Pearl Harbour is attacked by the Imperial Japanese Navy - Hawaii, 7th Dec 1941
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Netherlands
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Italy
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Japan
seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
Pearl Harbour is attacked by the Imperial Japanese Navy - Hawaii, 7th Dec 1941
Neil Gaimen’s time has come. Is anyone ever surprised by this point?
Not because “Oh, I never really liked them” or “I knew they were bad news.” Rather because… no one gets this famous without something to hide.
Here's something a lot of people have to understand: EVERYONE has skeletons in their closets and those with fame especially. Some more grotesque than others and in need of clearing out but either way, there's a reason "Never meet your heroes" is a terribly timeless cliche.
This artist, that writer, this actor, that director? Each of them have some sort of dirt that can be used against them. Be it something they did long ago they hoped to bury rather than make right or a reoccurring pattern of bad behavior behind the scenes. There's something.
For those who made a big impact on the world or in a niche of said world, their work was not a fluke. They were or became very bad people but produce works of art that spoke to the human soul. J.K. Rowling's queen of the TERFs but Harry Potter was still a worldwide phenomenon. It wasn’t a fluke, it didn’t trick us, it was just that good.
Vic Mignogna has been a creepazoid since the nineties for those willing to do actual research on the claims. BUT many of his roles in Anime are considered legends even among sub-onlies. His voice acting as Edward Elric speaks for himself. Still a sleezeball.
I could go on but the point is we can and should recognize these artists for their bad behavior but know that they garnered fans for a damn good reason. That's nothing to be ashamed of in this age of Social Media where more are empowered to have a voice compared to real life.
There will be many more Rowlings, Gaimens, Austin St. Johns that either reveal their true colors or change into something nearly different from who they were before. We weren't "swindled" or "tricked." We just didn't know. And some of us, I bet, wish we never did know.
It's selfish but natural to wish that these allegations weren't coming out of the woodwork and up-ending your escape from the world that's already a crapsack. But we can never truly escape reality. Take a break, sure. But our letter to Hogwarts was always a pipe dream.
Today in Hip Hop History:
Mobb Deep released their fifth album Infamy December 11, 2001
Amy <3
The beautiful bride and ugly ass groom ahh doodle
Infamy, infamy! They've all got it in for me!
Dorothy Dandridge in a publicity portrait for the MGM/Andrew L. Stone drama The Decks Ran Red (aka: Infamy), 1958.
finally part of the cool heisters club 😎 🎉🎉🎉
The first season of The Terror is Tumblr's darling, but personally, I think the second season, Infamy, is much better. It's about the community of Japanese-Americans who lived on Terminal Island, and who were sent to the concentration camp Manzanar. Most of the show takes place in the camp and is about how the ghosts of past personal betrayal and present political betrayal intersect in the lives of some related families.
The National Trust for Historic Preservation aims to save from destruction the last two surviving structures from Terminal Island's pre-Worl
The only two surviving buildings from Terminal Island’s days as a thriving Japanese American fishing village in the early 1900s have been placed on the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s 2025 list of America’s 11 most endangered historic places. The designation, announced Wednesday morning, is meant to elevate the visibility of the site, which stands as a physical reminder of a story that ended with the incarceration of the island’s residents — among an estimated 120,000 people of Japanese descent, most American citizens, who were forcibly removed following the bombing of Pearl Harbor in World War II.
Today, Terminal Island is part of one of the country’s busiest container ports, and many people don’t know that it was the first place from which Japanese Americans were uprooted and sent to government camps such as Manzanar in the Owens Valley.
Terminal Island may be best known for the Japanese American village tragically uprooted by government order. A new book mines its history as