Anna Ralphs Forest Blowjob ❲Popular ✭❳
For those who only know her through her viral “Forest Hour” segments or her best-selling field journal Root & Rhythm , Anna Ralphs might appear as a curated ascetic: a woman in a waxed canvas apron steeping chaga tea by a wood-fired stove. But to reduce her to an aesthetic is to miss the radical proposition at her core. Ralphs argues that the forest is not a retreat from entertainment—it is the original, and best, form of it.
Her latest project, a live 72-hour “Rotcast” (streamed entirely on a low-bandwidth text-and-still-image platform called HundredRivers), will feature nothing but the decomposition of a fallen alder. No narration. No music. Just a photo every fifteen minutes and a live chat that moves slower than the rot. anna ralphs forest blowjob
The Clearing: How Anna Ralphs is Rewilding Entertainment and Living by the Forest’s Clock For those who only know her through her
“I want a place where entertainment doesn’t travel faster than sound,” she says. “Where a laugh doesn’t echo off concrete, but gets absorbed by moss.” Her latest project, a live 72-hour “Rotcast” (streamed
“If you watch for three hours and feel nothing,” she says, “good. That’s a feeling too.”