she…..
taylor price
Claire Keane

★

izzy's playlists!
sheepfilms
Acquired Stardust

⁂

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

roma★
Show & Tell
AnasAbdin
YOU ARE THE REASON

blake kathryn
hello vonnie
Keni

Andulka
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
$LAYYYTER
Today's Document
will byers stan first human second

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@vampyrekat2
she…..
all I want is to be a goat or a duck standing in a field while it rains
In Kind
I volunteer for the OTW, the parent nonprofit organization that runs AO3. So do, as of the last monthly newsletter, 678 other people. The OTW has no paid employees; everyone there is a volunteer.
The average weekly work expectations for OTW volunteers run around 5 hours per week for most committees. Of course, in reality, people are all over the place. Some do 1-2 hours a week, some 30 or 40 or even more - a full work week without pay.
Let’s say that, hypothetically, a volunteer works only 1-2 hours per week, and their work is only worth $10 per hour. (It’s probably worth more - the opportunity costs of most skilled labor is worth more than that - but let’s low-ball it.) That means that every single week, that volunteer is donating $10-20 dollars of their time to the OTW. Some people are donating hundreds of dollars of their time each week, for months or years on end to help keep all its projects running.
Because of course there are multiple projects. There’s TWC, the freely available, peer-reviewed academic journal that just celebrated its 10th anniversary. There’s Fanlore, our fannish history wiki that has over 46,000 articles. There’s Open Doors, which rescues at-risk archives from disappearing. There’s Legal Advocacy, which donates legal expertise to help fans address copyright and other issues. And then there’s the AO3, which is currently listed as the 264th most popular website in the world (#98 in the US). Any one of those projects could easily encompass an entire nonprofit organization by itself. None of them has even a single paid employee. No OTW website shows any ads.
The real secret to the OTW’s success is not that it pulls in just enough money every year to cover its server expenses and overhead - though it does that, and every volunteer is grateful to our donors for keeping the lights on. It’s that the OTW somehow runs entirely on volunteer power. There’s no way we could pay for all the expertise and effort we receive. Other nonprofit websites like the Wayback Machine and Wikipedia pull in millions in funding every year to cover relatively small staffs. We survive without having to write grants or beg wealthy donors because of our volunteers’ unseen donations of their time, expertise, and effort.
Maybe this year you don’t have any money. Or maybe you do, but you’re saving for a rainy day, or you gave it somewhere else. No worries. People volunteer because we want you to enjoy this labor of love. We want you here, building the OTW with us by using our projects. If you did donate, much love to you. Your generosity is deeply appreciated, and we’ll continue being the penny-pinching, wait-is-there-a-free-option, do-they-give-a-nonprofit-discount volunteers we’ve always been, to stretch your donation as far as it can go.
If you want to give something that isn’t money, consider this: How often is a volunteer thanked by someone who isn’t a fellow volunteer? People volunteer because they want to know they’re making a difference. They want to build up the world. Think of how a kudos or a comment makes you feel, then consider how rarely volunteers get one.
You can read about all our committees here, and you can send one of them a quick thank you via the contact form, if you like. Or you can leave a comment with thanks on a Drive post on AO3. Maybe tell Finance how much you love the budget being available, or thank Development & Membership for all their hard work organizing the donation drive to keep the servers running, or show some love to our Communications Committee that’s keeping all these posts updated, or to the Translation Committee that translated them. Maybe you noticed that AO3 Documentation just put out a Tag Set FAQ in time for the exchange season. Maybe you’re wondering who keeps 679 people organized - that would be our Volunteers & Recruiting Committee. Maybe you want to thank the Systems Committee for getting out of bed way too early in the morning to fix the mailer (or whatever else decides to mysteriously break this week). However the spirit moves you, feel free to show some love. It goes a long way.
Thanks for being part of the journey.
Eddie: Parasite
Venom:
Gedeon Burkhard
Omg please draw more Hans and other frozen characters!! I love your art style and your style with Hans looks amazing!
Thank you! I don’t even like Frozen, but I’ll draw whatever you ask, so feel free to send me some ideas.
Requested by @pen-and-james
Alright, I’m not saying I see him as Gleb, but. He would be perfect as Gleb.
Caption: Gleb being posh in Paris
Sick ass adventure wizard investigates native crustacean with his supportive but easily spooked familiar
On this aesthetic I will build my church and all the powers of hell will not conquer it
Coyote Peterson met a young ocelot in the jungle. This ocelittle frequents tourist trails in a wildlife park, and so it’s accustomed to people and doesn’t see them as a threat.
It fiercely “attacked” him.
It stole his socks.
It picked a fight with a crab.
You should watch all of these. But especially the crab one.
You’re welcome.
He is so clearly enchanted with her even when she’s chewing on his head. It’s wonderful.
What a fantastic world we live in!!!
fun fact about me: when i played fallout 3 for the first time i didn’t actually see liam neeson’s death scene because right before he dies he tells you to “run” and. liam neeson’s voice gives off such powerful Dad energy he could tell me to jump off a bridge and i would do it without question. i trust liam neeson with my life. anyway, i decided hearing “run” was a good enough reason for me to turn and bolt out of the rotunda all the way to rivet city. eventually i figured out that i wasn’t supposed to do that and went back so that doctor li could yell at me and get the plot restarted but. yeah. sorry i missed your delicately crafted emotional death scene todd
Me playing a Bethesda questline without reading a wiki beforehand
That fact that Brendon Urie is, physically, exactly the sort of guy I'm into is both a recent and unwelcome realization.
our new leader
“OMG [Insert character here] IS THE NEW ONCELER!! HAVE WE LEARNED NOTHING FROM HISTORY!?!? *Insert screencap of that one ‘I’m not strong enough* scene from The Incredibles*”
I FORGOT I WROTE THESE TAGS AND NOW I’M SO DEEPLY DISAPPOINTED THIS ISN’T A SHOW
you have to be fucking kidding me
Just a reminder that Bethesda actually thought this was an acceptable way to end a story.
me: hey fawkes can you walk five feet into this room and type 3 numbers on a keyboard for me? since i saved your life and all?
my best friend fawkes: tbh dude i could but it’d be cooler if you just fucking died
i wish there wasnt “””cringey””” stigma involved around drawing/writing self-inserts bc its honestly such a wholesome and cute thing that i fully support
like sometimes when im feeling shitty i’ll doodle myself like, playing cards or something with one of my favorite characters and i’ll feel a bit better afterwards. it’s a small thing but it makes me feel just a little less shitty.
so shoutout to everyone that enjoys drawing self-insert stuff to cheer yourself up a bit in tough times, you deserve to hug your favorite character without some greasy dudebro calling you cringey