Mutant, in partnership with Sony Music Masterworks, and Amazon MGM studios are proud to present the complete soundtrack to Lord & Miller
sick and twisted that the phm soundtrack vinyls are golden records btw!!!

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Mutant, in partnership with Sony Music Masterworks, and Amazon MGM studios are proud to present the complete soundtrack to Lord & Miller
sick and twisted that the phm soundtrack vinyls are golden records btw!!!
jayce in a crop top + booty shorts + roller skates. thank u for your time
it's been six months straight of jayvik brainrot and still. every time I see them I'm like ohhhhhhh holy shit these two are like IN LOVE in love
THIS PATTERN is NOW AVAILABLE IN DUTCH.
hello jayvik knitting nation. what if: papillon shawl but with the colors of their farewell scene... ;_;
alternatively! the dragonfly/top of the hexgate colors...hmmm
no thoughts just the concept art from the scene where jayce finds viktor in the rubble
While designing Viktor's post-explosion look, our team created this mise-en-scène to better understand his condition. Every detail from the script was considered, from his tattered clothes to the moment Jayce discovers his transformation. llustration by Forticher Mariana Galiano.
source from Fortiche's official Twitter acct
I am a regular guy I know how to rest when I'm sick I am a regular guy I can take a break when I'm tired I am a regular guy I can ask to cancel that meeting I am a regular guy I don't have to work all the time I am a regular guy I know what it means to just be
happy birthday killua zoldyck <3
food for thought this sunday: another awesome thing about commenting nice things on ao3 fics (besides absolutely making the author's day, ofc) that I haven't often seen brought up outside acafan circles is: comments are an essential part of community context for a fic! from a media preservation/archive perspective, you can learn a lot about the community/fandom from a comments section, because those responses (and the responses to those responses) are linked directly to a work.
some comments are emoji blasts/keyboard smashing. some are 2000-word, line-by-line literary analyses. some are more akin to what you'd see in a traditional writing workshop--"I love how you wrote XYZs character, your prose in this section was really strong," etc. some are the beginnings of relationships--I've seen threads where author and reader go back and forth dozens of times before one of them eventually goes "hey, wanna take this to [other messaging platform]?", and I can't help but smile and wonder where they are now. and some comments are fulfilling not just for the author, but for other readers, too! if I see a recurring commenter on a bunch of fics I enjoyed reading, I'll go to their profile to see what else they've bookmarked, because there's a good chance I'll be able to find even more stuff I love. I've gone looking in comments sections on works that are 5, 10, 15 years old and found other readers discussing the same things I noticed, and I get the same little rush of connection/wistfulness I get when I connect with a story written a hundred years ago. (obviously it's not quite the same--you can't exactly message Virginia Woolf or the author who wrote the forward for your copy of To the Lighthouse to tell them their story changed your life, but if you find a fic that's old enough, the feeling is remarkably similar). (actually rereading that just now--it fucking rules that you can just message the author of your favorite 15-year old fic. they may never see it or respond, but hey, you still contributed to fandom history!). all are ultimately worthy of preservation, because they provide important metatext for a work, the context it was written in, and information the community it was written for.
the ao3 is first and foremost an archive. the scope of its preservation, by design, includes the comments section. and idk, especially these days, when it can be so easy to get wrapped up in stats and figures (lord knows I sometimes get a little swept up in the go-go-go of fandom via social media), I really love the slower pace of the comments section, the longevity of it. it feels very real and tangible, in a way not a lot of things do these days.