Man… I don’t need to ask because unfortunately I know, god bless you all for your tolerance.
art blog(derogatory)

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blake kathryn
Sade Olutola
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
we're not kids anymore.

izzy's playlists!

Janaina Medeiros
DEAR READER

Origami Around
taylor price

tannertan36
Acquired Stardust
Misplaced Lens Cap
AnasAbdin

@theartofmadeline
Stranger Things
Sweet Seals For You, Always
NASA
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United States
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seen from United Kingdom
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seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from Türkiye
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@titleleaf
Man… I don’t need to ask because unfortunately I know, god bless you all for your tolerance.
The second poster of Haulin'Ass was, creatively, called Haulin'Ass Too
me on my blog
of all the ways people try to justify moralizing about other people’s kinks on here it does think “you should only get off to kinks related to things you’ve experienced” is the funniest one
it’s just a perfect encapsulation of the increasing push to deny all anonymity online right? you should have to disclose all your identities so we can see if it’s sufficiently likely that you experienced the correct traumatic events that would make it acceptable for you to have sex this way
Delectable Mountains, about 1920 Kentucky
“More recently, feminist film theorists have turned to the work of one of Lacan’s successors, the French feminist psychoanalyst Julia Kristeva. Kristeva’s book Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection focuses on literature and not film, but her views have been adapted to the study of visual horror by Barbara Creed, in a 1986 Screen article about Alien, and in her more recent book The Monstrous-Feminine: Film, Feminism, Psychoanalysis. Kristeva locates the sources and origins of horror not in castration anxiety, but in the preoedipal stage of the infant’s ambivalence toward the mother as it struggles to create boundaries and forge its own ego identity. The mother is ‘horrific’ in the sense of being all-engulfing, primitive, and impure or defiled by bodily fluids—particularly breast milk and flowing menstrual blood. Kristeva uses the term ‘abjection’ to designate the psychic condition inspired by this image of the horrific mother. For Kristeva, horror is fundamentally about boundaries—about the threat of transgressing them, and about the need to do so. Hence she emphasizes the duality of our attraction/repulsion to the horrific.”
— Cynthia A. Freeland, “Feminist Frameworks for Horror Films”
Drawing some Rachel Grey fits + bonus Rachel/Ava’Dara.
Albert Watson - Outfit by Nina Ricci (Vogue Italia 1985)
80s and early 90s Rachel how I miss you.
Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (2004)
“oh damn, I have my likes turned off so it’s not an urgent issue but I wonder what my comments look like when grouped together”
You will never guess the one singular theme uniting 98% of my recently made comments.
Now, as then, 'tis simple truth — Sweetest tongue has sharpest tooth!
Speiredonia spectans, the granny's cloak moth, is a moth of the family Erebidae.
ever since i was a child i knew i wanted to get overinvested in "bad victims" in every form of media and get my heart broken by their endings over and over and over again
just saw a 'comments' tab on someones blog you know where the following and likes tabs would be if enabled and it was just showing all the replies theyve made on peoples posts. this is fascinating when did this feature come out
EMERGENCY - ITS AUTO ENABLED!
if you've made replies on posts there is now a tab on your blog showing every post youve replied to and your reply.
if this is not what you want, either go to your blog and click comments and disable it from there or just go to your individual blogs setting pages. just change it from blue to grey if you dont want everyone to see your replies AND the post you're replying to
PLEASE BE ADVISED that it is set to disabled for blogs that have not made any replies but it will turn ON if you reply with that blog in the future.! i just tested it with my main, which was greyed out but it turned on the moment i left a test reply
figured i'd get the word out bc i have not seen a single mention of this and i'm sure there are plenty of people who maybe comment on things they don't want on display for everyone to see on their blog lol. you can still look at your replies with it toggled off just no one else can, like locking the following and likes list
so for some reason this feature was actually announced on the tumblr engineering blog. interesting choice not to reblog it to the staff or tumblr blog, esp considering they asked for user input on how to implement it, but i suppose considering the response to the last update maybe the replies would be too overwhelming...
so couple of clarifications. comments are disabled as default for primary blogs that have their likes disabled. they are seemingly enabled for all other blogs that have replied to posts
posts you comment on may show on your followers 'for you' page if you leave your replies publically available. they may, in the future, show in on your followers dashboard if your follower goes to their dash settings and enables this. apparently, if your likes are enabled, your followers can already see those on the dash if they've gone into preferences and selected to do so, which I was unaware of, and that seems to be disabled at default, but it's possible i disabled it previously and forgot about it ig
Fellow white people did you know there's this cool youtube hack where you go out of your way to watch videos made by Black people. And suddenly your video recommendations will have loads of cool new channels. And then you realise youtube was literally hiding videos made by Black people from you because they assumed you wouldn't be interested
For everyone being like "we should talk about racial segregation by algorithms", you'll love Discriminating Data by Wendy Chun! She literally digs up the original study that "proved" people prefer to socialise with folks similar to them and showed that it discarded Black participants.
For those who don't know: Ikumi Nakamura is the woman who was senior artist on Bayonetta, and designed the titular character along with Hideki Kamiya. Their greatest moment of bonding was over their insistence that Bayonetta keep her glasses on at all times. Nakamura cannot go to horny jail. She is the warden.
Happy pride month to her and her exclusively
she made a comic about the experience on twitter
happy pride
An Update from back in October I'm surprised wasn't added to this post. lol