I fell in love with this.

@theartofmadeline
Not today Justin

if i look back, i am lost
đ©” avery cochrane đ©”
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wallacepolsom
trying on a metaphor
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Peter Solarz

blake kathryn

Love Begins

tannertan36
Three Goblin Art
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

titsay
Aqua Utopiaïœæ”·ăźćșă§èšæ¶ă玥ă
we're not kids anymore.

â

Discoholic đȘ©
Claire Keane

seen from Canada
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seen from Australia
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seen from Northern Mariana Islands
seen from Brazil

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@hbeastley
I fell in love with this.
#this really is funny with no context #like âanakin is the father of your child? tragic :/â (tags by @finnskywallker)
Gao ZhiPing  -  http://drawcrowd.com/bigballgao  -  http://bigballgao.lofter.com  -  https://twitter.com/BigballGao  -  http://blog.sina.com.cn/umcg  -  http://www.weibo.com/bigballgao?is_hot=1  -  http://www.poocg.com/bigballgao  -  http://blog.sina.com.cn/bigballgao  -  http://www.cgartt.com/u3106  -  http://blog.sina.com.cn/umcg  -  http://bigball.zcool.com.cn  -  http://bigballgao.artp.cc/works_en
@love.little.sampsons
This is at the National Museum of African American History and Culture. This is a statue of Thomas Jefferson.
Those bricks behind him?
Each one has the name of an enslaved person that Thomas Jefferson owned.
Also written behind him on the wall is the section of the Declaration of Independance which states all men are created equal.
the museum has no chill
The 15 PLOT POINTS of Story Structure
To all the writers who have ever been told they need to outline their story, and privately thought âGreat. But how do you DO that? What exactly does that mean?! Is there a map? WHAT IS THE SPECIFIC DEFINITION OF THE VAGUE WORD âOUTLINEâ?â
Good news. Stories have structure. Structure that can be learned. And a fantastic place to start learning structure?Â
Save the Cat: The Last Book on Screenwriting Youâll Ever Need by Blake Snyder. This book gives a simple outline that most stories follow. And as an introduction to story structure, it canât be beat.Â
In Save the Cat, 15 plot points are spelled out in something called a beat sheet. During the outlining process, these âbeatsâ or plot points can be used as an armature or skeleton that your story is built upon.Â
So what are those 15 plot points?
Opening Image: A snapshot of the heroâs problematic ordinary world, right before the story starts and changes everything.Â
Set-Up: Further establishing that ordinary world and what the hero does every day, impressing upon the audience or reader whatâs wrong, and the idea that something needs to change.
Theme Stated: Â The truth that the hero will learn by experiencing the story, the statement that will be proven to the audience. But upon first encountering this truth, in this story beat right in the beginning, the hero doesnât understand or outright refuses to believe it. The theme stated is asking a question, a question which the story will answer.
Catalyst: The ordinary world is shattered. Something unexpected happens, and this event triggers all the conflict and change of the whole story. Life will never be the same after this moment. This is the Call to Adventure.Â
Debate: But for a moment, the hero wonât be quite sure about answering that call. Leaving behind the ordinary world is difficult â even if the catalyst has come along and disrupted everything â because the ordinary means safety, it means not being challenged, it means avoiding conflict and heartache. Yes, that existence theyâre stuck in might be stagnant and unpleasant, but it protects them from facing the intimidating task of growth, of becoming something better.
Break Into 2: And this is when the hero decides to answer the call and cross the threshold of act two, determined to pursue their goal.Â
B Story: This is when the relationship â which usually carries and proves the theme â starts in earnest.
Fun & Games: This is just what it says: the premise promised a certain type of pure entertainment, and this beat is where we get to experience it fully.Â
Midpoint: This is either a false victory or a false defeat. Something really really good happens. Or something the exact opposite.
Bad Guys Close In: Forces of opposition and conflict begin to converge on the hero and his goal. Everything begins to fall apart for the hero, the defeats piling up one after another, the main character punching back. Â
All Is Lost: This is the sequence where absolutely everything falls apart for the hero. The plans fail, the goal is lost, the mentor dies, the villain wins. All is, quite literally, lost.Â
Dark Night of the Soul: The heroâs bleakest moment is right here. In addition to all of the tangible things that have been lost, hope and the gumption to continue with the story have also vanished. There is usually a hint of death here, of some kind. An actual death, or an emotional or spiritual death.Â
Break into 3: Ah, but thereâs a light at the end of the tunnel. Inspiration occurs, hope is rekindled, courage to pursue the story returns. Usually, this is the moment where the main character learns what they NEED, the truth which will heal them, and allow them to fix their own lives. With this, they are able to snatch victory from defeat.
Finale: And in here, the story goal is pursued once more, but this time from the stronger version of the hero â the version that has learned the theme, and committed to act accordingly.Â
Closing Image: The opposite of the opening image. This is a snapshot of life after the story, the problems of the ordinary world solved or banished, a new world opening up for the hero. If the opening is the equivalent of âonce upon a timeâ this is saying âAnd every day after ⊠âÂ
So letâs see how that works! And to see it, letâs look at my favorite short film of all time â Paperman  (because this gave me an excuse to watch it several times and listen to the music while writing it.)
1) Opening Image
We see George, a twenty-something in a sixty-somethingâs suit and tie, obviously on his way to work, and not looking at all enthused about it. He stares straight ahead, expression bored, lifeless, right on the edge of depressed. Wind from a passing train pushes him slightly, and he lets it, demeanor unchanging.Â
2) Set-Up
But then a sheet of paper, caught on the wind, hits his shoulder. The paper flies off again, and a young woman appears onscreen, chasing after the paper, as the surprised George watches.
 After catching it offscreen, the girl returns, tucking the paper into the stack she carries, smiling slightly. They both face forward, waiting for the train side-by-side, in silence. Sheâs glancing sideways at him, heâs smiling and fidgeting nervously, but still resolutely facing forward; theyâre both aware of each other, seemingly hoping the other will be braver, but neither able to overcome their shyness and the unspoken rules of everyday life.Â
3) Theme StatedÂ
As a train charges into the station, a paper from Georgeâs stack is snatched by the wind and lands flat on the womanâs face. When he pulls the paper away, she laughs: her lipstick left a perfect kiss mark on the sheet. When George spots it, he laughs too âŠÂ
but when he opens his eyes, sheâs gone. Sheâs boarded a different train. The kiss-mark paper flaps in the wind as the train begins to move, taking her away. He watches, crestfallen. She glances back. Looks of regret and disappointment are exchanged, both a little wistful. The paper, the symbol of their fleeting memorable meeting, waves goodbye.Â
Through this little sequence of images, the question of the whole story is asked: Was there a connection between them? Will they find each other again? And on a wider level: What does it take to find love?Â
Further Set-Up:
And cut to George behind a desk, in a gray office, dark file cabinets towering behind him, clocks on the wall ticking away his life. Miserable again, he stares at the lipsticked paper. A stack of documents slams onto the desk from on high. The grim-faced boss of the office scowls down at him. George frowns at the stack, then at his boss, who stomps away. Â Â
4) CatalystÂ
Breeze pulls the kissed paper off his desk and out the open window. He catches it just in time, breathing a sigh of relief. And then he sees something. The girl! Sheâs there! Sheâs right across the street!Â
5) DebateÂ
He needs to get her attention! He dithers for a moment, then throws the window wide and enthusiastically waves his arms.
 An ominous âahemâ from the boss brings him back inside, and back to his desk. But his attention is still on the girl, and the need to get her attention. He folds a paper airplane, stands before the window, poises the airplane to fly ⊠but he glances at his bossâs office before he throws it. Should he?Â
6) Break Into Act 2
Yes. Yes, he should. He sends the little airplane messenger to bridge the distance between himself and the girl.Â
7) B Story
What he should have done while waiting for the train, heâs committed to do now. Talk to her. The relationship of the story has started officially.Â
8) Fun & Games
In this moment, he becomes the âpaper manâ of the title. He folds and throws paper airplane after paper airplane. The boss shows up, shoves him back and slams his window. George pauses until heâs gone, then just keeps sending airplanes. They sail over the street, but are intercepted or miss their mark every time.Â
9) Midpoint
He reaches for more paper ⊠and knocks an empty tray off the desk. Heâs run out. Except for one paper, the kissed one, the only one heâs held onto. With a determined look, he folds it precisely into an airplane, stands before the window, breathes to steady himself âŠÂ
And the wind steals the airplane from his hand, sending it spiraling to the street below, George reaching out pointlessly. On top of this defeat, the girl leaves the office. Â
10) Bad Guys Close InÂ
Immediately, the boss emerges from his lair. The other office workers hurriedly return to their scribbling, hunched to avoid drawing attention. The girl is leaving the building across the street! George turns from the window ⊠and finds the boss looming above him, glowering, delivering another tall pile of meaningless work.Â
George sinks into his chair, defeated. But something happens as he watches his boss walk away, as he sees the office workers in neat rows; all of them older versions of George, reflections of what he will become ⊠if he doesnât do something right now.Â
He runs, sending paper from the perfect stacks flying in his wake.Â
11) All Is Lost
But when he escapes the building, and attempts to cross the street, cars nearly kill him. And when he finally makes it to the opposite sidewalk, the girl is nowhere in sight. Sheâs lost again.Â
And all he manages to find is the little traitorous paper airplane. The paper heâd believed might mean something, might have signified something important and maybe a little magical. Which it obviously never did.Â
12) Dark Night of the Soul
Angry, he grabs the plane and throws it with all his strength. Â Heâs lost his job, heâs lost the girl, heâs lost all faith in the magic heâd just started to believe might be real. He stomps towards the train station, returning home.Â
13) Break Into 3 Â
But fate has other plans. The airplane glides over the city, almost supernaturally graceful and purposeful. It dives between buildings, and lands in the middle of the alley where all the paper planes have collected.Â
It sits immobile. Then it moves. Moves again. And jumps into flight. The airplane flies over the rest, stirring them into motion, into the air. In a place where not even a breath of wind could reach, there is now a whirlwind of Georgeâs airplanes.Â
Though the forces of mediocrity tried to keep them apart, something greater has recognized Georgeâs efforts and is going to see things through.Â
14) Finale
A parade of airplanes follows George down the street.Â
The leader attaches to his leg. He brushes it off, mad. A flurry of them attach to him, then carry him down the street, unfazed by his fighting.Â
The leader airplane rockets over the city purposefully, finds the girl, then lures her to follow.
 She chases after.Â
Somewhere else in the city, George is being pushed wherever the paper airplanes want him to go. We switch back and forth between George and the girl, as the airplanes push him and beckon her.Â
Until theyâre both on different trains, which stop simultaneously, on opposite sides of the platform. The girl gets out. She fiddles with the airplane, like sheâs trying to get it to work again. And just then, a breeze brings hundreds of paper planes skittering all around the platform.
 She looks up âŠ
15) Closing Image
And thereâs George, covered in paper planes.Â
He lurches towards Meg, and the airplanes falls away, their work done.Â
George and Meg face each other, smiling, the barriers of routine and shyness overcome. Exactly what should have happened, exactly what was meant to happen. Putting effort into connection and love prevailed in the end, defeating the allure of life spent in safety and mediocrity. The closing image is the opposite of the opening: heâs not alone, heâs not facing the train leading to his mundane job, heâs not looking miserable and hopeless. Heâs facing the girl, his bright and meaningful new future. ***
So! Those are the 15 plot points. This is a fantastic way to begin learning what story structure is, why it works the way it does, and how to precisely pull it off.Â
For a more in-depth explanation, I highly recommend picking up a copy of Save the Cat. (It holds a special place in my heart; it was the first screenwriting book I ever read, and started obsessive study of storytelling.)
please support this interracial french gay couple and their 20 kids
Writing Science Fiction: Tips for Beginners
Weâve seen a lot of science fiction stories over the past year or so. Itâs not like they sci-fi ever went out of style, but it seems to be gaining popularity recently.
For some, writing science fiction might seem like a daunting genre to break into. Do you need to know complex mathematical equations? Do you need to know exactly how space travel works? Did you need to major in astrophysics?
Sure, those things donât hurt, but theyâre absolutely not necessary. You can write a great sci-fi novel without years of research. And you can tell a really interesting story, even if youâre not a science pro.
Here are a few tips to get started:
Consider âWhat-ifâ Scenarios
This isnât just a great rule for sci-fi novels, but I think the best ones use this approach. Start off with a simple what-if scenario. For example: what if we lived on a world made of ice? What if in this particular world only consisted of women? Obviously, youâll need to expand on those scenarios and spend time really developing what those caveats would mean, but you get the idea.
Start with a small what-if scenario and brainstorm!
Figure Out Your Rules
I donât think writing great sci-fi depends on being 100% scientifically accurate ALL THE TIME, but I do think you need to stick to your own rules. Whatever is a hard rule for your own universe, itâs important to keep it that way. Does your world have ships that can travel quickly from planet to planet? Sure, thatâs great! Figure out your own rules for space travel and develop your world. How do the inhabitants on one planet act/grow/eat/interact compared to the inhabitants of another? Spend time developing these ideas!
No Info Dumps!
Sometimes when people write science fiction, they tend to explain their universe all in one big info-dump. Donât. This is boring and it does nothing to serve your story. Slowly reveal information. Every plot point in your story should serve a purpose. Develop your characters through the action and show off your worlds through them. Get creative.
Keep it Vague
If youâre unsure about the science of something, write to your strengths. Donât understand how space travel works? Maybe your MC is put to sleep during a long trip. This is just one example, but try to figure out a way to make it work for you. Maybe avoid space travel altogether if it doesnât serve your story.
Listen, this isnât a substitute for research, but I also donât want you to avoid writing science fiction if you just donât get a lot of the concepts involved. If youâve got a great idea for a story, work it out to fit your style. Science fiction is a great platform for unique and compelling character studies, so donât get scared off! You donât have to write hard science fiction in order to write a good novel.
-Kris Noel
How IAMKARENO Styles Graphic Tees
How IAMKARENO Styles Graphic Tees
Who loves IAMKARENO (aka beauty/style vlogger Karen Yeung)?? Everyone raises their hands. Yeah, me too. Sometimes, the style muse doesnât come to you and you need to search for a little fashionista inspiration. Personally, I find myself falling into the same old outfit choices and once Iâm locked into a uniform, itâs hard to break out of that bubble. Checking out my favorite fashion bloggersâŠ
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Betta Have My Budget
Betta Have My Budget
Yayo. Yayo. Moo-la-lah. Yayo. B*tch betta have my- BUDGET. Cause even though I crave RiRi style, I donât have a fraction of her funds and Iâm definitely not ballin bigger than LeBron. So, Iâve created a new segment called Betta Have My Budget. Iâm going to take a peek at RiRiâs fantastic looks, then see how I can slay the same way without spending all my savings. Look #1 is classic Rihanna ââŠ
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Read black authors. Native Son, Black Boy, Their Eyes Were Watching God
Before the computing era, ILM was the master of oil matte painting, making audiences believe that some of the sets in the original Star Wars and Indiana Jones trilogy were real when they werenât. They were the work of geniuses like Chris Evans, Michael Pangrazio, Frank Ordaz, Harrison Ellenshaw and Ralph McQuarrie ! Forever thank you, to their handmade art and the work of their colleagues, that made us dream of impossible worlds and fantastic places across Earth and the Universe.
There are more background paintings on this article, featuring comments by the masters/artists themselves !Â
Some of the following pieces were made by other artists:
Awesome.
mind blown
These are incredible
Source Click HERE to Follow the Ultrafacts Blog!
ALICE ROOSEVELT WAS HARDCORE. âShe was known as a rule-breaker in an era when women were under great pressure to conform. The American public noticed many of her exploits. She smoked cigarettes in public, swore at officials, rode in cars with men, stayed out late partying, kept a pet snake named Emily Spinach (Emily as in her spinster aunt and Spinach for its green color) in the White House, and was seen placing bets with a bookie.Â
So what Iâm reading here is, she was a Roosevelt?
Well I have a new hero.
Her whole wikipedia article is gold
âWhen her father was governor of New York, he and his wife proposed that Alice attend a conservative school for girls in New York City. Pulling out all the stops, Alice wrote, âIf you send me I will humiliate you. I will do something that will shame you. I tell you I will.ââ
âHer father took office in 1901 following the assassination of President William McKinley, Jr. in Buffalo (an event that she greeted with âsheer rapture.â)â
âDuring the cruise to Japan, Alice jumped into the shipâs pool fully clothed, and coaxed a congressman to join her in the water. (Years later Bobby Kennedy would chide her about the incident, saying it was outrageous for the time, to which the by-then-octogenarian Alice replied that it would only have been outrageous had she removed her clothes.â
âShe was dressed in a blue wedding dress and dramatically cut the wedding cake with a sword (borrowed from a military aide attending the reception)â
âWhen it came time for the Roosevelt family to move out of the White House, Alice buried a Voodoo doll of the new First Lady, Nellie Taft, in the front yard.â
âLater, the Taft White House banned her from her former residenceâthe first but not the last administration to do so. During Woodrow Wilsonâs administration (from which she was banned in 1916 for a bawdy joke at Wilsonâs expense)âŠâ
âAs an example of her attitudes on race, in 1965 her African-American chauffeur and one of her best friends, Turner, was driving Alice to an appointment. During the trip, he pulled out in front of a taxi, and the driver got out and demanded to know of him, âWhat do you think youâre doing, you black bastard?â Turner took the insult calmly, but Alice did not and told the taxi driver, âHeâs taking me to my destination, you white son of a bitch!â
âTo Senator Joseph McCarthy, who had jokingly remarked at a party âHereâs my blind date. I am going to call you Aliceâ, she sarcastically said âSenator McCarthy, you are not going to call me Alice. The trashman and the policeman on my block call me Alice, but you may not.â
I love this woman.
WOMEN WHO NEED FUCKEN MOVIES.
This is Alice as an older lady. The pillow says âIf you canât say something good about someone, sit right here by me.âÂ
She is my absolute favorite.Â
This is great! Iâd love a film about her.