I’ve had this same dilemma too many times
One Nice Bug Per Day
Xuebing Du

@theartofmadeline
$LAYYYTER

pixel skylines
RMH
NASA

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Kiana Khansmith
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
will byers stan first human second
wallacepolsom
KIROKAZE
Mike Driver
cherry valley forever
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DEAR READER
we're not kids anymore.

oozey mess
occasionally subtle
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@k1mmmd
I’ve had this same dilemma too many times
I know all us grown up queers love She Ra, but I can’t stop thinking about the little girls who watch it and feel seen and known and understood.
The multiple WLW relationships, the female friendships, the diversity of the cast, the message of sometimes doing what is good for YOU and not just everyone else?
That would have meant the world to me as a kid.
"There's nothing inappropriate about being gay and living your life," the show's creator said. "This is something we need to represent and show in as many different ways as possible."
Mild spoilers for She-Ra
“Outside of the typical epic storyline of a massive army and the resistance fighters hellbent on stopping them, “She-Ra” has taken the time to examine relationships, both romantic and platonic. Its final season, airing earlier this year, took the giant risk of admitting that — for all the social media “shipping” — Adora and her best friend/moral enemy Catra (voiced by AJ Michalka) were actually in love with each other. “It’s a responsibility in my eyes [to] create media for children, for all ages, that shows these issues as normal,” she said. As a member of the LGBTQ community herself, Stevenson never wanted to present the relationship as something to be afraid of or “saved” from.
Cartoons like this didn’t exist when she was growing up, she explains, leaving her to latch onto characters that were coded as gay or lesbian. “They weren’t characters who were outwardly gay or lesbian,” Stevenson said. “It was characters where I projected onto them or latched onto them in a way I didn’t understand yet.” She says Velma from “Scooby Doo” was her first crush on a character but, as a child, she didn’t understand what that meant or how to approach it: “I just felt a kinship with her. I felt seen in some way.”
That sense of visibility affected how Catra and Adora’s relationship developed as Stevenson understands children test out the way they want to be seen through characters. “That’s a space that is very important for young people who are finding out who they are,” Stevenson said. “It would have been huge for me for [I] had had something that was very normal, very accepted, something that was shown as being aspirational and beautiful. I think I would have started to figure things out a lot earlier.”
Read the full piece here
black lives matter and pride are intrinsically linked. the black trans community have done so much for us, we owe it to them to not forget their movement this month. without black lives, there would be no pride. black lives matter, today and always
get to know me meme: [5/?] favourite characters ♡ cosima niehaus (orphan black)
“It’s all of us. You have to love all of us.”
schitt’s creek celebration
eight quotes → david in 4x12
Buffy the Vampire Slayer | 3.09 “The Wish”
Crazy Rich Asians (2018) dir. Jon M. Chu
the holy trinity
Not enough for me? You are e v e r y t h i n g.
#that self-quarantine state of mind