*throws ibuprofen on the ground and watches the aging tumblr populous peck at them like chickens*
Don't be ridiculous. Our backs and knees absolutely cannot do that.
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Product Placement
Peter Solarz
Keni
Jules of Nature

Andulka
wallacepolsom
taylor price
I'd rather be in outer space šø

ā
No title available
sheepfilms
Three Goblin Art
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć
almost home
cherry valley forever
Cosimo Galluzzi
h
official daine visual archive

JVL

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Tunisia
seen from India

seen from India
seen from United States
seen from United States
@midlifecrisses
*throws ibuprofen on the ground and watches the aging tumblr populous peck at them like chickens*
Don't be ridiculous. Our backs and knees absolutely cannot do that.
Little, Brown Young Readers Instagram Story Oct 12, 2022
Colferblueeyes: Chris Colfer. My life is complete. ā¤ļøļø
Colferblueeyes: And here's another one. He's so pretty. š„µš„° [Posted Oct 12, 2022]
Americans for the Arts will present the annual National Arts Awards October 17.
Darren Criss to Receive Ted Arison Young Artist Award
Darren Criss will receive the Ted Arison Young Artist Award from Americans for the Arts at the annual National Arts Awards, set forĀ Guastavino's in NYCĀ October 17 at 6:30 PM.
Criss played Blaine Anderson, his breakout role, on TV'sĀ Glee, which has since led to a career across screen and stage. He starred inĀ American Buffalo on Broadway earlier this year and co-hosted the 2022 Tony Awards: Act One with Julianne Hough. He previously starred as Hedwig inĀ Hedwig and the Angry Inch after his Broadway debut inĀ How to Succeed in Business Without Really TryingĀ as J. Pierrepont Finch.
Taking place for the first time since 2019, the National Arts Awards recognize "artists, activists, and collectives whose work demonstrates extraordinary aesthetic achievement while advancing cultural discourse in the United States." Other recipients this year include Joy Harjo, For Freedoms, Robert F. Smith, and The Gordon Parks Foundation. Awards will be presented by Dr. Elizabeth Alexander, Jesse Williams, Jon Batiste, LaToya Ruby Frazier, and Lea Salonga.
leamichele:Ā The amount of times this guy has seen me sing Donāt Rain On My Parade š I love youĀ @ darrencrissĀ andĀ @miavoncrissĀ ā¤ļø
One more question(for now) why do people on tumblr use tags to talk #like this #about whatever they think of the post, instead of just commenting on the reblogš Is there an etiquette I'm missing?
short answer: yes.
long answer, there is an etiquette to it, and I think it's a longstanding thing that just ended up ingrained in a lot of users, which comes off as cold/shy/outlandish or maybe even standoffish to people from other sites and apps. there's no be-all end-all of how to act online or on here but i think in terms of most* people (*speaking broadly, making this up) who've used tumblr for a while it feels like this:
tumblr is a theater, the dashboard is a stage, each post is a performance. (a joke, a dramatic act, a story, a movie, a picture, etc.) you have a variety of ways to interact with the performance, but some of them are going to be more frowned upon--based purely on how the long standing visitors of the theater are used to acting, honestly.
to add: In The Time Before, reblogs were not part of a chain straight down but each subsequent reblog indented the ones before it more and more, like this:
depending on how far the reblog chain went, the original post ā the thing you were, in theory, responding to ā would be so far indented that it was practically unreadable, or (this happened automatically, but no one liked it) all of the posts above a certain point would be turned into a link to the lowest blog's comment, and treated as reblogs of a link rather than reblogs of a post. so no one would even see the original post, just the reblogs.
so refusing to reply in reblogs actually had a practical application: it meant that you weren't literally supplanting the original post for your "yeah, I agree!" addition.
This does differ depending on the kind of post, by the way.
Some posts are literally meant to be discussions, and so of course it's ok to add your opinion to that post, because the original poster's entire purpose of putting it into the world was to have that engagement.
So some posts are less theater, and more a circle of chairs, where everyone is an equal and OP is leading the discussion.
Part of what makes Tumblr the site it is is the engagement via reblogs and the things people add on.
Tony Benn's speech in the house of commons in 1998.
sometimes you just have to stand up and say something intensely cringey like "killing people is bad" etc.
I am a(n):
āŖ Male
āŖ Female
š Writer
Looking for
āŖ Boyfriend
āŖ Girlfriend
š An incredibly specific word that I canāt remember
*wakes up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat*
WAIT ITāS CALLED A THROW PILLOW
here is a super helpful website for this kinda thing!
the first result isnāt always the one youāre looking for but when you press enter itāll give you a ton of words related to your query thatāll probably have what youāre wanting, or something better
hereās some examples:
Reblog to save a writerās sanity.
Said this to a dear and much-loved friend today, but I think maybe we all might need to see it:
Long-fic is not the rent you pay to be a part of fandom.
Fic, full-stop, is not the rent you pay to be a part of fandom.
Art is not the rent you pay to be a part of fandom.
Constantly creating is not the rent you pay to be a part of fandom.
Fandom is a community, not a corporation, your productivity is not a payment you have to make to be here.
THIS. I saw a post the other day that literally said if you do it to a fictional character, youāll do it in real life.
No. Just NO.
Iām so glad someone put it into words.
Lin-Manuel Miranda is a legend, and heās absolutely right.
And I really feel like there are parts of fandom that donāt get or donāt believe this, and I think thatās troubling.Ā Iāve seen arguments that people shouldnāt have dark fantasies, or that bad impulses in themselves make a bad person.Ā Iāve seen so much shaming over thoughts.
And if you get to a point where itās bad to have dark thoughts and itās bad to wonder what something would be like and itās bad to put yourself in the shoes of anyone who isnātĀ āpureā, if fiction is no longer a realm where you can confront and explore, but an ongoing test of moral purity⦠well, maybe not everyoneās brain works like mine, but I feel like that takes away something incredibly important to being human.
Purity culture is gonna kill art if yāall let it.
Fiction is a safe place to explore whatever fucked up or dark desire that you have. You can write the most vile and fucked up shit in fiction and it be absolutely nothing you desire in real life. You can write about a serial killer who gets away with it. You can write about someone who goes on moral crusades to purge the world of all evils and still be the protagonist. You can write anythingĀ in fiction because thatās what it is meant for.Ā
It isnāt meant to be a social commentary unless you create it to be.Ā
It isnāt meant to be educational unless you create it to be.Ā
Sometimes a story can be just that, a story. Entertainment. Nothing more, nothing less.Ā
Not everything has to be deep, or have meaning, etc. unless the creator wants it to be and a lot of the purity types end up forcing something to have deep meaning or social commentary where it isnāt meant to.Ā Is this inherently bad? No, but these people donāt just sayĀ āBut this is my interpretation of it.ā they go as far as trying to force that interpretation onto everyone else, including the creator, as a means of sayingĀ āSee? It means that they promote/condone xyz so theyāre bad and shitty people who should spend the rest of their life in jail with/are the same as people whoāve actually committed acts of violence against other people.āĀ
THANK. YOU.
@ all the people in the notes saying āyes except u canāt write about (list of immoral things they donāt want to see in fiction)ā congrats on missing the point so spectacularly Iām not sure I could create better performance art if I tried
So, I have OCD. Responsibility/harm OCD, in particular. And guys, let me tell you, the hardline stance that having bad thoughts makes you bad is actively harmful to people like me. āHaving a thought means you will act on itā goes against everything mental health professionals say and what mental health advocates stand for.
And you know, there are people who have it even worse than me? Religious OCD often focuses on achieving complete moral purity. P-OCD features fears of secretly being a pedophile. Postpartum depression features intrusive, frightening thoughts that sometimes drive new parents to suicide because of the stigma of having those thoughts. There are stories of people actually being investigated by child protective services because they shared their fears with an ignorant health professional who believed thought=action. Many abuse survivors with PTSD live in terror of becoming abusers themselves, and any errant negative thought that floats across their brain can frighten them into thinking theyāre becoming monsters.
Perpetuating the idea that thoughts=actions makes it hard for people struggling with intrusive thoughts to reach out for help dealing with them. That makes mentally ill people live in unnecessary misery. It isolates them. Sometimes it even kills them.
Accepting and exploring bad thoughts is actually the basis of exposure and response prevention therapy for OCD. Itās literally part of the treatment for the illness. Discouraging that act, portraying it as evil, can be detrimental to recovery.
āOh,ā you might say if youāre guilty of this, āI donāt mean people like you with bad thoughts, I mean people who write bad thoughts!ā Cool. Doesnāt fucking matter. People like me hear and internalize it. People who have these illnesses and donāt yet recognize that hear and internalize it; they may never get help because of it. You canāt lob a bomb at your enemy and un-kill all the bystanders caught in the blast. Not how that works.
Fandom needs to stop being so far up its own ass about fictional content that itās becoming ableist. There are real world consequences for the ignorant ideas being pushed. Even if you donāt care about fiction as a tool for catharsis, even if you donāt care about the importance of art as free expression, even if you donāt care about censorship, you should still criticize this trend in fandom because itās ableist as fuck. Thanks for coming to my TED talk.
some very important info re: paid accounts~
I am not a lawyer, but I can decently interpret legalese and, being as I also suffer from tl;dr syndrome and assume others may as well, I took one for the team and went through the updated TOS for the post+ accounts and highlighted (what I understand to be) the most pertinent information, which ultimately comes down to this:
You cannot monetize copyrighted works (aka charge and earn money from fanfic, fanworks, etc) and if you do decide to put your fanworks behind a paywall via Tumblr, when you are inevitably sued, Tumblr will not protect you and will not defend you and you alone, personally, will be responsible for whatever monetary damages said lawsuit results in.
If anyone is a lawyer and knows I've gotten any of this wrong, please do not hesitate to correct me/this post.
Screenshots taken from Tumblr's TOS (updated 7-21-21), Stripe's Account Agreement, and the post+ FAQs.
1. Your paid account will not be hosted by tumblr; it is routed through a 3rd party.
2. By signing up for a paid account, you're entering into an agreement with Stripe, so in addition to Tumblr's TOS, you are also bound to Stripe's TOS.
3. Stripe, like Tumblr, will not defend you or protect you against any lawsuits.
4. Furthermore, you may end up owing Stripe money (indemnify = compensate)
5. Tumblr's TOS specifically states that you can't put any content on your post+ account that violates any laws, including laws that protect intellectual property rights of others. This is super important, because Tumblr's post+ FAQ also states that you can post anything that you would regularly post on tumblr, which I'm sure many will take to mean that gifsets, fanworks, etc are fair game, since all of that stuff can be posted on tumblr now. However, the difference is, you're not making money from the fanworks you're posting or reblogging now. Once money enters the equation, the game changes.
Tumblr is making it seem like any and all content goes for post+ accounts, knowing 90% of this site is fanworks. This is not true and you'll be opening yourself up for lawsuits if you charge for fanworks.
6. Tumblr further disclaims any and all liability in any legal issues.
tl;dr: Please do not make a post+ account, bc you will be opening yourself to lawsuits and if that happens, Tumblr's response will be not our problem, you agreed to all the terms which said you couldn't do that, sorry not sorry. Please protect yourself.
This post is a public service.
This staffās post explaining their POV on this just showed up on my wall, so here, have the relevant part:
We do, however, want to address the main concerns we are hearing:
Fanfiction & Copyright Infringement
Basically, the process works the same as it always has. And yes, the following information is coming to you straight from a lawyer:
We fully support Creators sharing their fanfiction and fanart on Tumblr. We encourage sharing creative work of all kinds on the platform.
Fanfiction and fanart are frequently considered fair use and we support our Creatorsā fair use rights. Monetizing fan work does not necessarily mean that it isnāt fair use.
Any content posted on Tumblr, both free and monetized, should follow our Terms of Service and Community Guidelines, which prohibits infringing the intellectual property rights of others. Whether a piece of fanfiction meets the requirements for fair use varies depending on the work. Intellectual property rights holders are in the best position to decide if they think a fanfiction or fan art violates their rights. If they do, they can use the normal Tumblr DMCA process to identify content for removal. Creators can also take advantage of the normal counter-notification process if they believe the content was misidentified as infringing.
So, basically, with a bit of fancy wording around it how itās gonna be Totally Cool, No Worries on tumblrās side, OPās point still stands fully, imo.
Thanks for the addition, @hidden-but!
Once again, I am not a lawyer, but here's my interpretation (again, anyone who is a lawyer please correct me if I'm wrong) of the above post (because I think it's deliberately misleading):
Basically, the process works the same as it always has. And yes, the following information is coming to you straight from a lawyer: We fully support Creators sharing their fanfiction and fanart on Tumblr. We encourage sharing creative work of all kinds on the platform.
Emphasis mine. This is worded very specifically; Tumblr is not supporting or encouraging you to sell your fanworks. They are not encouraging you to charge for your fanworks. Share =/= sell.
We encourage you to share your fanworks
means
we encourage and support posts and reblogs containing copyrighted works, but we're not telling you to SELL ANYTHING, so if you do, then the consequences are your problem.
Fanfiction and fanart are frequently considered fair use and we support our Creatorsā fair use rights. Monetizing fan work does not necessarily mean that it isnāt fair use.
I think this is irresponsible wording bc it makes it seem like you have the right to charge for copyrighted works if you claim that your work falls under fair use - but how many of us actually know what fair use means? And if you don't know what it means, how can you use it as a defense by claiming your work falls under it? I'll be honest, I don't really know what all "fair use" entails but when I looked it up I found a pretty straightforward and thorough explanation that cleared things up for me.
From this article on fair use, published by Stanford Libraries:
In its most general sense, a fair use is any copying of copyrighted material done for a limited and ātransformativeā purpose, such as to comment upon, criticize, or parody a copyrighted work. Such uses can be done without permission from the copyright owner. In other words, fair use is a defense against a claim of copyright infringement. If your use qualifies as a fair use, then it would not be considered an infringement.
So what is a ātransformativeā use? If this definition seems ambiguous or vague, be aware that millions of dollars in legal fees have been spent attempting to define what qualifies as a fair use. There are no hard-and-fast rules, only general guidelines and varied court decisions, because the judges and lawmakers who created the fair use exception did not want to limit its definition. Like free speech, they wanted it to have an expansive meaning that could be open to interpretation.
Most fair use analysis falls into two categories: (1) commentary and criticism, or (2) parody.
Emphasis mine.
Translation: You can share your fanworks (we're not telling you to sell them) and if you get in trouble, you can claim "fair use," and if that defense doesn't work because fair use isn't applicable, we will not protect you from whatever legal ramifications you face.
Whether a piece of fanfiction meets the requirements for fair use varies depending on the work. Intellectual property rights holders are in the best position to decide if they think a fanfiction or fan art violates their rights.
I'm just going to say Anne Rice and leave it at that.
Okay, I'll say more than that. Many authors, creators, etc won't hesitate to, at the very least send you a cease and desist and, at the worst, file a lawsuit against you. This is why it's so important that AO3 is non-profit and you can't link to or mention your ko-fi, patreon, etc - because many ip rights holders do not consider fanworks to be fair use and will go after authors (or artists, etc), so AO3's legal defense rests on "nobody is making money or profiting from this."
What Tumblr is doing is removing itself from any responsibility here by saying, okay, even if what you post isn't considered fair use, it's fine unless the person who owns that intellectual property decides to come after you, in which case, again, we are not going to protect you.
Tumblr went out of its way to say their statement on copyrights came directly from a lawyer. All this means to me is that Tumblr got their lawyer(s) to word their side in a way that protects them from any legal liability while still encouraging you to profit off of copyrighted works, and they're trying to make it seem like a lawyer has said this is fine, but that is very much not the case.
tl;dr: Copyright law and "fair use" are much more complicated than you might think, and the latter is probably not going to hold up as a defense if someone comes after you, and Tumblr still will not protect you. So again, by creating a post+ account and putting fanworks behind a paywall, you will be making yourself very vulnerable to legal action being taken against you and Tumblr will not do a thing to help you.
!!!!!!! If possible please reblog this version, re: tumblr's stance on fair use. I've already seen a few people saying tumblr said it's legal to monetize fanworks, so their post is definitely sending the wrong message to users.
This is an appreciation post for the fanfic authors who arenāt included on rec lists
For the fanfic authors who donāt get art of their fics
For the fanfic authors who canāt get to 1000/500/100 hits
For the fanfic authors who donāt get comments/reviews
For the fanfic authors who write for small fandoms
For the fanfic authors who write rarepairs or gen fics
For the fanfic authors who get hate for the ships/characters/fandoms they write
For the fanfic authors who write in English despite it not being their first language
For the fanfic authors who donāt write in English
For the fanfic authors who donāt think anyone reads or likes their work
For the fanfic authors who arenāt big name fans
For the fanfic authors who donāt get requests in their inboxes
For the fanfic authors who canāt write stories that are more than a thousand words
For the fanfic authors who only write one ship
For the fanfic authors who are just starting
For the fanfic authors who have been writing fic for years
For the fanfic authors who use fanfic to practice writing
For the fanfic authors who write self-insert fics
For the fanfic authors who write about their OCs
For the fanfic authors who write to vent or cope
For the fanfic authors who are just waiting for their big break
Keep creating, I love you ā¤ļø
For the fanfic authors who ask for requests that never come
For the fanfic authors that hate their own work
For the fanfic authors that donāt have ideas
For the fanfic authors who just stop because nobodyās reading
Thereās almost always at least one person whoād be disappointed if you stopped. <3
Things Iāve seen in Covid19 as an ICU nurse:
- a husband and wife admitted to icu, positive for covid after sending their two teenagers back to school when it opened. She coded and died yesterday. We wheeled her body into his room so he could say goodbye to his high school sweetheart from his hospital bed. We dont expect him to survive.
- 94 year old man, married to his wife for 64 years, both tested positive after a single visit to their dentist. It was the only āoutingā they had since March. Because there are so few beds available, they were sent to separate hospitals. She stroked and died shortly after. He watched her funeral on FaceTime and never got to say goodbye.
- a 25 year old who flew home from another state because his mom was afraid and asked him too. He tested positive 3 days after his flight. He died 20 days later in our ICU.
- a father/son duo who run a manufacturing company, tested positive along with the majority of their employees. They both came to our ICU. Dad died. Son was able to leave the hospital 30 days later - he learned of his fatherās death after leaving, for fear of impacting his recovery.
- A schoolteacher, working for special needs children, tested positive 1 week after her school mandated they reopen. She died 10 days later. Her last words before we intubated her were, āIm going to be your next survivor!ā We told her she was right, but we all knew it wouldnāt happen.
- a 45 year old woman with a 6 and 8 year old at home. After 65 days, she never woke up due to hypoxic brain injury. She never made it off a ventilator.
- tiered nursing models, where ICU patients are being cared for primarily by nurses without ICU experience while one ICU rn gets placed as a āsupervisingā nurse over 5 ICU patients, and monitors the regular nurses care over them. Your loved ones not getting the appropriate level of care deserved because we have no staff left to care for them.
- patients who should be in ICU unable to come to the ICU because there are no beds available. Left on the regular floor in hospital with no additional supervision or coverage because thereās not enough staff to do so.
- patients that have been sent from out of state because their home areas have no room to take them. When these patients are close to end of life, their families are hard pressed to arrive in time to say goodbye.
- a unit opened as a tiered-staffing ICU where there is no negative pressure in patient rooms and no way to install them per maintenance. Nurses are going to be required to wear PAPR during their entire shifts without taking them off while working in that unit. So 12 hours without drinking water or eating unless you can leave the unit. Which it being tiered staffing - its not safe for the ICU rn to leave because there will only be 2 ICU nurses on the unit.
We are a long ways from having herd immunity with the coming vaccines. Please wear your masks. Dont go where you dont absolutely have to go. Wash your hands. This is not the time to go on new dates, have family gatherings or big game nights or get together. Please. You have called the nursing profession āthe most trustworthyā for decades - and now when we beg you to listen, to wear a simple mask and social distance, you call us liars and the trauma we see these patients go through every day a conspiracy. Please. We are breaking.
Remember!
2020 may be over, but the pandemic isnāt
This.
We are living in a apocalyptic science fiction story, THAT IS NOT FICTION.
This is real.
windows users, save money using these free apps!!
other fab programs that are absolutely 100% free:
recuva - accidentally deleted something in the recycling bin? recover it back with this program!
speccy - tells you the specs of your computer, among other things
defraggler - defrag the SHIT out of your hard drive and clean it right up
This is a great post what makes it even better is that most of these you can get from Ninite which will download and install the latest versions of all available software ALL AT ONCE without you having to worry about adware or the annoying clutter (toolbars, changing your default search engine) that sometimes comes with their individual installers. So, yeah. Have at it folks.
For posterity.
Good lord this is awesome.
I saw @jasontoddiefor AO3 Guides and thought Iād make one about something I see a lot.
Ohhhh helpful!!!
how to get over your exboyfriend a guide by kurt hummel