AAA! WE NEED TO STOP WITH THIS SHIT. RIGHT NOW! The drag folks are riffing off her; she was the ORIGINAL.
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." I'm sorry, but, watch THIS and tell me that's a man. STOP IT. She was the BEST.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJS670okmZc
Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
But, NO DRAG QUEEN FAGGOT could have written her most famous quotes. This is a woman talking:
I generally avoid temptation unless I can't resist it.
Every man I meet wants to protect me. I can't figure out what from.
I wrote the story myself. It's about a girl who lost her reputation and never missed it.
Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before.
Good sex is like good bridge. If you don't have a good partner, you'd better have a good hand.
That's a WOMAN talking, boys. Mae West was ALL WOMAN, she was the "Yogi Berra" of sex, she was the sexiest woman of the 20th century, and I'll fucking fight you if you don't see it!
AAA! WE NEED TO STOP WITH THIS SHIT. RIGHT NOW! The drag faggots are riffing off her; she was the ORIGINAL.
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." I'm sorry, but, watch THIS and tell me that's a man. STOP IT. She was the BEST.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJS670okmZc
Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
But, NO DRAG QUEEN FAGGOT could have written her most famous quotes. This is a woman talking:
I generally avoid temptation unless I can't resist it.
Every man I meet wants to protect me. I can't figure out what from.
I wrote the story myself. It's about a girl who lost her reputation and never missed it.
Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before.
Good sex is like good bridge. If you don't have a good partner, you'd better have a good hand.
That's a WOMAN talking, boys. Mae West was ALL WOMAN, she was the "Yogi Berra" of sex, she was the sexiest woman of the 20th century, and I'll fucking fight you if you don't see it!
AAA! WE NEED TO STOP WITH THIS SHIT. RIGHT NOW! The drag faggots are riffing off her; she was the ORIGINAL.
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." I'm sorry, but, watch THIS and tell me that's a man. STOP IT. She was the BEST.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJS670okmZc
Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
But, NO DRAG QUEEN FAGGOT could have written her most famous quotes. This is a woman talking:
I generally avoid temptation unless I can't resist it.
Every man I meet wants to protect me. I can't figure out what from.
I wrote the story myself. It's about a girl who lost her reputation and never missed it.
Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before.
Good sex is like good bridge. If you don't have a good partner, you'd better have a good hand.
That's a WOMAN talking, boys. Mae West was ALL WOMAN, she was the "Yogi Berra" of sex, she was the sexiest woman of the 20th century, and I'll fucking fight you if you don't see it!
AAA! WE NEED TO STOP WITH THIS SHIT. RIGHT NOW!
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." I'm sorry, but, watch THIS and tell me that's a man. STOP IT. She was the BEST.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJS670okmZc
Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
But, NO DRAG QUEEN FAGGOT could have written her most famous quotes. This is a woman talking:
I generally avoid temptation unless I can't resist it.
Every man I meet wants to protect me. I can't figure out what from.
I wrote the story myself. It's about a girl who lost her reputation and never missed it.
Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before.
Good sex is like good bridge. If you don't have a good partner, you'd better have a good hand.
That's a WOMAN talking, boys. Mae West was ALL WOMAN, she was the "Yogi Berra" of sex, she was the sexiest woman of the 20th century, and I'll fucking fight you if you don't see it!
WE NEED TO STOP WITH THIS SHIT. RIGHT NOW.
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." I'm sorry, but, watch THIS and tell me that's a man. STOP IT. She was the BEST.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJS670okmZc
Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
But, NO DRAG QUEEN FAGGOT could have written her most famous quotes. This is a woman talking:
I generally avoid temptation unless I can't resist it.
Every man I meet wants to protect me. I can't figure out what from.
I wrote the story myself. It's about a girl who lost her reputation and never missed it.
Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before.
Good sex is like good bridge. If you don't have a good partner, you'd better have a good hand.
That's a WOMAN talking, boys. Mae West was ALL WOMAN, she was the "Yogi Berra" of sex, she was the sexiest woman of the 20th century, and I'll fucking fight you if you don't see it!
WE NEED TO STOP WITH THIS SHIT. RIGHT NOW.
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." I'm sorry, but, watch THIS and tell me that's a man. STOP IT. She was the BEST.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJS670okmZc
Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
But, NO DRAG QUEEN FAGGOT could have written her most famous quotes. This is a woman talking:
I generally avoid temptation unless I can't resist it.
Every man I meet wants to protect me. I can't figure out what from.
I wrote the story myself. It's about a girl who lost her reputation and never missed it.
Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before.
Good sex is like good bridge. If you don't have a good partner, you'd better have a good hand.
That's a WOMAN talking, boys. Mae West was ALL WOMAN, and I'll fucking fight you if you don't see it!
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." I'm sorry, but, watch THIS and tell me that's a man. STOP IT. She was the BEST.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJS670okmZc
Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
But, NO DRAG QUEEN FAGGOT could have written her most famous quotes. This is a woman talking:
I generally avoid temptation unless I can't resist it.
Every man I meet wants to protect me. I can't figure out what from.
I wrote the story myself. It's about a girl who lost her reputation and never missed it.
Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before.
Good sex is like good bridge. If you don't have a good partner, you'd better have a good hand.
That's a WOMAN talking, boys. Mae West was ALL WOMAN, and I'll fucking fight you if you don't see it!
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." I'm sorry, but, watch THIS and tell me that's a man. STOP IT. She was the BEST.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJS670okmZc
Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
But, NO DRAG QUEEN FAGGOT could have written her most famous quotes. This is a woman talking:
I generally avoid temptation unless I can't resist it.
Every man I meet wants to protect me. I can't figure out what from.
I wrote the story myself. It's about a girl who lost her reputation and never missed it.
Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before.
Good sex is like good bridge. If you don't have a good partner, you'd better have a good hand.
That's a WOMAN talking, boys. I'll fucking fight you if you don't see it!
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." I'm sorry, but, watch THIS and tell me that's a man. STOP IT. She was the BEST.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJS670okmZc
Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't just repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died.
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Anyway, he was Mae West 'till the end. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
SHE WASN'T A MAN. IN FACT, SHE WAS "ONE OF US." Read on!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died.
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Anyway, he was Mae West 'till the end. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died.
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
[looking at the chalkboard] What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Anyway, he was Mae West 'till the end. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died.
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What is this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Anyway, he was Mae West 'till the end. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died.
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
And what's the killer line in the entire short?
What's this?
"I am a good boy."
"I am a good man."
"I am a good girl."
What's this? Propaganda??
Legend. She was one of us.
Anyway, he was Mae West 'till the end. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died.
She was the destroyer. Watch her literally take over this class of young, hormone-ridden class boys. This is in the 1930s when this was filmed. This wasn't just "edgy," this is when sexy women in film could really do anything:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCja9HCzzH4
Anyway, he was Mae West 'till the end. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
I once dated a professional burlesque performer, if you can believe it. It's when the whole thing started getting taken over by the dogshit LGBTQ+ bullshit that I realized that you can call it dead. Modern burlesque had a revival in the 1990s and was characterized by a mix of traditional striptease, comedy, and theatrical performance, but around 2014 is really, really got taken over and cannibalized by the drag queens, and it's really a dead art, now. In fact, a traditional woman performing burlesque would be laughed off the stage, now, most places. SAD!
Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. This video is a watermark in film; this is when you saw a woman absolutely take over, absolutely steamrolling a man. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there. That was the real deal.
This particular short was shot during WW2, while all the "studs" were over in Europe or the Pacific fighting the war, which naturally left a vacuum for "real men" to play against, which is why you see this poor bet just get absolutely steamrolled by how sexy she really can be. But Mae West was a goddess from 1930 and onwards. Even the biggest stud would have a hard time keeping up, right until she died. Check this out, she made this when she was 87:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwW38OgAVb0
Total committment. She was the real deal.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
I once dated a professional burlesque performer, if you can believe it. It's when the whole thing started getting taken over by the dogshit LGBTQ+ bullshit that I realized that you can call it dead. Modern burlesque had a revival in the 1990s and was characterized by a mix of traditional striptease, comedy, and theatrical performance, but around 2014 is really, really got taken over and cannibalized by the drag queens, and it's really a dead art, now. In fact, a traditional woman performing burlesque would be laughed off the stage, now, most places. SAD!
sigh Always outing myself as a former libtard, welllll, I used be part of that scene. Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Fucking legend. That's confidence, not bravado, that's the real thing. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there. That was the real deal.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
I once dated a professional burlesque performer, if you can believe it. It's when the whole thing started getting taken over by the dogshit LGBTQ+ bullshit that I realized that you can call it dead. Modern burlesque had a revival in the 1990s and was characterized by a mix of traditional striptease, comedy, and theatrical performance, but around 2014 is really, really got taken over and cannibalized by the drag queens, and it's really a dead art, now. In fact, a traditional woman performing burlesque would be laughed off the stage, now, most places. SAD!
sigh Always outing myself as a former libtard, welllll, I used be part of that scene. Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away. The woman could do anything, and she knew it. Check out the way she just reaches THROUGH the camera here and takes you over:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgdIh6rE7PQ
Yeah, that's a woman, baby. Dance and fuck around all you want, no drag queen f*ggot has what you just saw there. That was the real deal.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
I once dated a professional burlesque performer, if you can believe it. It's when the whole thing started getting taken over by the dogshit LGBTQ+ bullshit that I realized that you can call it dead. Modern burlesque had a revival in the 1990s and was characterized by a mix of traditional striptease, comedy, and theatrical performance, but around 2014 is really, really got taken over and cannibalized by the drag queens, and it's really a dead art, now. In fact, a traditional woman performing burlesque would be laughed off the stage, now, most places. SAD!
sigh Always outing myself as a former libtard, welllll, I used be part of that scene. Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that, and no surprise, as in that era, a burlesque performer dealt with everything, from a love-smacked and smitten admirer proposing to her from the audience to a drunk dude jumping the stage and putting her on his shoulders and trying to take her away.
Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
I once dated a professional burlesque performer, if you can believe it. It's when the whole thing started getting taken over by the dogshit LGBTQ+ bullshit that I realized that you can call it dead. Modern burlesque had a revival in the 1990s and was characterized by a mix of traditional striptease, comedy, and theatrical performance, but around 2014 is really, really got taken over and cannibalized by the drag queens, and it's really a dead art, now. In fact, a traditional woman performing burlesque would be laughed off the stage, now, most places. SAD!
sigh Always outing myself as a former libtard, welllll, I used be part of that scene. Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that. Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment, but, dammit, Mae West was 100000% woman. She was brazen and bold and well-known throughout early Hollywood for being not just a lover of men, but, even a connoisseur of men. Those women are few and far between these days, eh, boys?
I once dated a professional burlesque performer, if you can believe it. It's when the whole thing started getting taken over by the dogshit LGBTQ+ bullshit that I realized that you can call it dead. Modern burlesque had a revival in the 1990s and was characterized by a mix of traditional striptease, comedy, and theatrical performance, but around 2014 is really, really got taken over and cannibalized by the drag queens, and it's really a dead art, now. In fact, a traditional woman performing burlesque would be laughed off the stage, now, most places. SAD!
sigh Always outing myself as a former libtard, welllll, I used be part of that scene. Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that. Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days West often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment.
I once dated a professional burlesque performer, if you can believe it. It's when the whole thing started getting taken over by the dogshit LGBTQ+ bullshit that I realized that you can call it dead. Modern burlesque had a revival in the 1990s and was characterized by a mix of traditional striptease, comedy, and theatrical performance, but around 2014 is really, really got taken over and cannibalized by the drag queens, and it's really a dead art, now. In fact, a traditional woman performing burlesque would be laughed off the stage, now, most places. SAD!
sigh Always outing myself as a former libtard, welllll, I used be part of that scene. Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that. Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment.
I once dated a professional burlesque performer, if you can believe it. It's when the whole thing started getting taken over by the dogshit LGBTQ+ bullshit that I realized that you can call it dead. Modern burlesque had a revival in the 1990s and was characterized by a mix of traditional striptease, comedy, and theatrical performance, but around 2014 is really, really got taken over and cannibalized by the drag queens, and it's really a dead art, now. In fact, a traditional woman performing burlesque would be laughed off the stage, now, most places. SAD!
sigh Always outing myself as a former libtard, welllll, this is kinda my wheelhouse. Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that. Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment.
I once dated a professional burlesque performer, if you can believe it. It's when the whole thing started getting taken over by the dogshit LGBTQ+ bullshit that I realized that you can call it dead. Modern burlesque had a revival in the 1990s and was characterized by a mix of traditional striptease, comedy, and theatrical performance, but around 2014 is really, really got taken over and cannibalized by the drag queens, and it's really a dead art, now. In fact, a traditional woman performing burlesque would be laughed off the stage, now, most places. SAD!
sigh Always outing myself as a former libtard, welllll, this is kinda my wheelhouse. Mae West said, "When women go wrong, men go right after them." She didn't repeat that, she wrote that. Mae West performed in burlesque shows early in her career, which is why she carried forward that "saucy" vibe, but she was in burlesque because it let her write, which was her real passion. She was not just a successful actress, but also a successful playwright, and screenwriter, too. In the early days often wrote and performed her own material because, in burlesque, if the men in the audience responded, they ran with it at the next town, and if it was a hit there, they'd clamour for her to write more of it. Burlesque of course was known for being risqué and provocative for its time, but WE know drag today as being anti-woman, more pedophilic, even satanic. Her burlesque shows helped to establish her as a popular and controversial figure in entertainment.