Finished painting Nanny 🎉
todays bird
AnasAbdin
hello vonnie
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
KIROKAZE
occasionally subtle
ojovivo
trying on a metaphor
Stranger Things
styofa doing anything
Sweet Seals For You, Always

⁂
Misplaced Lens Cap
d e v o n
Jules of Nature
wallacepolsom
DEAR READER
Game of Thrones Daily
Show & Tell
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@galavanting-galaxies
Finished painting Nanny 🎉
Sharkie - Hells Belles
[ENG] Third times the charm, everyone's faveourite gremlin is finally here!
Sharkie was the third and final Hells Belles character I drew for my video.
I hope to make a part 2 sometime in the future, but for now the next 3-4 videoes are already set in stone.
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[HU] Három a magyar igazság, mindenki kedvenc gremlinje megérkezett!
Sharkie volt a harmadik és utolsó Hells Belles karakter akit a videóban lerajzoltam.
Remélem a közeljövőben egy második résszel is szolgálhatok, de egyenlőre a következő 3-4 videó már kőbe van vésve.
I just finished reading For Whom the Belle Tolls by Jaysea Lynn and am now rewatching the Hell's Belles on TikTok, and I can't help but think about how time works in the Afterlife. There's consistently comments about how time isn't the same in the Afterlife as it is in the Mortal world, but then they use the same measures to describe when things happen, like day and month. Obviously there is a daylight cycle since in the book Lily describes it multiple times for both her Paradise and Hell. I assume that the daylight cycle in Paradise would depend on the person who's Paradise it is (for example, if someone's Paradise would be eternal twilight, they probably wouldn't have the day/night cycle that Lily does), but clearly there is a set one in Hell since they talk about how the light changes. In the book, Sariah talks about her pregnancy in terms of months, just like mortals do, so days must be organized by months. Not only that, but the demons all know how many years old they are and reference things happening several hundred years ago, so there must be some kind of year cycle in addition to the daylight cycle. In the video series, we see Sharkie, Penny, and Lily celebrating a holiday that seems to be a traditionally northern hemisphere winter holiday (they are wearing matching shark christmas sweaters) and we see Employee Appreciation Day at least twice, so I think it's safe to assume there are annual holidays that happen around the same time each Afterlife year.
My theory is that when souls die they go through a Jeremy Bearimy kind of time travel, which explains why some souls who died before them show up at the help desk after the main characters. But once they enter the actual Afterlife, they can experience time in a linear way once again. That way they can take eternity to learn and grow as needed. This also allows the Afterlife denizens to know how old they are and when things happened. I also think that the year does not necessarily line up with the Mortal world year. They do specifically mention some days by title (i.e. the sexy Sunday when there was a Hell-wide shortage of fishnets), which I think is because the Mortal world impacts the Afterlife, so even though they may have once been called a different name, now the days of the week match the Sunday - Saturday titles most mortals are familiar with. I don't know if the months have names or the years have numbers (what would they be counting from?), but I do belive the months and years exist.
Hey hey hey, if it’s your first time hearing about Ellipsus Plus features (or you just feel like watching a lovely video with gorg graphics and asmr narration 🙈)... here’s a delightful video on what they’re all about!
This June, we debuted Ellipsus Plus as a way to help keep Ellipsus independent—while supporting the free plan for everyone. The plan includes the features shown in the video, and more will be added soon (as well as updates to the free plan)!
The Plus plan is designed to be flexible—you can buy the license upfront, or spread the cost across smaller payments. (Subscribe-to-own means every payment counts towards your ownership of Plus, so there’s no endless subscriptions.)
You can try Plus for free at any time, no payment info required. For more info, head over to the Plus page! - the Ellipsus Team xo
I know this is an ice cold take but watching TOS was shocking because I thought Kirk was a womanizer before going in and no it turns out he just loves falling in love.
I blame the 80’s.
The original series came out in the late 60’s and early 70’s during civil rights and the whole hippie free love movement. It was deemed sexually liberating and empowering to be free of judgement and have as many partners as you want. Believe it or not but things like Playboy used to be considered progressive.
But then the 80’s came. And so too did the aids crisis. And suddenly all that free love felt dangerous and reckless. There was strong pushback against women’s rights and conservative values skyrocketed. Moral panics ran rampant.
So all that free love and progressiveness got reframed as womanizing and misogynistic. Even TNG, which started under Gene Roddenberry’s thumb, struggled because it was too much like the original show and people were uncomfortable with how much sex and sexuality was infused into everything (Season 1 was very horny). So all of that got stripped away in later seasons.
There are so many episodes where Kirk defends his female crew mates from the dirty looks and anti-women jabs from unprogressive aliens. It’s almost quaint now because all of that would be labeled as “woke” if it was attempted today…
It is still WILD to me that Star Trek Prodigy exists. This is a show for kids set in the Star Trek universe. So you’d think it’s going to be silly and dumb and childish…
Episode 1: THE HORROR OF CHILD SLAVERY AND PARENTAL NEGLECT!
And it doesn’t stop there! Prodigy’s entire PREMISE is a time travel loop that we only really learn about in season 2. It’s one of the most complicated time travel stories I’ve ever seen and touches upon Star Trek Voyager character arcs and plot lines that no normal kid unfamiliar with Trek is going to pick up on. It’s filled to the BRIM with references that date back to the original 1960’s show, and up through the most recent revival series like Discovery and Picard.
Oh and on top of that all of the characters have to struggle with crazy deep psychological issues. Rok deals with abandonment issues. Gwyn deals with heightened expectations and loyalty to an abusive parent. Dal deals with a loss of identity and self esteem issues as a result. Zero deals with body and gender dysmorphia. Jankom deals with anger issues and not living up to expectations of your society.
This is such a WILD and FUN Star Trek shows, and yet so many people don’t even know it exists! Paramount tried to bury it before season 2 even came out! Nobody who’s watching Trek now is looking for it.
Please for the love of god, check out Prodigy. Give it about 5 episodes. I’m begging you. It’s the PERFECT way to introduce someone new into the Trek universe.
Sam Carter in every episode
The First Ones (4.08)
new fanfic writer who has marked their work completed ao3 only to leave a note at the end saying: thanks for all the support guys if you want to read the rest of the fic subscribe to my patreon :)
me, an elder fandom veteran, suddenly having anne rice flashbacks:
no.
NO.
starting to rock back and fourth.
you do not understand.
you were born into an age of peace. i was there Gandalf. i was there three thousand years ago. i remember the cease and desists. i remember authors hunting fanfic writers for sport. i remember when every fic opened with a disclaimer because we genuinely thought it might protect us.
we do not charge money for the copyrighted gay wizard stories.
do not tempt fate youngling.
step away from the paywall.
that is how you summon the ancient evils.
that is how you wake the lawyers.
Remember people, this is against AO3s terms of service. If you see a fic that does this REPORT THAT THING!!! These people may not know better or they might, but them doing this has the potential to ruin things for everyone.
Tell the writer to read the TOS. Writers absolutely CANNOT ask for payment in exchange for fanfic. If they won't take it down ASAP, report it to AO3.
Annual reminder that you can not try to make a profit of any kind via AO3.
No "buy me a kofi"
No links to patreon or other money-making sites or apps
Post on AO3 for the love of the game or don't post at all
The thing that pisses me off about bad period movie adaptations is when they go for a realist tone but don't care about what real people wore or thought. Like the tone is realist, the acting is realist, the colour palette is realist, and the clothes are things that real people at some point in time have worn. But they aren't accurate to the period, and it's just like. That's not a realistic depiction of the period or the people in it. So what's the point in being realist???
Incidentally, this is why I don't care that the recent Wuthering heights wasn't realistic period dress or society etc. It was blatantly symbolic (and Symbolic!) and wasn't trying for realism or period accuracy, so I don't criticise it for period inaccuracy. Like, who walks across the moors in a massive tulle gown in real life? No one ever, and that's the point. It's obviously performance, and that's what its going for. My criticisms are based on other criteria.
But this new adaptation of S&S seems realist - the colour palette and grading, the costumes and hair that aren't accurate but look like something real people at some point in time have worn, the characters that read like real(ish) modern women... It's trying to read as realist without being realistic and just. What's the point in setting it in the past then?? Why adapt Sense and Sensibility, a realistic realist novel, into an unrealistic realist movie?
I'm just so tired of earth tones being "realist." People wore bright clothes! The past wasn't drab, honestly it might have been brighter than now given our whole obsession with beige minimalism.
But no, it's not realistic unless it's BROWN and BORING
This is just modern minimalism imposed on the past. Just make a modern.
This is all just P&P 2005 recycled over and over
SG1'S 1K CELEBRATION ☆ @burningbea requested ↳ A Sam and Janet set
So this iris is gonna hold right? Pure titanium. Less than three|micrometers from the event horizon. It won't even allow matter|to fully reintegrate.
Stargate SG-1 1.03 The Enemy Within
Stargate SG-1, 04.06 Window of Opportunity
It’s been a bit since I made this but I love it so what the hell
The Tiffany Aching books are forever in my heart - one of the first fantasy series I read and my launchpad into the rest of Discworld!
SG1’S 1K CELEBRATION ☆ Anonymous requested ↳ Jack's confession scene from Stargate SG-1, 04.05 Divide and Conquer
They kept cutting Nichelle Nichols' lines on Star Trek and telling her the part was small. Then she turned around and helped staff the United States space program. The first American woman in space and the first Black man in space both came up through the recruitment drive she ran after the show ended.
Small part, they said.
On the set of Star Trek, somebody kept cutting her lines.
Nichelle Nichols would get the week's script and watch Uhura shrink. A full page on Monday, a few words by the time the cameras rolled.
She was the communications officer of a starship. Some weeks the communications officer had almost nothing to communicate.
The people who ran the studio had a word for what they thought the part was worth. The word was small.
It did not seem to matter to them that Uhura was unlike almost anything Black audiences had ever seen on a screen. A Black woman in a position of skill and rank, treated by her crew as an equal, never once handed a tray or a mop.
There was something worse than the cut lines, and Nichols did not find out about it until later.
Letters were coming in for her. Bags of mail, from people all over the country who had never once watched a Black woman on television hold a job with that kind of steadiness and command.
She was not receiving them. Someone at the studio had quietly decided that Uhura's mail did not need to reach Uhura.
So at the end of the first season, Nichols made up her mind to leave.
Broadway was her first love. She had come up in musical theater, had shared a stage with Duke Ellington, and now a Broadway role was sitting in front of her.
She went to Gene Roddenberry, the man who created the show, and told him she was done. He was shaken, and he asked her to take the weekend and think it over.
That weekend there was an NAACP fundraiser, and Nichols went.
An organizer found her somewhere in the crowd. He told her one of her biggest fans was in the room and was asking to meet her.
She turned around expecting some Star Trek enthusiast. She found herself looking at Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
For a moment she could not speak. She had grown up admiring this man, and here he was telling her that he admired her.
King said he was a fan of the show. He said it was the one program he and Coretta let their children stay up past bedtime to watch.
Then Nichols told him her news. She told him she was leaving the series.
She always remembered the way his face changed when the words landed. The warmth dropped away, and something very serious moved in behind it.
"You cannot and you must not," she recalled him saying.
He told her she had already done something that could not be undone. She held onto his exact words for the rest of her life.
"You've changed the face of television," he told her. "You've opened a door that can never be closed again."
He told her Uhura was not a small role at all. He told her that up on that bridge, in that chair, she stood ten feet tall.
Nichols tried to explain herself. She said she wished she could be out marching with him instead of pretending to fly a spaceship.
She never forgot his answer.
"You don't understand," he told her. "We don't need you on the front lines."
"You are marching. You are reflecting what we are fighting for."
She went back to the set that Monday. She stayed.
Star Trek ran three seasons and ended in 1969. The bridge of the Enterprise was plywood, paint, and colored lights, and once the show was canceled, the crew took the set apart and hauled it off.
The show was over. Nichelle Nichols was not.
By the middle of the 1970s, NASA was building the Space Shuttle and needed a new generation of astronauts to fly it.
Nichols looked hard at who NASA had been sending up until then. Every single American who had been to space was a white man.
She put it plainly when she talked about it years later. "There were no women, and there were no minorities in the space program, and that's supposed to represent the whole country?"
She had spent three years playing an officer on a fictional crew that the entire nation was supposed to look at and see itself in. The real crew, the one that actually left the ground, looked like none of that.
So she went to NASA. Not in a Starfleet uniform, and not as Lieutenant Uhura.
She went as Nichelle Nichols, running a consulting company of her own called Women in Motion. And she made the agency a deal with teeth in it.
"I am going to bring you so many qualified women and minority astronaut applicants," she told them, "that if you don't choose one, everybody in the newspapers across the country will know about it."
That was not a polite request. That was a promise with a consequence attached to it.
Then she went to work, and the work was relentless.
In 1977 she made a recruitment film for NASA. She walked the floor of the Johnson Space Center, looked straight down the camera lens, and called on women and people of color to apply.
"I still feel a little bit like Lieutenant Uhura on the starship Enterprise," she said at the top of that film.
Then she traveled. She stood in front of crowds at colleges, at Black sororities, at engineering schools, anywhere she could reach the people who had been raised to assume space simply was not meant for them.
She told them, to their faces, that it was.
She did it for months. Campus after campus, auditorium after auditorium, a famous face spending its fame on a government recruiting drive that most stars of her standing would never have bothered to touch.
The applications came back changed. Far more women, far more people of color, more than NASA had ever drawn before.
The astronaut class NASA selected in 1978 did not look like any class the agency had picked in its history.
It included Sally Ride, a physicist. It included Guion Bluford, an Air Force pilot, along with Judith Resnik, an electrical engineer, and Ronald McNair, a laser physicist out of small-town South Carolina.
Women on the list, Black Americans on the list. In the training, in the simulators, on the flight rotations.
In June 1983, Sally Ride became the first American woman in space.
That August, Guion Bluford became the first Black American in space.
Both of them had come into NASA through the recruitment drive Nichelle Nichols built with her own hands. The actress whose television lines kept getting crossed out had just helped send the first American woman and the first Black man past the edge of the sky.
Then came January 1986.
The Space Shuttle Challenger lifted off the pad on a cold Florida morning and broke apart a little over a minute into the flight. Everyone on board was lost.
Two of the seven were Judith Resnik and Ronald McNair.
Resnik, the engineer. McNair, the physicist who had come all the way up from a small town in South Carolina to a seat on a spacecraft.
Both of them had come out of that 1978 class. Both of them were people Nichelle Nichols had gone looking for.
She had stood in front of rooms full of young engineers and pilots and promised them the sky was theirs to claim. Resnik and McNair were exactly the kind of people she had been speaking to.
They believed her. They trained for years for it.
They climbed aboard on a cold morning in January, and they did not come home.
For Nichols this was personal in a way most grief is not. The faces in those recruiting rooms had been her whole argument, living proof that the space program could be made to look like the country it flew for.
Two of the people who carried that proof were gone seventy three seconds after liftoff.
Nichols did not stop the work after that. She believed the door she had pried open had to stay open, no matter what it had cost to hold it.
In September 1992, six years after the Challenger, the Space Shuttle Endeavour carried Dr. Mae Jemison into orbit.
Jemison became the first Black woman in space. She had grown up in Chicago, watching Star Trek, watching Uhura work that communications board, learning from a television screen that a Black woman could belong on the bridge of a ship.
Years later, at a birthday celebration for Nichols, Jemison spoke about what that picture had done for her as a girl. She said Uhura had shown her there was a place at the table, and that she had gone and taken one.
Nichelle Nichols died in July 2022, at eighty nine years old, in Silver City, New Mexico.
NASA released a statement when she passed. The agency's administrator called her a trailblazer and a friend, and said her Uhura had held a mirror up to America.
Think about where the whole thing started.
A young actress on a soundstage in the 1960s, watching a man with a pencil shorten her lines, being told by the people in charge that the part was small.
Sally Ride rose off a launch pad on a column of real fire in June 1983, because a recruiter named Nichelle Nichols had gone looking for her. Guion Bluford rose the same way that August, and Mae Jemison followed them both up in 1992.
They told her the communications officer did not have much to say. The communications officer got through.
Stargate: SG-1 - S10E06, “200”