I can't stop ( take the iPad away 😭)
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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
styofa doing anything

titsay
will byers stan first human second

blake kathryn
Cosmic Funnies

JBB: An Artblog!

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shark vs the universe

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roma★
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
NASA
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

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if i look back, i am lost
Show & Tell
Acquired Stardust

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@motefloat
I can't stop ( take the iPad away 😭)
With how Rook stalks Leona and Vil (is it really stalking with Vil if Vil is very much aware and consents enough for rook to be in the open?) if both of them date Jamil, would he also be stalked?
He's already hyper aware of his surroundings so adding rook into the mix feels like he should just get more time to sleep.
Thank you SO MUCH for asking! Lemme introduce you to Vil/Rook/Leona shipping, the sheer potential of Rook-Jamil, and my Rook metamour theory!
First, I'm a big Vil/Rook/Leona shipper. I call Rook/Leona the Hunter/Hunted ship. Who's the hunter? Who's the hunted? Who knows. As @aria-faye (THE Rook connoisseur who made me love Rook too lol) said, they both come from the same place, have the same culture, and are both somewhat outsiders in their own way. Rook doesn't really fit the Sunset Savanah stereotype or the Savanaclaw mentality in full. Leona doesn't fit the ideal of a prince and gets ostracized by his own people. Both of them work really well as a ship with Vil and it makes this funny Pomefiore-to-Savanaclaw pipeline with Rook in the middle, having been in both dorms.
For Jamil, once more quoting V "I feel like Rook kind of already keeps an eye on Jamil, a bit. He watches things he finds beautiful, and Jamil is definitely beautiful." Plus there didn't seem to be any adverse reaction from Jamil toward Rook for the entirety of book 5. And Rook is so desperately honest and true to himself that it contrasts completely with Jamil who still struggles to find himself after a lifetime of lying. He'd be a good push for Jamil to be more honest too, a good influence.
In relation to the N2 squad, here's my answer : METAMOUR. I'm already polyshipping 24/7, it might not yet be completely obvious in my blog but I ship more OT3 than actual couples. I work better with 3+ characters relationships than regular couples. So since Vil, Leona, and Jamil are already dating, why couldn't I add Rook too? He's not part of the N2 squad, but he's such a constant shadow to Vil that it's hard to imagine them away from each other. Leona and Jamil would start dating him fully knowing Rook is there and not leaving. Really, Rook would probably be Vil's first boyfriend before Leona and Jamil become a thing.
That doesn't mean Leona and Jamil would necessarily start dating Rook though, and that's where the metamour happens. They all share Vil, but whether there is a relationship between Leona and Rook, or Jamil and Rook is up to... my mood, mostly xD Or reader's interpretation I guess. Maybe they just get comfortable simply sharing Vil, maybe they have a sort of queer platonic relationship, maybe they're all dating.
I tend to treat Rook as a bonus when it comes to N2, because he doesn't fit the group, but it's hard to imagine him away, and he's so stupidly supportive that he'd probably be a good influence on forever-depressed-Leona and desperately-confused-Jamil.
Tldr : Jamil and Leona would start dating Vil knowing Rook would be there anyway, so if they ever feel uncomfortable about it they can only blame themselves.
(Who'd you think held the camera in those illus?)
Peony tattoo paintings
Really old Shima and Yukio doodle I made who knows how long ago that I apparently never bothered to upload or save into a relevant art folder I guess. Anyway, have two very tired questionably Illuminati bois..
Papercraft commission of Shima and Yamantaka from Blue Exorcist! I had such a good time with all the details of this one, and with Shima’s face, and with trying out new techniques to depict Yamantaka (the red outlines were particularly fun).
Cheeky!
Deeply Rooted
Title: Deeply Rooted Fandom: Ao no Exorcist Verse: I Wanna Be Your Knight Pairing(s): ShimaBon Warnings: total canon divergence after chapter 97, hanahaki, unbeta’d Summary: Renzou wouldn’t call himself all-loving, but as a general rule, he liked people. They kept life interesting and fun. People were jigsaw puzzles —there were clues to how they fit together and those who could see them and correctly ascertain where they fit were those who saw the bigger picture. A/N: For @freykugel, my favorite cannibal oniisan, and @motefloat, who once told me about their fascination with hanahaki. Also, their unending love for ShimaSugu, which I appreciate.
More notes after the end~
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Was playing with layer settings! I liked this color combo a lot :0 I haven’t had much downtime between work and commissions so I wanted to finish something simple.
BL, “Okama”, and gay stereotypes in animanga
Since BL and fujoshi discourse is the hot topic du jour, let’s talk a bit about gay stereotypes in Japanese manga and anime.
I’m seeing a worrying number of people not only saying that all BL and fujoshi promote homophobic stereotypes, but that BL is the primary or sole instigator of homophobia in Japanese society (excuse me, I choked on drink there).
For those who don’t know, Boy’s Love (BL) is a niche category of shoujo/josei manga that focuses on M/M relationships (commonly known in the west as “yaoi”, though that is a misnomer). It’s still frowned upon, both for being gay content and for being mainly romance aimed at women. The word “fujoshi” — used today to mean “female fan of BL” — even has seriously misogynistic origins.
So far, BL is published on specific magazines, and most anime adaptations are OVAs that aren’t aired on TV. Although it has a significant following, it’s definitely not popular enough to change the opinions on gay men of the entire anime fanbase, much less of Japanese society as a whole.
Homophobia in Japan has a long history, but one of the most impactful chapters was the Meiji Restoration (1867-68), when Japan’s isolationist foreign policy was abolished and rapid westernization began. Negative Christian views on homosexuality disseminated throughout the country and public opinion of practices such as nanshoku/wakashudou declined until they were practically criminalized and banned.
For reference, both BL and yuri had their origins more than a century later, in the 1970’s-80’s.
I find that a lot of criticism of stereotyping in BL is, unsurprising, very US-centric. The thin, androgynous, pretty and emotionally sensitive characters of BL may coincidentally fit western gay stereotypes, but this type of character just represents an East Asian beauty standard for men. Guys who fit these bishounen and ikemen types are considered desirable by Japanese women and are generally assumed to be straight.
A handful of pretty boys from Touken Ranbu.
In the US, your idea of a stereotypical gay dude may be a metrosexual twink with a lisp and a limp wrist, but different countries have different stereotypes. In Japan, the appearance of イカホモ/イカニモ (“ikahomo” or “ikanimo”, a stereotypical gay man) is a heavy-set masculine guy with short haircut, strong face, and facial hair.
Sort of like the guys you see in geikomi, right?
Pin-ups by Jiraiya, long-time artist for G-men magazine.
But we’re talking about entertainment media, more specifically about animanga. We’ll get there soon.
Gay men in Japan are stereotyped by the general population as being camp, and using feminine clothes, language and pronouns. Those who present femininely are often referred to as オネエ (“onee”) because they use オネエ言葉 (“onee kotoba”, feminine speech), and may or may not identify as male. Many entertainers who are out use onee personas on TV to, well, entertain the audience. That may be the only exposure an average Japanese person has to a real-life openly gay or trans person.
As for fiction, media creators tend to fall back on archetypes based on prejudices for minority characters, and that includes gay men. A bit like how the US has the “fairy” archetype, Japan has the “okama”.
Now, オカマ (“okama”, lit. rice pot) is not a word used in polite conversation to refer to people. It’s a homophobic and transphobic slur, directed at people who fit the onee stereotype. If you’re not a Japanese queer man or transfem individual, you shouldn’t direct it at anyone, period. Not even yourself. Although there are some who reclaim the term, it’s still largely considered derogatory and insulting.
Japanese media has an okama character archetype, which reflects how society thinks a gay man looks and acts. You may be surprised to hear that it’s not the willowy, androgynous bishounen of shoujo manga.
It’s something more like this:
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I love how their relationship developed ;-;
I need more good interaction between them Y-Y
hey what's up with the "!" in fandoms? i.e. "fat!" just curious thaxxx <3
I have asked this myself in the past and never gotten an answer.
Maybe today will be the day we are both finally enlightened.
woodsgotweird said: man i just jumped on the bandwagon because i am a sheep. i have no idea where it came from and i ask myself this question all the time
Maybe someone made a typo and it just got out of hand?
I kinda feel like panic!at the disco started the whole exclamation point thing and then it caught on around the internet, but maybe they got it from somewhere else, IDK.
The world may never know…
Maybe it’s something mathematical?
I’ve been in fandom since *about* when Panic! formed and the adjective!character thing was already going strong, pretty sure it predates them.
It’s a way of referring to particular variations of (usually) a character — dark!Will, junkie!Sherlock, et cetera. I have suspected for a while that it originated from some archive system that didn’t accommodate spaces in its tags, so to make common interpretations/versions of the characters searchable, people started jamming the words together with an infix.
(Lately I’ve seen people use the ! notation when the suffix isn’t the full name, but is actually the second part of a common fandom portmanteau. This bothers me a lot but it happens, so it’s worth being aware of.)
“Bang paths” (! is called a “bang"when not used for emphasis) were the first addressing scheme for email, before modern automatic routing was set up. If you wanted to write a mail to the Steve here in Engineering, you just wrote “Steve” in the to: field and the computer sent it to the local account named Steve. But if it was Steve over in the physics department you wrote it to phys!Steve; the computer sent it to the “phys” computer, which sent it in turn to the Steve account. To get Steve in the Art department over at NYU, you wrote NYU!art!Steve- your computer sends it to the NYU gateway computer sends it to the “art” computer sends it to the Steve account. Etc. (“Bang"s were just chosen because they were on the keyboard, not too visually noisy, and not used for a huge lot already).
It became pretty standard jargon, as I understand, to disambiguate when writing to other humans. First phys!Steve vs the Steve right next to you, just like you were taking to the machine, then getting looser (as jargon does) to reference, say, bearded!Steve vs bald!Steve.
So I’m guessing alternate character version tags probably came from that.
sketch dump
Two of my problematic fave.
KAZUE KATO WHERE IS MY SON???? 🔫🔫🔫
How do you feel about Yukishima??
Oh, an ask!Hmmmmm, well honestly I’m pretty open to shipping all kinds of stuff, since what’s the point of fan content if not exploring all the options? I think Yukio and Shima are interesting in that they’re pretty similar and compatible in some ways but also their goals and focus would stunt a relationship in various other ways.
Shima happens to actually know the most out of anyone in the series about Yukio’s current mental state, mostly because he’s been keeping an eye on him through this development, and because he can probably relate quite a bit about how other people being Good People always reminds him that he’s NOT good, the way Yukio can’t deal with what a naturally good person Rin is because of that self-loathing issue (though Shima doesn’t mind being Not Ideal the way Yukio does). Shima doesn’t ever use this knowledge to try to sympathize with Yukio in canon though. Mostly he uses it to manipulate him, lol! But at least he’s very upfront to Yukio about it? Well, and after Toudou pulled that ‘WE’RE ALIKE’ thing on Yukio, it’s probably a good thing Shima isn’t pushing that angle.
I think while they’re not the type to develop romantic feelings, they are able to have an honest and direct connection with each other because there’s no point in Yukio lying to Shima, who already has a very good read on him, and Shima doesn’t need to hide his intentions either–there’s a bit of comfort in not having to suppress your uglier side around someone…! I think Shima probably has friendlier feelings toward Yukio than Yukio has toward him, just because Shima is generally a more accepting, go-with-the-flow kind of person and he’s honestly fond of people and their flaws… despite thinking he has enough detachment that he’s willing to toss them under buses. Yukio meanwhile is very busy grappling with his own issues and doesn’t have the emotional bandwidth right now to care about other people, and honestly Shima has been antagonizing him for a while, so he’s extra irritated with him.This is a fast-burning and utilitarian ship, but so long as no one gets too emotionally attached, it can function…! lol. As soon as anyone gets an emotional attachment though someone will probably get hurt, because these two are focused on taking care of themselves right now and not each other.
I’m the mask and shroud
I’m the burning out
I’m the lie you tell yourself