styofa doing anything
$LAYYYTER
Xuebing Du
Show & Tell

if i look back, i am lost

JVL
Mike Driver
d e v o n
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trying on a metaphor

blake kathryn

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Janaina Medeiros
sheepfilms

oozey mess
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Sweet Seals For You, Always

Product Placement

izzy's playlists!
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@forever-bedhead
Twin Peaks dir. David Lynch
by lika.sunshine
blue velvet (1986) dir. david lynch
Givenchy, S/S 1998.
But I'm a Cheerleader (1999) dir. Jamie Babbit
not normie enough to fit in but not fringe enough to lean into being a freak, worst of both worlds, pure liminality, just the weird coworker, and unrelatable classmate. and your mutual
Studying at a showing of A Streetcar Named Desire, Natalie Wood leans toward Dennis Hopper to discuss something new she has noticed in the acting of Vivien Leigh.
Ralph Crane, “The Strange Doings of Actress at Practice: Friends Help Natalie Wood Polish Dramatics,” Life, Jan 28, 1957
Gregory Peck as John Ballantyne SPELLBOUND 1945 — dir. Alfred Hitchcock
This crocheted Döskallesjal, translated to Skull Shawl was designed by Kungen Och Majkis on Ravelry. Find the free pattern and photo tutorial in English and Swedish on her blog!
source
Outtakes of Kate Bush with her dogs Bonnie and Clyde posing for Hounds of Love cover shoot, 1985
Photography: John Carder Bush⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Dress
c. 1825-1830
Museum of Applied Arts Vienna
If we wanted to engage in nuance (lol, lmao) on the "are audiobooks reading" debate, we really do need to bring literacy, and especially blind literacy, into the conversation.
Because, yes, listening to a story and reading a story use mostly the same parts of the brain. Yes, listening to the audiobook counts as "having read" a book. Yes, oral storytelling has a long, glorious tradition and many cultures maintained their histories through oral history or oral + art history, having never developed a true written language, and their oral stories and histories are just as valid and rich as written literature.
We still can't call listening in the absence of reading "literacy."
The term literacy needs to stay restricted to the written word, to the ability to access and engage with written texts, because we need to be able to talk about illiteracy. We need to be able to identify when a society is failing to teach children to read, and if we start saying that listening to stories is literacy, we lose the ability to describe those systemic failures.
Blind folks have been knee-deep in this debate for a long time. Schools struggle to provide resources to teach students Braille and enforcing the teaching of Braille to low-vision and blind children is a constant uphill battle. A school tried to argue that one girl didn't need to learn Braille because she could read 96-point font. Go check what that is. The new prevalence of audiobooks and TTS is a huge threat to Braille literacy because it provides institutions with another excuse to not provide Braille education or Braille texts.
That matters. Braille-literate blind and low-vision people have a 90% employment rate. For those who don't know Braille, it's 30%. Braille literacy is linked to higher academic success in all fields.
Moving outside the world of Braille, literacy of any kind matters. Being able to read text has a massive impact on a person's ability to access information, education, and employment. Being able to talk about the inability to read text matters, because that's how we're able to hold systems accountable.
So, yes, audiobooks should count as reading. But, no, they should not count as literacy.
Finally, a good fucking take.
this "negative" review of guillermo del toro's upcoming frankenstein movie is everything to me
"The Mexican director has chosen to emphasise the romanticism at the expense of the horror. Elordi plays the creature as a misunderstood, James Dean-like outsider with Oedipal issues rather than as an agent of evil and chaos. Even if his face and torso are latticed with suitably grotesque scars, staples and stitches, he is not only the most sympathetic character in the movie but the best-looking one too. It’s left to Oscar Isaac to provide the real villainy as the brilliant but egomaniacal scientist, Victor Frankenstein..."
HELLO YES IT'S ME, MARY SHELLEY CALLING, JUST WANTED TO ASK IF YOU'VE EVER SEEN A GUILLERMO DEL TORO MOVIE OR... I DON'T KNOW... READ MY BOOK?
"The film lurches between scenes of lush romantic melodrama and moments of Grand Guignol bloodletting."
*bangs fists on table* SIGN! ME! THE! FUCK! UP!
Ida Lupino, the only female director of a Twilight Zone episode.
I'm sorry I'm leaving. I'd like to be with you. You are. I think my fear is gone. I think I'm happy.
CORINNE MARCHAND and ANTOINE BOURSEILLER in Cléo de 5 à 7 (1962) | dir. Agnès Varda