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Cosimo Galluzzi

izzy's playlists!

@theartofmadeline

Product Placement
Three Goblin Art
hello vonnie
macklin celebrini has autism
NASA
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
art blog(derogatory)

#extradirty

pixel skylines

if i look back, i am lost

blake kathryn
dirt enthusiast
$LAYYYTER

Janaina Medeiros
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@forevertheawkwardbystander
John O'Brien for NEW YORKER magazine, 1991.
who up in a kafka-esque rut sleep deprived, casually malnourished, socially awkward, painfully self-conscious, struggling financially, lacking community, altogether anhedonic
i hope you write (i hope we both write)
hand in unedited hand
HR scenes as a pride flag
shane & blue
google search (oxford languages) // laura villareal - blue // maggie nelson - bluets // ibid. // katy kelleher (the paris review) // rebecca solnit - a field guide to getting lost // ibid. // flower face - cornflower blue // christopher malec - bruises
rewatching s1 for like the 100th time--at what point does all the brilliant animal sight gag stuff (eg the croc wearing crocs) get added? is it like, we need to have a croc wearing crocs, where can we fit this in? or do you start out by needing someone to guard the food and say let's do a crocodile--hey, he should wear crocs? or some kind of total afterthought, or something else entirely? thanks. love the show, my favorite of all time.
Hello! I am going to answer your question, and then I am going to talk a little bit about GENDER IN COMEDY, because this is my tumblr and I can talk about whatever I want!
The vast vast vast majority of the animal jokes on BoJack Horseman (specifically the visual gags) come from our brilliant supervising director Mike Hollingsworth (stufffedanimals on tumblr) and his team. Occasionally, we’ll write a joke like that into the script but I can promise you that your top ten favorite animal gags of the season came from the art and animation side of the show, not the writers room. Usually it happens more the second way you described— to take a couple examples from season 2, “Okay, we need to fill this hospital waiting room, what kind of animals would be in here?” or “Okay, we need some extras for this studio backlot, what would they be wearing?”
I don’t know for sure, but I would guess that the croc wearing crocs came from our head designer lisahanawalt. Lisa is in charge of all the character designs, so most of the clothing you see on the show comes straight from her brain. (One of the many things I love about working with Lisa is that T-Shirts With Dumb Things Written On Them sits squarely in the center of our Venn diagram of interests.)
NOW, it struck me that you referred to the craft services crocodile as a “he” in your question. The character, voiced by kulap Vilaysack, is a woman.
It’s possible that that was just a typo on your part, but I’m going to assume that it wasn’t because it helps me pivot into something I’ve been thinking about a lot over the last year, which is the tendency for comedy writers, and audiences, and writers, and audiences (because it’s a cycle) to view comedy characters as inherently male, unless there is something specifically female about them. (I would guess this is mostly a problem for male comedy writers and audiences, but not exclusively.)
Here’s an example from my own life: In one of the episodes from the first season (I think it’s 109), our storyboard artists drew a gag where a big droopy dog is standing on a street corner next to a businessman and the wind from a passing car blows the dog’s tongue and slobber onto the man’s face. When Lisa designed the characters she made both the dog and the businessperson women.
My first gut reaction to the designs was, “This feels weird.” I said to Lisa, “I feel like these characters should be guys.” She said, “Why?” I thought about it for a little bit, realized I didn’t have a good reason, and went back to her and said, “You’re right, let’s make them ladies.”
I am embarrassed to admit this conversation has happened between Lisa and me multiple times, about multiple characters.
The thinking comes from a place that the cleanest version of a joke has as few pieces as possible. For the dog joke, you have the thing where the tongue slobbers all over the businessperson, but if you also have a thing where both of them ladies, then that’s an additional thing and it muddies up the joke. The audience will think, “Why are those characters female? Is that part of the joke?” The underlying assumption there is that the default mode for any character is male, so to make the characters female is an additional detail on top of that. In case I’m not being a hundred percent clear, this thinking is stupid and wrong and self-perpetuating unless you actively work against it, and I’m proud to say I mostly don’t think this way anymore. Sometimes I still do, because this kind of stuff is baked into us by years of consuming media, but usually I’m able (with some help) to take a step back and not think this way, and one of the things I love about working with Lisa is she challenges these instincts in me.
I feel like I can confidently say that this isn’t just a me problem though— this kind of thing is everywhere. The LEGO Movie was my favorite movie of 2014, but it strikes me that the main character was male, because I feel like in our current culture, he HAD to be. The whole point of Emmett is that he’s the most boring average person in the world. It’s impossible to imagine a female character playing that role, because according to our pop culture, if she’s female she’s already SOMEthing, because she’s not male. The baseline is male. The average person is male.
You can see this all over but it’s weirdly prevalent in children’s entertainment. Why are almost all of the muppets dudes, except for Miss Piggy, who’s a parody of femininity? Why do all of the Despicable Me minions, genderless blobs, have boy names? I love the story (which I read on Wikipedia) that when the director of The Brave Little Toaster cast a woman to play the toaster, one of the guys on the crew was so mad he stormed out of the room. Because he thought the toaster was a man. A TOASTER. The character is a toaster.
I try to think about that when writing new characters— is there anything inherently gendered about what this character is doing? Or is it a toaster?
ASK ME QUESTIONS ABOUT BOJACK HORSEMAN.
anyone know any books with a wlw indian mc?
Indian authors
The Navarasa Potion Shop by Akshaya Raman [free online short story]
Kari by Amruta Patil
Miss Timmins’ School for Girls by Nayana Currimbhoy
Babyji by Abha Dawesar
Falling into Place by Sheryn Munir
Love Bi the Way by Bhaavna Arora
The Paths of Marriage by Mala Kumar
I Can’t Think Straight by Shamim Sarif
The World Unseen by Shamim Sarif
Nights Like This by Divya Sood
Valmiki’s Daughter by Shani Mootoo
Cereus Blooms at Night by Shani Mootoo
A Married Woman by Manju Kapur
The Normal State of Mind by Susmita Bhattacharya
377 by Manish Jani
The Green Rose by Sharmila Mukherjee
Stealing Nasreen by Farzana Doctor
All Inclusive by Farzana Doctor
Acid by Sangeetha Sreenivasan
Out! Stories From The New Queer India edited by Minal Hajratwala
Facing the Mirror: Lesbian Writing from India edited by Ashwini Sukthankar
Non-Indian authors
Afterworlds by Scott Westerfeld
Vanished series by E. E. Cooper
Future Leaders series by Emily O’Beirne
Forward Pass (Podium Sports Academy #4) by Lorna Schultz Nicholson
Landing by Emma Donoghue
Certainly, Possibly, You (Sucre Coeur #2) by Lissa Reed
Love by the Numbers by Karin Kallmaker
Up on the Roof by A. L. Brooks
Flinging It by G. Benson
Parties in Congress by Colette Moody
Jane Hollander x Calvin Klein
Persepolis
Marjane Satrapi
i get that americans love their cultural imperialism, but it really does piss me off that june is “international” pride month just because something happened in the united states.
in aotearoa, june isn’t our pride, it’s theirs. marsha p johnson and sylvia rivera are their historical figures, not ours. the phrase that “you owe your rights to Black trans women” is true there, but here we owe our rights to (mostly) Māori historical figures. i have the freedoms i do because of the legacy of an entirely different set of people operating in an entirely different context at entirely different times.
But because of american cultural imperialism, most queer people in Aotearoa don’t even know our own queer history. Carmen Rupe, Ngahuia Te Awekotuku, the Dorian Society, Gillian Laundon, Georgina Beyer, and the Wolfenden Association are some of our queer history. We should know their names! we should know what they did for us! but because of the power of the american imperial machine, we don’t.
our national pride month should be july, the month that the Homosexual Law Reform Act passed in 1986. our two largest cities hold their pride festivals in february and march, respectively. american queer history has very little (or nothing, depending on who you ask) to do with our queer history. anecdotally, from my own queries, queer youth in aotearoa know more about american queer history than our own.
anyway, happy pride, americans. i’m truly sorry that most of you don’t see the negative impact your nation’s culture has on the rest of the world. and to the rest of the world reading this, try searching for your own country and culture’s queer history, don’t accept the american narratives as your own. we deserve our own histories divorced from the cultural hegemony of the USA.
im in love with your crashout summer au and even though we aren’t even close to the end or anywhere near them getting caught, i just wanna know your thoughts on when and who would be the ones to “catch” them. There’s so many people that are actively looking for them, ilya and raiders, scott maybe gets involved again when he sees diplomats on the chase and needs to warn him with kip, yuna and david, j.j. and hayden give it a try as well, roses team is on the case, roses brothers (maybe during the second leak she talks about her brothers and how much she misses them and wishes she could have a relationship with them and they realize that their parents played them and need to see their baby sister), roses parents are probably acting like they care, the fbi and canadas equivalent, the mlh, lawyers, and like 3 countries are on the look out for them. Each one getting more chaotic and emotional and the chaos of them all somehow getting the same tip or getting a different piece of the same puzzle and all getting to them at the same time is insane to me. I know that you probably will have or already have an amazing reasoning for who and what happens and i’m just so curious even though we’ve only hit the surface of this beautiful story. By the time someone FINALLY catches up to them, they’re tired and mentally drained and maybe can’t go on for much longer and if it’s just one person they’re like if this is the end then i’d rather go together no one can separate us. if it’s everyone they are absolutely terrified and clueless as to what has been going on and have to be informed one by one why this person is here and why tf these diplomats are asking for them? Hopefully they also get the mental help and loving support they very much need because all that panic for months is not good for their immune system lmao. Can’t wait to hear more about this amazing AU!!!
Who says they have to get caught?
Maybe they heal enough that one day they realize they’re ready to come in from the cold
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nothing legolasts forever
Marion Stephan (German,b.1968)
Der Fuchs ist zurück (The fox is back), 2010
Oil on canvas
people are always like "girls and gays" and then include lesbians in neither
come to my cottage where there’s no slamming doors and we don’t walk on eggshells and you don’t have to think about how as a child you memorized the sounds of footsteps on the hardwood and who they belonged to and how much to shrink yourself depending on the answer. don’t go back to russia because you always come back to me in pieces and pretend you don’t need to be put back together. i know a place that won’t break you. come to my house. we’ll have so much fun. i want to watch tv with you. i want to knock elbows with you while we brush our teeth. i want to taste your mouth while its still warm from your coffee; to suck syrup off your fingers at the table. i want every mundane luxury we’ve never allowed ourselves to have. it’s so private, no one will know. because they can’t. and for now it’s okay; i’m not ready for the world to have us when there’s so many ways i’ve yet to have you. we’d have a week, or even two, and it still won’t be enough. how do you make up for almost ten years of never seeing a sunrise together. never kissing with morning breath. all the things i might already know if i never left that time you asked me to stay. we’ll be completely alone, together, with our clothes in the same laundry basket and your hair on my pillowcase and the enormity of everything i want touching every corner of every room.