this would've been a great photoshopped imagine back in the days



#interview with the vampire#iwtv#the vampire armand#assad zaman
seen from T1
seen from China
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from Paraguay
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Germany
seen from Nepal
seen from China
seen from Yemen
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from Australia
seen from Canada

seen from Canada

seen from Denmark
this would've been a great photoshopped imagine back in the days
MINSUNG @ idol human theater
psa: unionizing? so hot. 😮💨 (check rbs)
My hot take is that El owes Will nothing
Eddie gets top surgery and even when he's still super bandaged up he keeps grabbing his chest and giggling, like straight tee hee shit
Steve thinks it's absolutely adorable
This is hell
The scene where Neil replies with ".. nothing..." when his father aggressively asks him what he feels is definitely the one where I relate to him the most out of the entire movie. His father took that as Neil coming to his senses and giving up on the, to him, foolish idea. Whilst Neil meant that he truly felt nothing. The pain in his eyes, the loss for words, the long silence before answering, didn't go unnoticed, it went uncared for by his parents. Neil didn't just give up on his dreams, he gave up on everything. He knew that no matter how loudly he yelled, it'd fall on deaf ears. No matter how much he cried and begged, it would mean absolutely nothing to the people who were meant to support him the most. His nothing was Neils way of finalising his exhaustion and the emptiness he felt on the inside. When people say that his behaviour was reckless and that he was overdramatic it really makes me realise how many people went their entire lives being heard that they don't understand what its like to be completely disregarded. To have "Is it better to speak or to die?" mean the same exact thing because your voice meant nothing regardless.
"And he called it 'Absolutely Nothing' because that's what it was really all about."
nothing to say about this.