KIMETSU NO YAIBA agatsuma zenitsu
One Nice Bug Per Day
Today's Document

PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

blake kathryn

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Mike Driver
RMH

Janaina Medeiros

JBB: An Artblog!
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almost home

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Jules of Nature

Origami Around
DEAR READER
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@bleuskais
KIMETSU NO YAIBA agatsuma zenitsu

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You see, if he retires, the depression will catch him.
Here's the teaser trailer for The Boy and the Heron!
I don’t think it’s depression. I think it’s that he has a career and a vision that keeps him going lol.
I hope everyone finds a job like that honestly. Work you enjoy and find meaningful and that you keep coming back to. They say that once you retire, your health declines faster actually.
No shade to people who work to live of course and plan to retire! But having a fulfilling life and career you can keep coming back to is a real treasure that you should hold onto when you can.
Look, I'm not gonna seriously arm chair diagnose world renowed animation directors over here. But some of the documentary footage of Miyazaki (especially in 10 years with Hayao Miyazaki and the Kingdom of Dreams and Madness) shows him...really struggling at times, especially between projects. He's described himself as "manic depressive" in interviews as well. He smokes a lot, has a difficult relationship with his family, and generally seems to have an intensely cynical view of life.
Which seems wild, given how gentle and hopeful his movies tend to be. But I think that's kind of the point for him. He uses his films to find comfort and joy in a world that he knows can be painful and difficult. Making hopeful and joyful films is a calling and a distraction, it's aspirational.
It's why we get memes like this-
He's also exactly the embodiment of this-
Hayao Miyazaki once said one of his memories which severely strained his relationship with his father was when their town was going up in flames during WWII. He said when he was 4 years old, because his family was privileged they owned a truck, and as such were able to escape when the firebombs came. He remembered his uncle beating people off the truck who tried to climb onto it, and he remembered them passing a burning house with people calling for help, but his father didn't stop and instead kept driving with his family. Miyazaki said for a long time he thought his father was heartless and uncaring. It was only much later in life he said he realised his father in that moment could only focus on saving what was HIS. That all he could do was cling to his OWN family and focus on saving the people that belonged to HIM. So that even if he truly wanted to help, at that moment he could not do more than just focus on keeping his own family together as they ran.
“I was born in 1941… and had a strong feeling in my childhood that we had ‘fought a truly stupid war’. Many times… I heard adults speak boastfully of the horrible things they had done on the Chinese continent. At the same time, I also heard about the extent of the horrors of the air raids [on Japan]. I heard many stories and I started to think that I had been born in a country that had done stupid things and I truly started to hate Japan.”
Before this revelation, however, Miyazaki said when he was a teenager he often argued with his father, trying to make his father acknowledge his responsibilities in the war as someone who managed a factory where they made war planes. He and his father often argued about this, because Miyazaki's father himself had no patriotism and merely did the work for the good money it brought in (which ties into Japan's economical difficulties before the war which is too much history to go into here) which meant he could remove himself emotionally from his work, whereas Miyazaki wanted him to acknowledge his part in the bloodshed. I cannot find direct sources to say otherwise, but I believe he also managed to reconcile this part of his father's life, as Miyazaki has grown to love planes and flight for their own sake, removed from their function as tools of war. Which he illustrates in "The Wind Rises".
He sometimes speaks of a Japan he hopes for in the future. One that turns further away from Nuclear power and instead refocuses on strengthening Japan's bonds to its natural landscapes and beauties.
“… I started to understand just how much I love the plants and the natural world of these islands. If there were no people, I thought, the Japanese islands would be unbelievably beautiful. I became aware that it wasn’t the nation or the rising sun flag that I loved, but it was the land that is truly special.”
The doomer Miyazaki memes are funny... but they also make me a little sad. Because they are true, but most people forget why.
I feel a lot of people overlook the fact that Miyazaki is not the way he is for no reason.
Escape from JoJo's Bizarre Nightmare exclusive P.6 artwork
TASKMASTER 21.09 "Maybe Someone Else Wrote Veep?"

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star wars fans really just make anything up
I’m not Glup Shitto-ing you. He has a sexstache and everything.
star wars heritage post
Happy Pride to Biggs Darklighter
Dandelion - Goron to Doron
POLL: Who is your favorite Inner Sailor Guardian?
↳ RESULT: Makoto Kino / Sailor Jupiter

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From Kazue Kato’s Twitter
In a post that will amuse exactly one (1) person aka myself,
~
watched Tokyo Water Police earlier this year & watching Borderless now and thinking
why hasn't Nakao Akiyoshi & Inohara Yoshihiko played brothers in a jdrama before?!
preferably as Inari kitsune lmfao
https://blueexorcist.fandom.com/es/wiki/Uke_%26_Mike
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fun fact: Nakao's nickname on Naka Riisa's youtube channel is Kitsune-san coz their son asked if he was a fox when he was young lmfao
so cute
stop
This beautiful man is battling demons

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The way that most of Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories’ most horrible villains are rich dudes that are abusive to women, in a time such as the 1880’s, compels me.
There’s a whole subset of Sherlock Holmes stories that could be labeled Asshole Guys Try to Control Women’s Money.
Yup, there’s a huge number of times where Sherlock Holmes is the ONLY person to take a young woman’s complaint or worry seriously and finds out someone is up to some serious evil. Holmes also shows a lot of compassion and empathy with the victims over and over again. (This is why I find “Secretly a woman” or “Trans” Holmes headcanons much more convincing than “sociopath” Holmes.)
I am never going to shut up about how much I specifically love The Adventure of The Copper Beeches because it is literally Sherlock Holmes listening to a young lady he does not know except as a potential client, agreeing with her that a potential job she has interviewed for that she thinks is SUPER SKETCHY is, indeed, sketchy as fuck and when she says she’s probably gonna take the job anyways because the money is good and she needs it going “OKAY I GUESS but for the love of god please write to us so we know you’re okay we will literally drop everything and jump on a train if you want us to”.
The job turns out to indeed be sketchy as fuck, she writes to them, Holmes and Watson drop everything and jump on a train when she asks them to. I read this story for the first time when I was twelve and it made a HUGE impression.
This is also the basis for a lot of speculation about Holmes’ family life. The idea that he has been a victim of abuse, or his mother was abused (or even murdered by his father.) There’s definitely SOMETHING that makes him very aware of how dangerous isolated families can be, and the dark things that can happen behind closed doors. Plus, of course, the motivation to devote himself to stopping crime. And yes, so much of it is of the personal type.
dude see this is one aspect of the original books i NEVER understand why modern remakes (cough cough) don’t go all in on. Like, in the 21th c we HAVE all the dumb forensic shit that made Victorian Holmes stand out, but we STILL DON’T HAVE uh….you know, compassion for women and minorities, or the willingness to believe them, adequate community support for domestic violence or hate crimes, etc. etc. which you’d think is exactly where a renegade consulting detective would come in handy. A good modern day Sherlock Holmes remake, instead of trying to convince us that Holmes is some super genius for being better than fingerprint analysis or whatever, could have him just be…a good person who helps out people the police can’t and won’t help. There you go. That’s how to write a relevant modern Holmes.
One thing that annoys me is how much the BBC version of Sherlock (and the fandom around it) focus on police cases or cold cases. In the stories, Holmes’ bread and butter cases had fuck-all to do with the police and in a few stories, he actively works around/against them, or outright lies to them. Of the many, many things I wish that show had done differently, this is one is particularly obnoxious since it’s such a gimme.
There were very few actual murder cases in the Canon, and Holmes handled them either one of two ways:
Option one: The murder victim was innocent while the killer was an abusive bastard, see Speckled Band. Conclusion, arrest and have the killer charged (Or in the case of Speckled Band, indirectly murder him yourself then shrug and go home)
Option two: The victim was murdered to protect someone that the victim was abusing, or for vengeance, see Boscombe Valley, Devil’s Foot, Abbey Grange. Conclusion, Oops, I don’t know who the killer is, I am suddenly incompetent, oh look a pheasant.
#my favorite murder in holmes canon#is when they straight up witness a lady murder her blackmailer#do nothing except destroy his other blackmail material#and then straight up lie to lestrade about it#sherlock holmes#more of this in modern adaptations pls (via @cactusspatz )
Let’s not forget the time Holmes helps a young woman who’s being catfished by her own stepfather to steal her inheritance, and when the villain sneers that the law can’t touch him, Holmes grabs a horsewhip out of sheerest chivalry.
i've found it, my favorite dungeon meshi panel