Jimmy why is your love language wanting to use her toothbrush as she's using it
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@believe-the-lie
Jimmy why is your love language wanting to use her toothbrush as she's using it
Some mcwexler sexytimes because I miss them. Full picture (NSFW) here: https://archiveofourown.org/works/59575318
IMPORTANT: TUMBLR HAS MADE A DEAL WITH MIDJOURNEY/OPENAI.
YOUR ART AND IMAGES ON TUMBLR ARE BEING USED TO TRAIN AI MODELS.
The opt-in is automatic, but you can turn it off in settings.
Go to "Blog Settings" -> "Visibility" -> "Third-Party Sharing" and turn on "Prevent third-party sharing for [blog]". (This post shows how to do it on browser and on mobile.) You need to do this with every sideblog. (Note: The option in settings might not appear if your app hasn't updated yet. You can still opt out via browser.)
Spread the word. Everyone on Tumblr needs to know about this.
you’re the kind of lawyer guilty people draw
screencap redraw to cope with mcwexler depression 💙
You keep talking about the origins of AO3 as this group effort by an actual group of people who were friends and who spent time discussing this with each other in person. It's kind of blowing my mind. Is there a post or a journal somewhere that specifically keeps record of this?
--
I'm dying.
Nonnie, seriously?
No, that's mean, I know you're serious. It's just flabbergasting how much fandom has expanded and how much there isn't a direct link to the past.
Astolat and Cesperanza floated the idea at Vividcon and various places, I think, though I wasn't going to cons in that era. We were all on LJ in those days, and Astolat made a big post nailing her theses to the door. Discussion in the comments was instant and prolonged.
A LJ com was set up to discuss. It was later renamed to otw_news, but if you go all the way back to the beginning, you can see brainstorming mess instead of official news posts.
Fanlore page linking to Astolat's post and giving a little context.
Early brainstorming: https://otw-news.livejournal.com/2007/05/
For example, here I am collecting links to older archives to look at for research when designing AO3.
Fun fact, we never intended to call it AO3. There was a whole call for name suggestions, but nothing was as evocative as astolat's original post title referencing Virginia Woolf. (For those who haven't thought about it, AO3's name is a reference to A Room of One's Own.)
Here's the name discussion
Here's the poll that came out of it
But also notice how many people voted: 562.
That's how many people cared at the time: a few hundred. Maybe a thousand if you count lurkers, but frankly, that community was not as lurkery as now. It wasn't just ten friends. It was a community effort. But what "our" community looked like at the time was vastly different. It was six degrees of Kevin Bacon astolat, not a vast sea of strangers like fic fandom on AO3 is now.
Here's an early post suggesting we ban the under 18s from the site entirely. Pity we didn't do so, given the rise of antis.
Here's the invite to a fundraising party at astolat's in NYC that following Halloween. I dressed as Amanda from Highlander, not very well.
You can tell we knew each other by looking at those comments on astolat's initial post. You can also tell how discussion-based that part of fandom was back in 2007.
The way my tumblr is now with a ton of text, back and forth, and hopping around between threads of conversation, all featuring a consistent set of faces, is very much like LJ. Most of tumblr is not.
This is important info to put out there, and I constantly forget that "fandom" as it is now is nothing like the community we had then. This is a good resource for understanding what was going on with the creation of AO3 in particular, but it's also a great example of why older fans say that we miss the Livejournal era of fandom so much.
AO3 is the result of long discussions, hard work, and a dedicated community of fans. Though it isn't is a social media site (and it was never intended to be), it is the only place now that sometimes feels like how the fannish community used to be on LJ--when a good discussion gets going in the comments on a story. But AO3 is for fanfiction et al, and therefore is limited in discussion subjects.
(The ads you'll encounter if you follow those links, though? Did not exist when we were there and were one of the reasons we abandoned the site--not the most important reasons by a long shot as you'll understand if you read more about why AO3 was created, but they were a factor.)
We were a collection of communities, with some-to-significant overlap in members. Fanfiction writers were not "content creators," and people who didn't write fanfiction were not "the lucky audience who should be soooooooooooo grateful that writers deigned to gift us with their incredible talent." We knew each other. Many of us met each other IRL after meeting through fandom (once fandom shifted to the internet there was some hesitancy at first about meeting "online" friends, but that was quickly gotten over). We went to conventions together. We had lunch and dinner and parties and meet-ups IRL outside of conventions.
If you take a wander around from even just that one LJ community (click on a username to check out their personal LJ), you can see how discussions would branch off without excluding anyone the way they do on Tumblr. If you wanted to share something you saw on someone else's LJ, you just linked to it, and people followed the link to read it and join in the discussion (or just lurk). The force of Tumblr splintering is an active barrier to creating real communities.
I really miss LJ. I miss the connection I felt to my community there.
#fandom is supposed to be a community -- not a two-tiered system of sellers and buyers
Yup.
Flashback time. I (heidi) came on board in July, 2007; in May of 2007, LJ's then-owners, SixApart, banned a number of fanfic communities including Pornish Pixies, which played a role in some of the discussions about having a site where there would be ownership of the servers, so fandom wouldn't be at the mercy of third parties who changed policies with some capriciousness and, occasionally, less notice.
Now I (heidi) enjoy that my kids (who are now all now young adults) read and post on AO3, and that they won't tell me what their usernames are.
pretty sure the name An Archive of Our Own was actually suggested in irc by boosette. It was thoroughly embraced by the community but it was definitely boo who came up with it.
One thing that I don't think people realise is that these vast multi-fandom archives that we take for granted were all started by a tiny handful of people and in many cases run out of pocket to pay for bandwidth and servers etc.
Xing Li created fanfiction.net because he wanted as a programmer to build something scalable that he believed had a place in the world and would grow. The only reason that it began using banner advertising was because it quite literally was costing too much to run for him to pay on his own, as he was a university student at the time.
The original automated archive script that astolat wrote that was used for glass onion and various single-fandom archives allowed archives to be automated which was a very big deal.
previously an archivist would have to format submissions and update all of the HTML every time there was a new story. I did this for a solid decade, in countless fandoms, and this was simply the norm as we migrated from fanfiction primarily being distributed via letter zines and fanzines to being posted on Usenet to being posted on mailing lists and then archived on FTP sites and then finally websites.
(so if you are feeling like you want to tour the Stone Age, all of the fan fiction archives that I created and maintained back in the '90s through the mid aughts are still online, they're just no longer updated. But you can swing by loony-archivist.com for the lion's share of them.)
everything starts because there is a need, and there are people who step up to fulfill that need.
granted, 99% of the time new technology is first embraced by early adopters, popularised by pornography, and then embraced by the masses sometime later.
fandom by and large has always been part of the early adopters group. (not that you would know it from the way some people talk about the history of fandom.)
however all of this is covered at length in the fanlore wiki which is out there for everyone's edification, and I highly recommend it.
(Also, never forget the part that gopher played in the early days before FTP sites!)
Better Call Saul is just a show about orange cat behaviour
Destructive lust for life erected, on the verge pricked up like a picket
fearing to respond to the tempting but malevolent call of the other side
Slippin' Kimmy appreciation post. <3
Happy birthday, Kim!
this is MY emmy winner 🏆 💖
quick better call saul studies
i like when i click the author of a mcwexler fic and i see the x-files listed. like yeah that's how it's supposed to be
It’s her saying: “I see you. And I know you see me.” Which, I think, is the profound connection that they always had—that they felt seen by each other, to their depths. And she’s letting him know: “I see the person you really are, and I always knew you were still in there.” There’s still love there. There’s pain, there’s tragedy. It’s hello, it’s goodbye—to, at least, a chapter of their lives. [...] I wanted that moment to be that she’s saying: “There’s still a connection. There always will be.” [...] I feel like she’s letting him know… I mean, there’s a lot. It’s incredibly painful to leave him there. To not take him in the car with me. But I think she thinks that they do have a future, and that he has a future. Both by the fact that they both decided to unburden themselves and free their conscience and also… You know, I’m a hopeless romantic, so I personally think she’s gonna start trying to figure out how to decrease his sentence. But legally, not in a scam. x
It felt right. The great thing about it is it doesn’t say, "nothing’s changed." It says something else. Because, boy, the circumstances that those two people are in couldn’t be more different. But on the other hand, they’re still… You know, I don’t think they’re ever gonna be finished with each other. I think these are two people who mean a lot to each other. No matter how much they’re seeing of each other, I think that they’re gonna live their lives in relation to each other, until the very end. x
one year since jimmy returned to his true north
510 Something Unforgivable / 609 Fun and Games
How to break up with the love of your life.
Jimmy wanders out of the elevator landing and heads for the parked cars. But when he comes across Kim, he's neither startled nor embarrassed. Instead, he joins her. / There's a CLICK and the heavy door opens. The CO maneuvers Jimmy inside. Jimmy stops in his tracks at the sight of Kim Wexler. She's waiting for him.
“No matter what the future brings, there’s something between these two that will never end.”
Better Call Saul 6.13 “Saul Gone”
written by Peter Gould
“This is the guy she fell in love with.”
Better Call Saul 6.13 “Saul Gone”
written by Peter Gould