Do you know I don’t think one hour passed where I didn’t think of you? I tried not to, but every time I closed my eyes, there you were.
Gentleman Jack (2019-)

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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

izzy's playlists!

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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Sade Olutola

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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Claire Keane
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
One Nice Bug Per Day
Today's Document
AnasAbdin
noise dept.
Xuebing Du
RMH
wallacepolsom
tumblr dot com
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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@pink-squirrelle
Do you know I don’t think one hour passed where I didn’t think of you? I tried not to, but every time I closed my eyes, there you were.
Gentleman Jack (2019-)
Masterlist of Links to TV & Film starring Jodie Whittaker
Film:
Venus (2006)
St Trinian’s (2007)
Good (2008)
White Wedding (2009)
Swansong: Story of Occi Byrne (2009 - Amazon to buy link)
Roar (2009 Short Film)
Perrier’s Bounty (2009)
Wish 143 (2009 Short Film)
St Trinian’s 2 (2009)
The Kid (2010 - Amazon to buy link)
Ollie Kepler’s Expanding Purple World (2010 - Buy on iTunes)
Attack the Block (2011)
One Day (2011)
A Thousand Kisses Deep (2011)
Good Vibrations (2012)
Ashes (2012)
Dust (2012 Short Film)
Smoke (2012 Short Film)
Hello Carter (2013)
Spike Island (2013)
Get Santa (2014)
Emotional Fusebox (2014 Short Film)
Black Sea (2014)
Adult Life Skills (2016)
Journeyman (2017)
TV:
The Afternoon Play (2006 No Link)
Doctors (2006)
Dalziel and Pascoe (2006)
This Life + 10 (2007 No Link)
Tess of the D’Urbervilles (2008)
Wired (2008 -Amazon link to buy)
The Shooting of Thomas Hurndall (2008)
Consuming Passion (2008)
Return to Cranford (2009 No decent link found)
Accused (2010)
Royal Wedding (2010 No Link)
Marchlands (2011)
Black Mirror - The Entire History of You (2011 Netflix)
The Night Watch (2011)
Broadchurch (2013-2017)
The Assets (2014 No Link Yet)
The Smoke (2014 No Link Yet)
Trust Me - Series 1 (2017)
Doctor Who (Well you all know where to find this!)
Updated, Trust Me and Emotional Fusebox
Lesbians are so good at pointing out romantic chemistry between women on TV but in real life it takes 3 years of friendship and an entire peer reviewed scientific paper to convince us that a girl might like us back.
Long time no art! Killing Eve was GOOD. (follow me on insta @holepsi for updates)
Crazy thing! I just had my first solo exhibition. And I really must thank the fangirl part of me. Because the theme of the exhibition, that’s called Everyday - Gal Pals in Print, is lesbian visibility and representation and domestic female relationships. My goal is to produce images that include lesbians without in any way problematising the homosexuality. That shows the big part of our lives called “the everyday”. So that more people gets the chance to be reflected and feel confirmed. I didn’t really have a gay community until I started reading fan fiction and I don’t think I would’ve been comfortable working with my sexuality in this way if it wasn’t for me now having it. So yay!
I’ve now read so many story’s written by lesbians and bisexual women. Probably straight as well but compared to the “real” world it’s like heaven, when you’ve grown up having everything you read and watch written by men!
I’m rambling a bit now but, I love that in this capitalistic world there is so many people spending so much time and energy doing something without any profit. It’s just such a calming place. There’s so much bad fan fiction and fan art out there and I love that it’s allowed to be. Because it doesn’t matter! Take what you like and do what you like! And there’s so much good stuff out there as well, that definitely would make money if it was packaged in the right way.
Keep up the good work gals, everyone from producers to consumers. This is a nice place!
This shit is starting to sink in :)
Seven years after, I see you again 😚
Guys this completely changed my writing, heed it. I often do an entire draft just looking at sentence variation and oftentimes the results are absolutely transformative in the difference.
Cause of Death: Cara Delevingne wearing tails and chewing a toothpick at the Royal Wedding.
I call this set… “Noir Princesses”.
PRINTS HERE… https://bit.ly/2NqqOX7
r/InterestingAsFuck
this was our pupper the first time we put his booties on him.
I love him
DRESSAGE
whunt L’FUCKE have u done of mine PAWSE
Now complete if you want to catch up before she returns, including behind the scenes, interviews and trailers - enjoy!
June episodes will be uploaded in August when I have a laptop again
Primum Non Nocere Parts 1 and 2 and also the behind the scenes “Berena Back in Business” have been added!
True! 👏
On Woman’s Weekly, and why we should all care about their new contract policy
Anyone who has ever written for Woman’s Weekly will already be aware of the fact that the magazine group, which also includes a huge raft of other magazines, has been taken over by a giant firm called TI Media. What the rest of the reading and writing world may not yet be aware of is what that firm is doing with rights.
Rights are what an author sells to a publisher, be it a book or a magazine publisher, that allows them to publish the author’s work. There are also film rights, stage rights, media rights, foreign rights, which are sometimes bundled into a contract as part of a publishing deal, or negotiated separately, depending on the author. It is generally accepted that if you sell the rights to a short story to a magazine, you’re only selling them the magazine rights. You shouldn’t also be giving them the right to republish elsewhere without paying you, or to adapt your story for TV, or make it into a movie, or recreate it as a game, or translate it into different languages, without paying anything to the author.
And yet, that’s what TI Media are doing with the short story writers at Woman’s Weekly.
Here’s a bit of background from one of the womag writers concerned.
https://womagwriter.blogspot.com/2018/06/bad-news-from-womans-weekly-guest-post.html
As you’ll see, Woman’s Weekly writers were originally paid £150 for a 2000-word short story (which is already a very low rate of pay for original fiction). Most writers, barring a few bestselling novelists, are already very poorly paid. The average professional writer, according to figures from the Society of Authors, earn less than £11,000 a year. That’s a drop of 40% over the past ten years, even though the publishing trade is doing better than ever.
And now, here’s a giant media corporation offering only £100 per story, and demanding all rights, including moral copyright. That means that if they then sell the story to someone else, the author doesn’t even have the right to have their own name shown on the piece.
This is a completely unfair and exploitative deal, and in most other EU countries, wouldn’t even be allowed. But as we prepare to leave the EU, companies like TI Media are starting to circle the wagon train, hoping to snaffle whatever they can from authors already facing a dramatic cut in earnings.
In real terms, it means that, as an author, you’d be giving up all the valuable rights to your work, forever, including the right to have your name on the project, for no more than the initial sum of £100 (or whatever you’re left with after income tax). That means:
If TI Media ever decided to sell those rights to make a multi-million-pound grossing movie, you’d get nothing. Not even your name on the credits.
If TI Media ever decided to syndicate your piece to all its other magazines (and it has many, including Marie Claire, NME and Country Life), you’d get nothing.
If you ever wanted to use your story in a collection of your short stories, you wouldn’t be allowed to. It would belong to TI Media.
Forever.
So if you care about justice, you should be watching what ‘s going on here. If you care about reading, whether or not you’re not you’ve ever read a TI Media magazine, you should be watching what’s going in here. If you’re a writer of any kind, you should be watching what’s going on here. Because this isn’t just an attack on a handful of womag writers. It’s an attack on all writers, and on the very concept of authors having rights at all.
I’ve been trying to raise awareness of this situation through my various social media platforms, and I’m afraid that some authors (especially male authors of literary fiction) haven’t been what you’d call quick to react on behalf of these women’s magazine authors. But here’s the thing. Womag writers are the canary in a very deep literary mine. If we, the more influential and better-protected folk of the literary world, allow their rights to be exploited, then sooner or later companies like TI Media will come for the rest of us. Tomorrow it could be your publishers they’re taking over. And when that happens, you’ll be glad you stood up for the rights of those Woman’s Weekly writers.
So please, all of you: make some noise. Whether or not you’ve ever written for Woman’s Weekly (and I haven’t) make some noise. Protest. Resist. Don’t write for them. Don’t sign their exploitative contracts. If you’re a new writer, be forewarned. Don’t let them scoop you up, easy prey, in the place of more seasoned writers standing up for their rights. There are other, better magazines than Woman’s Weekly out there. Don’t be lured by false promises. Keep control of your moral rights.Don’t sign away your future.
Readers, don’t buy their magazines - and there’s a full list of all of them here on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TI_Media - until they agree to better terms for their short story writers.
Writers; talk to your trade union - be that the Society of Authors, the Writers’ Guild, or any other. Call out @TI_Media_UK on Twitter. So far they’ve ignored every attempt to communicate or negotiate - and that’s because they think our voices can safely be ignored.
Let’s show them they’s wrong.
Because, fellow-authors (and I’m looking especially at you, white, middle-aged male writers of litfic), this isn’t just about the rights of womag writers. Their rights are your rights. Their business is your business. And what unites us makes us stronger in the face of those giants who think they can bully us.
We’re writers, for fuck’s sake. We know how to use words. So let’s use them to make this right. Because there’s no place for “I’m all right, Jack” in the writing community. Bestseller or not, woman’s writer or not, we all know the difference between right and wrong. And this is a wrong that we can right, together, and for all of us.
Kathryn Janeway + hair | Part 2/4 (requested by aurelia-which-means-sunrise)
LGBT History Month - Lesbian Fiction
Oranges are Not the Only Fruit, by Jenette Winterson
Trumpet, by Jackie Kay
Tipping the Velvet, by Sarah Waters
The Well of Loneliness, by Radclyffe Hall
Curious Wine, by Katherine V. Forest
The Black and White of It, by Ann Allen Shockley
The Girl on the Stairs, by Louise Welsh
Kissing the Witch, by Emma Donoghue