Sky of Sinners - Sinners (2025) dir. Ryan Coogler
"Look at that sky. That's a mighty fine day to be free, aint it?"

Sky of Sinners - Sinners (2025) dir. Ryan Coogler
"Look at that sky. That's a mighty fine day to be free, aint it?"
'all rap music is about money, guns, sex and drugs' is like a nearly 40 year old argument and it's still just as racist and inaccurate as it was in the past
like even if those were the only subject matter that rap and hip hop touched on, it shouldn't be a valid excuse to write off the genre because like it or not money sex drugs and guns are a part of the human experience that many other races of people partake in and make music about currently and throughout history and the singling out of black people and a black music genre as being uniquely evil for these things is just pure unadulterated racism
hey there again, my friend nader (@abdalsalam2000) could really use your help. nader is a palestinian teenager raising funds for his family to survive the dire conditions in gaza. he's currently 64% on the way to his goal, โฌ51,191 raised out of โฌ80K! it would be really lovely if y'all could donate and share this post to get the word out, any bit of help counts! (and if anyone would like to match โฌ5 with me, that would be awesome. let's keep it going!)
vetted #4 on the gaza fundraiser list. please, let's help him reach his goal. him and his family deserve a safe and fulfilling life, don't you think?
There's a nuanced scene in Sinners that I'd like to point out that may explain why Smoke didn't just throw Cornbread the money instead of placing it directly into his hand.
I'm barely old enough to remember the conversation my elders had about how exchanging money between races was a thing. Whether it was an actual written law or just a punishable social no-no, it was unacceptable to place money directly into the hands of white people.
For black people, we had to set the money on the counter so that they could pick it up, and for white people, they would purposely ignore our outstretched hand to place the money on the counter. A silent way to draw the line in the sand.
In the south, especially, it became an encoded social construct, long after the Jim Crow era, that a particular generation would still abide by these rules. My grandma would refuse to shop in places if the clerk refused to take money from her hand. Additionally, if she had to accept cash, she would demand that they place it in her hand. I've seen her and my mother refuse money if they didn't give the respect they demanded.
As a kid, I thought it was silly, but as an adult, I understand that it is a sign of respect or disrespect.
With all that in mind, no, Smoke wouldn't dare throw money at Cornbread because it was utterly disrespectful to do that during that era. Smoke was operating within the boundaries of their social customs, and as a black man, wouldn't dream of disrespecting another black man that way, accused vampire or not.
In today's society, think of the scene in ATL where Big Boi said "Oooh shit! That was so disrespectful. You done hit me in my mouth with some got damn money." Big Boi, also from the south, improvised that line, and I'm willing to bet cash that he was taught the same customs. That "oooh shit," was my exact reaction when I first saw that movie.
Additionally, I'd like to add that I appreciated the sentiment behind this interaction because you can see Smoke battling internally with whether to throw the money for self-preservation (no one would have blamed him) or to place it in Cornbread's hand.
Watching that scene, I thought of Cornbread's family and how Stack showed up to present a better way of life. I thought of how Cornbread was out there that night because he believed in Smoke and Stack's vision. And how he'll never return home to his family. And how Smoke, with all of this in his mind as well, saw past the threat of Cornbread potentially being a vampire and saw Cornbread (for the last time) as his friend.
So as a parting gesture, Smoke placed the money in his hand. Even if it meant going down with him.
The little touches in the film mean everything, especially if you're Black with connections to the south with elders who taught you this.
Thinking about this in the context of Sinners and Smoke coming back from WW1 with a tremor. Stack having hidden trauma not just from his father but also the war as well.
preacher boy
I amย Noora Dahdooh,ย a mother of four children, Obaida, Farah, Aya, and Muhammad.
I work as a nurse at Al-Sahaba Medical in Gaza City.
My husband,ย Osama Dahdooh, is an accountant and training center manager, but his center was completely destroyed, and we lost our home as well.
Today, we are living in tents, enduring extremely harsh conditions without basic necessities.
My son,ย **Obaida**,ย suffers from chronic bronchitis and urgently needs a clean environment and medical care that is unavailable in Gaza.
In addition,ย all four of my children are suffering from severe psychological trauma due to the devastating situation.
My daughter,ย Farah,ย requires urgent psychiatric treatment and long-term therapy to heal and recover.
Why Do We Need Your Help?
Our goal is to raiseย **โฌ100,000**ย to help usย leave Gazaย and start a new life in a safe country, where our children can continue their education and we can live with dignity.
Spending Plan:
โ Visa fees and legal procedures to leave Gaza.
โ Travel and transportation costs to ensure our safe relocation.
โ Securing stable housing for a safe and healthy environment.
โ Advanced medical care for Obaida to improve his condition.
โ Intensive psychiatric treatment for Farah, including long-term therapy.
โ Enrolling our children in schools so they can continue their education.
โ Establishing a senior care center, led by nurse Noura, to utilize my nursing expertise in caring for the elderly and helping build a sustainable future for our family and new community.
### **How Can You Help?**
Any donation, no matter how small, will make a big difference in our familyโs future. You can also support us by sharing this campaign with your friends and family.
**Together, we can give Obaida, Farah, and their siblings a chance for a better and safer future, while also creating new opportunities to help others.
Thank you to everyone who extends a helping hand.
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thanks to your support, the ever mile foundation has raised 10,778 / 20,000 USD to feed palestinians in gaza. they are over halfway to their current goal.
here is bisan talking about community kitchens started by palestinians in response to the starvation imposed by the zionist state. it reflects the self-sufficiency and generous spirit of the palestinian people, in spite of zionist rule.
if you want to support palestinians and alleviate some of the burden of their efforts, please continue to share and donate to eyadโs charity. remember he is doing this while providing for his own family and whilst living under genocide.
thank uou for showing me your little white boy i do not like him can you put him away please
Annie: There are legends of people born with the gift of making music so true, it can pierce the veil between life and death; conjuring spirits from the past...and the future. In ancient Ireland, they were called Filรญ. In Choctaw land, they called them Fire Keepers. And in West Africa, they were called Griots. This gift can bring healing to their communities. But it also...attracts evil....
Sinners (2025)
it really frustrates me to think about how people are inevitably going to take Remmickโs one (1) singular statement about how much he resents the way the Irish were colonized and forcibly converted to Christianity and use it as fuel for โactually he had a pointโ and โhe was right actuallyโ and โheโs not really the villain hereโ posts, when the whole point is that Remmick is, through the vampiric hive mind heโs creating, forcibly assimilating people into yet another manipulative and parasitical system. he doesn't value the cultures of the people he assimilatesโnotice how all the vampires he turns dance to his culture's music using his culture's dances, and how he only uses the languages or knowledge other vampires have to offer when he needs to manipulate someone. Remmick is extremely transparent about the way he sees the people he turns as resources to exploit.
heโs perpetuating a cycle that he claims to hate and resent, and I think the movie is pretty damn clear about the fact that he doesnโt see anybody as valuable or useful to him except as prey and as pawnsโotherwise he would just, you know, focus solely on people who actually consent to being turned. but he looked sad in that one scene and heโs an apparently attractive white cis man so people are gonna bend over backwards justifying all the harm he did.
Interviewer: "What was like the toughest day on set, would you say?" Ryan (to MBJ): "Twin day. Your last twin day. The cigarette pass. [It was] 120 [degrees], I think." Michael: "Yeah, that was intense. Multiple takes, not a lot of movement so you're standing still in the heat."
MICHAEL B. JORDAN as THE SMOKESTACK TWINS -> Behind the Scenes Composite Shot Featurette Sinners (2025) dir. Ryan Coogler