please god let chatgpt die out like nfts did. With a fast and graceless fall into irrelevancy
Like to charge, reblog to cast.
This spell has a very low hit ratio, so we need a lot of us to do it.

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@fandomirregular
please god let chatgpt die out like nfts did. With a fast and graceless fall into irrelevancy
Like to charge, reblog to cast.
This spell has a very low hit ratio, so we need a lot of us to do it.
when I choose the most popular response in a subjective tumblr poll: oh hell yeah I chose the correct response. I am going to get a good grade in tumblr poll, a thing that is normal to want and possible to achieve.
when I choose the least popular response in a subjective tumblr poll: I am a tastemaker. a trailblazer. avant-garde. the uncultured masses cannot fathom the secret depths of my genius.
One thing I’ve seen happens in this fandom- and honestly sometimes in real life discussions about Hudson too- is that people end up flattening all POC experiences into one universal experience.
Race absolutely matters. Racism absolutely exists. But different racial groups are stereotyped in different ways, and those stereotypes can produce completely different social expectations.
For example, I’ve seen people criticize Rachel and Jacob for joking about Hudson being unintelligent because he’s a person of color. If Hudson were Black, I would understand that criticism more, because there is a long history of anti-Black stereotypes portraying Black people as unintelligent. But Hudson is Asian. Asian men are stereotyped in almost the opposite way. They’re often assumed to be intelligent, studious, and academically successful. The stereotype is still racist, but it’s a different stereotype. It doesn’t suddenly become an anti-Asian stereotype just because we’ve replaced “Asian” with the broader category of “POC.”
The same thing happens constantly in fanfiction with Shane.
A lot of writers portray Shane as being afraid to fight because he knows he’ll be judged more harshly than white players. I understand where that idea is coming from, but as a black person I’ve never found it particularly convincing.
If Shane were black, that analysis would make more sense to me. Black men are often stereotyped as aggressive, which means behavior that is considered acceptable from white athletes is often interpreted differently when black ones do it.
But asian men occupy a very different place in the racial imagination. They’re frequently stereotyped as passive, non-threatening, weak, nerdy, emasculated, etc. If racial stereotypes were influencing Shane’s approach to hockey, I could just as easily imagine the opposite dynamic: feeling pressure to prove he’s aggressive enough to belong. Maybe he’s fighting TOO much.
But that doesn’t make sense for Shane. He’s the league’s golden boy. He’s polite, media-friendly, and heavily inspired by Sidney Crosby. He’s a superstar. Fighting is often delegated to players lower on the depth chart whose role is specifically to provide physicality. Star players generally aren’t expected to be enforcers. Teams usually want their elite talent scoring goals, not sitting in the penalty box after dropping the gloves.
So Shane not fighting much doesn’t strike me as evidence of racial pressure. It strikes me as evidence that he’s Shane Hollander.
Crosby is a useful comparison here. For years, people mocked him for not being physical enough (and for talking to the refs too much). They questioned his toughness and masculinity. They called him “Crybaby Crosby” or “Cindy Crosby.” Fans edited photos of him in dresses or makeup. The criticism wasn’t really about hockey. The joke was that he wasn’t a “real man.”
And that’s a white player.
Imagine how much worse those conversations could become if the player in question were Asian.
That’s the kind of racial dynamic I could actually see affecting Shane, not him worrying about people thinking he’s too aggressive, but people questioning whether aggressive ENOUGH.
There’s a good chance that if Shane fought exactly like many white players, he probably still wouldn’t be viewed as tough enough. Meanwhile, if a Black player fought exactly like those same white players, he might be interpreted as more aggressive.
People often criticize Rachel for not doing much racial analysis in the books. But sometimes fandom fills that gap with racial analysis that feels disconnected from both hockey culture and the specific stereotypes that affect different racial groups.
Not every POC experience is interchangeable.
A stereotype that affects Black athletes is not automatically a stereotype that affects Asian athletes. A stereotype that affects Latino athletes is not automatically a stereotype that affects Indigenous athletes.
If we’re going to talk about race- and we should- we have to talk about the actual racial dynamics at play, not just substitute “person of color” for a more specific analysis.
Sometimes no racial analysis is better than bad racial analysis.
The thing about Ilya and Shane is that they would look back.
Some old fart retired hockey player goes on ESPN and does an interview where he talks about how gay DEI initiatives are unfair and are ruining Hockey by keeping the good ole boys from getting their chance to prove themselves on the ice.
Ilya, as the captain of the gayest NHL team, is asked for comment on this. Of course, this is half way through the season while the Cens are sitting first in their division and second in the league. So Ilya says, “Ah, yes, I can see how he would think that. It seems unfair that being queer is clearly such an advantage for hockey players. We are just much better players, and having so many of us on one team, while very fun and nice for us, does seem to be putting us above everyone else in the standings. Perhaps more teams could play well if they had gay players? The Admirals are okay, but they only have one and we have four, so it is not quite fair.”
There is a rampant debate online over whether Ilya actually understands that the original comments were homophobic or if he genuinely believes that people think gay guys are too good at hockey. People also start speculating about who the fourth gay player is because Luca hasn’t actually come out publicly yet.
Scott Hunter has to put out a statement that he doesn’t believe his homosexuality has had any impact, positive or negative, on his athletic ability even though he believes being out of the closet and in a fulfilling relationship has made it easier to focus on the game.
Troy posts a tweet that just says “got gayer and got better”
Shane puts up a post with pictures of every time he won the Stanley cup and the caption “I’ve been gay the whole time and I’ve been great the whole time” with a shrug emoji.
Hudson Williams, #1 Shane Understander
I think Shane was a character who, soon as I read him, made all the sense to me. I felt immediately a kinship and an ownership over Shane. I was like, “I need to be the only person to tell this story. I get it. I want to be the person to be Shane and I want to spend time with him.” [x]
(sources below)
let's play a game
when you watch bridgerton season 3 and 4, you take a shot everytime something happens that even remotely says "ANTHONY SHOULD HAVE BEEN THERE FOR THIS"
i guarantee you will be drunk very quickly
Melania: Devourer of Men
another thing that absolutely baffles me about people’s resentment toward shane in the long game is that nobody seems to clock that the long game is, in fact, mostly ilya’s book. ilya’s perspective. ilya’s internal monologue. ilya’s deeply unreliable, emotionally self-protective head.
heated rivalry is shane’s book the way the long game is ilya’s. we’re closer to shane in book one because it’s literally about his sexual identity and awakening — the narrative invites intimacy with him. in book two, the emotional center shifts to ilya: his adjustment to ottawa, his family, his shame, his coping mechanisms, his way of loving through deflection and control.
so when people come out of TLG mad at shane, i’m like… congratulations, you have successfully been manipulated by ilya’s perspective. that is the text working as intended....
what is not clicking here.
just saw an instagram post that was like “i need heated rivalry except it’s wlw and they’re ballerinas or cheerleaders” you realize women also play hockey right. you know wlw heated rivalry could also be about hockey players right. you know women play contact sports like hockey right. right. right guys
SHANE & ILYA + parallels
he's really having the time of his life 🥺 (insp)
yall is standing in your kitchen late at night eating chocolate pudding while listening to piano parts of the thunderbolts* sound track a mood?
it’s a mood
not a mood
episode 6 recreating some of their previous moments
Episode 1:
Episode 1:
Episode 2:
Episode 5:
Not to mention that every time we see Yuna and David with Shane they are at a lunch and eating together, and this time finally Ilya is there:
#all the times on the left being in darkness#and in episode 6 they are in the light and the sun is rising
willyoucometomycottagethissummer? don't go to russia come to my HOUSE we'll have so much FUN 🤫private🤫 👀know👀 it's so no one will we could have a week, or even 2️⃣
we'd be completely alone... ✨TOGETHER✨
yall need to go back and watch the bridge again without your expectations of what you *wanted* the story to be. that episode was actually really good lol.
The horrific scene of Holly being ripped back into the sky.
The even more horrifying scene of the kids all going psycho, chanting, and beating her up. Straight up horror show.
The explanation of the bridge, how vecna survived, what he's been doing, why he chose will, why will had to come out (which was low-key super poignant writing actually, flaws and all - go back and watch him talk to Joyce beforehand... He literally explains it all. & telling everyone so the fear could be 100% gone, like... What's not clicking for people. And the group reaction was a perfect blend of cheese and heart - did y'all not realize you were watching an 80s teen scifi show, not euphoria? Lol).
The hilarious one-liners (the Steve big dick joke... like?) ... Hopper's reaction to the D&D references... Murray's reaction to everything Hopper says...
Steve being the one to come up with the game plan.
I refuse to be gaslit by the Internet. That shit was good.
the holy grail types of fanfic
Friendly reminder that these only happen slowly, carefully, with lots of reader encouragement, engagement, reflection, and support, and an ending is never a guarantee.
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