According to her Instagram, Madonna is feeling sentimental, as she recently took a trip down “memory lane” by visiting her own personal archive.
This archive is where she keeps many of the garments she has worn throughout her decades-long career, including some of the most iconic pieces that the world has come to know and love and associate with her and only her.
The pop superstar took to Instagram and shared a heartfelt message about how far she’s come along with the photos of some of her most memorable articles of clothing.
Madonna began the slideshow post with a photo of herself holding up an old blue velour cone bra – one of her most controversial and beloved pieces.
The singer then followed with a snap of a gold corset with smaller cones on the breasts, which was still resting in its box.
She then added an image of her actually wearing that item. After that, she showcased a nothing-but-the-bone tuxedo-like top, still in the box, before showcasing a pair of black bloomers she once wore while holding them over her hips.
“A trip to my archives is always a nostalgic trip down memory lane!” Madonna started the caption on the fashion-forward slideshow. “If I think about my journey through music over the last 4 decades — how could I not think about all the incredible clothes I got to wear and all the amazing designers I was lucky enough to work with!!”
In addition to showcasing the actual fashion held in her archives, Madonna also included a glimpse of her collection of tapes from earlier in her career, a snap of the rows of boxes and racks she keeps all of her memorabilia in, and a shot of what her entire safekeeping spot looks like. It’s huge!
Madonna revealed that the archive trip was particularly emotional for her as it reminded her of her childhood.
“When I was a little girl I remember my mother was always cold. Partly because she was sick but also because she never had a coat,” the singer wrote in the Instagram caption.
“She always spent what little money we had on our coats, and I remember standing outside waiting for the school bus with my mother shivering in the cold in the middle of winter!! Years later when I became successful my mother’s sister said to me, ‘Now you can buy all the coats your mother couldn’t buy for herself!'”
The Grammy winner then added a bit about how far she’s come, and she kept things very emotional. “The journey from the memory of my shivering mother in winter to me shivering in the over air-conditioned storage space where all my costumes are stored is quite remarkable! I am overwhelmed with gratitude.”
Madonna finished the post with a message to her mother, “Every time I put on an incredible coat, I think of my mother. I hope she likes my taste in costumes, but most of all, I hope she’s warm!”
The superstar was likely busy in her archives as she prepares for her career-retrospective Madonna: The Celebration Tour, which will see her revisiting many of her biggest hits. The trek begins in July and is currently expected to run through January 2024.
Meta, the parent company of Instagram, Facebook, and Threads, has been accused of restricting LGBTQ-specific content on its platforms.
According to journalist Taylor Lorenz, reporting on her User Mag Substack, Meta has been hiding content with LGBTQ-related hashtags for months, in the name of restricting "sexually suggestive content."
As reported by Lorenz, posts employing the hashtags #lesbian, #bisexual, #gay, #trans, #queer, #nonbinary, #pansexial, #transwomen, #Tgirl, #Tboy, #Tgirlsarebeautiful, #bisexualpride, #lesbianpride, and other references to LGBTQ identity were censored or hidden from searches where Instagram's "sensitive content" filter was turned on.
A Columbus man has been sentenced to more than four years in prison after pleading guilty to an elaborate sextortion scheme in which he'd catfish gay men in multiple states -- including a minor -- and blackmailed them by threatening to publicize explicit photos of them engaged in sexual acts.
On December 19, U.S. District Judge Michael Watson of the Southern District of Ohio sentenced Omoruyi Uwadiae to 51 months in prison after the 28-year-old pleaded guilty to eight charges of cyberstalking.
Watson also sentenced Uwadiae to 24 months in prison for pleading guilty to seven counts of "making interstate communications with the intent to extort," or sextortion, and to 51 months for pleading guilty to seven counts of "unlawfully using a means of identification," a form of identity theft.
Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and Threads, has overhauled its moderation policies to allow users to use anti-LGBTQ rhetoric or insult LGBTQ people in the name of "free speech."
Meta announced the change on January 7, noting that it was eliminating its third-party fact-checking system and replacing it with a user-based "Community Notes" model similar to the one employed by X.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg further announced the company would be relocating its content moderation teams from California to Texas to "help remove the concern that biased employees are overly censoring content."
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