I've never loved anyone as much as I love Ursula Le Guin
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@kunagisana
I've never loved anyone as much as I love Ursula Le Guin
sorry i’m reblogging this again but this just makes me so fucking angry. this reminds me of those dudes running game of thrones who had virtually no experience and were allowed to just. treat a multimillion dollar franchise as their little fuck-around-and-learn-about-tv sandbox. why are white men with no credentials allowed to get away with this over and over again while the rest of us have to fight tooth and nail for literal crumbs. i fucking hate the entertainment industry
tfw you realize you put more thought into your self indulgent fanfic in middle school than someone in charge of a multimillion dollar franchise that employs thousands of people and is watched by millions.
HOW DID THE GUY WHO CREATED LOST NOT ALREADY LEARN YOU NEED TO HAVE A PLAN????
You know what I'm gonna COMPLAIN!
Vanilla sex isn't "wholesome sex"! Sex is not more pure just because it's done within the framework of a monogamous relationship and free from elements of kink!
"Person is so pure they probably don't even know what sex is." Purity isn't defined by the distance from sex! As if the more a person encounters sex in any context the less pure their soul becomes!
You🫵are not immune to propagating the beliefs and ideas of purity culture!
Mike Smith, Addingham based printmaker
Wild Flower Meadow - Upper Wharfedale',
16 colour/hue, 40 x 30cm. reduction linoprint.
Timothee Chalamet is being dragged for shitting on ballet and opera which I like to see because I love ballet and opera and don't like Chalamet.
But as usual there is a string of comments about how opera, ballet and classical music are soooo inaccessible, and only rich people can afford it.
Is it inaccessible tho or you don't like it and try to invent a justification for it?
Yes, not everyone can visit live performance, because every type of live entertainment is limited by infrastructure. People living in big cities have way more access to concerts, sport events and so on.
But for any other form of entertainment these argument would be laughable. Is being a fan of NHL team is inaccessible if you can't go to see them (and if you live in the middle of hot nowhere you can't even go to see any hockey live at all)? Is being a fan of a famous singer is inaccessible if you only can afford to listen to their music in Spotify using your shitty headphones?
But for some reason inability to go to the MET is making ballet inaccessible.
In the same time, opera and ballet are straight up accessible for free on YouTube. You can watch tons of professional high quality recordings from opera houses all over the world. For opera you will need to search for subtitles in languages you know, of course, but for example OperaVision (EU sponsored opera channel) provides subtitles in English.
If you happen to live in a city with any kind of professional educational institution for classical musicians, you can visit their concerts for free. They are good and also may have more interesting repertoire that your usual big orchestra.
I’m a fan of anyone who shades Timothée Chalamet
on everyone’s soul timothee chalamet is not touching that oscar tonight
Rosalía, "Berghain" feat. Björk Live at Brit Awards, 28.02.2026
accidentally spilled everything thats ever existed on the floor
The Canterbury Tales (1972) dir. Pier Paolo Pasolini
instant loss 2koma
The really funny part is that many modern sources that want to gas up Sparta will bring up this specific anecdote, but stop at the "if" and just not mention what happened immediately afterwards.
similarly, "μολὼν λαβέ" (come and take them) is a really cool thing to say, made significantly less cool by having them taken
Weird Fantasy (1950) #18 written by Al Feldstein and drawn by Joe Orlando, with editor Bill Gaines
So he said it can't be a Black. So I said, "For God's sakes, Judge Murphy, that's the whole point of the Goddamn story!" So he said, "No, it can't be a Black". Bill just called him up and raised the roof, and finally they said, "Well, you gotta take the perspiration off". I had the stars glistening in the perspiration on his Black skin. Bill said, "Fuck you", and he hung up.
Al Feldstein, Tales of Terror: The EC Companion
Just to add context for those not aware of the impact of this story.
The reason it was so important for narrative purposes, was that the plot concerns the visit of the Astronaut, in his completely opaque spacesuit, to a planet populated entirely by self-aware robots (originally from Earth) who have built their own society and are petitioning to be allowed to interact with Earth again as equals.
They have a democratic government and free choice of careers etc. as the orange robot serving as guide tells the Astronaut.
The Astronaut notices that there are two different types of robot on this world; the orange ones, who are in charge, gifted access to all information and facilities. and the blue robots, who are seen as more limited in function, have less access to information and resources, and are not allowed positions of power or as wide a choice of employment opportunities. Even transportation is segregated.
The Astronaut investigates further and discovers that the blue and orange robots are actually structurally identical, there is absolutely no difference between their potential or capabilities, and it is only because the orange robots are instructed by their Educator system to consider themselves superior, that the difference exists.
The Astronaut tells the robots they are not ready for re-alignment with Earth, until they come to terms with their own unfairness, and how Earth had had to deal with this issue themselves. When that time comes, the robots will be able to ally with Earth.
Then he leaves in his spaceship, and it's only in that one final panel that we see the Astronaut is black.
Not subtle, nor should it be, but for 1950 this was a breathtakingly powerful statement, perhaps the first of it's kind in the genre.
The black character was not a caricature, or comedy relief, he was a main character in his own right, a human who "simply" was black.
When I was a professor I fucking LOVED teaching this comic. You can read the full thing here (and please read the letters to the editor at the bottom as well—including a message from Ray Bradbury).
Friday the 13th usually bring me good luck. Here's hoping this post helps even more !