The Avengers 2012
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
hello vonnie
almost home
Mike Driver
macklin celebrini has autism

JBB: An Artblog!
RMH
wallacepolsom

ellievsbear
todays bird
Cosmic Funnies

JVL
occasionally subtle
NASA
Game of Thrones Daily
Stranger Things
sheepfilms
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Love Begins
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
seen from Vietnam

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Morocco
seen from United States
seen from Morocco
seen from United States
seen from Morocco

seen from Morocco
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
@10-96dispatcher
The Avengers 2012
"there is no way you're not using chatgpt for at least a few things here and there no matter your stance on it" what the FUCK are you talking about
Pet owners, what kind of name does your pet have???
A food-item (Waffles, Peanut)
A color (Pinky, Hazel)
A real-life person (Marilyn, Paris)
A fictional character (Eevee, Simba)
A type of flora (Rosie, Willow)
Animal-like (Kitty, Gator)
A trait (Lucky, Buddy)
Something else
If you have more than one pet, choose the most applicable listed (ex: you have three pets named Cookie, Cream & Rocky, so you choose the “Food” option). Also, would be interested if you reblogged your pet’s name(s) in the tags and the reason why you chose it ^^
Pet owners, what kind of name does your pet have???
A food-item (Waffles, Peanut)
A color (Pinky, Hazel)
A real-life person (Marilyn, Paris)
A fictional character (Eevee, Simba)
A type of flora (Rosie, Willow)
Animal-like (Kitty, Gator)
A trait (Lucky, Buddy)
Something else
No pet
If you have more than one pet, choose the most applicable listed (ex: you have three pets named Cookie, Cream & Rocky, so you choose the “Food” option). Also, would be interested if you reblogged your pet’s name(s) in the tags and the reason why you chose it ^^
@notpedeka @no-longer-another-bondi-blonde @angryschnauzer @nuggsmum @sarabeth72 @angreav @izhunny
Nope.
Nope, nope, nope.
Can the written form be Computer-Rendered Artifical Prose?
For @kalika999 for the @charityhawktion
Kali’s ‘sneaky and terrible’ (hee!) friend J gave her the Hawktion as a birthday present, and although I would have happily jumped out of a cake, what Kali wanted was some happiness for her fave pairing after Endgame, which I was only too happy to provide. I hope this dose of “yeah no that’s not what happened” helps, Kali! J, you’re a rockstar, thank you for helping out the American Society for Deaf Children.
So:
wake up, say good morning to
that sleepy person lying next to you
[in our bedroom after the war]
Hello Jeremy Renner, you handsome man 😍
people talk about how we need to bring back "don't feed the trolls" rhetoric for modern internet ragebait and I agree but also I think the most useful thing from the Old Internet that I miss is LURKING
be a lurker. just read things and think about them without feeling the need to weigh in or call out or disseminate everything you encounter. it's so nice and so freeing and it's a good way to learn things.
I have frequently regretted getting involved in shit that didn't involve me online but you know what I've never regretted doing? Lurking. literally lurk moar
✦ Glen Powell vs. 'The Most Impossible Glen Powell Quiz' ✦
you gotta include this photo
ağlıycam
This is it. The internet has come full circle. You can all go home now. We’re done.
When you were a child, was your internet access ever limited and/or monitored by your parents (or legal guardians) in any way?
Yes, my internet access was limited and/or monitored
No, my internet access was never limited or monitored in any way
I didn’t have access to internet as a child at all
*This poll was submitted to us and we simply posted it so people could vote and discuss their opinions on the matter. If you’d like for us to ask the internet a question for you, feel free to drop the poll of your choice in our inbox and we’ll post them anonymously (for more info, please check our pinned post).
Look at the sheer joy of this American bison, skipping and pronking at Yellowstone National Park! 
May we all one day experience such joy...
The first time she learned of the ghost was from the realtor. They had been very upfront about it, just like they had made it very clear that it being haunted was the only reason this stately Victorian home was anywhere near her budget. So she had taken it, of course she had. It was a sweet house, a family home. No manor or mansion by any definition of the word, but built before the time that people were concerned with saving space. It was stately, but in disrepair, and most definitely, absolutely, undoubtedly haunted.
It shouldn't really have surprised anyone that he did not move on when he died. He had been the butler of the house when the family had lived there, had become its custodian during their absence, and what was the purpose of a custodian if not to wait with the house for the return of its owners? Except they never returned.
The first time she felt the ghost was when she went to clean the place up. Which is why she came back with a sensible supply of ibuprofen the next time. It was very hard to get anything done with impending migraines stabbing at her temples. The bone chilling cold that seemed to seep from the walls was harder to keep at bay, but she did not hold it against him. If she had been trapped in this place she would be kicking up more fuss than the occasional cold spot. Besides, it was a good incentive to keep busy. It's impossible to be cold while scrubbing a floor. By the time she had gotten around to restoring the fireplaces to their original marble with paint stripper and a scraper, she didn’t even feel chilly anymore.
They might have abandoned the house, but he hadn't. He had kept it tidy, well aired out, and in good repair, decade after decade. Over half a century. What was a century more? It was a good house, a fine house. It did not need “developing”, it did not need these people with grey paint and eggshell paper. They should have left the finials and weathervane in place.
The first time she heard the ghost was while looking for the kitchen door. There were bits and pieces missing of the house, her house. Someone, at some point, must have taken that door off its hinges, in a vain attempt to approach open-plan living. It was nowhere to be found, but she would find it, if only that terrible rattling and wailing would stop. It did stop, once she found the ladder that had dropped down from the attic. The attic the realtor had told her was completely inaccessible. The attic filled with ornaments and antique doorknobs, a battered weathervane, and a panelled kitchen door.
Restore... That was a quaint word. Not at all like “remodel” or “modernise”. There were a lot of words he had never heard before, he had not bothered to listen for a long time. Such a cheerful, appreciative voice.
The first time she saw the ghost was while poring over a sample book, fretting over the few scraps off wallpaper she had found behind a patched-up baseboard. The colours were too faded to make out and she did not want to get it wrong. Victorian reproductions were expensive, and the leaves and the feathers looked so much alike. She had nothing but a corner of paper to go on and she stared and stared and stared, until a hand reached out of nowhere, and turned the page to the maroon one. She barely breathed, she put the scrap of paper on the page, a perfect corner of the pattern, and smiled.
It was a fine house, a beloved house. And people came there again, not to buy and destroy it, to visit. There were people who said they wanted to buy it, people with broad smiles and greedy eyes. But that would not happen now. They were always sent away.
But the first time she met the ghost was on a pale autumn morning, stumbling from the car to the front door with her arms full bolts of damask for the curtains. She had just begun to wonder how she'd reach her keys when the fine oak door swung open, all stately hospitality, and on its doorstep, standing respectfully aside, was the same tall, well groomed man, clad all in black. He bowed and stepped aside, speaking in a hollow voice warmed by respect and satisfaction:
“Welcome home, ma'am.”
This was a great photoshoot for him
did your parents *"pre-screen" the media you interacted with when you were a kid/before legal adult age where you are?
yes, always AND they did parental guidance talks about it
yes, always but there was no parental guidance involved
sometimes, with parental guidance talks
sometimes, no parental guidance talks
not usually, but occasionally (WITH parental guidance)
not usually, but occasionally (WITHOUT parental guidance)
they never pre-screened but there were other rules (elaborate?)
my parents fully didn't give a shit about what media i engaged with
see results
*by "pre-screening", i typically mean any sort of behavior that exists on a spectrum of "actually watching/playing/reading the thing before you played it" to "doing any sort of research on it before letting you watch it".
feel free to share your experiences in the tags or replies or whatever!
It was a crap shoot and it depended on whether Mom, Dad, or the babysitter was the one deciding things. Like, we saw Alien at the Drive In when I was 10 and I went with my Dad to see Carrie in the theater when I was 7.
The babysitter's boyfriend once sat through 3 screenings in a row of "The Apple Dumpling Gang" at the theater, just to make me happy (As I grew up I realized just how HIGH he had to have been to do that), but he never would have thought of letting me know anything except Disney actually existed.
When I was 12 and didn't want to listen to my Mom try to give me "the talk", my Dad sat me down to watch "Barbarella" with him. When it was over, he asked me if I had any questions about sex. I shook my head and wandered off, very confused. I still love Duran Duran though. Thanks Dad.
Mom would have been happiest if Shirley Temple movies were my only media experiences. When I was in college she wanted to see "White Knights", because of Baryshnikov, so I took her for her birthday. It was the first R rated movie she had ever seen. I had been telling HER not to watch things because they might upset HER since I was going to the movies with Dad at 7.