river-b: mizubyte: andiamburdenedwithgloriousfeels: ALEXANDER…

Thursday, June 2nd, 2016

river-b:

mizubyte:

andiamburdenedwithgloriousfeels:

ALEXANDER HAMILTON
HIS NAME WAS ALEXANDER HAMILTON

LMAO that was my exact reaction

i think you mean was his name alexander hamilton

heh. if one were sufficiently trash of the thing, they could have tried to answer in question format by rapping the entire opening number.

“How does a bastard, orphan, son of a–”

Alex: Correct.

“–whore and a Scotsman, dropped in the middle of a forgotten–”

Alex: Yes, correct. The judges agree. Let’s move on.

“–spot in the Caribbean, by providence impoverished, in squalor–”

Alex: *sigh* Let’s go to commercial.

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1P92ymS.

nonbinarist: tumblr mobile doesn’t discriminate between the sinners and the saints it breaks and it…

Friday, May 20th, 2016

nonbinarist:

tumblr mobile doesn’t discriminate

between the sinners and the saints

it breaks and it breaks and it breaks

but we keep using it anyway

every picture it paints

it paints as a square filled with grey

and if there’s a reason i’m still online

when my phone’s almost died

it’s that i’m willing to wait for it

i’m willing to wait for it

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1OEN5dP.

thefederalistfreestyle: icymi: Renée Elise Goldsberry’s FB live…

Friday, May 13th, 2016

thefederalistfreestyle:

icymi: Renée Elise Goldsberry’s FB live q&a from yesterday

As awesome as the one Leslie Odom Jr. did a while ago. I love seeing these people who are so in love with what they’re doing, talking about it as they’re getting ready to go do it again.

I’m totally jealous of @erinwert getting to see the show tomorrow. Happy birthday you ridiculously lucky person!!

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1OoifeN.

““Listen, theater can be any fucking thing we want it to be,” Odom said, leaning forward. “It is…”

Friday, April 29th, 2016

“Listen, theater can be any fucking thing we want it to be,” Odom said, leaning forward. “It is malleable. It is strong. It is sturdy. So shut the fuck up. We can make it whatever we want it to be. Kids can play adults. And old people can play young people. And black people can play white people and Asian people can play black people. If it’s done with a thoughtfulness and a care and a reason, we can do anything.”

Yes, Hamilton has underlined that point, but that doesn’t mean Odom is settling. Because no matter how successful Hamilton is, it can’t last forever. And part of why Odom continues to work so hard is because he knows it.

“You kind of just get used to things not coming through and being rejected and being in shows that are not successful. And so when it does come around, I think what keeps you grounded is that you’re kind of always wondering when it’s going to fall through,” Robinson said.

There’s a certain amount of uncertainty inherent in any actor’s life: Every major success is tempered by the question of what’s next. For now, Odom is focused solely on the daily challenges of Hamilton and reinventing himself in every performance.

And by the time he steps out of Aaron Burr’s shoes, he’ll have worn them every way possible.

“I know that it’s only a moment — it is fleeting,” Odom said. “But to have a show that means as much to historians as it does to rap legends, as it does to actors and writers and young theater practitioners and businesspeople and parents, this is the dream. This is it.”

Leslie Odom Jr. Is Not Throwing Away His Shot (Buzzfeed)

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1r3WJkR.

propitlikeithot: spockspeak: So Im the oldest and the…

Wednesday, April 20th, 2016

propitlikeithot:

spockspeak:

So I’m the oldest and the wittiest and the gossip in New York City is insidious

I am so happy to share my Angelica Schuyler cosplay with you all!! It’s historically accurate and as close to stage accurate as I could get. I used ten yards of a beautiful two-toned faux taffeta for the fashion fabric, but there’s also about seven undergarments (and pockets!) underneath to give it structure. The bodice is steel boned, with lace and chiffon trim around the whole thing.

This gown took 225 hours to complete; it’s by far the best thing I’ve ever made and I’m so, so proud of it.  

GOOD BE FUCKING PROUD YES

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1SuVHaI.

marjorierose: The other day I read Aja Romanos article on Vox about Hamilton as fanfic. Then I…

Tuesday, April 19th, 2016

marjorierose:

The other day I read Aja Romano’s article on Vox about Hamilton as fanfic. Then I read the response from Slate, and then I finally made myself read the New York Times article that Romano was responding to. I’d been avoiding it, I guess because I still feel such a shocked, delighted reaction to the show itself that I have been reluctant to wade into the criticism. But I finally read it, and it was just a handful of comments about historical accuracy. I’m actually amazed that such a brief fact-check has triggered such defensiveness. Not that I don’t understand the impulse! I feel defensive of the show too; I adore it and would like to preserve the impression I had when first leaving the theater that it was the best thing I had ever seen, a rare, genuinely life-changing work of art.

But you know, I just don’t get to live in that moment forever. A work doesn’t get to change your life if you just see it and let it be, if you hallow its memory and shush any doubt. A work can only change your life if it’s part of your life.

There’s a lot that I find deeply odd about the Vox piece in particular, enough that I’m going to stick it behind a Read More.

Keep reading

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1SXyHP8.

“This criticism of how Hamilton places its title character in context might be legitimate if Hamilton…”

Thursday, April 14th, 2016

This criticism of how Hamilton places its title character in context might be legitimate if Hamilton weren’t, well, what it is. In essence, Hamilton is a postmodern metatextual piece of fanfic, functioning in precisely the way that most fanfics do: It reclaims the canon for the fan.

In this case, Hamilton’s canon is history, and the fan, Miranda, is doing a lot more than simply adapting it. Like the best fanfic writers, he’s not just selectively retelling history — he’s transforming it.

Hamilton historians are viewing Hamilton as part of the “Founders Chic” movement — but the musical doesn’t really fit into that trend

Alexander Hamilton has long been a divisive figure in the annals of historical study, but in recent years he’s become a focal point of a historical trend many academics and history enthusiasts refer to as “Founders Chic.” Founders Chic first appeared as a term in a July 2001 issue of Newsweek and quickly caught on to describe the sudden millennial trend of lauding the forefathers.

A year later, in a now-offline essay for Common-Place, Jeffrey Pasley observed that “Founders” really meant “Federalist,” as most of the acclaim was centered on David McCullough’s dazzling biography of John Adams, with plenty going to fellow Federalist Hamilton on the side.

Numerous other biographies of the Founding Fathers soon followed, as did a 2008 biopic based on McCullough’s Adams biography. Soon after that, Miranda famously conceived the idea for the musical while reading Ron Chernow’s 2004 biography, Alexander Hamilton, which focuses on Hamilton’s early life as a bastard orphan on the tiny Caribbean island of Nevis, and emphasizes the way his formative years shaped his relationship to the US.

Analyzing the Founders Chic trend in 2003, the Atlantic wrote critically of it: “In revering the Founders we undervalue ourselves and sabotage our own efforts to make improvements — necessary improvements — in the republican experiment they began. Our love for the Founders leads us to abandon, and even to betray, the very principles they fought for.”

But although Hamilton stems from one of the trend’s byproducts, its function as a text is to do exactly what the Atlantic calls for and critique the history the founders began. The real-life Hamilton’s experience, passion, and ambition resonated deeply with Miranda, who is deeply concerned with the American immigrant experience. Miranda immediately recognized a fellow hip-hop artist in Hamilton, in that the founder had all the earmarks of a Tupac or a Biggie Smalls: innate intellect, brashness, unrelenting ambition, and a grand tendency to start drama. (A much-admired piece of recent Hamilton fan art notes he will “fight anyone, including himself.”)

[…]

Like countless fanfic writers before him, Miranda clearly loves his canon, but he expresses that love by tearing the canon to pieces. Like countless fanfic writers before him, he remains as close to the letter of authenticity as possible while also completely deconstructing the worldview he’s been given. Miranda uses his text to not only have fun with and celebrate US history but to critique everything about that history — something his perspective as an American immigrant writing about another American immigrant puts him in a unique position to do.

Miranda’s fanfic interrogates the mythos of the American dream, tearing down the idea that “America” emerged from a single cultural identity that belongs only to white European immigrants and their descendants. This is something Hamilton’s fan base seems to grasp innately. “Do you understand what it’s like to live in a nation where you are made marginal and inconsequential in the historical narrative that you are taught from your first day of school?” writes Tumblr user thequintessentialqueer in a brilliant explication of Hamilton’s function as a text: “Whose rebellion is valued? Who is allowed to be heroic through defiance? … Violence is only acceptable in the hands of white people; revolution is only okay when the people leading the charge are white … Hamilton is not really about the founding fathers. It’s not really about the American Revolution. The revolution, and Hamilton’s life are the narrative subject, but its purpose is not to romanticize real American history: rather, it is to reclaim the narrative of America for people of colour … If you’re watching/listening to Hamilton and then going out and romanticizing the real founding fathers/American revolutionaries, you’re missing the entire point.”

Again and again, Miranda emphasizes that this version of US history is being told by those other immigrants — the ones who, as the show notes, “get the job done,” and the ones who had no choice about whether to immigrate at all.

And just as he emphasizes that “you have no control … who tells your story,” he reminds us that he’s telling the story of American history now — and he’s telling it his way.

[…]

If we rush to defend Hamilton in this instance, we can be forgiven: History is littered with examples of women and writers of color having their work subjected to a higher standard of inquiry and criticism than the work of their white male counterparts. And that is precisely why Hamilton exists as a text: to elevate and celebrate the dismissed and devalued.

As fanfic, Hamilton interrogates the text of American history from the “wrong” perspective to reclaim that narrative for those who were left out of it

Ultimately, critiquing Hamilton for historical accuracy regarding Alexander Hamilton’s actual place in history is a fundamental misunderstanding of what Hamilton is doing as a modern metatext and as fanfic. The entire point of Hamilton is that the real Alexander Hamilton was a man for the 1 percent, not the 99 percent. The act of presenting Hamilton as a man for the people allows Miranda — and by extension, the audience — to feel as though they are actively shaping the future by making the past all about themselves.

The fundamental objective of fanfic, especially when it is written by women, queer and genderqueer people, and people of color, is to insert yourself, aggressively and brazenly, into stories that are not about and were never intended to be about or represent you.

In this way, Miranda’s aggressive over-identification and use of a Federalist Founding Father to represent modern hip-hop and immigrant culture is precisely as subversive, and for many of the same reasons, as the woman-authored fic I read last week about a white male TV character who gets pregnant and gives birth to were-kittens.

Hamilton unites the story of American independence with black, Latino, and Asian actors who were excluded from it, and in doing so allows these excluded citizens to put themselves back into the narrative. Hamilton is not just a story of history — it is the story of the ongoing struggle to make sure that people of color, immigrants, women, and other marginalized citizens are included in the sequel.

Fans of Hamilton don’t flock to the musical because of the way it transforms the Founding Fathers.

They flock to Hamilton because of everything the Founding Fathers never were.

Hamilton is fanfic, and its historical critics are totally missing the point (a much longer essay than what is excerpted here) (Vox)

Reposted from http://ift.tt/23J7oQ5.

thefederalistfreestyle: For $10, New York City Students See…

Thursday, April 14th, 2016

thefederalistfreestyle:

For $10, New York City Students See ‘Hamilton’ and Rap for Lin-Manuel
Miranda (NYT)

The 1,300
students who saw “Hamilton” on Wednesday, most of them 11th graders enrolled in
classes about American history, are the first of 20,000 who are to see the
musical under a program sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation. The program,
which focuses on students in schools with high percentages of low-income
families, is intended to make it possible for younger and more diverse
audiences to see a show for which tickets have become hugely expensive and
difficult to obtain.

“I hope I can
be inspired and motivated,” Yeliz Sezgin, a 15-year-old junior at Fort Hamilton
High School in Brooklyn, said as the daylong events, which included a
question-and-answer session with the cast, began. Ms. Sezgin designed a T-shirt
for the 159 Fort Hamilton students, with her school’s mascot, a tiger, posed
with the upstretched arm of the musical’s logo.Photo 

In preparing to
attend the show, Ms. Sezgin and her classmates had read love letters between
Alexander and his wife, Eliza, and she compared them to text messages; she said
she was also impressed by the realization that Mr. Miranda spent years
developing the musical: “He didn’t know what this would be, and yet he kept at
it.”

After seeing
the show, some students said they were especially struck by the cast, which
features Hispanic and black actors playing the founding fathers. “I was
thinking about the diversity while I was watching it, with all this controversy
in the entertainment industry,” said Amber Montalvo, a 17-year-old student at
the High School for Media and Communications in Manhattan. “It’s inspiring.”

Kaye Houlihan,
the principal of Fort Hamilton, said her school had an annual unit on Hamilton,
because of its name, but had intensified its study in anticipation of seeing
the show. She said the exercise of asking students to produce skits — of two
minutes or less related to the history — had prompted various takes on the
material, including girls exploring neglected women of the era.

Some students
said reading the history had made them more curious to understand how the
musical was conceived. “I want to know why Burr killed Hamilton,” said Raekwon
Edwards, a 17-year-old junior at Bronx Engineering and Technology Academy. His
schoolmate Valentin Dinaj, 16, said, “I want to see how they bring history
alive.

The students
were, not surprisingly, an extraordinarily enthusiastic audience. They shouted
“I love you” at Mr. Miranda. They cheered for belted notes, laughed at sexual
innuendo, cheered trash talk (“Daddy’s calling!,” a dig at Hamilton’s
dependence on President Washington, and “We know who’s really doing the
planting,” a jab at the South’s dependence on slavery, drew particularly loud
reactions) and gasped at the shooting death of Hamilton’s son Philip.

Two of the cast
members who addressed the students, Mr. Miranda and Anthony Ramos, are alumni
of the New York public schools. Mr. Ramos said that by participating in school
musicals, as well as sports, he was able to “find that part of me that I didn’t
even know I had.” And he urged the school officials present to do more for arts
education. “The public school system has neglected the arts a little bit,” Mr.
Ramos said. “Y’all think you don’t have the money — you better find it.” 

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1WtETnA.

janel-moloney: “The two hours and 40 minutes we’re on stage…

Tuesday, April 12th, 2016

janel-moloney:

“The two hours and 40 minutes we’re on stage makes the most sense. It’s everything else in my life that doesn’t make sense. Like this, sitting right here—no one has ever wanted to talk to me before.” x

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1T27ai0.

thefederalistfreestyle: The Next Best ‘Hamilton’ (New York…

Friday, April 8th, 2016

thefederalistfreestyle:

The Next Best ‘Hamilton’ (New York Times):

It used to be New Yorkers complained most about real estate, but lately the griping is about the scarcity of tickets for the hit musical “Hamilton.” (The show’s creator and star, Lin-Manuel Miranda, answers our By the Bookquestions this week.)

For those who may not get into the theater for a while, if ever, “Hamilton: The Revolution,” a lavishly illustrated new companion book, can help ease the pain. Its yellowed, rough-edged pages are redolent of the founding era, as is its serpentine subtitle: “Being the Complete Libretto of the Broadway Musical, With a True Account of Its Creation, and Concise Remarks on Hip-Hop, the Power of Stories, and the New America.”

The show’s lyrics are annotated by Miranda, who provides autobiographical and historical context, as well as lighthearted comments on his creative process. About the song “Aaron Burr, Sir,” Miranda writes: “I know every word that rhymes with Burr. It’s a long list. I tried to use all of them in this show.”

The book also includes photos from the production, interviews with many of the show’s actors and crew members, and excerpts from emails, like one Miranda wrote to his fellow librettist John Weidman in 2009: “I’m trying to turn Hamilton’s life into a hip-hop album. Inevitably, the more research I do, the more daunting the project seems.”

Miranda co-wrote the new book with Jeremy McCarter, a former theater critic and early champion of Miranda’s work who later worked at the Public Theater, where “Hamilton” premiered. McCarter writes in the introduction that though the phenomenon of “Hamilton” “looks seamless and effortless and inevitable, it was none of those things. . . . Thousands of choices and a fair bit of luck shaped the result. The same can be said of the 18th-­century Revolution: inevitable in retrospect, but unprecedented and all but impossible to imagine ahead of time.”

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1MYP1Td.

whenamericasingsforyou: Photos from Hamilton: The Revolution by…

Monday, April 4th, 2016

whenamericasingsforyou:

Photos from Hamilton: The Revolution
by Jeremy McCarter and Lin-Manuel Miranda

#hamiltome

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1SxfrHZ.

macaroon22: I may not live to see our glory, But I will…

Wednesday, March 30th, 2016

macaroon22:

I may not live to see our glory, But I will gladly join the fight 

And when our children tell our story. They’ll tell the story of tonight 

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1UUPHLF.

macaroon22: Dolley Madison was so awesome!  She was a Quaker…

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2016

macaroon22:

Dolley Madison was so awesome!

 She was a Quaker and had two sons. Her husband and son died from a yellow fever epidemic and she was left a widow. Her neighbor Aaron Burr introduced Dolley to James Madison and the two of them became engaged but since Madison wasn’t a Quaker, she was expelled for marrying outside her faith. 

In 1814 the British invaded and burned down the White House.  Dolley Madison risked her own safety and refused to leave the estate until she had the painting of George Washington with her.

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1RlrVVo.

knitmeapony: Ahahah that last gif

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2016

knitmeapony:

Ahahah that last gif

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1XNv3Ls.

thefederalistfreestyle: legacy – what is a legacy?? [x x x x]

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2016

thefederalistfreestyle:

legacy – what is a legacy?? [x x x x]

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1RiPo7w.

“To see an alternate or understudy in a role can be revelatory—not just about the actor in question…”

Monday, March 21st, 2016

To see an alternate or understudy in a role can be revelatory—not just about the actor in question but about the work itself. When, in the opening number of “Hamilton,” Lin-Manuel Miranda makes his first entrance, and his character announces himself by name, the audience reliably applauds. Here is the man they have come to see: the first Secretary of the Treasury and the MacArthur-certified genius who has re-imagined him so powerfully. The entrance is an opportunity for a celebration of his achievement. The audience members are fully aware of all that Miranda and Hamilton have accomplished—even though they haven’t yet seen the play, and even though the Hamilton onstage is newly arrived in New York City, unheralded and as yet unknown.

Enacted by an alternate or understudy, though, uncertainty is restored to the scene. When an unfamiliar actor steps into the light as Hamilton, the applause that greets him is scattered, more muted, as audience members rustle their Playbills for the overlooked white slip. The challenge that faces Hamilton, the character, as the play unfolds—how to make an impression against all expectations—is also the challenge that the actor confronts in playing him.

“Who is this kid? What’s he gonna do?” Hamilton’s fellow-rebels ask, before witnessing him deliver his first, incendiary number, “My Shot,” in which he stakes his claim to the future. To see an actor other than Miranda step into this role is to be aware in a different way of the risk and the danger and the promise of the historical moment, and the theatrical one. It is also a salutary reminder to all theatregoers to embrace the understudy, in whatever show he or she appears, in whatever role he or she is cast. See the understudy take his shot. It might be revolutionary.

The Thrilling Uncertainty of the Understudy (The New Yorker)

Reposted from http://ift.tt/21DEpu8.

thefederalistfreestyle: give it up for the Southern…

Saturday, March 19th, 2016

thefederalistfreestyle:

image

give it up for the Southern Motherfucking Democratic Republicans! [x x]

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1MurjbD.

thefederalistfreestyle: Pop Culture Happy Hour: ‘Hamilton’ (NPR):The first segment is about the…

Friday, March 18th, 2016

thefederalistfreestyle:

Pop Culture Happy Hour: ‘Hamilton’ (NPR):

The first segment is about the show itself: we talk about influences both inside and outside the world of Broadway, we play some Sondheim and some Cole Porter, we talk about jazz hands and Bugs Bunny, and we break the news to you that yes, this particularly heavily hyped thing is just as good as the hype suggests it is. Here’s the listof references I talk about one point (there are many, many other similar pieces around), and here’s the episode of Another Round that Gene references.

The second segment is about the show as a phenomenon and what it’s doing to all of us. We talk about the tremendous social-media meme-ing of it, and how we feel about the overload that many of us have felt and are feeling, and Gene takes a moment to ponder what might have happened if he’d obeyed a different instinct than the one he did.

A couple of things you should know: I’m so sorry we didn’t have at the tip of our tongues the name of Alysha Deslorieux, the fantastic performer we saw as Angelica. We were falling all over ourselves to talk about how great she was and didn’t pause to Google her. I apologize; she was tremendous. That’s what we meant to get across. See also: Javier Munoz, whom we referred to (he generally does Alexander Hamilton one performance a week) but didn’t name. (And best thoughts, sir.)

[…]

It’s really important to recognize, I think, that this is not a series of concerts, where the live performances — these specific ones — are the only thing. Hamilton is a feat of authorship, just like Company or The Pirates Of Penzance or South Pacific or Rent orAnything Goes or whatever, and it’s going to exist in a zillion forms. It’s going to be performed and revived and re-revived and done in schools and done locally, and it’s going to be done well and done badly, and individual songs will be covered on people’s albums, and there will probably be a movie someday, which lots of people will hate. There will be disputes over who can play Hamilton, who can play Burr, who can play Angelica.

There will be intense conversations related to particular productions about rap experience and theater experience, many of which will carry problematic and gross undertones and teach people things and make them fight, and this show is going to keep vexing and challenging a certain subsection of theater people in this wonderful way. There will be boys (and girls too, but I’m going to guess especially boys) who have never done theater or even thought about doing theater who suddenly want to do it because of this, and one of them will write a show in 20 years that will draw its own crowds. God willing, Old Man Miranda is going to get his Kennedy Center Honors and his EGOT (that’s actually probably going to be, like, soonish) and his next show will put him and everybody else in the position of realizing it cannot be this again because nothing by anybody can be, quite, this again.

It’s not just this thing, like a production you go stare at and go home or else press your nose up against the glass wishing you could get into. It’s a really important piece of writing, and it’s going to be around a lot longer than these crazy lines and lotteries and YouTube videos and memes and hashtags. It’s a piece of theater by an enormously important American composer, and it’s out in the world, and I promise, if you’re open to it, it will get to you as a composition, whether or not it gets to you as a hot-ticket Broadway show.

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1TUMtYt.

thefederalistfreestyle: Hamilton​’s Anthony Ramos Admits He…

Thursday, March 17th, 2016

thefederalistfreestyle:

Hamilton​’s Anthony Ramos Admits He Never Planned to Be on Broadway (Teen Vogue):

Just as the burgeoning actor’s lark into the world of theater began, his baseball career was reaching new heights as well and he soon set his sights on playing college ball for a NCAA Division III school. However, that dream was abruptly pulled out from underneath him. “My family was going through some things at the time and I was doing the application process by myself. I didn’t get my financial aid papers by deadline and all of my applications were withdrawn,” he explains of the blow.

With his only way out of the projects squashed, Anthony had nowhere else to turn and decided to join the Navy. However, it was a teacher at New Utrecht who refocused his trajectory. “I’m convinced she was an angel sent from above to show me the path I was supposed to take in my life.” That teacher, New Utrecht theater director Sara Steinweiss, saw a spark in the student and recommended he apply for the American Musical and Dramatic Academy, otherwise known as AMDA, a theater school located across the East River in Manhattan. “I was like, what? No way. I’ll never get in. I’m not auditioning.”

He soon relented and the recruiters from AMDA saw the same talent in his audition that Steinweiss did, later offering him admission. However, there was one snag. “They threw me the numbers at me on how much it’d all cost and I thought I had no way to pay for this. The next thing you know, (Steinweiss) put my name in for a scholarship funded by Jerry Seinfeld. She told them my story and how I grew up, so they wanted to meet me.” Ramos poured his heart out during a meeting with a representative from the skeptical foundation. “They said, ‘We don’t usually give this scholarship to people with your grades.’ I was like, ‘My grades are not a reflection of me. I just need somebody to give me me a shot and believe in me. I won’t let you down.’ By the time I left, we were both crying.” He didn’t hear back until right when AMDA’s payment deadline was approaching: he was given a full scholarship, with housing

“I’m convinced she was an angel sent from above to show me the path I was supposed to take in my life.”

Teachers: low status, low pay, hope-crushing failure as a daily reality.

Also: the occasional chance to change someone’s life.

Reposted from http://ift.tt/21xJZOE.

fyeahanthonyramos: From Jasmine’s Instagram:Feeling all the…

Wednesday, March 16th, 2016

fyeahanthonyramos:

From Jasmine’s Instagram:

Feeling all the feelings right now at the White House!! #Bam4Ham

Reposted from http://ift.tt/1TPHFDs.