If the Studio C fandom is dead then so am I
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If the Studio C fandom is dead then so am I
he slayed so hard here
Stephen and James wearing their costumes from Studio C's Time Travel Heroes Stop Hitler sketch
PART TWO OF THIS POST HERE!
I don't know how many Studio C fans are on here but I do know that one of my best friends, who actually INTRODUCED ME to them, has loved Studio C much longer than I have. And when I found this video on James Perry's Instagram and sent it to her, it turned out she HADN'T seen it. So I'm sharing this here for all the Studio C and Jk! Studio fans who did not know this video existed (and maybe didn't even know that Matt is colorblind LOL)
(link to original post here)
(Okay but this video is so sweet tho 😭😭😭 Matt legit looks so happy and it's so sweet seeing that they really are friends irl 🥺 love these guys)
These doubtful accents scarce I heard, When D-m-r’s pallied form appear’d, Like beauty’s setting sun; Fondly they claspt each other’s waist. Then talk’d, of Sappho’s purer taste, And maids themselves had won.
Excerpt from An Epistle from Mademoiselle D'Eon to the Right Honorable L–d M——-d, C—f J—–e of the C—t of K–g’s B—h, On his Determination in regard to her Sex by James Perry
While the poem presents itself as being written by d’Eon in reality it was written by James Perry to satirise her. Unfortunately many believed the poem to be authentic. On the 27th of March 1778 the Morning Post wrote:
A correspondent observes that Mademoiselle D’Eon, has, by her epistle to Lord M——-d, displayed a great share of wit; but the obscenity, however it may please the gay and thoughtless, deserves the severest censure;
“D-m-r” is presumably Anne Damer who was wildly rumoured to be a sapphist. Hester Thrale Piozzi reported in her diary that it had “now grown common to suspect Impossibilities-(such I think 'em)-whenever two Ladies live too much together” and that it was “a Joke in London now to say such a one visits Mrs Damer.” (Diary of Hester Thrale Piozzi, 9 December 1795) Perry seems to have had somewhat of a fixation on Damer as he refers to her in two other poems Mimosa: or, the Sensitive Plant and A Sapphick Epistle.