To subscribe to: Mad and honest rapper instagram Candy Ken
CONTINUE TO TELL about decent accounts in social networks through which you can view the whole world.
The 23-year-old Berlin rapper Jacob Casimir, or Candy Ken, loves Hello Kitty, translated tattoos, Versace lingerie, pink, Grillz gold braces and crazy lenses. Why does he look like that? Well, the shortest and most capacious explanation is because you fuck, that's why. According to Casimir himself, without all of this, he looks like a typical jock, and he doesn’t want this - hence the gender-neutral clothes, “grylzes”, tiaras and other “non-male” attributes.
One gets the feeling that the rapper builds his visual style on the contradiction to all the expectations of society from a typical man - and in this Candy Ken overtakes his mastermind Riff Raff, who has an unthinkable, but selfish desire to show himself behind an eccentric look. Casimir picked up the popular hashtag #sorrynotsorry and urges its subscribers to not be shy about being themselves - he demonstrates this not only with the post, but with all his instagram and life in general.
Candy Ken's unusual love for a man for self can, of course, be explained by his not very ordinary work and the need to maintain the chosen image. Nevertheless, the rapper seems to be quite enjoying this simple exercise, and it can be understood. Selfies are just another way of documenting everything that happens, but for some reason, many allow only women. At the same time, self-reliance of a selfie is usually tied up with a close mind - they say, there is nothing more to show apart from the asshole, and why should one expose oneself as a commodity.
As with everything in the world in general, a one-sided assessment of even such a trifling phenomenon as a selfie strongly depraves a condemning one: besides the desire to show oneself (in which, by the way, there is nothing wrong), one can see a desire for open, honest communication, attentiveness to details that help to consider the beauty of the environment, and the desire for introspection. These impulses are to some extent peculiar to each person regardless of gender and gender, so taking selfies as an exclusively feminine and shameful activity for at least the last century.