The fact that the guy who designed Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl set designed Ethel’s for Coachella; and the fact that he said something about how he didn’t know much about her except that she liked power lines. Our girl is so autistic I love it

#dc comics#dc#batman#dc universe#bruce wayne#tim drake#batfam#batfamily#dick grayson#dc fanart



seen from Germany
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seen from Germany

seen from Kuwait
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seen from France
The fact that the guy who designed Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl set designed Ethel’s for Coachella; and the fact that he said something about how he didn’t know much about her except that she liked power lines. Our girl is so autistic I love it
BACK TO YOU pt1.
Finn Wolfhard x reader
synopsis: you go to Coachella to forget Finn but one glance across the crowd pulls you right back into something that never really ended.
contents: celebrity!reader, exes to something more, unresolved tension, kissing(loads of kissingbut you’re gonna have to wait 😛)
side note:
I’m sooo sorry that this took one but here’s chapter 1!!!!
I hope yall enjoy 🤍🤍
The desert never really settles.
It hums instead in a low and constant, like something alive beneath the surface, something that breathes through the speakers and the bodies and the heat that clings stubbornly to your skin long after the sun has started its slow descent behind the mountains. Coachella is exactly how people describe it and somehow still nothing like it at all, because no picture or video ever quite captures the way it feels to stand in the middle of it, suspended between music and movement and the strange, fleeting sense that nothing outside of this moment really exists.
You had told yourself you needed this.
Not in the dramatic, life changing way people like to pretend trips like this are, but in a quieter, more practical sense. You needed noise. You needed distraction. You needed something bright enough, loud enough, consuming enough to drown out the thoughts that had been following you for weeks now, lingering just at the edge of your mind like a song you couldn’t quite place but couldn’t stop hearing either.
And it had been working.
Mostly.
You’d let yourself get pulled along with the crowd, let your friends drag you from one stage to another without really caring who was playing, let yourself laugh when something was funny and dance when the rhythm felt right, even if your movements were half a beat behind everyone else’s. You’d let the heat press into your skin and the music settle into your bones, had let yourself exist in that in between space where nothing needed to be defined or understood or dealt with.
For a while, it had almost felt easy.
Which should have been your first warning.
Because nothing about this, about the past few months, about the things you had carefully avoided thinking about had ever been easy, no matter how hard you tried to convince yourself otherwise.
Still, you didn’t question it when Sadie grabbed your wrist and pulled you deeper into the crowd, weaving between bodies and laughter and spilled drinks with the kind of determination that suggested she knew exactly where she was going, even if you didn’t.
“Trust me,” she’d said earlier, eyes bright in that way that meant she was already two steps ahead of you. “This set is going to be insane.”
You’d nodded, because it was easier than asking questions, easier than admitting you didn’t really care what you were seeing as long as it kept you moving.
So you followed.
You let yourself be pulled forward, let the crowd swallow you whole, let the music grow louder and sharper until it felt like it was vibrating through your chest rather than just around you. Lights flickered somewhere ahead, casting everything in shifting colors that blurred together the longer you looked at them, turning faces into something indistinct, unrecognizable.
It was overwhelming in the best possible way. Until somehow it wasn’t because life happens like that, doesn’t it?
With no warning. Not with anything dramatic enough to prepare you for it.
But rather a single glance that shouldn’t mean anything, and then suddenly does.
You don’t even realize what’s changed at first. You’re still moving, still half listening to whatever Sadie is saying as she leans in close to be heard over the music, still nodding along without really processing the words. Your attention drifts, just for a second, pulled sideways by something you can’t quite name, something that feels more like instinct than thought.
And then you see him.
It isn’t cinematic.
It isn’t slow motion or perfectly framed or anything like the kind of moment people would expect from a story like this. There’s no dramatic reveal, no clearing of the crowd to give you an unobstructed view, no music swelling in a way that feels intentional.
It’s messy and he’s just there.
Standing a few feet away, partially turned, his attention caught in a conversation you can’t hear, the noise around you swallowing whatever words are being exchanged. The fading light catches in his hair, the last traces of the sun turning it something softer, warmer, and for a second it feels like your brain can’t quite catch up with what your eyes are seeing.
Because it doesn’t make sense.
Not here.
Not now.
Not when you had spent so long convincing yourself that the chances of running into Finn Wolfhard again were slim enough to ignore completely.
But there he is anyway.
Close enough that you can make out the familiar lines of his face, the way his expression shifts as he listens, the small, absent movement of his hands as he talks. Close enough that it feels undeniably real, undeniably present, undeniably something you can’t pretend isn’t happening.
Your body reacts before your mind does.
It stills.
Not dramatically, not in a way that would draw attention, but enough that your friend’s voice fades into the background completely, her grip on your wrist loosening slightly when you stop following her momentum.
“What—” she starts, turning toward you, but whatever she was about to say doesn’t matter, because you’re not looking at her.
You’re looking at him.
And maybe it’s stupid, maybe it’s predictable, maybe it’s exactly the kind of thing you should have expected the moment you stepped into a place like this, but there’s something about the way the world seems to narrow in that instant that makes everything else feel secondary, like background noise you can’t quite tune back into even if you tried.
You tell yourself not to stare.
You tell yourself to look away, to laugh it off, to let it be nothing more than a coincidence that you can move past without letting it pull you under.
You don’t.
Because right as the thought crosses your mind—he looks up.
There’s no hesitation in it, no searching glance that moves across the crowd before landing on you. It’s immediate, direct, like he’s been drawn to the same shift in the air that pulled your attention to him in the first place.
Like he felt it too.
And just like that, the distance between you stops feeling like distance at all.
It’s strange, the way recognition works when it’s tied to something more than just familiarity, something deeper than simply knowing someone’s face or voice or the shape of their presence. It isn’t just that you see him… it’s that you know him, in that quiet, instinctive way that bypasses logic completely.
And he knows you.
You can see it in the way his expression changes, subtle but undeniable, the conversation he had been in faltering just slightly as his attention shifts fully, completely, entirely toward you.
For a second, neither of you moves.
The crowd continues around you, bodies pressing closer, music building toward something louder, brighter, more intense, but it all feels distant now, like it’s happening behind glass rather than around you.
You’re aware of your heartbeat in a way that feels inconvenient, distracting, louder than it should be.
You’re aware of the way your fingers curl slightly at your sides, like your body is preparing for something your mind hasn’t caught up to yet.
And you’re aware of him.
And then something shifts.
It’s small, almost unnoticeable if you aren’t looking for it.
He steps forward.
Just one step.
But it’s enough.
Enough to break whatever fragile stillness had settled between you, enough to turn this from something distant and observational into something real, something moving, something happening whether you’re ready for it or not.
Your breath catches, just slightly.
You could leave.
The thought comes quickly, instinctively, presenting itself as the easiest option, the simplest solution. You could turn away, let Sadie pull you back into the crowd, disappear into the noise and the lights and the movement before this becomes something you have to deal with.
Before it becomes something you have to feel.
But you don’t because he takes another step.
And then another.
And suddenly, the distance between you isn’t distance anymore, it’s time.
Seconds ticking down in a way that feels too fast and too slow all at once, each step bringing him closer, each movement making it harder to pretend this is anything other than what it is.
An ending or a beginning.
You don’t move. You don’t speak. You just stand there, caught in the middle of it, watching as he closes the space between you like it was never meant to exist at all.
And when he finally stops in front of you, close enough now that the noise of the festival fades into something distant and unimportant, close enough that everything you’ve been avoiding thinking about for weeks comes rushing back all at once , and you realize, with a clarity that feels almost cruel, that walking away was never really an option.
Not this time…
GDYB
Taemin | Cochella 2026 | Week 2
Who was gonna tell me?!👀‼️
OH MY FUCKING GOSH
Her mind 🤯
since I've seen a lot of ninlings complaining (i love how annoying we are) about the new cover, I made some. I saw another person on here do it, and I thought it would be super fun.