In this Studio 2.8 photograph from Seattle Trans Pride on June 28, 2019, an attendee held aloft a poster on a yard stick with the slogan "Pride Is A Riot" on it, in homage to the June 28, 1969 Stonewall Riots in New York City. This Studio 2.8 photograph was produced on the evening of June 28, 2019 just before the 2019 Seattle Trans Pride march and rally. The Seattle Trans Pride 2019 march and rally was held in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle, Washington.
This photograph is a Studio 2.8 photograph taken on the evening of June 28, 2019 at the Seattle Trans Pride event held at Seattle's Cal Anderson Park in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. In this June 28, 2019 Studio 2,.8 photograph, a craven and cowardly male, Anarcho-Communist domestic terrorist tugged at his all black facial disguise as he blustered and taunted at a Studio 2.8 photographer in vain, while he claimed to the Studio 2.8 photographer, "You got nothin' " (sic).
This is a Studio 2.8 photograph produced on the evening of June 28, 2019 at the Seattle Trans Pride event held at Seattle's Cal Anderson Park in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. In this June 28, 2019 Studio 2.8 photograph, a gutless, masked, male, Anarcho-Communist domestic terrorist pointed and taunted at a Studio 2.8 photographer while claiming to the Studio 2.8 photographer, "You got nothin' " (sic).
This Studio 2.8 photograph was produced on the evening of June 28, 2019 at the Seattle Trans Pride event, held at Cal Anderson Park in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle, Washington.
This Studio 2.8 photography photograph was produced on the evening of June 28, 2019 at the Seattle Trans Pride event, held at Cal Anderson Park in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle, Washington.
This is a Studio 2.8 photograph produced on the evening of June 28, 2019, at the 2019 Seattle Trans Pride march and rally, during the march along Broadway in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood. Pictured in this Studio 2.8 photograph is a very afffectionate pair of attendees who are producing their own video of the Seattle Trans Pride 2019 march and rally.
In this pair of Studio 2.8 photographs produced on the evening of June 28, 2019, at the 2019 Seattle Trans Pride march and rally, before its march portion in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood, the two women in this photograph displayed a poster with the slogan "Cheer for Queers" on it. The two women in this Studio 2.8 photograph appeared quite happy and quite proud to communicate their message, "Cheer for Queers". In this June 28, 2019 Studio 2.8 photograph the two women in it wore colorful clothing with rainbow pride colors and rainbow jewelry and accessories.
This is a Studio 2.8 photograph produced on the evening of June 28, 2019, at the 2019 Seattle Trans Pride march and rally, before its march portion along Broadway in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood. Pictured in this Studio 2.8 photograph is Noah Avery Doyle, who was interviewed by local television news channel Q13 for its feature that day about the Seattle Trans Pride 2019 event. In this Studio 2.8 photograph Noah Doyle faux fur jacket with white, yellow, pink, and blue stripes, a black t-shirt with a Jurassic Park logo on it, patent leather military captain's hate, black glasses, dangling torquise earrings, and an over the shoulder purse.
The Studio 2.8 photography photo was produced on the evening of June 28, 2019 just before the 2019 Seattle Trans Pride march and rally. The Seattle Trans Pride 2019 march and rally was held in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle, Washington.
In this Studio 2.8 photograph an attendee held aloft a sign with the slogan "More Love Not Less" on it. The attendee appear quite appeared delighted to take part in the event and to display this sign to communicate the attendee's sentiment.
In this Studio 2.8 photograph from the Friday June 28, 2019 Seattle Trans Pride 2019 march and rally, held in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood, a small group of girls stood in front of a large banner held by people with an organization called genderdiversity.org. The large banner, had a white background with the phrase "Gender Diversity" in bright blue on it.
In this Studio 2.8 photograph from the Seattle Trans Pride 2019 march and rally, held on Friday June 28, 2019, in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood, one of several attendees who carried political posters held aloft a large yellow background poster with phrase "kill bezos" on it.
In this Studio 2.8 photograph from the Seattle Trans Pride 2019 march and rally, held on Friday June 28, 2019, in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood, a group of attendees, apparently with the University of Washington, held aloft a large banner entitled "Queer and Proud @ University of Washington". The University of Washington Pride banner also included the slogan "where justice, equality, compassion and respect prevail ... you are welcome here" on it.
This Studio 2.8 photography photograph was produced early Friday evening June 28, 2019 on Capitol Hill in Seattle as attendees there gathered before the Seattle 2019 Trans Pride March, pride weekend event, along Capitol Hill's Broadway thoroughfare.
In this Studio 2.8 photograph, a group of attendees held up posters, including one attendee who held a poster with the phrase "Kill Bezos" on it, apparently in reference to billionaire amazon.com founder and CEO Jeff Bezos, whose wealth is estimated at over $110 Billion dollars. The other posters in the Studio 2.8 photograph above include the phrases: "LGBT cops make my pussy dry", "No Pride In - cops, cages, corporations", and "This is Hell! All We Want is Total Freedom! Poverty Is Violence!".
The fair use video clip below, from the 2019 movie Joker depicts a fictional scene in which a crowd of angry protesters held up posters that included a sign with the phrase "Kill the Rich" on it. The 2019 Joker movie wasn't released until October 2019. The "Kill Bezos" poster above represents an example of a reality, and begs the existential question about whether fiction imitates reality and sometimes vice-versa. In this instance, the political messages in the photograph above represent the start reality of what Seattle has become, with its bifurcated economy in which high-technology employees garner annual salaries of $250,000.00 and up, plus stock options, living in million dollar downtown Seattle condominiums, while people who have failed to prepare for the stark reality of the bifurcated West Coast U.S. economic extremes, can barely eat and house themselves on a $15.00 per hour minimum wage, or are, worse yet, sleeping on cardboard under blankets on the sidewalk, in front of the very skyscraper condo towers that are home to the tech economy's affluent employees.