Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹
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Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted

Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted

Every Haitian has a digital responsibility. We must not allow the internet to reduce Haiti to poverty alone. Let us also showcase our beaches, our culture, our history, and our beauty. Together, we can reshape our nation’s image online and share the true Haiti with the world.
Nadal-Nau CAZIR 🥜🇭🇹@cazirnadal95
Haití🏞🏖🇭🇹🔥🔥🔥
English
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted

This is one of my favorite details from the halftime show: the ribbed knit top worn while waving Haiti’s flag was basically a quiet conversation with history.
It echoes photographer Jay Maisel’s Haiti, 1973 series, specifically the picture "Haiti No. 59".
Maisel once said those images came from “a nostalgic view of better times,” and somehow that nostalgia found its way onto one of the biggest stage in the world.
From a street corner in 1973 and a fresko cart to a global halftime show decades later, same colors, same soul, "same" Haiti.
Fashion as memory. Culture as continuity. 🇭🇹✨
Thank you for this ❤️ @_dilemmer

Jïuliette@GiulietteR48567
Haiti, 1973 - Jay Maisel
English
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
Cheetos & Kilos 🇭🇹 retweeted
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