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Welcome back to “characters that are literally me but I also have a violent crush on their actors”
Okay gang, LISTEN UP!!!! I AM CALLING A DAVE ENGLAND FAN MEETING BECAUSE IF YOU HAVEN'T WATCHED SHRED DOWNLOAD TUBI AND WATCH IT NOWWWW
Max fisher aka dave england is the apple of my eyes. The inspiration of my newly plotted fic im making and I need you guys to watch shred to get down and dirty with max alright!?!?!?!?!?
Fucking look at him, my god.
Go watch shred right now
P.s if you encountered this video on my TikTok NO YOU DIDN'T AND THATS NOT ME!!!!!!
characters you think would be besties from different media
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Social platforms are unnaturally rich with sources of moral outrage; there is always a tweet or news development to get angry about, along with plenty of users to highlight it to a potential audience of millions. It's like standing in the center of the largest crowd ever assembled, knowing that, at any moment, it might transform into a mob. This creates powerful incentives for what the philosophers Justin Tosi and Brandon Warmke have termed "moral grandstanding" - showing off that you are more outraged, and therefore more moral, than everyone else. "In a quest to impress peers," Tosi and Warmke write, "grandstanders trump up moral charges, pile on in cases of public shaming, announce that anyone who disagrees with them is obviously wrong, or exaggerate emotional displays." Off-line, moral grandstanders might heighten a particular groups sensitivities a few degrees by pressuring peers to match them. Or they might simply annoy everyone. But on social networks, grandstanders are systematically rewarded and amplified. This can trigger "a moral arms race," Tosi and Warmke cautioned, in which people "adopt extreme and implausible views, and refuse to listen to the other side.
Max Fisher, The Chaos Machine: The Inside Story of How Social Media Rewired Our Minds and Our World
WHO PUT HIM UP THERE??