ĐżĐŸ ĐŒĐŸŃĐžĐČĐ°ĐŒ ŃĐ°Đ±ĐŸŃŃ Â«Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea».
gracie is a half-fish and I give her gills and sharp teeth
ŃĐ°ĐŒĐŸĐ” ĐœĐ°ĐŽĐ”Đ¶ĐœĐŸĐ” ĐŒĐ”ŃŃĐŸ ŃŃĐŸ Ń ĐżĐ°ĐżĐșĐž ĐœĐ° ŃĐżĐžĐœĐ”
hello vonnie
cherry valley forever
Misplaced Lens Cap

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i don't do bad sauce passes
Show & Tell

Love Begins

Product Placement

izzy's playlists!
wallacepolsom
Acquired Stardust

blake kathryn
almost home

Andulka

tannertan36
KIROKAZE

pixel skylines
ojovivo

Discoholic đȘ©

if i look back, i am lost

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@kataclysmicsass
ĐżĐŸ ĐŒĐŸŃĐžĐČĐ°ĐŒ ŃĐ°Đ±ĐŸŃŃ Â«Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea».
gracie is a half-fish and I give her gills and sharp teeth
ŃĐ°ĐŒĐŸĐ” ĐœĐ°ĐŽĐ”Đ¶ĐœĐŸĐ” ĐŒĐ”ŃŃĐŸ ŃŃĐŸ Ń ĐżĐ°ĐżĐșĐž ĐœĐ° ŃĐżĐžĐœĐ”
posted my H50 (but mostly mcdanno) out of context video to youtube if anyone wants to support and see it in hd! đ
this show has no right being as funny as it is and ESPECIALLY with zero context
send this to your oomfs with zero explanation and all theyâll come up with is âđłïžâđđ€š?â
enjoy!
so uk netflix is getting hawaii five o and my friend... i am so ready to go on this journey. your gifs, your tags, your meta, it has prepared me. i am ready for a navy seal to go gooey eyed for a feisty lil guy. i am ready for their team to joke about their relationship. i will be grinning and kicking my legs when i see the scenes from Gifs. your blorbos... will become mine also <3
haha, incredible, you've been reblogging mcdanno from me since the beginning of my obsession aka november 2021 so i naturally assumed you already had seen the show, lol. well im glad they are about to graduate to your blobros proper from blorbos-in-law đ€ sounds like i have prepared you well, putting on mcdanno goggles is the only correct way to enjoy the show ;)
'navy seal goes gooey eyed for a feisty little guy' is an absolutely spot-on description of the show (and it kinda rhymes!), sounds like you already know your stuff, a+
Long time no see all!
Sorry for the delay, I know I promised Iâd post more of the videos I got soon⊠Iâve just been so jet-lagged Iâve been focused on settling back into work and acting like Iâm normal and didnât experience a genuinely life changing event.
Hereâs a snippet from the first song of the night, A Drinking Song for the Socially Anxious. They really know their audience âșïž
My favorite memories of the performance are moments like these, that were so uniquely TAD, so intrinsically tied to THIS audience, THIS time and THIS place, that they are truly irreplicable. The way we were all right there with Joey and Madeleine, were feeling their lyrics so deeply and with such love we couldnât help but spontaneously start to sing along? Magic.
Iâll be making an effort to post more of my favorite clips of the performance in the coming days. The videos I got arenât the best (I was fighting tooth and nail with my phoneâs focus the entire time, ugh), especially when compared to some of the really awesome videos other fans have shared, but Iâd still love to offer what Iâve got!
I do have audio recording of the book interview at the start, as well as longer videos (and these shorter ones not absolutely fucking mangled by Tumblrâs compression, if anyone has tips on how to deal with this Iâd love to know). If people are interested Iâd be happy to put together a Google Drive to share. Just let me know!!
Itâs been so joyous to see everyoneâs posts about the night, I love you all so much and I feel so lucky to be a part of a fanbase as fucking amazing as this one â€ïž
i've been phasing the phrase 'google it' out of my vocabulary and going back to 'look it up'. fuck you youve lost your generic trademark privileges
seconding these tags by @ragsy: #if the social consciousness has decided that duckduckgo is the Only Othet Search Engine#might i suggest 'go duck yourself'
Give a man a mask, and he'll show the world who he truly is. Teach a man to mask, and nobody can tell he's autistic until he has a breakdown.
give a man half a mask, and he'll stalk the sewers of paris for 20 years or something then attack a fancy ball i think I wasn't paying attention
awww the like button turns into a rainbow when you press it! that's so cute...hey staff what's with all the trans women you keep nuking?
i think we should be ridiculing them more for this. you don't get to try and go all "queer website" when your staff likes to go on nuking sprees targeting the trans fem users
The Calling: Do you like my dress? It's got pockets.
Blossoms: Yeah that's awesome. Uhm. Do you have a fire extinguisher by any chance?
The âcis is a slurâ shit is so funny because you know the people who say that are using transphobic slurs in every other sentence and assuming that cis is derogatory because all of the terms they use for trans people are so the terms transgender people use to refer to their identity must be demeaning too. Itâs not but if they do invent a slur against cisgender people, I will be using it. Fuck off, default settings.
Zohran Mamdani is using New York City to show the world how progressive policies work for everyone. #DemocraticSocialist
This is what's so fucked up about "nothing that requires the labor of others is a human right".
The labor is already being done under capitalism. The laborers are already being underpaid under capitalism.
When you propose removing the greedy profiteers and paying the workers a reasonable wage, people call that "slavery" while they have no problem with the current system.
They're not even trying to make sense.
'trans men haven't upheld their weight in the community at the same level that lesbians and trans women have' a lot of those lesbians were trans men and mascs but you're all not ready for that conversation
#a mixed Black transmasc woman very likely sparked the stonewall uprising (storme delarverie)#and yet somehow we never fucking hear about her! even when people talk abt the trans and Black origins of Stonewall!#& when it comes to feminist stuff as ive said before#transmascs often find inspiration in cis women in history who resisted misogyny#yet cis women REFUSE to ever find inspiration in transmascs who resisted misogyny and transphobia#have trans men failed to uphold their weight or can you not tolerate visible transmasculinity
actually adding my tags. ik op also talked about Stormé in the notes but like. i really do find it so frustrating how he has been completely neglected as a historical figure. to the point where there's a lot of people who will, when talking about the erasure of Black trans people from Stonewall history, will immediately jump to talking about Marsha P. Johnson (who, while a vital figure in US queer history who deserves the attention she has started to receive from the community, did not start the uprising and arrived to them later) and continue to credit her with "throwing the first shotglass." but they don't even know who Stormé is, despite again, it being at the very least equally if not more likely she was actually involved with sparking the uprising.
and its even more frustrating because part of the reason its likely isn't just Stormé's own recollection, but because there are other reports that the uprising was kicked off when the cops arrested, specifically, a person seen as female who was wearing male clothing and was being violently arrested for FTM crossdressing. FTM activists were trying to raise awareness about this in 1989. like people specifically saw (even if it wasn't Stormé) a butch dyke getting arrested explicitly for wearing too many men's clothes and not enough women's clothes.
and yet, no one ever. fucking talks about this. no one who specifically is trying to talk about the erasure of trans people from queer activism mentions this. and we should all be asking, ourselves and each other, why? a lot of people don't want to have this conversation because it asks a lot of us, but that's exactly why its so vital to have responsibly.
Stonewall is as much myth as it is historical event, especially at this point in time. and how we choose to narrate it matters, even though we (should) all know that we will never know the full exact story, nor do we need to because, again, much of its importance is serving as a grounded myth of the birth of organized queer resistance in the US. And the fact is, there is every reason for us to tell a version of this myth which highlights that the inciting moment for queer people being fucking done with the constant acts of violence, was a mixed Black transmasc woman, a drag king who identified as a transgender warrior in Leslie Feinberg's book of that name, being violently arrested for his transmasculine presentation.
and not only is that not the version we tell, there's often no trace of transmasculinity at all in how we remember Stonewall or any queer historical events. & op is so. so incredibly right in prompting people to critically examine that absence. because i do believe if Stormé was a femme lesbian, people would be a lot more invested in making sure people know about the lesbian woman who started Stonewall. almost like, on an unconscious collective level, we see transmasculine figures as undesirable when it comes to being community icons, martyrs, heroes, theorists, creatives, etc.
anyways, for those curious, here's Stormé's recollection of Stonewall, from this interview:
The conversation turned to the night in June of 1969 at the Stonewall Inn where she made history. Quite a few friends, writers and historians over the years have identified her as the tough cross-dressing butch lesbian who was clubbed by the NYPD, which evoked enough indignation and anger to spur the crowd to action. She was identified as the Stonewall Lesbian in Charles Kaiserâs book The Gay Metropolis, and her scuffle with the police has been mentioned a few times in passing by The New York Times in the past couple of decades. Then in the January 2008 issue of Curve Magazine she identified herself as the Stonewall Lesbian in a detailed interview with writer Patrick Hinds, an excerpt of which is below: I asked her if she still remembered that night. She answered in the affirmative. After the cop hit her on the head, she socked him with her fist. âI hit him,â she said. âHe was bleeding.â A natural protector, she has worked as a security guard at a few of the lesbian bars in the city. I spoke to her friend, Lisa Cannistraci, who has known her for around 25 years. Now one of the owners of lesbian bar Henrietta Hudson, Cannistraci said that DeLarverie worked as a security guard at the original Cubby Hole, located at 438 Hudson Street, starting in 1985. Cubby Hole eventually moved to the corner of West 4th and West 12th. Then Henrietta Hudson opened at the 438 Hudson Street location, and DeLarverie continued working there until 2005. âUntil she was 85 years old?â I asked her. Cannistraci said yes.
also, just to drive home the point, the community ignoring Stormé was not a harmless act. he developed dementia later in life and did not receive the support that she fucking deserved from the community:
In March, Farrell, who lived next door to DeLarverie at the Hotel Chelsea, found DeLarverie disoriented and, uncharacteristically, asking for help. DeLarverie was shaking and dehydrated, and she was taken to and treated at the nearby St. Vincentâs Hospital. No next of kin has been located, and she no domestic partner. Friends say that she had a long term relationship with an aerialist and burlesque performer, but that was âa long time ago.â With no one in her life legally able to make health care decisions, she was given a court appointed a guardian: the Jewish Association for Services for the Aged (âJASAâ). She remained at the hospital as doctors ascertained her ability to care for herself. When St. Vincentâs went bankrupt and closed abruptly, she was transferred to the nursing home. SAGE, an advocacy group for elderly members of the LGBT community, has also been offering assistance. Her friends say that communication with the aforementioned groups has been inadequate and a source of frustration, and they feel powerless to improve her situation. [...] DeLarverie continued emceeing and singing after Stonewall â at gay events and at benefits. Her friend Williamson Henderson, President of the S.V.A., told me that she hosted an annual gay nightlife event, The Gay Bar Peopleâs Ball, where all of the movers and shakers of NYC gay nightlife would congregate and receive awards. âIt was an event that was well known and a big deal,â he said. In Sam Bassettâs film, DeLarverie said that she continued to sing at benefits for battered women and children, remarking âSomebody has to care. People say, âWhy do you still do that?â I said, âItâs very simple. If people didnât care about me when I was growing up, with my mother being black, raised in the south.â I said, âI wouldnât be here.'â What does the future hold for DeLarverie? Cannistraci told me that she is currently in the process of petitioning for legal guardianship of DeLarverie and hopes to move her into a brighter, more modern nursing home with a larger staff and activities for the residents â and one where a friend of DeLarverieâs already resides. âShe was a protector of the community, and [her situation] is heartbreaking,â she said. [...] DeLarverieâs situation is, unfortunately, not unique, and it highlights some of the issues faced by gay and lesbian seniors. It is unclear whether DeLarverie has no surviving family members or whether she has surviving family members but simply lost touch with them over the years. Many elders become isolated from their families, either because of family disapproval or because they moved away from their families to a big city with a large gay and lesbian population, thereby becoming out of sight and out of mind. If they do end up in a retirement home or nursing home, there is also the issue of whether other residents will have a problem with their sexual orientation. Furthermore, in many states, same-sex partners cannot be legally bound, and if there is no next of kin, one can end up being a ward of the state. If the Rosa Parks of the gay community can end up in a nursing home among strangers like other forgotten elderly men and women, it is certainly a wake up call.
idk not to get on a soapbox here on op's post, but i think Stormé is such a good example of how this "lack" of transmasc contributions to the community is actually a sign of anti-transmasculinity. i want you to think about how Stormé's race and trans*masculinity made the labor she did for the community, for decades, invisible.
#Stormé DeLarverie#this genuinely makes me want to chew glass every time i think about it#like frankly if you don't know about /any trans men contributing to queer rights/ you should Not be bragging about it#bc it just means you do NOT know your history#are you a queer trans person with access to transition? you Better put respect on Lou Sullivan's name#or hell do you have Actual Access to Medical Transition At All ???#Jamison Green WROTE the policy that formed the groundwork for medical transition AND anti-discrimination policies across the US#i mean hell Gavin Grimm's court case aiming to officially classify bathroom bills as discriminatory was only 5 years ago#and he was a fucking /teenager/ when that ball started rolling#if you think trans men and transmascs are not and have not ALWAYS been involved in community activism#you are simply uneducated and you should be ashamed of that
^^^ all of this + Gavin Grimm not only did that, but he didn't benefit basically at all. he graduated before the case was decided, and he only got $1 from it. Gavin was left traumatized and poor and has since struggled with housing. And I personally have never heard his name mentioned in discussions of vital modern trans activists in the US. Sounds familiar, doesn't it? Fuck, I've barely heard his name ever, and I'm a queer from the DMV (region in the northeast USA) who has been pretty involved in my local queer community, so there's really no excuse.
You can still donate to his GoFundMe if you'd like. From this article:
As Donald Trump rolled back LGBTQ+ rights, including banning trans servicemembers from the military and authorizing homeless shelters to exclude trans people, Grimm won repeated court victories. But his school district appealed. One court of appeals judge compared Grimm to the historic American plaintiffs who challenged slavery, Japanese concentration camps, segregation and bans on interracial and gay marriage. A 2020 ruling offered a âresounding yesâ in favor of the constitution and civil rights laws protecting trans students from discrimination. Grimm graduated before the case was resolved and never got to return to his schoolâs boysâ bathrooms. In 2021, the supreme court allowed Grimmâs victory to stand, and the school board was ordered to pay $1.3m in attorneyâs fees. Grimm, however, only got a symbolic $1. To secure damages, Grimm wouldâve had to give the oppositionâs lawyers access to his medical records to scrutinize the cause and extent of his emotional distress, a process he couldnât stomach after years of fighting. The idea heâd have to prove his anguish was unbelievable to his mom, who canât shake the memories of her son becoming suicidal. Grimm doesnât regret moving on without damages. But he desperately couldâve used financial help â especially as the trauma of his childhood began to catch up with him. [...]
happy pride! credit transmasculine people or shut the fuck up
while we're here, might as well add on that not only was the Stonewall Uprising likely kicked off by a transmasculine person resisting state violence because of their masculine presentation, but the transmasculine people & other queer (perceived-)women of the nearby Women's House of Detention rioted in solidarity:
"The House of D [was] 500 feet from the Stonewall Inn," Ryan says. "On the first night of the riots, people incarcerated in the prison could actually see what was happening out their windows, and they started a riot all their own, setting fire to their belongings and throwing them down to the streets below while chanting 'Gay rights! Gay rights! Gay rights!'" By the '50s and '60s, Ryan estimates, "around 75% of the people incarcerated in the House of D are queer in some way." In the 1960s, the prison began marking gay prisoners with a "D" for "degenerate," and placing them into solitary confinement because they were considered a "danger to other women."
credit transmasculine people or shut the fuck up.
Happy Pride
Your regular reminder that trickle-down economics is a cruel joke designed by the wealthy.
HE FOUND TUMBLR??????
Iâve been here the whole time.
Dear god, he's not kidding...