
Frederick’s Gotham volleyball team
The last normal season game is a win! I brought team snacks #teammom… I expect good things for the tournament!
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| Read Insta-comments -> http://bt.zamartz.com/1hnuWjT

The last normal season game is a win! I brought team snacks #teammom… I expect good things for the tournament!
| ???
| Read Insta-comments -> http://bt.zamartz.com/1hnuWjT

| I bought this frame a while ago because it was gold and fit my bedrooms motif. I never had a reason to use the frame until Frederick gave me a Instagram printout of NYE 2013. The perfect fit!
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| Read Insta-comments -> http://bt.zamartz.com/1lkPblf
| ?⭐️?
| Read Insta-comments -> http://bt.zamartz.com/GTejBb

Fashion Week might very well be coming to an end but the fun and furry lives on!! Yesterday the lovely and adorable Meagan and Zach from the BODHI Art & Web Department made a splash at the JOOR event inside the Mercedes Benz tents at Lincoln Center. Oh and rumor has it that Miss Meagan’s BODHI Signature Safety Clutch was quite a hit; photographed by WWD…enough said.
xx B
( FULL STORY AT: BODHI BLOG)



some late nights you look back and think what did i do the rest of the night if this is where i started – trash party
via (nicky digital)

idk what the look on my face is other than yeah – im tired but also danced real hard. David is the same but with fluffy hair! LOL
via (Nicki Digital)
and (sleeplessnyc)
Trash! @ Webster Hall
the full original night life group in the green room of the basement of webster hall. all our skinny asses on one piece of furrniture
<3



Back in 2010, New York City nightlife still had teeth. Before everything was optimized, sanitized, and Instagram-polished, nights out were messy, loud, and completely unhinged—in the best way possible. One of those nights was Trash, the legendary weekly nightclub party at Webster Hall, and it’s still burned into my memory as one of the wildest, most carefree nights of my early NYC years.
David and I didn’t just go to Trash that night—we somehow ended up on stage, dancing like we belonged there. Which, for reasons that still make me laugh, we kind of did.
If you were in New York around that time, you know Trash wasn’t just another club night. It was fashion kids, music kids, chaos kids, drag, punk energy, sweat, glitter, and zero concern for tomorrow. Webster Hall felt infinite back then—multiple rooms, pounding bass, sticky floors, and a crowd that fed off pure momentum.
From the second we walked in, it was one of those nights. Drink tickets in hand. No real plan. Just vibes and volume.
At some point—and this is where things blur—we ended up dancing on stage. Not as a stunt. Not ironically. Just fully leaning into the moment. There are photos floating around of us mid-dance, lights blown out, bodies in motion, the kind of images that perfectly capture that early-20s, “this feels important even if it’s not” energy.
I’m pretty sure David was actually go-go dancing that night, which explains how we got anywhere near the stage in the first place. It also explains the green room access, the casual hanging out like we were part of the furniture, and the general sense that we had somehow unlocked a backstage cheat code to the night.
We bounced between rooms, hung out backstage, disappeared into conversations with strangers we’d never see again, and kept collecting drink tickets like they were party currency (because they were). Everything felt loose. Easy. Electric.
There was no content strategy. No phones out for stories. No worrying about how it looked later. You were just there, inside the noise, inside the night.
Looking back, it wasn’t about Trash specifically—it was about that version of New York City. The one where you could stumble into a legendary party, dance on stage without credentials, end up in the green room by accident, and leave at 4 a.m. with your ears ringing and your mind blown.
That night with David at Trash in 2010 was loud, ridiculous, absolutely wild, and perfectly of its time. And honestly? I wouldn’t trade it for anything.
Some nights don’t need to make sense.
They just need to happen.
This is a drawing i did for a long lost and thankfully found again friend from my childhood. Once upon a time we played soccer and track together and then were lost in the whole college experience. Now that we are besties we are now the Zachs!
Model : Zach Fore
This is just a quick 2 hour work in Charcoal.