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Claire Keane

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Janaina Medeiros
Cosimo Galluzzi
we're not kids anymore.

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noise dept.
trying on a metaphor

Kaledo Art
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@imperialbogmonster
omggggg
that kitty really went
HE FLEW
I know y'all did not read the books but Roald Dahl talks about this in the book. Charlieâs teacher points out the fact that unless you buy a shit ton of bars youâre probably not gonna win. Just like the lottery. Just like how all of the other winners of the tickets bought a shit ton of bars. Except Charlie, who just got lucky. And Charlie was originally black. Literally the whole point of the book was that wonka wanted to give the less fortunate a fair opportunity and it wasnât fair because the system isnât fair.
Stop the car.
Charlie was originally black?!?!
!?!!
He was and Mr. Dahl was forced to make him white. Also his widow has spoken and confirmed that as well.
because you shouldnât believe everything you read on a tumblr post at face value, here is a guardian article confirming that charlie was originally conceived as black but dahl made him white at the behest of his publisher
WHAT
But yeah, coming back to the original point, the other kids, especially Augustus Gloop and Veruca Salt, cheated the system by claiming a ridiculous amount of chocolate bars. News reports mention people hoarding Wonka chocolate bars in hopes of finding the Golden Ticket. Mr Salt even admits that he refitted his staff at a nut-shelling factory for opening chocolate bars, without a doubt losing a huge amount of capital in lost profits and mass bulk-buying of chocolate, just to win. The working-class lady who actually found that ticket didnât benefit from that luck or labour - she was immediately made to hand it over to her boss for his spoiled daughter, who holds it as âhisâ victory and good luck.
Charlie didnât even find the ticket in his first bar, or his second. His first bar, his birthday present, was a dud, and he even failed to enjoy it like normal because he dared to hope, just for a moment, that he might actually be lucky enough to get the one. Later, he is lucky enough to find a dropped 50p piece in the street, and goes to buy a chocolate bar for himself. Finally holding a treat that is all his, he wolfs the thing down, stopping only long enough to realises that he didnât get lucky and win a Golden Ticket. Itâs only on the third bar that he gets it, and, smelling blood in the water, the shopkeeper tells him to immediately go home and not tell a soul that he has it, knowing what people might do to this small starving boy if they find out what he has.
And Wonka knows! He knows he done goofed! He realises almost immediately that the people who have been attracted to his lottery, who have stacked the decks in their favour, are awful, cruel, entitled people! Augustus Gloop, the glutton, doesnât care what placed in front of him so long as itâs food - and the first obstacle? A room where everything is a kind of sweet. Violetâs gum-chewing is excessive, but the modern film adapts this into a more realistic and sinister flaw - overcompetitiveness. Itâs not just that sheâs been chewing the same piece of gum for months, itâs that sheâs been chewing the same piece of gum, weeks after its taste is gone, whether it is socially acceptable or not, just to break a record. So when Wonka promises a new treat, a personal favourite of one of the kids, but says itâs not ready yet and you canât have it, of course Violet seizes it, because damn the consequences, she will be the first to try it. Veruca is shown a collection of unique animals, and immediately declares that she wants one, because sheâs always had the bragging rights and luxury rare items. And when Mr Wonka refuses to sell? She steals it, because dang it, she will have that golden goose/trained squirrel! Mike Teevee, in his hubris, mutilates himself almost beyond recognition because he had to challenge Mr Wonkaâs outlandish claim of transmitting physical objects via television. Charlie was the perfect heir, not because he was humble and poor, but because he had the wonder and appreciation for the treats Wonka made but also the sense and caution not to risk messing with the many dangerous things in an active factory. If the lottery was more fair, maybe Charlie would have had more stiff competition, but as it stands, Charlie is almost the poster boy of âwon by doing nothingâ.
Sorry, got sidetracked
TLDR: Apart from Charlie, most of the other kids were entitled rich (white) kids who gamed a system that should have been fair, and were punished for it by revealing to them their greed and hubris
Amazing
Sometimes I just get so f****** impressed by the term pre-raphaelite. Like imagine being so f****** important, that anything that comes immediately before you is PRE-YOU
The Needs of the Many: A Garashir Reading of âBroken Linkâ
Whatâs the current definition of stupidity? It might be trying to write meta for a twenty-six year old show. But you know what? Iâm doing it anyway. I make questionable fandom choices and regret mostly nothing.
So. Iâm still watching Deep Space Nineâabout halfway through season five, but with pretty much every spoiler under my belt considering I have no patience and dove straight into the ficâand I am, without a doubt, absolute garashir trash. Now this is important because as I watch Iâve been on the lookout for all the major scenes and episodes that the fans like to talk about, those that catch our attention for obvious reasons: âPast Prologue,â âThe Wire,â âOur Man Bashir,â and the like. However, through my (admittedly cursory) browsing these last few months, Iâve been surprised to find no one talking about season fourâs finale âBroken Link.â
On the surface it makes sense. Though Garak gets one of his all too rare episodes, weâve past the point of no return with Bermanâs homophobia and our two lovesick faves arenât interacting as much as they once did. RIP.Â
Thus, itâs easy to pass over Garak doing another Bad Thing in the name of his Cardassian devotion, especially when the Bad Thing is circumvented thanks to Worf instead of Julian. However, whatâs nagged at me since watching that scene is one simple, yet significant detail.
Julian was down on that planet.
Quick re-cap for those of us who havenât watched in a while: the Defiant is taking Odo back to the Great Link in order to cure him of the disease they saddled him with in the first place (nice, huh?). Garak realizes that this may be the one and only time they have all the Founders together and potentially vulnerable. He tries to gain control of the Defiantâs weaponry, but is ultimately discovered and stopped by Worf. Sorry, Garak. You might be surprisingly fit for just a plain, simple tailor, but youâve got nothing on a battle-obsessed Klingon.
Keep reading
Honestly âBroken Linkâ is something I always point to as a reason why Garashir should have been canon. Because if the show had explicitly statedâat least to the audienceâat some point that Garak was in love with Bashir, and changed absolutely nothing else about this episode, just think how much more of a punch those scenes would have? How much more clearly it would show what kind of character Garak was, what he was willing to sacrifice for what he believed in? How the stakes and emotional resonance of those scenes just shoot through the roof, purely because of that context? Weâre not even talking about representation at this point; itâs just a matter of what makes the best television. And Garak/Bashir being some kind of a thing (even if itâs just something the audience knows and hasnât been acted on by the characters) is just such a good dramatic choice for the story theyâre telling.Â
there should be weebs but for Ireland
Literally every person on st Patrick's day
Clothesline Farm Animals Graze the Countryside in Playful Illusions by Helga Stentzel
the disrespect
false alarm I think heâs an okay one
Can- Can we have more TK-500? Please? As a treat? đ„ș đđ»đđ»
OH COOOUURRSSSEEE!! Please take this messy Post-Empire look for him đ
(The poncho was essential)
@carrionmagpie Nope. No more TK-500. Yâall lost privileges.
Some people shouldn't be allowed on the Internet. Lol.
A weed Pikachu. Found her at Savers.
And yes, I took her home. I couldnât resist.
Alejandra Oviedo