Betrothed when still in womb by parents, Ai Changhuan is forced to marry a man of 37! Naturally, she wants to run away. However, right before her escape, she finds that this guy is probably gay who shows no interest in a woman. Relieved, she decides to stay. Never has she expected this man with gentle smiles is actually cunning and scheming in heart. Holding her in arms, he smiles, his tone indulgent and domineering, "Honey, be a good girl and stay by my side. One day as my wife, and you'll forever be my sweet wife." Only then does she realize that she has been wrong from the very beginning. She jumps to him and scratches him hard out of rage.
In her MasterClass, photography icon Annie Leibovitz shares her unique insight into the art of photography. Here are 5 key concepts from the class that photographers can (and should) apply directly to their own photographic journey.
I went to an all-girls Catholic high school. Sadly, not once did I ever catch one of the nuns who taught at my school behaving “badly” or “out of character” for someone married to Christ, but boy do I wish I would have. These nuns gave detention left and right for the dumbest, most innocuous shit ever (like my socks being the wrong shade of blue or my skirt being 1/4 of an inch too short). The nuns had it out for my ass. I was convinced they were evil robots not nice ladies doing the Lord’s bidding. Nuns still make me nervous to this very day… So to my surprise, I found these vintage photos of nuns “letting their habits down” and even a few of them being slightly naughty a turning point in my appreciation for nuns: Apparently they’re not ruler-slapping robots after all. I could hang with some of these nuns!
http://youtu.be/nIvOqHfia2s "Show Me Where Ya Noms At", a new music video by Hannah Hart of My Drunk Kitchen & Songs To Wear Pants To.