What are they talking about 🧐
i don't do bad sauce passes
One Nice Bug Per Day
Monterey Bay Aquarium
hello vonnie
🪼

⁂
sheepfilms

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

blake kathryn

if i look back, i am lost
Today's Document
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Game of Thrones Daily
d e v o n

No title available
Peter Solarz
Xuebing Du

izzy's playlists!
occasionally subtle

★

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands
seen from Canada
seen from Canada

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from New Zealand
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

seen from United States
@clikesfandomstuff
What are they talking about 🧐
we did a collab project of redrawing a chapter from tbhk and its finally out!! you can look at it on twt account @/tbhk_collabs
Rip Minamoto Teru you would have loved picky pads
do u think their eyes being inverted means anything or nah
hi, i love dynamics that r like “we make each other worse” on the surface but when u look deeper it is actually just “we understand each other on a level that no one else does and nudge each other out of our typical comfort zone” which just circles around to “we make each other better”. it’s abt the accidental growth just by being in each other’s lives. idk
no one is doing it like bingqiu (svsss tpmeme 3/?)
Yuri as a genre has been built around a set of tropes and styles and motifs, you can watch a show where someone may not explicitly say "i am a lesbian for you" but you know these girls are in love because of how it plays with the standards and archetypes of the genre that were established decades ago. So it always annoys me when people do this whole "is it yuri or just vibes" thing. Im sorry they're not scissoring on screen but I promise you yuri is still yuri.
Absolutely true.
I’d like people to consider for a moment, also, what good drawing lines about what is “real yuri” and “not yuri” really does.
Secondly, as much as I hate to say it- because this phrase is often used as a cudgel for people to deny queer romance- there are genuinely some cultural considerations at play when it comes to yuri. And all of these are a part of the very fabric of the genre.
There is an age where having baby crushes and infatuations for other girls is expected to be left behind, but (historically, at least) a blind eye was turned to relationships between young girls. Yuri takes place in- and is sheltered by- the ambiguity of girl’s relationships, and the casual intimacy girls are allowed to have with each other. It lives in the uncertainty, in testing the boundaries, in trying to feel out if the feelings the other girl has are the same. It is both a veil of protection, and a veil of obfuscation. Yuri takes place in absence and in allegory- but that does not make it any less real.
This puts yuri anime in a unique position, on a corporate level, where any affiliated company- let’s say Bandai, for example- can deny any overt support of LGBTQ rights by stating a relationship between two women is “up to viewer interpretation,” which is beneficial for their bottom line. If you’re versed in the language, you know what the interpretation is intended to be. It’s extremely clear!
But this sort of public stance of a company insisting it’s “up to interpretation” often leads to Certain Types of western anime fans crowing “see! They aren’t lesbians!” and people who didn’t watch it to write it off as “queerbaiting.”
When that happens, I can’t help but be reminded of my own coming out, and people’s insistence that “you can’t be sure you’re a lesbian, you’ve never been with a man before.”
And while I’m not saying you’re doing the same thing by saying “I don’t think these two anime girls are REAL gays because they didn’t Prove It,” I am asking, “why does Proving It matter so much to you?”
It is also worth noting that the ambiguous intimacy of girls' relationships has historically been used to subvert censorship in order to tell stories about queer love. Michiko Suzuki’s wonderful paper “Writing Same-Sex Love: Sexology and Literary Representation in Yoshiya Nobuko's Early Fiction,” examines the early work of Yoshiya Nobuko, a writer who pioneered the Class S genre of which contemporary yuri is a descendant. In the paper, Suzuki contextualizes Yoshiya’s work by laying out the prevailing beliefs among the Japanese intelligentsia related to sexuality and how her stories quietly defied the expected norms of young women’s literature in subtle, yet profound ways.
During the late Meiji period and into the Taishō and Shōwa periods (basically, the pre-war 20th century), it was widely understood that a deep level of emotional intimacy between teenage girls was not only acceptable but considered healthy for their emotional development. Homosexuality between women was only a problem if it became too sexual or if it persisted after high school and into the age at which women should be married. Thus, there was space within the largely homophobic world of Japanese print media for stories that depicted deeply intimate relationships between teenage girls. These were supposed to be didactic narratives that both valourized the acceptable parts of these relationships (emotional development, social education, etc) while downplaying the existence of unacceptable levels of homosexulity. Their aim was to teach girls that emotional intimacy was a good but temporary thing to be indulged as a sort of practice for when they left the environment of the all-girls school for their marital home.
Suzuki argues that, on first blush, Yoshiya’s work fits this mold perfectly. The relationships between the girls in her Hanamonogatari (Flower Tales) all centre around a virtue that can be learned through the relationship in question. Further, the relationships in these stories always have definite endings and often tragic ones. Unrequited love, illness, and death always intervene to separate rate the girls from one another. These ending are suggestive of a warning against growing too attached to these fleeting, youthful feelings. Suzuki writes:
The girls in Flower Tales are extremely melancholy, overwhelmed with tears; they are nostalgic, not only for the past but also already for their own girlhood that will inevitably come to an end. They are in a continuous state of mourning for the loss of the same-sex world; as a character from the tale "Shiro mokuren" (White Magnolia) notes about her life after graduating from higher girls' school, "I was happiest when I was in school—having entered the real world, there is nothing but loneliness." (Suzuki 2006, 582)
It is in these stories, the girls often do not grow up and leave the all-girls school. They die young before ever having had to taste the outside world and its compulsory heterosexuality. As the above quote suggests, those who do survive leave a part of themselves in that edenic garden of their youth. These reoccuring motifs in Yoshiya’s work have been identified by critics as being indicative of a resistance to the very mainstream narratives that her work seems to play into. Again, to quote Suzuki:
Flower Tales simultaneously re-presents mainstream assumptions about same-sex love in youth while resisting simplistic notions of purity, innocence, and the "normal" transitory relationship. By reiterating acceptable views of the sentimental romantic friendship, these stories could be published en masse by mainstream publishers eager to supply girl readers, a newly emergent consumer base for age/gender-specific fiction. At the same time, however, Flower Tales opens up resistant modes of interpretation, allowing readers to see same-sex love and girlhood in new ways, to question compulsory heterosexual development and ideas about female adolescence. The narrative content (histoire) of these stories offers such possibilities for resistance, not only through the girls' nostalgia for their youth and refusal to grow up but also by the overwhelming tragedies (death, suicide, disease) that are repeated in every story. This excessive dysphoria can be considered through Homi Bhabha's theorization of melancholia, not as passivity (or internal prohibition) but as resistance through repetition for subaltern voices (see Bhabha 1992, pp. 65-66; Butler 1997, p. 190). The recurring tragic drama of "normal" same-sex love, repeated in the serialized stories and book publications, underscores the subversive aspects of girlhood and highlights the oppressive nature of a society that demands compliance through heterosexual maturity. This repetition transforms same-sex love beyond a temporary phase and redefines this experience and girlhood as key aspects of female identity. These stories enable girls and women to explore alternative ways of reading such relationships without overtly transgressing the boundaries of social acceptability. Yoshiya describes Flower Tales as a "bouquet," a special gift of love from author to reader that continually underscores the importance of girlhood love; in book form, the dedicatory preface comments: "The many flowers that bloom / in the dream of a young girl's days / that will never return, / these I send to you, my beloveds" (Yoshiya 1975, vol. 1, p. 5). (Suzuki 2006, 583)
In Yoshiya’s work we can see how prevailing homophobic views on same-sex relationships between girls play into and inform resistance to those views. The tropes that today define yuri have their origin in both. So when we see these tropes in contemporary media, it is worth remembering that they inherit this legacy of subversiveness. Whether the authors are conscious of this or not, simply playing into yuri tropes means drawing on that legacy. In my humble opinion as an amateur (FOR NOW) scholar of the genre makes Bandai’s statement somewhat ironic. If you’re leaving a relationship that draws on yuri tropes ‘up to interpretation’ then the history of the tropes suggests there really is only one conclusion to draw. Moreover, that they originate with an author who was using them to subvert the expectations of homophobic publishers and critics makes it all the more amusing. Going out of your way to deny the inherent queerness of a story that uses these tropes really only serves to reinforce their meaning to those who understand the tropes. There truly is nothing new under the sun.
Works cited:
Michiko Suzuki, “Writing Same-Sex Love: Sexology and Literary Representation in Yoshiya Nobuko's Early Fiction,” in The Journal of Asian Studies, vol. 65, No. 3 (Aug 2006): 575-599. Author’s note: This paper is excellent and worth a read. I absolutely will under no circumstances send a PDF copy to anyone who wants to read it. You simply should not message me if you want to read it because I will not send you my PDF copy. ;)
why does this have 32k notes? it’s just a picture of a knife in a ranch bottle, is there some unspoken joke that 32 thousand people share? what is going on here, i dont get it. it’s just a fucking picture of a knife in a ranch bottle. is there some spiritual connection people have to this picture? is there some ominous and mystical reasoning that this has 32 thousand notes? do people reblog this because it makes them look like some indie blogger? or is there just something funny to this? someone please explain
no one tell him
This is it, lads. The post that started us on this path 9 years ago.
I sure hope no one told him.
@hellsite-hall-of-fame
the fact that people sat down to make a sick af skateboarding anime, then someone said "but wait, make it for the gays" and now we get to have renga, matchablossom, and awesome skateboarding in one whole show
we are truly, truly gifted
Every 21st century piece of writing advice: Make us CARE about the character from page 1! Make us empathize with them! Make them interesting and different but still relatable and likable!
Every piece of classic literature: Hi. It's me. The bland everyman whose only purpose is to tell you this story. I have no actual personality. Here's the story of the time I encountered the worst people I ever met in my life. But first, ten pages of description about the place in which I met them.
Modern writing advice: Yes your protagonist should have flaws but ultimately we should root for them and like them from the beginning :)
Charles Dickens: Here is the worst ugliest rudest meanest nastiest bitch you’ve ever met in your life.
Modern writing advice: Make sure your POV character goes through a significant arc! Make sure they are changed by the narrative! Make sure they learn a lesson!
Narrators of every book of the 19th century: the lesson I learned is these people fucking suck, sayonara you freaks
Modern writing advice: It’s all about the character overcoming obstacles and learning! They learn their lesson so they can fix their mistakes and make good choices in the future! It’s a character arc! It’s called growth! Readers love it!
Everyone from ancient times through the 19th century: would you like to watch a Guy fuck up twenty times in a row
breaking my silence Zuko and Sokka should never have been in that sun/moon poll to begin with there is not a celestial bone in those bodies. dating the moon doesnt count thats like moon nepotism. "Sun and Moon pairing" girl thats not Sun and Moon thats Tabasco Sauce and Beef Jerky. thats Legos and Fidget Spinner. idc I stand by this.
the hardest lines ALWAYS come from ao3 fanfics and I stand by this
Mostly thanks to @emilyelizabethfowl (their reblog contains many of the fic links!! thank u sm) and a few deep dives into my ao3 history, the sources of the quotes have mostly all been recovered! I apologise for not posting them all with proper credit originally, I truly didn't think the post would blow up so much, but the lesson is very much learned :) enjoy!
- number 1 is another merthur fic, called Destiny Ordered You To Die, But I Willed You To Live by ironfamjam (apparently also appears in Filling the gaps, a spiderman fic by the same author!)
-The klance one (number 2) is from reach out for you (break these walls) by Paladin-Pile (UserFromPluto)
- number 3 is a batman fic called Home (jason centered) by Daisybirb
- number 4 is a zukka fic by I'm Not Angry Anymore by team_avatars_eyebags
- two are from The Art Of Burning by hella1975, an amazing ongoing atla following zuko (also zukka but it hasn't quite happened yet) - numbers 5 and 9 to be exact
- number 6 is a hualian fic called No paths are bound by cataclysmic_calamity (originally a thread fic but also fully uploaded on ao3)
- number 7 is a merthur fic called tell me every terrible thing you ever did (and let me love you anyway) by Stardustwrites17 (the quote is also originally from a poem by Sade Andria Zabala or Edgar Allen poe apparently)
- The batman one (number 8) is from Nature and Nurture by lurkinglurkerwholurks
- number 10 is from a steddie fic called let me know (everythings alright) by bexiguess (had too dig deep to find this one - the stranger things phase last summer was no joke 😭)
ALSO there is now a part 2 !! (which I swear is better organized)
obsessed with the way my robotics team lead talks
she’s reinventing hieroglyphics
She’s the only person who truly understands how emojis were meant to be used.
POV you are a tank
Sorry that wasn’t clear
anybody want to do some faggot shit like whos up for doing some faggot shit
Looks like fanfiction.net is gone. Probably should have backed up the fic I had there. Woops. Too late now.
Okay, this is very weird. The green leafy thing is what I’m seeing but apparently there are multiple people who can still access the site? I’m very confused right now.
www.fanfiction.net works, but fanfiction.net doesn’t
fanfiction.net is also literally just http://fanfiction.net.
Someone has done this on purpose
Signal boosting for everyone who got a horrible shock today: FFnet has not vanished. Someone just registered a near identical url, reminding us that the “www” matters and that they’re an asshole. >.<
ICYMI, there was fear that companies were scraping public AO3 fics to train their AI without the consent of AO3 or its users. That fear has been confirmed.
AO3 has written about what they’re doing (and what they’re not able to do), and they recommend restricting your work to AO3 registered users only. [Instructions here]
This gross misuse of the archive by techbros is why I’ve locked down my fics for the foreseeable future. I recommend the rest of you do the same.
@lordoftherazzles made a quick guide for ao3 authors to lock all their works at once for registered users only here!
Someone recently messaged me worried I’d deleted all my fic - it’s all still there, it’s just locked to A03 because of this and other skimming instances.
Please note that many fanfic authors are locking their stories so that they are only accessible to registered Ao3 users.
They’re still there at Ao3. The authors have made this choice to protect their work from misuse/AI scanning.