One of my pseudocompaints against SG is that I can't just link to the boobage, so I'm sure a lot of the unpaid shilling I spew about means absolutely jack shit if you're not on the site already. And I have far more friends off-site than on. It's the children that are wrong...
But anyway, I can link you to the free videos that are an (im?)proper subset of the moving pictures I see. Note that I'm about a page behind, but find out what SG waited for Amina stop hiding, discover the idea behind Taye's video ... these are kinds I'd like to see become common-place and boring around here, instead of things worth pointing out. I want to one day find them cliche and boring.
In general I find it hard to get into the videos because I dislike sitting noninteractively even for a few minutes, but in the end videos contain two things that photosets do not: capturing SG-style movement as well as form, and primary-source motivations on why the models do what they do, or why they are what they are. It is the latter that most interests me, especially because I haven't yet disciplined myself to read the Blog RSS feeds (Mostly because their cookie-based authentication does not work with NewsGator news aggregator service and because school hasn't given me the chance to body-oogle, let alone mind-oogle, and a journal backlog is far less curvy and supple than one for photosets.)
But anyway, I can link you to the free videos that are an (im?)proper subset of the moving pictures I see. Note that I'm about a page behind, but find out what SG waited for Amina stop hiding, discover the idea behind Taye's video ... these are kinds I'd like to see become common-place and boring around here, instead of things worth pointing out. I want to one day find them cliche and boring.
In general I find it hard to get into the videos because I dislike sitting noninteractively even for a few minutes, but in the end videos contain two things that photosets do not: capturing SG-style movement as well as form, and primary-source motivations on why the models do what they do, or why they are what they are. It is the latter that most interests me, especially because I haven't yet disciplined myself to read the Blog RSS feeds (Mostly because their cookie-based authentication does not work with NewsGator news aggregator service and because school hasn't given me the chance to body-oogle, let alone mind-oogle, and a journal backlog is far less curvy and supple than one for photosets.)