Showing posts with label tennessee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tennessee. Show all posts

29 September 2016

09 September 2016

cute sign!



The Bristol Virginia-Tennessee Slogan Sign is a landmark in the twin cities of Bristol, Virginia and Bristol, Tennessee, United States. The sign is positioned over State Street, a roadway along the border separating the two states. Although the landmark is technically located in both Tennessee and Virginia, the National Register considers the location as Tennessee. (via)
thank you very much.

08 September 2016

07 September 2016

worst seat in da house

i'd venture to guess that none of these seats are gonna be great.

20 June 2016

the footvols go on a hike


09 June 2016

oh hello smokey joe

20 May 2016

volunteer paula pell

03 March 2016

you're WELLCCOOOMMMMEEE!!!!!1111


blessed blessed blessed blessed blessed.

05 November 2015

i reluctantly enjoyed this.


as obnoxious as it was to hear justin timberlake referred to as "the soul of memphis".

14 October 2015

set your tivos!


tonight at 7.00pm on the SEC network, a special on our glorious saturday at neyland.

13 October 2015

you guys.


now that a couple of days have passed, i can trust that this wasn't just a glorious dream.

for all of your enquiring minds, starla's first words were "i wanna go back to nashville." but instead we got drunk on the strip with the college students.

here is an excellent takeaway.

06 August 2015

long read

In 1979, a gay rights activist, communist and Angeleno named Harry Hay — a founder of a neo-­pagan countercultural movement called the Radical Faeries — urged gay men to ‘‘throw off the ugly green frog skin of hetero-­imitation.’’ Instead of fighting for the rights that straights had, like marriage and adoption, the faeries believed that to be gay was to possess a unique nature and a special destiny apart from straight people, and that this destiny would reach its full flowering in the wilds of rural America. So it was perhaps fitting that the faeries began to refer to their secluded outposts as sanctuaries. There are more than a dozen loosely affiliated sanctuaries across three continents today, but in the same year that Hay made his pronouncement, the mother ship of the faeries landed on Short Mountain, one of the tallest points in Middle Tennessee. It remains home to what is almost certainly the largest, oldest, best known and most visited planned community for lesbian, gay and transgender people in the country, a place that one local described to me as a veritable Gayberry, U.S.A. (via)
 
Pin It