The following article provides a comprehensive overview of various topics, it is important to understand the context and relevance of each section. This includes information related to HIV/AIDS awareness, activism, and cultural phenomena, as well as observations on social media trends and subcultures.
Publicity campaigns around the world have aimed to counter HIV-related prejudices and misconceptions and to replace them with an accurate understanding that helps to prevent new infections. Because of lack of public acceptance, people infected with HIV are frequently subjected to stigma and discrimination.
HIV/AIDS Awareness and Activism
AIDS is a pandemic. Globally, 38.4 million [33.9-43.8 million] people were living with HIV at the end of 2021. HIV is spread primarily by unprotected sex (including vaginal, anal, and oral sex), contaminated blood transfusions, hypodermic needles, and from mother to child during pregnancy, delivery, or breastfeeding.
Here is a list of people who are known to have been infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the pathogen that causes AIDS, including those who have died:
- American actor and comedian who starred in the television series Miami Vice as Nugart Neville "Noogie" Lamont and 1983's D.C.
- Brazilian actress and model.
- American actress.
- Dominican born American actress, attorney and activist.
- American actor.
- American actor and comedian; best known for the Airplane!
- American actor.
- Japanese AIDS activist.
- American AIDS activist, author and singer-songwriter.
- Singaporean AIDS activist.
- Filipina AIDS activist.
- American AIDS activist who won a court case to remain at his school.
- American AIDS activist and LGBTQ rights activist, Democratic activist.
- American AIDS activist.
- American AIDS activist for pediatric causes, and wife of actor Paul Michael Glaser.
- Australian-born New Zealand AIDS campaigner.
- American LGBT and AIDS activist, who conceived of the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt.
- American LGBT and AIDS activist and congressional aide.
- AIDS activist/dissident and founder of the holistic AIDS charity Positively Healthy.
- American AIDS activist.
- American teenager and AIDS activist.
- Italian accountant convicted of thirty transmissions of HIV and sentenced to 24 years imprisonment.
- South African Radio DJ and Host.
- American radio and television personality in the Washington, D.C.
- Spanish actress and television presenter.
- British musician who played bass guitar in the influential 1970s group Free.
- American composer and lyricist.
- Ugandan musician.
- Dutch boyband singer and model.
- Spanish singer.
- English guitarist.
- Portuguese musician and songwriter.
- French Pornographic Actress. She tested HIV Positive in 1995.
- American pornographic actress.
- American man who was the first to be considered cured of HIV.
- Second person to have been considered cured of HIV.
- African-American Missouri teenager who was the victim of the first confirmed case of HIV/AIDS in North America.
- Puerto Rican drag performer; best known for her appearance in the 1995 film To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything!
- American comics writer, editor and art director.
- Russian-born American author and biochemist, a highly successful and exceptionally prolific writer best known for his works of science fiction and for his popular science books.
- French poet who was infected with HIV at the age of seventeen.
- Italian novelist.
- French American contemporary art dealer.
- American con artist.
- American born Australian resident, who although not in the risk group, She contracted the AIDS Virus.
In 1983 he testified before the President's Commission on AIDS and before both houses of the United States Congress.
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Undesirably discharged from the US army for being homosexual.
In 1992 starred in a controversial and iconic episode of Paul de Leeuw's TV show De Schreeuw van de Leeuw, where Klijn's illness was the main subject while De Leeuw took the liberty of cracking jokes about it. The episode was praised for discussing a taboo subject in frank but refreshing terms and won a Bronze Rose d'Or at Montreux.
Tori Coca Flame was infected with HIV. She did a film with Eric Stone who died from AIDS in 1996.
Co-founder with Bill T. Jones of Bill T.
Observations on Social Media Trends and Subcultures
Ever since Serial burst onto the scene back in 2015 , it birthed not only the world of podcasting itself, but an entire cottage industry of true crime podcasts, each one more ethically dubious than the last. But one such podcast may be, at least by title, the very worst: My Favorite Murder. This wildly popular series has been criticized over the years for its flippant water-cooler recounting of people’s real life traumas. And while My Favorite Murder made efforts to correct some of its wrongs, it has facilitated an avid online fandom called Murderinos, comprised mostly of self-proclaimed mentally ill girlies who have grown so prominent on the internet as to embody their own subculture.
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But, like laced PCP, nothing can be pure forever. And when your fanbase now comprises of the likes of Nancy Pelosi, Andy Cohen, and Anne Coulter, and your band is now helmed by indie demon John Mayer, you’ve gotta wonder… what went wrong?
The world certainly did a few years ago, when hypebeasts seemed to dominate every sidewalk of every shopping district in just about every city around the world. When brands like BAPE and Supreme popularized the limited drop sales model in the 2010s, they inadvertently spawned a breed of man whose entire life seemed to depend on “copping” the latest and most overpriced streetwear. But jump to today, and the hypebeast is nowhere to be found.
Emo emerged as a musical non-genre from the DIY hardcore punk scenes of San Fran and Detroit, and two decades later it would transform into completely unrecognizable pop punk radio hits resounding in every mall you ever walked into. But thanks to the no-holds-barred, cost-effective utopias that were MySpace and LiveJournal, it seemed the emo subculture was stronger than ever - as socially-anxious teens bonded over their love for Pete Wentz and their own self-loathing.
In this episode, Hannah and Maia talk about Disney adults - their malignment by the general public, their strange religiosity, and their unabashed love of a conglomerate that routinely tramples on the rights of its workers. But, after all, Disney was designed to be a a nostalgic teet from which lost adult souls may suck. So why is it that when adults like Disney, we hate them for it?
Thanks to some unflattering depictions in popular media like CSI and the Tyra Show, the world believes furries to be a group of maladjusted sexual deviants. But have furries gotten a bad rap? Is it really sexual deviancy, or a post-humanist movement that has been way ahead of us this whole time?
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Even stranger, the successful marriage of NFTs and legacy art institutions made strange bed fellows out of affluent old art collectors and dweeby tech bros.
In this episode, Hannah and Maia track how the weeb was born - from the radical DIY origins of manga and otaku, to the fedora-wearing white Redditors of today who hump h*ntai body pillows. But the question remains: Is a weeb a person who simply attends anime conventions and enjoys a vast knowledge of Japan, or a gooner with a Japan fetish? OR does this binary really exist at all?
In this special release of a 2023 bonus episode, Hannah and Maia discuss the elusive "e-Girl" and how, beyond the blushed nose, winged liner, choker, and multi-coloured hair - we have no clue what the e-Girl is all about. We do know one thing though - her online presence is a precarious one.
That place is SSENSE - the luxury e-commerce mega retailer based out of Montreal, which houses every fashion brand from Canada Goose to Issey Miyake, and employs just about the entire 20-something anglo population of Montreal. SSENSE has become an undeniable powerhouse in the world of luxury e-commerce, carving a name for itself with an unorthodox business model that fuses fashion and technology.
The selfie as we know it today may have been invented by a clumsy Australian man. But from its origins in the days of Renaissance courtships, to 19th century “cartes-de-visite”, to the self-portraits of Cindy Sherman, it may be that the selfie has been with us all along. Moreover, can selfies be… art?
No one, not even Azealea Banks, was safe from their pitchforks (or tridents). But in this episode, Hannah and Maia ask: is sea punk even about the sea? Is it even punk? And why did this subculture sink so early into its watery grave?
From Furries to Flat Earthers: Unveiling the Weird World of Internet Subcultures!
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