Show & Tell
Today's Document
noise dept.
Fai_Ryy
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Product Placement

roma★
RMH
Monterey Bay Aquarium
One Nice Bug Per Day

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EXPECTATIONS
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Love Begins
NASA

pixel skylines

shark vs the universe

tannertan36
Xuebing Du
seen from Netherlands

seen from Japan
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seen from Australia
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seen from Malaysia

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@svlover
Time for science...
Wherever you go, Khem, we'll go with you.
KHEMJIRA THE SERIES (2025)
adaap // episode 7
"We'll fight it together" will always hit harder than "We'll let it separate us."
In case you hadn’t heard, Michael Ralph, the production designer for all episodes of Good Omens, said this when asked about the significance of the snow globe in the finale:
Rob Wilkins came to me and asked me if I would invite in the final dress...there was no episode significance..I believe it was Rob who created the snow globe concept and manufacture of it as a piece of merchandise for the shop in London…...that's what I always thought...
I never designed it or used the concept of it in any of the episodes....people gave read into it and thought it has more significance, that's always been in everyone's imagination..I didn't correct their superstitions..
Include..not invite!!
I’m not saying the snow globe didn’t have any additional significance to Rob, but he definitely wants to sell them and that is what the Terry Pratchett estate started doing - before the finale aired and after he knew how it ended.
Bsky
Ah shit I never saw David's exact wording until now 😫 just seeing the first post I figured maybe they didn't end up having a fancy wedding at the end or something, nothing drastic like idk asking for death while aiding in genocide! ffs. Clearly he knew we were fucked 😭
Maybe I’d be more impressed with the Finale having room for sooooo many possible interpretations if it wasn’t for the fact all of these interpretations are fucking dismal!
Like, Crowley and Aziraphale reincarnating into Anthony and Asa is probably the one GO3 interpretation/copium that’s closest to being, like, an actual ‘Happy Ending’ for them in terms of narrative and themes and character.
It’s still pretty sucky! Giving the Ineffable Husbands their “”romantic happy ending”” not by emotionally resolving the issues raised in the Final Fifteen (and beyond, and before), but by basically resetting them into a blank slate that never hurt each other and don’t even seem to have the personal and interpersonal flaws that caused the issues in the first place makes their relationship and love seem a lot weaker, implying they could never actually overcome their issues. And it’s also a very Magical way to solve one of the central emotional conflicts of the show in an ending that’s supposed to be about the joys of mundanity. And it’s kinda counterproductive to the message of appreciating the imperfection of human existence when the limited time we have with Asa and Anthony only allows us to see very superficial flaws about their own lives and they otherwise feel much more inhuman and imperfect compared to the very messy and very human Aziraphale and Crowley. And it hurts the message of appreciating Humanity in general that Asa and Anthony are like the blandest, least compelling, most desaturated versions of Aziraphale and Crowley ever. Like, if these are really the versions of Crowley and Aziraphale that have True Free WillTM, they should’ve gotten even weirder. Oh! And of course it weakens the theme of ‘Free Will’ if they were somehow ‘destined’ to meet and fall in love. And then of course, you can raise the Jim Question, that even if these are Crowley and Aziraphale’s consciousnesses, can they be said to be Crowley and Aziraphale without their memories? And the question of whatever any sort of reincarnation should even exist in a ‘Goddless’ Universe. And that it really removes a lot of their appeal to take away their 6000 years of history and Slow Burn and loving against the odds and replacing it with a very generic Meet Cute. And also of course, some people would always be devastated that Crowley and Aziraphale seemed like they’re going to have an Eternity together and they only ended up with 40-30 years.
BUT EVEN WITH ALL OF THAT SAID (and maybe a few more complaints I forgot), this is STILL the least bad ending possibility of the Finale, both for the characters and the narrative as a whole. Obviously the Worst Option is that Crowley and Aziraphale are just straight-up permadead. But a lot of the other options people have suggested to make that ending ‘happy’ are still, in fact, kinda Worse than Crowley and Aziraphale spending 40-30 amnesiac years together. Like, the concept of Ineffable Husbands as a Reincarnation Romance or a Multiversal Constant only weakens the appeal of the Husbands as a love that triumphed against the odds and the theme of Free WillTM (not to mention that with how little actual reconciliation Crowley and Aziraphale had, how many of these times they ‘found’ each other they were actually happy and functional?). And then there are the ‘Happy Endings’ that take the Husbands away from Earth and Humanity, put them in a Snowglobe or ‘the Garden of Eden’ or outer space or whatever, when the entire original concept around which their storyline in the original book revolved around, the Humanist theme they originally conveyed, is that there’s nothing more wonderful than the experience of living in our world among the Humans, and this is so wonderful and important and fun to them that it’s worth defying both Heaven and Hell to preserve. It’s almost as hard to image a ‘Happy Ending’ for them that separates them from that human world as it is to imagine a ‘Happy Ending’ that keeps them apart from each other. Especially as so many interpretations put them into the exact same stagnant unchanging eternities they were afraid of in the first place. Even if these specific worlds are full of only the things they loved, they also loved the ever-changing nature of the Earthly Experience (Aziraphale goes slow, but not slow enough for Eternity) and they wanted to experience it, and not just watch it from afar. And then there are the Interpretations that hinge on some variation of Crowley and Aziraphale having Ascended to a Higher Plane of Existence, becoming the Universe or Stars or Cosmic Consciousness or the embodiment of Love or the Guardians of Humanity or Watching Over Us All (which can also intersect with some of the ‘Garden of Eden’ stuff). Which… also feels counterproductive with Crowley and Aziraphale’s very earthly love of earthly experiences. Again, they loved experiencing the pleasures of this world the way humans do, so much that Aziraphale gave up on an Eternal Heaven and Crowley risked Hell’s Wrath for it. Why should we believe that they’re happy to leave that behind forever for some cosmic experience we can’t even comprehend? Why should this supposedly ‘Humanist’ story about the most Human Angel and Demon end with them having to becoming something even further away from Humanity than ever before? And the whole central joke their characters (and their whole setting) hinged on is the idea divine and cosmic entities being Just Some Guys With a Job. Crowley and Aziraphale’s friendship was built upon them trying to minimize work as much as possible, they spent years trying to retire. Why should I be happy to see them take on another Cosmic Job that’s even more impossible for them to ever leave or separate their identities from or ever stop doing? And that’s not getting to cases where this ‘Happy Ending’ gives them a very God-like role, so it also kneecaps whatever ‘message’ this ending tries to have. Making it even less about dismantling harmful systems, and now the message is that it could all be better by just putting the Right People at the top of the System…
So many options for interpretations! And none of them feel like it would make Crowley and Aziraphale actually happy and make their sacrifice to feel worthwhile! Absolutely amazing!
Also, like, I feel this angle can’t really work if you’re also trying to argue that “Oh, this story isn’t really about Crowley and Aziraphale, it’s about Humanity uwu”. Because these ‘alternative interpretations’ and ‘Happy Endings’ only really matter if you’re considering the fate of Crowley and Aziraphale to be the Only Thing That Matters. Like, I’m pretty sure Anathema didn’t get her own custom Snowglobe. I don’t think that Mrs. Sandwich got invited to the Garden of Eden. I highly doubt Nina and Maggie got to find each other in every timeline. For pretty much everyone in the Universe except Aziraphale and Crowley, there are only two options, they either reincarnated into the New Universe (did they all get happier and more content lives than what they had in the previous World? Considering it’s supposed to be our real world, that’s hard to imagine) or they are all fucking dead forever!
10DANCE (2025)
David Tennant's dimples on Shakespeare Uncovered
A DOG AND A PLANE (2026) | Episode 7
I was just reminded of the official Amazon synopsis of the Good Omens finale
“Together, they must decide whether their friendship - and the world itself - is worth saving.”
Apparently it wasn’t 😭
… to the writers 🤬
the CHERRY MAGIC universe remains unmatched
30歳まで童貞だと魔法使いになれるらしい (2018) by Yuu Toyota Cherry Magic (2020) Cherry Magic! Thirty Years of Virginity Can Make You a Wizard?! (2024) Cherry Magic TH (2023)
The biggest problem finale is how badly this written (P2)
But in my opinion, the script s3 treats Aziraphale even worse than some takes after s2.
He receives no catharsis. No genuine moment of self-reflection.
By the end of the story he is still portrayed as vain, slightly condescending, and almost completely lacking empathy toward Crowley—even though that portrayal directly contradicts the character development he went through over the previous two seasons.
As a result, it feels as though all of this exists for one reason only: to make him accept Crowley’s destructive plan out of guilt rather than conviction.
That may be the strangest writing decision of all.
First, make a character behave terribly toward the person he loves.
Then suggest that the proper way to make up for it is to agree to mutual self-destruction.
Am I missing something?
My problem isn’t that they choose a universe where neither of them exists anymore.
Although, honestly, I also find the entire “reset everything” idea deeply disturbing.
Because it means they would both have to knowingly accept Crowley falling again and suffering through everything that followed.
Or Aziraphale would have to trade places with him.
Or they would conclude that they should both remain angels.
But in that case, the “us” we’ve spent six years following would never exist.
Personally, I wanted to see them actually argue about this.
I wanted them to discuss the consequences openly and acknowledge that perhaps a world without God, Satan, angels, or demons is simply the least terrible option available.
They didn’t have to agree.
They just needed to have that conversation.
Instead, it never happens.
And that is exactly why the ending feels emotionally hollow.
There is another aspect that disappointed me deeply, particularly regarding Aziraphale.
I wanted him to experience a genuine “fall”—not literally, but as a piece of character writing.
To be left alone with his own crisis.
To lose faith in the ideals that had defined him for so long.
The problem is that the script first invents those ideals for him.
Because Aziraphale was never truly naive.
There is simply no believable version of him that honestly thinks Heaven is made up of “the good guys.”
After everything he witnessed, that makes no sense.
That optimistic image was always a coping mechanism.
It allowed him to survive, avoid conflict, and outmaneuver people by pretending to be harmless, polite, and slightly absent-minded while actually being extraordinarily intelligent.
That is who Aziraphale has always been.
When he spends the beginning of the season quietly sabotaging the Second Coming through endless bureaucracy, that is perfectly in character.
But then the script suddenly asks us to believe that he sincerely thought he could reform the entire system from within.
To me, that isn’t character tragedy.
It’s character betrayal.
The finale almost seems to resent both of them.
Aziraphale is reduced to a fool and a kind of naivety he never possessed.
…
And Crowley…
What happens to Crowley feels less like character development and more like a whump fantasy.
A charismatic, resourceful, brilliantly independent demon is transformed into someone who can barely function without Aziraphale.
Yes, Crowley has always been traumatized.
Yes, he has always been vulnerable.
Yes, emotional dependence has always existed between them.
But none of that ever made him incapable of acting.
I would have found it far more believable if losing his miracles had driven him into panic or forced him to run away.
That would have been entirely consistent with his character.
His avoidance has always come from fear, despair, and a desperate instinct to survive.
Instead, he simply stays where he is and slowly destroys himself.
Not because that is the logical next step for his character.
But because the plot requires it.
Which is why the ending feels less like the conclusion of a carefully written story and more like a fetishized codependency fanfiction.
Ironically, even many whump fanfics allow their characters to communicate, care for one another, and actually grow.
This finale barely lets them do any of those things.
This is why, to me, it doesn’t feel like an honest exploration of depression or a respectful portrayal of the trauma Crowley has endured.
It feels far more like the fetishization of suffering.
His pain doesn’t seem to exist to deepen his character or allow him to grow. Instead, it becomes an aesthetic—something the story uses to make itself feel darker or to make its nihilistic ending easier to justify.
His depression never develops into an actual narrative.
It is never meaningfully explored.
It is never allowed to lead anywhere.
It simply exists.
And that is what hurts the most.
Because it feels disrespectful not only to Crowley as a character, but also to the people who have seen themselves in him for years—people who recognized their own anxiety, fear, despair, and struggle in his story.
When mental illness is reduced to a convenient patch for a poorly constructed tragic and cynical ending. It becomes nothing more than a narrative device.
Crowley deserved far better than this
I don’t have a problem with the ending itself. Even if it’s bad ending, even with main characters death, and even with word-destruction.
The problem is that the script stops making sense.
The characters say things that contradict their previous motivations. They make choices that don’t grow naturally out of their development. The central conflicts never receive meaningful catharsis, and the most important emotional moments aren’t properly earned.
It feels as though the writers decided on the ending first, kept a handful of scenes they considered essential, and then rushed to connect everything in between.
That’s why the ending itself isn’t what disappoints me.
I’ve been hearing this in my head since May 13th 4:30am EST so now everyone else has to as well lol
The biggest problem finale is how badly this written (P1)
An absolutely pointless and frustrating part of the finale is the way Crowley spends the entire story dismissing Aziraphale’s attempt to change things.
Look, Crowley has every right to feel hurt, abandoned, and betrayed. He has every right to blame Aziraphale for the destruction of their relationship and the trust between them.
But that is completely different from suggesting that Aziraphale was wrong simply because he wanted to change Heaven—especially when both of them know the Second Coming is approaching.
So what exactly is the point of repeatedly emphasizing that Aziraphale “failed to change anything”?
Because, thanks to the writing, Crowley becomes the one who ultimately chooses to do nothing at all. He doesn’t even offer an alternative.
There is no logic or common sense in that.
When Season 2 ended, most people said, “Of course Aziraphale won’t be able to change Heaven.”
But the entire narrative about “changing Heaven” was never his original goal in the first place.
He never wanted to go back.
He only agreed because he was given hope that Crowley could finally be freed from the burden of existing as a demon. That was his primary motivation.
After Crowley refused, his second motivation became the reminder that the Second Coming was coming. That is what ultimately made his decision final, despite the pain it caused Crowley.
Yes, Aziraphale talked about “the good guys and the bad guys.”
Yes, he said Crowley would be better off becoming an angel again.
Yes, he believed that together they could make Heaven a better place.
But none of those things were ever his original objective.
Which is why it makes no sense to treat that as his greatest mistake or to dismiss his entire decision because of it.
For me, the biggest problem with the finale is not how it ends.
The problem is that it’s simply bad writing.
No matter how the story ended—even if I personally disliked the ending—it still needed to be internally consistent. I should be able to understand why the characters say what they say and why they make the choices they make.
Instead, none of that is there.
It honestly feels as if the writers decided on the ending first, kept a handful of scenes they considered canon, and then let artificial intelligence stitch everything in between together—with no internal logic, no emotional intelligence, and sometimes no intelligence at all.
The worst part, though, is the complete absence of catharsis.
Neither character is allowed any meaningful growth.
Crowley ends the story even more wounded than before, still running away from responsibility.
Aziraphale remains stubbornly convinced of his own righteousness, despite the narrative repeatedly humiliating him for it.
Both characters are stripped of the healthy, believable selfishness that made them so compelling in the first place.
Instead, their flaws are exaggerated until they become caricatures of themselves.
Another major problem is Aziraphale’s so-called confession of love.
To me, it fails on almost every level.
First of all, it comes far too late to matter. The universe is already gone. After everything that happened, after all the emotional and psychological damage Aziraphale inflicted on Crowley for no meaningful reason, those words are no longer capable of fixing anything.
The only impression the scene leaves is that it was written for one purpose: to make the confession as painful and uncomfortable as possible.
Even the wording feels strange.
“You gave me Crowley, and then took him away.”
“You were the best angel.”
…What is that even supposed to mean?
Simply having Aziraphale tell God, “You treated him unfairly,” and then tell Crowley, “You have always been the most important being in the entire universe to ME,” would have solved a huge part of the emotional problem.
Instead, the script somehow manages to make everything even worse.
Especially the whole “best angel” or “special hero” angle. To me, it just comes across as awkward + cringe.
But that’s not even the biggest issue.
The story didn’t need a grand confession at all.
Instead, it could have shown a single moment where Aziraphale—perhaps for the first time in the series—makes a genuine sacrifice for Crowley. Even if that sacrifice were relatively small. I mean like this:
Actions like that communicate love far more effectively than any speech ever could.
But the story never gives us that either.
Which leaves me with the impression that the script had only one objective until the very end: to keep both of them miserable.
Crowley is left believing that he isn’t loved, isn’t needed, hasn’t been forgiven, and doesn’t even deserve to be loved or apologized to.
He remains exactly what he has always been: someone running away from responsibility while still struggling to understand God’s nature.
He circles back to the same question: why create people the way they are, only to punish them for being that way?
He ask another question before: his biggest problem was not with punishment humans, this was about “why it’s necessary to destroy them all especially so quickly”
But even that conflict goes nowhere.
Because, in reality, neither Heaven nor Hell spent most of history punishing humanity. Aside from extraordinary events like Job, Christ, the Flood, or the Apocalypse, humanity’s greatest suffering came from its own choices.
So even Crowley’s deepest philosophical conflict is left unresolved.
Instead, the story simply reminds us that he is “special.”
What a wonderful consolation. 🙄
~ the prettiest star 💫~
inspired by this beautiful frame from the good omens s2 openning title sequence
❤️🩹