Sleepers, an album by Max Uh Million on Spotify
TUC FAN ALBUM HI HELLO HOW ARE YOU DOING TODAY
spoilers for season 1 ā„ļø
Sade Olutola
Not today Justin
Monterey Bay Aquarium
official daine visual archive
Noah Kahan

Andulka

ellievsbear
ojovivo
Game of Thrones Daily
sheepfilms
cherry valley forever
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

JVL
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
todays bird
will byers stan first human second

if i look back, i am lost
almost home
I'd rather be in outer space šø

seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia

seen from Argentina
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Ukraine
seen from Malaysia
@whatanawfulurl
Sleepers, an album by Max Uh Million on Spotify
TUC FAN ALBUM HI HELLO HOW ARE YOU DOING TODAY
spoilers for season 1 ā„ļø
Oh, seed guy or war guy? Fuck you, Iām a sword guy
More TUC art - CodyĀ āNight Angelā Walsh sketch inspired by Sword GuyĀ by the Sig Figs Collective!!
what if Mr Brightside⦠had a dark side
Iām getting back in my cage, Iām doing horribly
The idea that psychiatric meds can be completely life saving and vital for some people and the idea that you should support and respect mentally ill people who chose not to be or can't be medicated can coexist actually. Meds are a very personal choice and your expirence (good or bad) will not translate to everyone else
iām not playing hard to getā¦i donāt know how to talk
"how did you hear about this job?" it came to me in an extremely vivid and unsettling prophetic dream
"congratulations! you're hired" i know.
apparently ur last 5 non face emojis are ur aestuetic. ā¤šš³ļøāššāāļøš AWWW
bro im gonna CRY i didnt know thisĀ š„ŗ
ADHD folks these days are getting way too relatableā¦or maybe iām the problem š³
Hey so being attracted to men isnāt worse than being attracted to non-men and itās not something you have to show disgust over orĀ āmake up forā or say you hate. This kinda rhetoric is literally just homophobia but make it woke and it directly harms mlm so can we please stop it
Queer men havenāt put up with decades of being told that liking men is gross and you should hate being attracted to men just to have that exact same sentiment thrown at us from people in our own community and this absolutely includes queer women who are attracted to men
nblm too. itās just terf rhetoric, thereās nothing inherently wrong with being a man/being attracted to men
Stoat on a trampoline
unrestrained summer fun
I want to have as much fun as a stoat on a trampoline
so iāve seen this around a lot and i always felt like the version i listened to just. didnāt have everything? sO! i edited together my three favourite versions of the tik tok sea shanty! enjoy!!
(listen with headphones if possible!)
(yes i know the ending is bad oKaY-)
You know, I want to see someone explain this in 20 years to music history scholars.
Not because itās a stupid thing or a dumb thingāI think itās wonderful and lovely that it existsābut because itās so RANDOM. āIn 2021, this one song specifically gained a following such that people across the globe, who had never met, began to sing it and harmonize together, and other people then stitched their videos together to make entire choruses.ā āOkay, but why?ā āā¦..because it was the cool thing to do.ā āOkay, but why did it become cool?ā
Answer that. ANSWER THAT. Why did it become cool? There is zero reason a 200-year-old sea shanty should be a meme, much less a meme people are taking SERIOUSLY. (Listen to these folks. Thereās not a parody in the bunch.)
Like. Just. āWe made this giant beautiful thing BECAUSE.ā Because why? Because. Thatās why. Just because.
I want to see that explained to students and scholars of history who insist there must be a reason for everything. Yes, yes, there was a viral video, but thatās just the catalyst. Why Wellerman? Why not the latest Megan Thee Stallion? Or perhaps more to the point, HOW Wellerman, ALONGSIDE the latest Megan Thee Stallion? What is it that made so many people latch on to this song? WHY?
I do. I want to be a fly on the wall for this. We have, functionally, modern recordings of what this would have genuinely sounded like on a ship, because of this meme. Thatās amazing. But whatās the why? And how do you explain ābecauseā?
Because the most human thing in the world is to find a way to connect and play with each other, and Tic Tok is the biggest, easiest form of that connection in a pandemic. Which is why itās being taken seriously; the game is no fun if you smash it. People wonāt let you connect if they donāt trust you.
Lockdown was the biggest public creativity Iāve had in decades. Not just because I was home, but because the deep driving urge to go āSee me. Iām here. I have something to offer. Iām alone but I have skills to share to give, let me give them. See me. I need to be a part.ā
Humans are social animals.
The other thing is that itās NOT completely random, itās not even very random; itās just that the things that factor into its appearance and creation are spread so widely due to our (new-ish) ability to connect as a community across the entire world that it SEEMS random from up close, AND it couldnāt have been precisely predicting in advance.
Pirates are not a new thing; we have media about them, recently pirates of the caribbean and black sails both being fairly well known pirates media. Ren faires often feature pirate material. Thereās been a lot of talk aboutĀ āpiratingā media lately because of the recent uptick in streaming services wanting to all have their own thing. Thereās people trying to hitch laws about pirating onto COVID relief bills. There was a recent release of a video game that was popular, I believe it was the Assassinās Creed one, that featured pirates AND sea shanties, introducing a lot of people to the idea of sea shanties, who could then spread it to others, that was probably one of the major catalysts in a previously simmering pot (the other major one being COVID-19).
And the thing about sea shanties is that they are supposed to be sung as a group, the way most popular music isnāt really made to do. Why not Megan Thee Stallion? Because those songs arenāt created specifically to be sung by a group. You can sing them too, and you can sing them in a group, but they arenāt created specifically with being sung as a group in mind. Theyāre meant to be sung along toĀ rather than sung together.
Okay, but then why not something like campfire songs?
Because campfire songs are meant to be sung in a group, usually with kids, but not particularly made to bring together a community that is facing a lot of isolation (which is where COVID-19 comes in). I mean, camping is sometimes āisolatedā but often they are camping at a grounds where there are other, discrete groups of campers nearby, and even if they are actually alone, most people singing campfire songs are not isolated more than a weekend, or a week or two, and MOST camping is pretty close to a community where people could go, and MOST camping songs are not meant to be sung repeatedly. Theyāre fun to sing once or twice, but imagine singing them on repeat for 3 months. I donāt know about you but that is not really my idea of a good time.
A group of pirates on a ship, theyāre a group, but theyāre also a community. They are a job and a family in one. And, IMPORTANTLY, they are isolated for LONG stretches of time together, in a place where the only friendly social contact they have is one another and the only songs they have are the ones they know themselves. And the shanties they sung were meant to bring them together, often for a task (sometimes that task was not murdering each other out of boredom or stress), and to remind themselves that even on days where they canāt see a single other sign of human civilization as far as the eye can see in any direction, they are not alone.
And THAT particular, specific sense of community is HIGHLY appealing to people that have been stuck in one form of stressful isolation or another for MONTHS, almost a year at this point. Think back to the beginning.Ā I canāt be the only one who remembers videos of people singing from their balconies together during the early lockdowns. I canāt be the only one who remembers the story of the night howl. People are desperate to reach out and sayĀ āAm I alone?ā and just as desperate to answerĀ āNo!! I am still here! Are there others??ā
So take a bunch of people who have been isolated for a long time (like pirates on the sea), with a good possibility that theyāve recently been exposed to a novel, fun concept (sea shanties) through a game (something more people probably played than usual because of the isolation), which they have potentially shared/spread to friends (because they are GOOD songs), and give them easy access to a single person singing one of these songs (a CATCHY song with easy, rhyming words and a good ONE-two-three-four beat, which humans love) that they are all now aware is meant to be sung as a group (which calls upon their nature as social creatures!!) or see others joining in as a group (because monkey-see-monkey-do is a HUGE human behavior phenomenon), and then give them a way to be included in this group with minimal effort (tiktok), as a way to feel connected to a wider community (those that view their inclusions) and have fun at the same time (which is DESPERATELY needed in a world where things are otherwise majorly crap)ā¦
Well, is it any wonder? Maybe the exact, particular song is a bit random, because it could have been any shanty, but even thatās not particularly surprising either since itās a shorter one (that fits in with Tiktokās time limit) with easy lyrics (and a REALLY easy, repeating chorus, so itās quickly learned) and it has a good, solid beat. Whoever first picked it may have chosen itĀ ārandomlyā or may have narrowed it down from those type of criteria. Youād have to ask the first person to post.
Maybe people 20 years out wouldnāt be able to piece enough together, but right here right now, it seems like a fairly obvious culmination of events. Maybe not a predictable one, but one that, looking back, makes sense. Something something, Hindsight is 2020 right
No this isnāt an excuse to put this on my dash again what are you talking about
I love seeing people be people and Iād like to add the following for consideration. Yes, sea shanties are meant to be sung in a group (sailors still use them btw), yes theyāre repetative and easy to pick up, yes the tune is simple, yes TikTok is basically the perfect platform for a thing like this to spread, and yes weāre all starving for human connection right now and this is ideal.
But also the words.
The overall song is about a whaling ship doggedly chasing down a whale, which (taken literally) is not all that relateable. But the chorus? The part that we sing as a group?
Soon may the Wellerman come To bring us sugar and tea and rum One day, when the tonguinā is done Weāll take our leave and go
This song is about a group of people working together to do something unpleasant, and they donāt know when itās going to end. The chorus is about the hope that it will soon be over, and the good things that await when it is.
Soon may the Wellerman come To bring us sugar and tea and rum One day, when the tonguinā is done Weāll take our leave and go
And that is a big mood.
Excellent addition, and reminds me to add that a) more than just pirates sang sea shanties, many sailors did (and do!) sing shanties, b) thereās apparently a singing group called The Longest Johns that has been singing shanties and becoming popular (likely because itās a novel, fun genre of music for the average person that is not a sailor, and because they sing them while streaming a pirate themed game called Sea of Thieves) and this is one of their songs, and c) I just learned of this whole TikTok Shanty thing a few days ago and havenāt had any time to sit down with it, so this was all just off the top of my head. Iām sure anyone looking farther into it would be able to find a LOT more connections and causation or at least correlation that could account for sea shanties (and THIS shanty in particular) becoming aĀ āsuddenā thing.
Another fun thing with this? The song doesnāt end. Not really. The last verse goes like this: As far as Iāve heard, the fightās still on The lineās not cut and the whaleās not gone The Wellerman makes his regular call To encourage the Captain, crew, and all (chorus repeats as long as you feel like) The crew of the whaler are in a potentially never-ending situation. The whale isnāt gone, itās still pulling the whaler. The ship could potentially be in a never-ending ghost-ship situation, which hooks in REALLY well to the āno itās STILL not overā feeling weāve got going right now. Also stan The Longest Johns theyāre amazing. Theyāve been playing that particular Assassinās Creed game on their youtube, too!
You people.
You people specifically are the ones who I want to see explain this. Print this shit out and save it because it is damn good shit.
there's no such thing as having too much love in your heart
~ Blue and Gold ~
Loose Fibers Billow Out of Warped Ceramic Sculptures by Artist Nicole McLaughlin
I am still surprised by my own voice every time I shout. I always had a frail voice but after testosterone, I am able to shout in such a way that it feels like throwing a punch from my mouth and it hurts my own ears. I can sound really forceful in a way that previously eluded me.
I can yell loudly enough now that I can physically injure both my throat and my ears without really trying and thatās too much power to be trusted with.
so what you're saying is testosterone made you dragonborn
yeah except Iām the only one who loses hit points
Lucy Miller, Victorian Puzzle Purse, 2020