Wonderful People:
emospritelet
rumple-belle
scribbles-by-kate
freifraufischer
sieben9
riskpig
darthmelyanna
rush-keating
ripperblackstaff
I haven't done one of these in a while, so have a Follow Friday!




#interview with the vampire#iwtv#the vampire armand#assad zaman


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Wonderful People:
emospritelet
rumple-belle
scribbles-by-kate
freifraufischer
sieben9
riskpig
darthmelyanna
rush-keating
ripperblackstaff
I haven't done one of these in a while, so have a Follow Friday!
Do you think the lack of moral ambiguity in flagship cinematic franchises (like the MCU) and the size/scope of fandoms for said franchises on tumblr leads to animosity toward moral ambiguity in other works of media on this site? I've thought about this myself over the past few years.
No, I don’t think so. I think it’s more a function of maturity (or lack thereof) and the marketing of mass culture. It’s more economic and technological.
The 1960s were a huge landmark in terms of mass culture because youth subculture became a big thing for the first time. Before the 1960s, teenagers and twentysomethings didn’t really have a separate set of media tastes from their parents, because everybody sat around the radio/television and consumed the same thing. I mean, there were youth fads and so on, but NOTHING on the level of what you saw in the 60s where hippies started saying things like “don’t trust anyone over thirty.”
Now, ironically, youth subculture and mature mass culture are becoming more amorphous and collapsing into each other. We’re losing any sense of separate generational tastes because even people who are thirty and forty and fifty spend a lot of their attention share on media centered on kids. Boomers love Disney, Millenials love Disney, everybody’s ultimately hooked on the same stuff and it’s not “cool” to rebel against it anymore. Corporations love this sameness, because once you hook people’s sense of nostalgia early on, they also get their kids into it as well and it’s a self-reinforcing cycle. You just need to slap a fresh set of paint on the old characters every now and then and sometimes (if it affects the bottom line) sand off the racist/sexist edges.
There are pluses and minuses to this manbaby-centered media landscape. I don’t really like it myself, but then maybe I’m just a cranky old fart stuck in the 90s and I need to get used to it. The negative is an overwhelming dullness and sameness demanded of narratives, conservatism, lack of experimentalism. The positive is that there’s one language of mass culture and it’s possible to affect that mass culture in good ways.
Annalise Keating, Donna Rosewood, Beaumont Rosewood
I definitely still love them, too
We are in the infant stages of creating a DSA in my town. It's mostly people my age with a few older folks who are involved. I know having lots of twenty somethings in a fledgling group can cause drama and that can cause the group to splinter off or die. Any advice about how to deal with interpersonal bullshit before it becomes a problem?
I have several friends in the local DSA and might join in future, but I don’t have any inside info as to what makes one successful or not successful. So this answer is more general than specific. The absolute most important thing is to have an enforced sexual harassment/abuse policy. And if people aren’t cool with having that discussion and establishing one, they shouldn’t be around: that’s the first level of enforcement! Asking everyone to read this essay is also a good idea—Why Misogynists Make Good Informants—and then having a required discussion about it. It’s a widely shared essay for a very good reason. To give just one example of how topical it remains: as a leftie you might have heard a lot of hopeful stuff about Redneck Revolt in 2016-2017, but not nearly as much positive now in 2018. And the reason is the classic misogynist abuse leading to organization implosion. It happens OVER AND OVER AND OVER again.
There’s a lot of interpersonal drama that doesn’t involve abuse (engaged in by people of all ages not just twentysomethings) but there’s nothing that can be done about that but hope for the best and communally encourage people’s better natures.
If you have a group that’s almost all twentysomethings, especially ones without children, it’s very easy for the group to get focused on their needs and everyone else gets sort of pushed out. So it’s a good idea to keep asking questions like: where do you want to see the group in five, ten, twenty years? What makes the group multigenerational in appeal? What does the group offer to a sixty year old or a ten year old? That doesn’t mean every group should have a babysitting room or something, just that they shouldn’t actively alienate people who don’t fit the majority member pattern. A lot of disability inclusion also overlaps with multigenerational inclusion, so you’ll be accomplishing two goals at one time.
Finally, if you do have a split, it’s not necessarily a bad thing. Depending on national developments, people in the local group might decide the local organization doesn’t align with their personal goals anymore, but if they split off in a more friendly way so that everyone still works together when they need to, that can still be a positive development.
hey you got a link to the livestream? I can't find it on youtube
It wasn’t on there, I was watching via Politicos’s facebook page, which for whatever reason I can’t figure out how to link to from here...hang on let me see if I can rip the footage out and upload it for posterity.
My Tumblr Crushes:
crowzley (5%)
scarlettjane22 (4%)
woodelf68 (4%)
celticheartedfangirl (3%)
canonspngifs (3%)
mrgoldsshopofhorrors (3%)
alwaysdearie (3%)
rush-keating (3%)
valoscope (3%)
rush-keating replied to your post: Okay all I did was change my URL and I’ve lost 4...
Ugh it’s not like you weren’t blogging about Rumbelle all the time before then
I know right? It’s not like this is brand new information.
Love your cover photo
<3 thank you