Ask me anything   Submit   I am a California native live there for 12 years then moved to dump hole Pueblo Colorado although I can't say it has been a complete dump! I am with my amazing boyfriend Kenny we met in high school. Sadly he goes to CSU but things are getting better for us and our relationship . Other than that umm...I am a criminal justice major and my dream is to work for the F.B.I and work as a spy or secret service. I am not your average ordinary girl. I am NOT like any other girl you know, I HATE girly girls, drama, assholes that live in Pueblo well really people in pueblo cept for friends that I know and love and family. I am an outgoing kinda gal I consider myself as one of the boys and I am open minded and love to have fun and I like to party haha

fuckyeahladygaga:

Of course, Bad Romance. 

love love love 

fuckyeahladygaga:

Of course, Bad Romance. 

love love love 

— 1 week ago with 449 notes

Ive always wanted to do this to my lips for a shoot 

Ive always wanted to do this to my lips for a shoot 

(via madlyinmakeup)

— 1 week ago with 50 notes

SOOOOO EXCITING

SOOOOO EXCITING

(Source: monst3rp4rty, via 90s90s90s)

— 1 week ago with 17100 notes

abbycash:

toxic-cocaine:

daydreamingislovely:

(via imgTumble)

omg i fucking love that dog

Hahah yes I love her dog

i FCKIN LOVE THIS WOMAN!

abbycash:

toxic-cocaine:

daydreamingislovely:

(via imgTumble)

omg i fucking love that dog

Hahah yes I love her dog

i FCKIN LOVE THIS WOMAN!

— 1 week ago with 89261 notes

YEEESSS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

YEEESSS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

(via 90s90s90s)

— 1 week ago with 5122 notes

i love dogs with gorgeous eyes :D

i love dogs with gorgeous eyes :D

(Source: cooldogs)

— 1 week ago with 25 notes

terrysdiary:

Gaga’s Versace boots.

DAMN I LOVE VERSACE

terrysdiary:

Gaga’s Versace boots.

DAMN I LOVE VERSACE

(via fuckyeahladygaga)

— 1 week ago with 2555 notes

phillipsdepury:

ANDY WARHOL | Gun, 1981-1982 | acrylic and silkscreen ink on canvas
Sold for $7,026,500 at the Contemporary Art Evening Sale, 10 May 2012, New York. [Video]
Jordan Crandall: You don’t like guns, do you?
Andy Warhol: Yes, I think they’re really kind of nice.
(From Splash No. 6, 1986, excerpted in I’ll Be Your Mirror: The Selected Andy Warhol Interviews, Edited by Kenneth Goldsmith, New York, 2004, p. 373).
After Andy Warhol’s assassination attempt in 1968 by Valerie Solanas, much of the violent imagery that had occupied his work of the 1960s—electric chairs, traffic accidents, nuclear explosions—vanished from his new pictures. Instead, during much of the 1970s, both famous and unfamous faces became a prominent trope. Warhol also began to incorporate different series into his silkscreens, including the infamous oxidation paintings and the “shadow” paintings of the late 1970s. Yet as the injuries from 1968 exerted their relentless and painful influence upon Warhol’s life and work, he returned in 1981 and 1982 to the subjects that he had avoided for more than a decade. 1982 saw showings on opposite sides of the Atlantic for Warhol’s Guns, Knives, and Dollar Signs, some of the most ominous and captivating work of his entire career. Gun, 1981-1982, exhibits Warhol’s full-circle return to the events that shook him to his mortal core in 1968, as we observe upon his canvas the exact style of pistol that almost claimed his life two decades before his death.

phillipsdepury:

ANDY WARHOL | Gun, 1981-1982 | acrylic and silkscreen ink on canvas

Sold for $7,026,500 at the Contemporary Art Evening Sale, 10 May 2012, New York. [Video]

Jordan Crandall: You don’t like guns, do you?

Andy Warhol: Yes, I think they’re really kind of nice.

(From Splash No. 6, 1986, excerpted in I’ll Be Your Mirror: The Selected Andy Warhol Interviews, Edited by Kenneth Goldsmith, New York, 2004, p. 373).

After Andy Warhol’s assassination attempt in 1968 by Valerie Solanas, much of the violent imagery that had occupied his work of the 1960s—electric chairs, traffic accidents, nuclear explosions—vanished from his new pictures. Instead, during much of the 1970s, both famous and unfamous faces became a prominent trope. Warhol also began to incorporate different series into his silkscreens, including the infamous oxidation paintings and the “shadow” paintings of the late 1970s. Yet as the injuries from 1968 exerted their relentless and painful influence upon Warhol’s life and work, he returned in 1981 and 1982 to the subjects that he had avoided for more than a decade. 1982 saw showings on opposite sides of the Atlantic for Warhol’s Guns, Knives, and Dollar Signs, some of the most ominous and captivating work of his entire career. Gun, 1981-1982, exhibits Warhol’s full-circle return to the events that shook him to his mortal core in 1968, as we observe upon his canvas the exact style of pistol that almost claimed his life two decades before his death.

— 1 week ago with 9747 notes