
#extradirty
AnasAbdin
we're not kids anymore.
One Nice Bug Per Day

JBB: An Artblog!

tannertan36
Mike Driver
Three Goblin Art
noise dept.
No title available
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

No title available

PR's Tumblrdome
Today's Document
Misplaced Lens Cap

No title available
trying on a metaphor
Xuebing Du
tumblr dot com
Cosimo Galluzzi
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Algeria

seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from Germany
seen from Italy

seen from Belgium
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Ukraine

seen from T1
@robzombug
What your character wants to be like:
The cool, collected “running from my emotions,” type…
What they’re actually like:
“You’ll never catch me, feelings! *crashes face first into a glass door and knocks self out immediately*”
https://creanavt.tumblr.com/archive
“There’s a town over there. It looks like it’s under a river. Of course. When it rains, it creates a river. Someday I’ll quit this job and go to that town.”
Spirited Away (2001), dir. Hayao Miyazaki
all fashion advice for short guys is aimed at making them look taller. what if i just want to look sluttier
hopefully this will help
booty shorts that say “god won't let me die” on the ass
A Meaningful Haiku
Writers: Bad people are still people with their own problems and emotions, even when they cause problems and distress and hurt other people.
Tumblr Gremlins: Problematic. Blocked.
If you portray bad people as good people, then you’re normalizing abuse. Of course that’s fucking problematic.
Newsflash: people and good people are not synonymous.
If you portray a villain, that villain has thoughts, emotions, desires. Maybe even loved ones. They have things they want. They have reasons for what they do. And none of this excuses their villainous acts.
If you portray a good person, all of the same things apply. Thoughts, emotions, desires, loved ones, things they want, reasons, etc. And when you look at the acts they commit, you think to yourself, “That is a good person. I consider this person heroic, someone worth emulating.” Whereas when you see what the villain does, you think, “Man, that is fucked up.”
The entire difference between a good person and a bad person is not whether or not they are people, but whether the things they do and their reasons for doing them are good or bad. So you can portray a bad person, who abuses people, as having emotions, and desires, and thoughts, and they can still be a bad person.
So yeah. The OP says “bad people should be written as if they are people.” This is true. “Normalizing abuse” is what happens when you write bad people as if they are incomprehensible evil monsters with no common humanity with the rest of us, because this tells abuse victims, most of whom love their abusers, “You’re not really being abused because the person you love is not a bad person! Bad people are 100% evil monsters and the person who is hurting you obviously has feelings!” No. Bad people are people. When you write an abuser, write them as a person, with thoughts and feelings, because real abuse victims know that their abusers are people, and you don’t want to convince them that their abusers can’t be abusers because only monsters are abusers. You want them to understand that abusers are human too, because they already know the person abusing them is human. What they don’t know is whether or not they can consider what’s happening to them to be abuse.
Antis: “Only good people are actually fully human beings! This totally isn’t fascist or anything!”
“If you write well-rounded, deep, believable characters you’re a fucking abuse apologist!”
This is way too similar to that god damn “if you write characters being traumatized/in traumatizing situations then you are fetishizing abuse and you’re bad!” Like stories need conflict and sometimes being involved in conflict can be traumatizing, do you really want to consume only media that is entirely Good People Doing Good Things, Everyone Is Happy And Nothing Bad Ever Happens?? Because that’s sounds like a whole lot of boring to me
Given the alternative that we’ve had forever now, where characters go through intensely traumatic shit but have absolutely no trauma whatsoever - thus conveying the message that the problem is YOU, YOU’RE the only one who breaks like that - I’m gonna have to say I’ll take the realistic portrayals of trauma.
There is something, I think, to us as a whole, as humans, that is INSANELY disturbing and difficult about viewing irredeemable, evil people as PEOPLE. Like, we cannot accept that people who do things like commit genocide or murder people or abuse people are, in a lot of ways, just like us. That they have families and feelings and complex inner lives. And my gf just summed up why the portrayal of evil people as something apart from human is such a problem:
Because it keeps us from confronting evil when it DOES actually show up. It keeps us from confronting other people, who we know, who espouse hatred. Because how can this person, whom we know , who maybe we are even friends or family with, be an empty evil husk? It’s what keeps us from addressing things like racism, fascism, white supremacy- you name it.
When we dress up evil people as something apart from us, when we act like humans are inherently better than the evil people we see in media, it means that come being faced with a person who is doing abhorrent things, we are unable to process that. Because we feel like humanity and evil are incompatible.
You know it’s funny but we really need more bad people depicted as real people because it’s meant to be a warning to what you can become if you aren’t careful. Antis are good examples of that because they genuinely don’t realize how evil their behavior is because they think they are doing it for the greater good or with the best intentions justifies it. People are always the hero of their own story and if you can’t recognize that you are capable of being a monster then you will become a monster because you see everything that you do as good. It takes any complex thinking about morals out of the picture because you aren’t a laughing disney villain so why should you be concerned if your decisions hurt people if it wasn’t apart of the big picture or plan you have.
Think the Original The Lorax where the bad guy was viewed as complex and had good points even though he still was the bad guy. He was complicated and Kids could understand it through Seuss’s writing that he was just a person. Then look at say Ursula or Makeficent who had the complexity of a wet napkin and few kids could imagine themselves becoming. Obviously some kids can imagine themselves as them but which story really teaches you that good people do bad things or bad people don’t always realize they are bad.
It’s not some evil pro villain thing to make bad guys real. It’s a warning that you need to be careful because you could easily become the bad guy even if you have the best intentions.
I love this post.
Describe all fights as uncharitably as possible. E.g. when the party is battling the evil lich in his lair: “as your highly trained warriors continue to beat up the old man in his living room…”
Change your url op
person: tell me about your ocs
me:
when a character you hate dies
I’m bubbie
Flapjack: “Bubbie.”
Bubbie: “Yeah, baby?”
Flapjack: [sadly] “I miss K’nuckles.”
Bubbie: [cheerfully] “I don’t!”
Villain whose main power is that he has a really entrancing voice. It’s not mystical or superhuman or anything, it’s just very beautiful and heroes hesitate in their attempts to thwart him just so they can enjoy the ASMR tingles of his evil monologues.
Villain: “….and that’s just the beginning of my evil schemes!”
Hero: “You. Keep talking.”
Villain: “Oh, intrigued? Have I tempted you to ‘join the dark side’? Perhaps you are beginning to see the virtues of my plans.”
Hero: “No, not really. I still think you’re an evil bastard. But your voice is like… really sexy and I just want to enjoy it before I kick your ass. Please continue monologuing.”
a sad day for america
haha grey
Commissions | Ko-fi | DeviantArt | Twitter