Queen Of Disaster | Lana Del Rey
When I saw your face it was incredible,
Painted on my soul, it was indelible
We celebrate our twisted fate,
We’re the broken ones
Queen Of Disaster | Lana Del Rey
When I saw your face it was incredible,
Painted on my soul, it was indelible
We celebrate our twisted fate,
We’re the broken ones
Lana Del Rey at The Metropolitan Museum of Art for Vogue on May 7, 2018 in New York City, USA
Nicole Kidman photographed by Firooz Zahedi, 1996
can you believe that all this time this photograph of Nicole Kidman in 1996 has been pasted to Lana Del Rey’s mirror
If male self-destruction is seen as opening up meaningful questions about great existential truths—Don’s alcohol binges in “Mad Men,” Walter White’s coming to terms with his own mortality in “Breaking Bad,” female self-destruction is still perceived as self-indulgent. The female depressive is seen as self-involved and attention seeking, empty-headed and silly. Seeking meaning in sex and drugs is seen as morally weighty when a man does it, but when a women grapples with nihilism, it’s still perceived as merely acting out for male attention.