I’m going to hold your hand when I say this…. The freaks have always been here. The freaks built fandom. The freaks built sites like AO3.

@theartofmadeline
we're not kids anymore.
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Noah Kahan
Cosimo Galluzzi
occasionally subtle

tannertan36

Kiana Khansmith
todays bird
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NASA

Origami Around
cherry valley forever
h
Sade Olutola
almost home
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@iremainimmortalinyourmind
I’m going to hold your hand when I say this…. The freaks have always been here. The freaks built fandom. The freaks built sites like AO3.
RIDE OR DIE (2026) | Trailer
shes not wrong
I watched the first two Mummy movies a few days ago and I'm still not over that Mr Traditional Blades Man Ardeth Bay...
actually has an affinity for machine guns.
the more I rewatch the mummy (1999 & 2001 movies) the more solid good stuff I see and among that stuff is the way Ardeth isn't your typical spiritually powered character. yes he's a believer of an ancient religion with mighty gods and powerful spells that still affect this earth. yes he's a person of tradition and a part of an ancient secret society etc etc. yes he's a mighty warrior. but he's mighty not because he's of that religion and spirituality. they coulda given him some supernatural kung pow like fighting style or make him deflect bullets and blades with a sword or the power of thought. they didn't have to make him realistic. the movie's goal isn't to be realistic. it's a story about a mummy coming alive and you can light a match on a guy's beard in it as long as the guy is hot enough, but still you have bits of brilliancy and accuracy and relatability in the whole mash. he is as realistic as the movie lets him be. his favourite weapon? a tommy gun. because that and your faith can get you much further than just your faith. it's funny and it's perfect and it's very refreshing
something i can never get over is just how small Jonathan looks next to these two
my mans is five-ten but these guys are making him look like a shrimp.
they could break him like a pencil. they could bench press him. they could fold him with ease.
When l stuck it on, l saw the pyramids at Giza. Then, whoosh! Straight across the desert to Karnak.
The Mummy movies vs the internet
i suggest not letting it get this far
With the whole "Markiplier making his own DVD copies of Iron Lung to sell" thing, it's been fascinating and slightly concerning how many people seem to genuinely believe that if a physical release isn't coming from a giant corporation, it must automatically be a bootleg.
Look at me.
Look me directly in the eyes while I say this.
You can just make things.
You can simply create something and put it into the world.
That's allowed.
People have been doing it for centuries.
They sell blank VHS tapes. They sell blank DVDs. Blank CDs. You can buy flash drives by the bucketful if you really want to. If you create a movie, an album, a game, a documentary, or a four-hour video essay about the mating habits of fictional space goblins, you are entirely permitted to put that thing on physical media and sell it.
That is not piracy.
Piracy is taking something that belongs to someone else and reproducing or distributing it without permission.
If I buy a DVD of a movie, I own that copy of the movie. I do not own the movie itself. I didn't acquire the rights to duplicate it, press a thousand copies, and start selling them out of my garage like I've become the regional distributor for Warner Bros.
The copyright, distribution rights, and intellectual property still belong to whoever created it or whoever legally acquired those rights.
If I start burning copies of Iron Lung and selling them myself without Markiplier's permission, that's piracy.
If Markiplier, who made and owns the rights to Iron Lung, burns copies and sells them himself, that's just distribution.
He's the rights holder.
He's distributing his own work.
If you made it, if it came from your own mind, your own work, your own time, your own resources, then congratulations. You own the thing. You don't need a corporation to bless it with legitimacy.
The corporation is not what makes it real.
The fact that it exists is what makes it real.
I think we've accidentally spent so many years living inside a world dominated by mass-produced media that some people have developed the strange assumption that all media emerges from a factory somewhere. As if films naturally occur in shrink-wrapped plastic cases and descend from the heavens aboard a pallet truck.
But independent artists have been burning discs, dubbing tapes, printing books, pressing records, and mailing things directly to people for longer than many of us have been alive.
That's not a bootleg.
That's just a product.
It's not "bootleg."
It's just... leg.
The normal kind.
The original, free-range, locally sourced leg.
The Mummy (1999)
"The Medjai were originally supposed to be tattooed from head to toe, but Stephen Sommers vetoed it because he thought Oded Fehr was "too good-looking" to be covered up." Horror Character Appreciation - Oded Fehr as Ardeth Bay in The Mummy (1999) dir. Stephen Sommers
I'll forever love The Mummy Returns for totally abandoning the trope of the main couple having had some off-screen break up before the sequel. Instead they're a loving, thriving, married, thrill seeking adventure family that had a child just like them. How brave of Stephen Sommers to give the audience that and not be afraid of Rick and Evy being "boring" because the "will they, won't they" tension was left resolved from the first movie. Refreshing even to this day to watch these movies back to back!
The shoulder rig is the male equivalent of a corset. In this essay, I will…
People on other social media: "Oh no, I finally watched Heated Rivalry, but everyone's already over it. Now I have no one to talk to about it."
Me, on Tumblr where we aren't even over The Mummy (1999) yet: "What is this mysterious over it?"