Crappy phone recording of a The Sinner First Look video I don't think we've seen yet? It was on my streaming service. I'm sure it'll be released online soon in good quality, but I couldn't find it.
ojovivo

oozey mess
One Nice Bug Per Day
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
đŞź

Kaledo Art
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă

@theartofmadeline
wallacepolsom
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RMH
Three Goblin Art

â
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Stranger Things
trying on a metaphor
occasionally subtle

ellievsbear

seen from T1

seen from TĂźrkiye
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@mrscaffrey310
Crappy phone recording of a The Sinner First Look video I don't think we've seen yet? It was on my streaming service. I'm sure it'll be released online soon in good quality, but I couldn't find it.
The ABCs of White Collar [insp.]
đđťđđťđđťđđťđđťđđťđđť Amazing!
Matt Bomer in Everything â In Time (2011)
[Henry Hamilton] has everything - all the money in the world, all the time in the world - but isnât happy, and knows that the way things are set up in this sort of classist society is unfair and unjust. He just doesnât know how to effect change, so he more or less goes on a suicide mission [âŚ] and somebody who had been given everything their whole life, ultimately the last decision he makes is one thatâs actually very unselfish. And I like that.Â
âThere is a poignancy in all things clear, In the stare of the deer, in the ring of a hammer in the morning. Seeing a bucket of perfectly lucid water, we fall to imagining prodigious honesties.â - Richard Wilbur [insp.]
Matt Bomer in Walking Out (2017)
NaNoWriMo Prep: How to Write 2000 Words a Day
Two thousand is a big number. Sitting down to write 2000 words can be extremely intimidating, so the first thing you should do is make that number friendlier.
Write 500 words in 4 writing sessions. Â
Chop up that big, intimidating number. Start with a goal of 500 words. In one session, with no breaks, write them all. Take a break, then write the next 500. Repeat until you reach at least 2000.Â
If you write 650 words in one session, donât aim for 350 in the next. Let those extra words add up. A few hundred extra words each day will get you to 50k quicker than you could imagine.
I recommend timing your sessions, aiming for 20 minutes each time. The deadline will help you get the words out, With 10 minute breaks between each session, you can reach your 2000 word goal in two hours. Which brings me to the next point:Â
Write fast.Â
Donât stop and think about your words. Donât go back and improve a previous sentence. Save all of your edits for later. Focus on writing as quickly as possible, throwing everything you have at that blank page. This will actually help boost your creativity. Make your brain work so fast, be so focused, that it doesnât have any space to doubt itself and youâll be amazed at what you can come up with.Â
But donât worry if you canât write 500 words in 20 minutes on day one. Writing quickly is a skill and it will take a few days of training.Â
Let the words suck.
This is absolutely key if you want a high word count. When youâre writing an entire chapter in a day, you shouldnât expect the words to be beautiful. Youâre not aiming at lyrical prose. Youâre mining raw material that you can work into art later.
Letting the words suck can include:
Writing [something happens here] in place of a scene.
Letting yourself use cliches as shorthand.
Dialog that is really exposition.
Long descriptions of things that donât matter.
Letting your characters ramble until you discover what it is they actually need to say.
As long as there are 2000 words and they relate to your story, theyâre exactly what you need. And if you hate having bad words on a page, once you have your 2000 for a day, you can go back and fix all of it. Take all the time you need. Just reach that word count first.Â
Tip: if you do edit at the end of each day, make that a separate document from your official NaNo doc. This way, you can trim scenes, descriptions, and dialog without worrying about its effect on your word count. (If you make a scene/description/sentence longer, feel free to include that in your NaNo doc.)Â
Donât know what to write next?
So youâve written 1200 words, completed a scene, and you have no idea where the story is going next. Here are some things you can do to get those 800 words in anyway:
Go to writeordie.com and FORCE the words out.
If that doesnât work, reread the scene youâve just written and see if youâre missing some obvious foreshadowing, some clue as to where the storyâs headed. (You can also add a few lines to bulk up your wc.)
If that fails, take a walk and let the fresh air usher a solution to you.
If that fails, skip the next section. Write another scene. Go where the story is waiting for you. Come back to the other scene at a later time.
Helpful tip:
Instead of breaking your writing session into four parts, break it into five. Use your first writing session to sketch out an entire chapter, like an outline, but with bits and pieces of dialog and description. Figure out where youâre headed and a couple of key stops along the way. Knowing what youâre writing towards will make doing the actual, fleshed-out writing much easier and quicker.
You can also do an outline for the next dayâs writing after youâve gotten your 2000 words for the day in. Future you will be extremely pleased.
The Last Tycoon -ep6
âYou, business, and women: The Unholy Trinity.â
The Last Tycoon -ep4
Matt Bomer for Todd Snyderâs Fall Campaign [x] [x]
Matt in episode 9.
Matt in episode 8.
Matt Bomerâs parts in Flightplan (2005) [dl]
Matt in episode 9.
Matt Bomer in Everything  â Tru Calling (2003-2004)
Matt Bomer âĽď¸đ for Modern Luxury Angeleno Magazine đ¸ by Brian Bowen Smith