelry store in O’Fallon, Missouri, for $9,000. He later told police he used the money to pay debts and put a down payment on a new car.

Bauer is charged with one felony count of stealing and is jailed on $25,000 bail, according to the Associated Press. He also faces a stealing charge for allegedly taking a $5,000 ring from his aunt.

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For Arianna Huffington and Kobe Bryant: First, Success. Then Sleep.

They may have seemed an unlikely pair, but it didn’t take long for Kobe Bryant, the Los Angeles Lakers star, and Arianna Huffington, co-founder and editor in chief of the Huffington Post Media Group, to develop the easy familiarity of old pals. Soon after Ms. Huffington, 64, arrived at Antonello Ristorante in Santa Ana, Calif., Mr. Bryant, 36, walked in, speaking fluent Italian to the waiters who trailed in his wake.

This Slow-Motion Video Of Tattooing Is Painfully Beautiful

They say “beauty is pain,” and a new video shows that’s definitely true when it comes to tattooing.

The video, part of the YouTube series Smarter Every Day, uses incredible slow-motion visuals to show the science behind inking.

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As the video shows, the tip of a tattoo machine consists not of a single needle but of multiple needles grouped together.

“Ink is held in between those multiple needle points using capillary action, and when it punctures the skin it drags the ink down into the dermis,” explains the series’ host, Destin Sandlin.

Tat’s amazing!

Man Accused Of Breaking Into Woman's Home, Following Her Onto Roof

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A man accused of breaking into a woman’s house in Venice and following her onto the roof as she tried to escape has been charged in the case.

City News Service says 29-year-old Christian Hicks pleaded not guilty Friday to a felony count of first-degree burglary with a person present. A passerby’s photo of Melora Rivera cowering under a second-story ledge, frantically calling police as the intruder loomed above her has gone viral.

Officers soon surrounded the house on Wednesday and arrested Hicks, described by neighbors as a homeless person often seen in the area.

A criminal complaint filed by Los Angeles County prosecutors alleges that Hicks was convicted in 2008 of carrying an unregistered loaded handgun and in 2011 of corporal injury to a spouse, cohabitant or child’s parent.

In teaser for Sunday show, Stokols presses Gardner for explanation of personhood hypocrisy

Fox 31 Denver is teasing interview with Cory Gardner to be broadcast at 9 a.m. Sunday on reporter Eli Stokols’ “#COPolitics from the Source.”

Judging from the short exchange between Gardner and Stokols broadcast by Fox 31 last night, it appears Stokols pressed Gardner for a factual explanation from Gardner about why he withdrew his endorsement from personhood amendments at the state level but continues to support federal personhood legislation, which would abortion, even in the case of rape and incest.

Stokols: You don’t support the personhood amendment at the state level anymore. Why keep your name on that Life At Conception Act at the federal level?

Gardner: There is no such thing as the federal personhood bill.

Stokols: Cory, the people who wrote that bill, Congressmen Duncan Hunter of California, Paul Brown of Georgia, they say–Personhood USA says–that that is what the Life at Conception Act is.

Gardner: When I announced for the Senate, that’s when this outcry started from the Senate campaign of Senator Udall. That’s what they are tyring to do. This is all politics. It’s unfortunate that they can’t focus on–

Stokols: But the facts are —

Gardner: No, the facts are, Eli, that there is no federal personhood bill. There is no federal personhood bill.

I’m looking forward to seeing the entire interview, which will air on Fox 31 Sunday morning at 9 a.m.

Rollie Egg-On-A-Stick Cooker makes you out like an expert

rollie-eggNot all rollers or rolling pins are created equal – some of them do boast of far better and extreme capabilities compared to the others. If you have always loved to bite down on a dish of eggs, but somehow or rather never really managed to master the art of dishing out perfectly rolled eggs that do not break despite being extremely thin, here is something which might just help you out – at the same time leaving everyone else to wonder just where and when did you acquire such skill? Surely you are not plugged in to the matrix with a program downloaded to help you master such a feat in the kitchen? The answer lies in the £34.99 Rollie Egg-On-A-Stick Cooker.

The Rollie Egg-On-A-Stick Cooker happens to offer a new, healthier and funnier way to cook perfect eggs – every single time. No longer do you need to worry about the mess that is created from using oil and butter, and neither do you need to watch the clock – the entire shebang will pop up when your eggs are done. It offers a revolutionary easy-to-eat shape, and thanks to its cool-touch housing with a non-slip silicone grip base, you will be able to make ues of Vertical Cooking Technology while doing other house chores at home.
[ Rollie Egg-On-A-Stick Cooker makes you out like an expert copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Sony is shutting down PlayStation Home in North America, too

It was only a matter of time. When word came down that Sony was shuttering the PlayStation 3 virtual space, PlayStation Home, in Japan earlier this year, the service’s domestic days were likely numbered as well. Citing a “shifting landscape” as the…

Signaling Post-Snowden Era, New iPhone Locks Out N.S.A.

WASHINGTON — Devoted customers of Apple products these days worry about whether the new iPhone 6 will bend in their jean pockets. The National Security Agency and the nation’s law enforcement agencies have a different concern: that the smartphone is the first of a post-Snowden generation of equipment that will disrupt their investigative abilities.