niko and the sun.
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
wallacepolsom
occasionally subtle
Not today Justin

Janaina Medeiros
Misplaced Lens Cap

if i look back, i am lost
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
noise dept.

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sheepfilms

JBB: An Artblog!
art blog(derogatory)

Kiana Khansmith
Cosimo Galluzzi
Three Goblin Art

izzy's playlists!
Jules of Nature

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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

seen from Mexico
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@edbangingrobot
niko and the sun.
Daily affirmations for tesla owners: your car is ugly as hell and everyone hates you
Tbh I don't understand anyone who denies their favorite character's flaws and acts like they've never done anything wrong when that is like consistently the most interesting part of any character ever
Dont be very woried about me since i deserve all of this
[looking at people younger than me] you have your whole life ahead of you [looking at people older than me] you have your whole life ahead of you [looking at myself] its over
Babe wake up, new all time great image just dropped
i do have to say that no matter how shitty any sort of media is or how shitty your own creations are. always remember
can you put that thing on a leash?
𓎟𓎟 reblog this so you can make out with your f/o sloppy style on their couch .ᐟ
I will lock in tomorrow like nobody has ever locked in before
Out of Touch
Out of Touch Thursday
OUT OF TOUCH THURSDAY
but im out of my head when you’re not around…
happy birthday.
this is the only out of touch thursday you can reblog this
Hey, man, c'mere. Listen. Get in real close, this is important.
You're gonna make stuff again. You're gonna make stuff you're proud of. You're gonna make stuff you're excited to share. You're going to feel that overwhelming drive to create, not just the frantic I want to want to you're stuck in now. You're going to have awesome ideas, and you're going to make them into reality. You're going to create again. You're still an artist. You're still a writer. You're still home to the same passion you had before. You'll find it again. It's not gone. It's just resting. Let it rest. You're going to make stuff again. I promise.
you've met me at a very "yeah i'm trying to work on that" time in my life
99%
Oh John.
Moses Supposes
Running into this on my dash was like running into an old friend
Thats just what theater kids are like
What I’ve always loved about this bit is
a. this musical number comes completely out of nowhere, with no greater context than what this video captures; and
b. the language instructor clearly can’t hear the music. He’s not from Musical Theatre Land. From his perspective, a couple of twinkle-toed weirdos just randomly decided to physically abuse him for three solid minutes. This isn’t reading anything that’s not intended into the scene – it’s literally the central gag.
@thebibliosphere in case you need some ridiculous Singin’ in the Rain on your dash.
(P.S. I imagined you making the faces at the instructor and it was hilarious)
I can but aspire to the level of expressiveness Cosmo Brown has with his face.
If you have ADHD and a manic episode this is what your brain does
@hotvintagepoll Donald O'Connor propaganda like look at him go he’s amazing the energy the skill the nonsense of it all
Every time I see this I strongly disagree with @prokopetz’s claim that the main, intentional gag is that the language tutor can’t hear the music—the joke is that this is simply what it’s like to have a best friend with a joke to share. Cosmo and Don could speak this number and it would have the same intent in the story—it wouldn’t be as incredible or clear, but it would still convey that Cosmo and Don have a tremendous amount of love and fun between them.
Singin’ in the Rain uses its musical numbers one of two ways: they are either songs performed in-universe as real musical numbers by or for Monumental Pictures, or they are used as extra-universe expressions of fondness between characters. Lena doesn’t have a big villain number. RF never sings about the weight of running a Hollywood studio. Songs—outside the ones everyone in-universe knows are being sung—are a secret language between Don, Cosmo, and Kathy. It’s a subtle meta structure that boosts the narrative impact of Don, Cosmo, and Kathy as people who genuinely like each other and connect in a way outside studio system politics. Look at the purely intimate songs that aren’t staged as studio numbers:
Make ‘Em Laugh—Cosmo is connecting with Don, trying to cheer him up
You Were Meant For Me—Don is connecting with Kathy, beginning their romance
Moses Supposes—Don and Cosmo are connecting as friends by making fun of the same thing
Good Morning—Don, Cosmo, and Kathy are connecting as friends who just shared an all-nighter and came up with a new idea
Singin’ in the Rain—Don is singing because of his connection with Kathy, having just shared a kiss with her
It’s also important to note that some songs transition from in-universe studio numbers to more personal songs—All I Do Is Dream of You is seen by everyone at the house party as a planned musical number, but for Don it’s the first time he really sees Kathy past their spat in the car. Would You is in-universe a song from The Dancing Cavalier, but it transforms into a personal connection song as Don sings it to Kathy at the premiere.
I’m bringing all this up because this is an exceptional way to use musical structure. It’s de rigueur to insist that every musical song further the story, but that’s typically taken to mean that the songs contribute to the plot. Singin’ in the Rain doesn’t do that. Instead, it uses its musical numbers —where it places them, who sings them, who “sees” them—to convey the emotional story, to subtly clue you in on who in this story really matters, who is really connected and really loving each other. It matters that the Hollywood studios are shifting from a silent system to a musical system that Cosmo, Don, and Kathy already naturally speak with, and it matters that these three are, or become, so comfortable with this change that it saves them. They are the only people in this story who shift easily between numbers planned for them by the studio and singing straight out of nowhere. Their songs are their way of sharing something with each other, to the point that the songs and their love for each other merge into the same thing—which is why it feels so right when singing (connecting) becomes the norm for Hollywood by the end of the movie.
Singin’ in the Rain is often thought of as the best musical ever made, and it’s not because the songs are throwaway gags—if that were true, it would be like every other songbook musical that commits to a joke for one song and then forgets it. The songs in Singin’ in the Rain reinforce the strength and love shared between our main three heroes, and constantly recontextualize what it means to shift from one worldview—the artificial lie of the silent movies and singing for other people—to a new one, where conveying love for another person is seen and heard by everyone. I said earlier the songs are about showing fondness, or connection—which is true—but if I’m being honest, I think Singin’ in the Rain is really about sharing joy with another person. It’s about the joy of being with someone you love.
(@silvermarmoset)