DEAR READER
taylor price
Cosimo Galluzzi

JBB: An Artblog!

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
No title available
occasionally subtle
art blog(derogatory)
Misplaced Lens Cap

tannertan36
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

No title available

#extradirty
tumblr dot com
will byers stan first human second

JVL
wallacepolsom

No title available
dirt enthusiast
🪼

seen from India

seen from Germany
seen from Albania
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from India

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Iraq
seen from United States

seen from North Macedonia
seen from South Africa
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@thelostsoftie
TADC ep 8 spoilers
Wyd when you kill your ai son on accident
I want to ask what they were thinking using a team of allocishet white men who specialize in dark fantasy and horror to write a queer comedy in 2026, but I suspect the reason is no one respectable would touch Neil Gaiman's work after we found out about his rapist history.
And it'd be nice if they gave a fuck, but they don't even care enough to watch it.
And now we know what was wrong with Good Omens 3, and I am so sorry for all of us it let down. Both the fans and creative team who loved it and did their best.
GOOD OMENS EXPLAINED.
God is the ultimate villain of Good Omens, a narcissistic creator, and the entire celestial cast was played like a deck of cards. They didn't realize until the absolute last second that to God and the Metatron, they were never valued children or beloved creations. They were just lines of text in a manuscript that God was bored of reading and ready to throw into the trash.
The ordinary angels and demons did not know that the Second Coming was meant to be an absolute, all-consuming cosmic wipeout. In fact, they were completely blind to the true scale of the devastation, believing it would just be a standard biblical war to conquer Earth. The Delusion of Survival: Heaven genuinely believed they would win the war, conquer Earth, banish Hell forever, and rule a perfect paradise. Hell believed they would overthrow Heaven and turn the universe into an eternal dark kingdom.
Aziraphale naively went up to Heaven thinking he could manage the logistics, protect humanity, and make the Second Coming "upbeat". He had absolutely no idea that the system was rigged to erase everything from the very beginning. Aziraphale is a victim of deep, thousands-of-years-old toxic gaslighting. Aziraphale Thought He Was the "Chosen One" Who Could Fix Heaven. When Aziraphale took over as Supreme Archangel, he realized the Metatron’s version of the Second Coming involved terrible biblical plagues and partial genocide for humans. To prevent human suffering, Aziraphale spent his time trying to pivot the Second Coming into a peaceful, second-chance event. He even brought Jesus down to give a peaceful speech at the UN to avoid any bloodshed.For 6,000 years, Aziraphale’s entire identity was built on the idea that "Heaven is inherently Good, and Hell is inherently Bad." Whenever Heaven did something cruel (like trying to kill Job's children or wiping out humanity with Noah's flood), Aziraphale would make excuses. Once he got to Heaven for Season 3, Aziraphale spent his time drowning in celestial bureaucracy. He was trying to delay the Second Coming by frantically asking for paperwork, filing extensions, and trying to rewrite the "rules" of the apocalypse to save human souls. He was essentially trying to fix a sinking Titanic with a piece of scotch tape.
Aziraphale was groomed and manipulated by The Metatron aka PALPATINE 2.0.
The Bait: He gave Aziraphale exactly what he wanted to hear: "You can make Heaven better, and you can even make Crowley an angel again!" Knowing Aziraphale's deepest desire was to be with Crowley without breaking the rules, the Metatron used it to blind him.
The Distraction: By giving Aziraphale the massive responsibility of managing the Second Coming, he kept him buried in paperwork. This isolated Aziraphale in Heaven and kept him away from Earth so he couldn't team up with Crowley to stop the apocalypse a second time.
As the official Voice of God and the ultimate bureaucratic authority over the Book of Life, the Metatron believed that he was the one writing the story, not a character inside it. He was a dictator seen as an advisor, when in fact he was the mastermind villain as well, because the official Voice of God, the Metatron was the sole bottleneck for all divine communication, so all their info came from him. He gatekeeped the original plan, and gave them a heavily redacted script, The information handed down to the Archangels (like Gabriel and Michael) and the Princes of Hell (like Beelzebub) explicitly told them: "There will be a massive war on Earth. One side will win. The winners will rule eternally. Prepare your armies." WHICH WAS ALL A LIE. Hell were so consumed by their hatred for Heaven and their desire for revenge that they never questioned the paperwork either. God and the Metatron wanted a villain. Lucifer was allowed to "fall" and create Hell because the system required an adversary to play the bad guy in the script. thats why in GO3 he says: “I was just doing my job.” he charmed the fallen angels and according to Crowley said “ I THOUGHT HE CARED.”
WHY CROWLEY FELL?
"Why build a beautiful, massive universe full of stars and life, just to trash it after 6,000 years?”
Crowley didn't fall because he wanted to be evil or rebel; he fell because he was a passionate designer who genuinely loved the universe and couldn't understand the cosmic wastefulness of God’s timeline.
The "Sensible Purpose": Crowley sought to make sense of things. He asked basic, logical questions about the flaws in God's setup (like putting a tree of forbidden knowledge right next to humans and telling them not to touch it).
The Punishment: In Heaven, asking questions is treated as a thought crime. The Metatron and God didn't want a "sensible purpose" no, they wanted blind obedience. Crowley's refusal to stop caring and stop questioning is what got him kicked out downstairs.
Crowley absolutely blames God, but he hates Heaven because Heaven is the weapon God uses to enforce her cruelty.
The Bureaucracy of Cruelty: Heaven isn't a peaceful sanctuary; it is a corporate, cold, and deeply judgmental machine. The angels aren't "good"—they are just blindly obedient, toxic HR managers executing an unfair script.
The Hypocrisy: What drives Crowley crazy is that Heaven claims to stand for love and light, yet they gleefully plan plagues, wars, and genocide while smiling and saying it's "Good". Crowley hates Heaven because it represents a system of brainwashed entities who gave up their own ability to think just to please a creator who views them as completely disposable.
It really is an incredibly tragic and beautifully written show. It highlights that the entire cosmic system was a corporate trap, and Crowley was the only one who saw the flaws in the design from the very first day. They were all absolutely doomed from the very first day of creation, and they spent 6,000 years completely oblivious to it. Because God and Satan are absolute cosmic constants representing pure light and pure dark, they effortlessly survived Michael's Book of Life rampage and materialized in the empty void of the bookshop. This is exactly why Crowley and Aziraphale’s final decision is so powerful. When they are left in the void with God and Satan, they look at both sides and basically say, "We are done playing your games."
Why Crowley is the Ultimate Hero
Looking back at the whole story now, Crowley is the true genius because he realized:
If Heaven is a lie, and Hell is a setup, then the only thing that is real is Earth.
The only things that actually matter are love, free will, good food, nice music, and the connection he built with Aziraphale over 6,000 years.
By wiping out the celestial system and forcing a purely human universe, Crowley didn't just save reality he liberated everyone from God and the Metatron's toxic manuscript. And Aziraphale became a hero as well by choosing to turn to dust and give up his divinity. Aziraphale ceases to be a puppet of Heaven. The finger-tip kiss. Complete Understanding: They didn't need a desperate, pleading kiss anymore because the argument was over. Aziraphale had finally woken up, rejected Heaven, and chosen Crowley completely. Even at the very end, Aziraphale is still fundamentally a proper, old-fashioned angel who expresses deep intimacy through subtle, quiet gestures. To the writers, having him gently touch Crowley's lips with his fingers before their celestial bodies dissolved was meant to be a quiet, devastatingly intimate promise of "I am yours, and I will find you in the next life." When they are reborn as the humans Anthony Crawley and Asa Fell in the new universe, they are completely free from their old angel and demon hang-ups. They don't have corporate offices watching them, and they don't have thousands of years of trauma holding them back. The movie concludes by showing them finding each other naturally in the South Downs, where they finally get to share real, happy, ordinary human kisses without any cosmic doom hanging over their heads. The reason why a temporary human life is a massive upgrade over a toxic, celestial eternity breaks down into these fundamental truths:
1. Immortality Was Their Prison
For 6,000 years, Crowley and Aziraphale’s immortality wasn't a gift; it was a cage. Every single day of their eternal lives was spent under constant surveillance by corporate offices in Heaven and Hell.
They were forced to live in constant fear of being wiped out, tortured, or permanently separated. When they were angels and demons, they had all the time in the world, which meant they spent 6,000 years pining, hesitating, and hiding behind corporate rules.
As humans, their time is limited, which makes it incredibly precious. BUT losing 6,000 years of shared memories, inside jokes, and survived apocalypses feels like a massive, heartbreaking theft.The Crowley and Aziraphale we loved for three seasons the ones who survived the French Revolution, handed each other holy water, and ran a Soho bookshop technically died in that bookshop. BUT THEY ARE SOULMATES.
Gravitational Pull: The thesis of the ending is that their souls are so fundamentally bonded that even if you completely wipe the hard drive of the universe, trigger a new Big Bang, and strip them of their memories, they will still blindly find each other in a crowd.
Looking at two 55-year-olds finally getting together after a lifetime of being alone absolutely gives off a vibe of "Well, we're old, we're lonely, might as well settle down now" instead of an epic cosmic romance. What We Needed: A montage showing a 25-year-old Anthony staring up at the stars feeling like a part of his soul was missing, or a 35-year-old Asa sitting in a quiet library feeling a phantom ache of grief he couldn't explain. Showing them actively feeling the void of their missing memories would have made their eventual meet-cute feel earned.
What We Got: Instead, the movie just rushes through a 20-year time skip, dumps them into their mid-50s as shy bachelors, and expects us to find it romantic. It feels deeply unsatisfying because we didn't get to see the emotional weight of their human isolation.
In Season 2, Gabriel and Beezlebub got a literal, beautiful enemies-to-lovers rom-com plot with them. They held hands, sang Everyday, and casually flew off to Alpha Centauri to be in love forever without a care in the world.
It set an expectation. The show told us, "Look, angels and demons can run away together and be happy!" Good Omens always used high-energy British satire, Queen music, and physical comedy to mask a deeply dark story, a genocide. The writers completely tricked the audience. We were lured in with three seasons of vibrant, quirky British comedy, chemistry, and comforting rom-com tropes, only to get slapped in the face by a pitch-black cosmic tragedy in the final 90 minutes. 1. The Deception of the "Comfort Show" It gave us cozy cardigans, hot cocoa, having dinner at the Ritz, walks in the park, feeding ducks, magic shows, to make us feel safe. We thought we were watching a story about two found-family entities making a home on Earth. When Crowley desperately begged Aziraphale to run away to Alpha Centauri in the Season 2 finale, it wasn’t because he hated their life. It was because he wanted to protect their happiness.
Crowley saw the storm coming. He looked at Alpha Centauri and thought, "If Heaven and Hell are going to smash this planet, I don't care about the war. I just want to take the person I love to a quiet star system where we can be safe and happy forever." Crowley knew Heaven was a meat grinder that would chew Aziraphale up and spit him out. 2. God is a writer because the universe is quite literally a book. From the very first episode, God is literally the narrator of the show.
God wrote the original outline (The Ineffable Plan).
Agnes Nutter wrote her own book of prophecies to try and edit the script from the inside.
AM I REACHING OR WHAT 😂
I'm not sure the writers bothered to watch their own show because how are you gonna make a whole episode focusing on Job and Sitis, the most devoted followers, cursing God for killing their children and trying to replace them with new ones as a "reward." Crowley and Aziraphale spend 20 minutes trying to stop that from happening because they know it's wrong and nearly dying in the process. The circumstances frame the angels as blind to human emotions and centered around quantity rather than quality and love. It doesn't matter if they'll have more children. They're not THEIR children, they're not the same people Job and Sitis have loved so much for so many years.
Then the finale drops. Crowley and Aziraphale are erased because... the fans were too loyal and we deserved this? and they're replaced with Anthony and Asa. And we're supposed to... be gaslighted that this is the happy ending?