samwell iv, asos / sansa i, affc.

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

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🪼

Andulka
ojovivo

shark vs the universe
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
styofa doing anything
Show & Tell
will byers stan first human second
Stranger Things
dirt enthusiast
todays bird
YOU ARE THE REASON
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Peter Solarz

Love Begins

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
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#extradirty

seen from France
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seen from Malaysia

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@empireofembers
samwell iv, asos / sansa i, affc.
when me and my trio haven't seen each other for while..
Person who wants to do stuff trapped in a body that needs to lie down
Florian and Jonquil mentioned in ASOIAF POV chapter count:
Sansa Stark: 5
Jon Snow: 2
Bran Stark: 1
Brienne of Tarth: 1
Jaime Lannister: 1
Tyrion Lannister: 1
do we think GRRM will be watching the dreadful? i'd like to imagine him tuning in since he is a fan of gothic romance after all..
I just remembered that part in ACOK where Jeor Mormont is talking to Jon about Aerys I and he mistakenly believes Aelinor was Aerys' sister-wife but is in fact, as we know it, his cousin. I truly believe George put that there for a specific reason and I think we all know why, lol..
Will and El being spiderman and spiderwoman and Mike and Max are their respective MJ's
this is lowkirkenuinely going to send me into psychosis
Honestly, the fact that the Duffers sort of implied that this is all some kind of schizophrenic vision from Mike in the last scene (i dont believe them bc what the fuck) and the fact that he doesn't know that the painting is from Will makes me believe that the reason he imagines her saying this is because he still thinks the painting is from her. In actuality, it's Will that would say all of this but he has no idea.
But also.... i think the Duffers forgot that the painting's from Will too
mike wheeler not being gay kind of makes him gayer. does this make sense
imagine creating a show supposedly centered around nonconformity and then making your characters conform so bad in the finale that your fanbase makes a theory called CONFORMITY GATE
biggest byler proof atp is that we still don't know how mike feels going into the very last episode. in a story where love is the thing that saves the day repeatedly. idk man you can call me delusional but i'm still at the restaurant
genuinely cannot wait to witness the Great Tumblr Crashout after these two boys kiss on our screens
How obvious?
A meta-analysis on Robin and Will's conversation about queer "signals"
Okay, I love this scene, and not just because it features Will and Robin discreetly discussing the nuances of queer romance.
I love this scene as a writer specifically, due to it's clever and subtle use of authorial intrusion disguised as character dialogue.
Authorial intrusion
Through authorial intrusion, the author/s can address the audience intimately, even under the guise of an existing character. It allows the author/s to communicate directly to the audience; commenting on the narrative, stating an opinion, or posing a question. It doesn't require a breaking of the fourth wall. It's similar to author or audience surrogacy. For example, Steve often acts as an audience surrogate in the series — the "simple" voice who asks questions which prompt exposition (usually from Dustin or Nancy), clarifying the plot.
Will and Robin’s scene is certainly seeking clarity, but it isn’t about exposition. It’s about introspection.
So, what is the alleged moment of authorial intrusion in question? It's this simple (and incredibly meta) line from Will, who is this season's lead protagonist: "How obvious?"
Of course, what Will is referring to here is Robin's notion of signals, aka subtle flirtation or signs of mutual attraction — particularly through the lens of queerness, which can be more difficult to navigate and discern.
To provide a succinct summary, the scene plays out like this:
-> Will asks Robin how she knew Vicki wanted to date her. -> Robin says Vicki sent her subtle "signals" such as a brush of the knee, a bump of the elbow, or a shared look. -> These little things (compared to a snowball) accrued and eventually became "obvious." -> Will, acting as a stand-in for the authors, poses the ultimate question: "How obvious?"
This is an extremely "meta" line, because it's as if the authors are completing an exercise in writing a queer romance in real-time. Through this question, the writers are examining their own craft, and gently prompting us to join them.
Questioning the approach
The writers are pondering their own approach to Mike and Will's storyline; How obvious can we make it, or rather, how obvious should we make it? What is even considered "obvious" in this case? Is a shared look or lingering touch obvious, or not?
It's not a condescending question either — they're not saying you should find it obvious, and if not, you're an idiot.
It's not, "How obvious do we have to make it for you to get it, dammit?!" It's more like, "We've tried to lay down the foundation, but we're unsure if it will land. How can we make this work?"
And this is why it's a question worth asking — there's no clear, universal answer. The writers don't have a lot of material to draw upon. They've probably been pondering this question in the writer's room for awhile.
So, they want to know if their signals have been received, and if so, were those signals obvious or obscure? How obvious should they make it to land the plane?
Providing an answer
The funny thing is, although they're curious to know what the auidence thinks, it's not intended for us to answer — because they've already finished the script.
They've made up their minds concerning "how obvious" they wish to go, and what that looks like to them.
They declared their answer through Robin:
It will become an avalanche.
They've even provided us with a visual metaphor for their chosen technique:
-> The subtle, "little things" like shared looks are like snowballs. -> The snowball accrues and builds over time, gaining mass. -> Eventually, it becomes an avalanche; massive and sudden.
The visual metaphor here emphasizes mass and timing — if they do this, then they want it to feel crushingly heavy, and abrupt.
And although they want to make it as obvious as an avalanche, they don't want it to be obvious all the time, and they don't want to make it too predictable — because avalanches cannot be predicted, it's only possible to assess the risk or likelihood.
Will foreshadowed as the "receiver"
So, this question deserves a thematic answer, because it's been introduced as a story element which Will is keenly invested in — it's Chekhov's gun.
There was no point to including this scene unless we can expect to see a snowball turn into an avalanche. Otherwise, they've taught Will how to examine his love life only to... not give him a love life.
You don't tell a character to look for signals if you're not going to give them signals to pick up on. And curiously (yet not so curious, because it was intentional), Will has already been referred to as a receiver of signals.
Like, quite literally in the episode before this conversation took place, by the same exact person.
So according to Robin, Will is a receiver, because he has an antenna.
Antennae convert electric currents into radio waves, or vice versa. In that way, the role of Will's metaphorical antenna isn't just to pick up signals, it's to convert them into something meaningful.
To decode them.
Why does that sound familiar?
Ah! Because Robin is already an expert in decoding — she solved the Russian code in s3, after all.
She even explicitly states that the point of code is to communicate something sensitive.
This is a commentary on the queer experience: you have to be careful, subtle, and possibly even use another language (or "cant") if you want your message to be safely received. For example, gay men and women in the UK used to speak in a form of cant called Polari to identify each other when homosexuality was criminalized. (x).
Will and Mike seem to agree with Robin — some things are very hard to say outright, and out loud.
The signals are "queer code"
And yes, that is a play on words.
The queer signals must be decoded and therefore, they are a form of queer code. Furthermore, Robin makes a direct reference to the Enigma machine — a cipher device used by Nazi Germany during World War II.
Robin states that the Enigma machine "won the war" which is simplified phrasing. Perhaps what she means to say is that the Enigma code won the war — because cracking the code played a crucial role in the Allied victory.
In fact, Alan Turing's contributions to cracking the Enigma code as cryptanalyst were so instrumental that he was awarded an OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire).
Alan Turing was famously gay (and later persecuted for it), and also happens to be the historical figure Will chose as his "hero" for his history assignment in s4.
While shared looks, subtle lip glances, and the brushing of hands are all signals intended for Will to decode, these small "easter eggs" are signals for the audience.
Subtext and text which hints at Will's queerness — because as of Season 5 Volume I, he is still yet to claim his sexuality (even if it seems obvious to us).
This is queer-coding in practice. And yes, Mike receives his own fair share of coding too — just look at his ridiculous bedroom.
Where is this leading?
It's leading to gay romance, obviously.
Will receiving no signals simply isn’t narratively coherent. The story has already established him as the receiver and decoder of queer signals.
What I'm personally getting from this, dear reader, is that we have two possible outcomes before us:
Will experiences a fully developed on-screen romance with a new love interest, complete with subtle signs which eventually become obvious over a period of time.
Will continues to recieve signals from Mike, which culminate into an "avalanche" scene — the writers' attempt at making it "obvious."
It's not a question of, "will he receive signals?" It's a question of, "who is he going to receive signals from?"
I now pose the question to you: which of the two options feels more likely, considering the way the story has been written thus far, and the screentime we have left?
I think the answer seems obvious, but I guess I could be wrong. After all, the entire point of the question is that "obvious" is not so easy to define.
At least we know Will is going to get some use out of that "antenna" of his.
“We really need some magic up here” he said to the “magical radio receiver”
THE F*CKING RADIO TOWER BEHIND MIKE LMAO he’s broadcasting signals and he doesn’t even know it. Funny how the radio tower/station has been broken down this season and they’ve been having to connect some wires and reset the breakers…
can you imagine if there was a lumax love confession scene where dustin was in the background right behind max, and then he had to touch her back and encourage her to say i love you, and then when she finally told lucas she loved him the camera moved to focus on dustin looking upset… riiiiight
daily byler affirmations:
-no one writes slow burn rejections
-will's arc will only be complete if he gets the love he wants and deserves
-this season is about will
- finn and noah spent the most time with each other on set
- if byler doesn't happen it will be queerbaiting
the Duffers after: Noah and Millie confirmed the love triangle, Millie called a mlvn scene boring, Gaten subtly hinted at Byler, Noah said we'll be "hap- satisfied" about Byler getting together in s5, Millie said she wants people to see El as a human and not as a superhero, - never tear up apart by INXS (1987), Finn thinks this song represents Mike, this song is about doomed love, lifelong connection and a rare bond 🤨🏳️🌈 and Byler is gay and in the 80's in a homophobic smalltown post about it here
it's the fact that song played in the euphoria flashback of cal and derek kissing for the first time in the gay club in the 80s!!! that is huge to me!