Austin: But, after all, for every inside there is an outside. No disaster was the first of its kind.
*music fades in*
Me:

roma★
AnasAbdin
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

No title available

@theartofmadeline

Kaledo Art
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
todays bird
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

JVL
d e v o n

Love Begins
No title available
KIROKAZE

Discoholic 🪩
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Janaina Medeiros
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany
seen from Italy
seen from Sweden
seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Macao SAR China
seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Finland
seen from Canada

seen from Austria

seen from Malaysia
seen from Macao SAR China
@chalkdoors
Austin: But, after all, for every inside there is an outside. No disaster was the first of its kind.
*music fades in*
Me:
Interviewer: where do you see yourself in 5 years?
Me: I used escapist fantasies as a coping mechanism to get through years of trauma and therefore never learned how to plan for a real life future
Alternatively: I went through periods of depression so frequent and intense that I never considered that I’d actually make it to my 20s so now I’m kinda just making it up as I go
Griffin McElroy wrote this
@chalkdoors
oh god
@skywalkerangst
In Flight Meal
Link lives by the old Klingon proverb that revenge is a dish best served airborne.
TricksyWizard.com
Patreon.com/TricksyWizard
“The barbie franchise enforces gender stereotypes”
Ken is literally a trophy husband to a successful rich beautiful business woman but okay go off I guess
makin this come back around again bc happy birthday barbie u intelligent gorgeous woman
This is why people keep saying we should eat the rich, just in case you were wondering
why DO teenage girls go through a witch/occult phase? I had tarot cards and a spellbook and I knew a group of girls who messed with ouija boards and another who had ghost hunting equipment. “oh yeah Cindy’s just going through that girly phase where she tries to raise the dead.”
theory - we want power and know our culture doesn’t want to give us any?
Addendum: witches are one of the few cultural figures of female empowerment that don’t derive their power from their relationship to a man.
Galaxy brain: all women have suppressed magic inside them waiting to be unleashed
Any character on Lost™️: *gets killed off*
Me, choking back tears: this is so sad, Alexa play you all everybody
LOST + text posts part 97
Airport security: sir, you can’t take that onto the plane
John Locke: but these are my emotional support knives
I can not believe that Lost was so diverse but there was not a single LGBTQ characters. But being first aired 2004 i think it was a big step to have such a diverse cast like they had in Lost.
I just did a research project on Lost for a communications class and actually the diversity was one piece of what led to Lost’s phenomenal success, and a HUGE reason for its global success. People loved having a show like Lost (which was unique for its time in MANY ways) that wasn’t about any one culture or (real) place. People all over the world could see themselves reflected in those characters, which was definitely not something many (if any) shows could say at the time. What other show from the early 2000s not only featured characters from Korea, the United States, Iraq, Brazil, Australia, France, Spain, the U.K., and Nigeria and showed the characters living their lives in these locations, but also featured countless scenes in languages other than English? For much of the early show, before (spoiler) it’s revealed that Sun learned English, the Kwons speak exclusively in Korean (and those who refer to them as anything other than Korean are swiftly called out by other characters) and continue to speak to each other in Korean long after Sun’s secret gets out. Richard Alpert’s flashback scenes are almost entirely in Spanish. Hugo Reyes is bilingual and speaks Spanglish with his family. Danielle Rousseau soeaks French, leaves her distress signal in French to be loosely translated by a feazzled American girl who spent a year “drinking, not studying!” in Paris. Mr. Eko is shown speaking Swahili with his brother and others in flashbacks.
Even many modern shows don’t measure up to the diversity in LOST.
Ben Linus in every Lost episode ever: *is lying and tricking Locke*
John Locke every time he’s tricked: