(X) press play to hear twenty-one year-old liam gallagher drop into a country western song*
Jules of Nature
Cosmic Funnies
Sade Olutola
i don't do bad sauce passes

Origami Around
$LAYYYTER
Sweet Seals For You, Always

JBB: An Artblog!
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
noise dept.
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

YOU ARE THE REASON
AnasAbdin
Peter Solarz

Product Placement
trying on a metaphor
Show & Tell
hello vonnie

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@feathersandblue
(X) press play to hear twenty-one year-old liam gallagher drop into a country western song*

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Them-coded
RIP Rupert Giles
When is the new season of Oasis: The Incest Brothers coming out? What do you mean, in September? What am I meant to do with myself until then? The first season about the reunion was great but the lack of content is getting to me. The "Occasional Sightings" spin-off really isn't enough to keep me fed. Underwhelming.

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Daniel Rachel: Itβs unusual for you to write very personally. Did having an abusive father contribute to your reluctance to reveal yourself in song?
Noel Gallagher: All the songs that I like, theyβre not written by songwriters pulling the scabs off themselves. All John Lennonβs shit about his mother; Iβm not interested in it, doesnβt mean anything to me. All these songs about personal torment, how can it? How can βMotherβ mean anything to anybody apart from John Lennon? It canβt, because heβs singing it about his mother, not mine. Thatβs just my perception of it. Itβs never come out in my music βcause (a) itβs nobodyβs fucking business; and (b) it doesnβt make for great music. For instance, βWaterloo Sunsetβ; the sun setting at Waterloo Station belongs to everybody. The abusive father I had belongs to me. I really wouldnβt want to share that or put it into a song. Why waste that three minutes when you could be writing about the sun coming up in the morning?
Noel Gallagher, Manchester City playoffs, 1999
I mean I get why people like the idea of Kaladin/Shallan/Adolin, and yeah I like Navani too but have you all considered that Dalinar/Kaladin is THE most delicious stew of trust issues/gentle domination you could possibly imagine.
Also just imagine, for a moment, Adolin's utter confusion and dismay upon realizing that his father is having the most embarrassing midlife crisis in all of Alethkar by falling for the new darkeyed captain of his guard.
There is a poetic symbolism in the way they die: Niall is smothered by Ruben, incapable of escaping the hold he has on him, overwhelmed by him. Ruben gets stabbed by Niall when he doesn't expect it, and slowly bleeds out.
"Ruben went to prison because Niall ..."
No. Do you even listen to yourself.

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Having watched the finale, and digested it (somewhat), I wanted to articulate one of the many things about the show that I have loved and always long to see in fiction. That is, the ouroboros of nature/nurture, excuses/explanations, abused/abuser. I sincerely appreciate that Gadd allows several things to be true at once, as they are in real life.
By the end, we are able to see that Niall is a conniving liar, lacking in empathy and a sense of duty to others, a misogynist who is content to treat women and children as collateral, unwilling to take offered opportunities (even as an adult) to self-reflect and to improve himself. He is cruel and petty and selfish. His own suffering is where the world begins and ends.
Ruben is a violent rapist, a murderer, a bully, a lazy sexist, and a brute. His self-image is as fragile as spun sugar, and he holds life cheaply enough that people (both men and women) may be considered merely things to be destroyed and obliterated, property to be held or discarded.
(They are, I think, both addicts).
And yet.
They are the products of their environments, as we all are. The choices that we are capable of making as adults are made possible by the nature of the mechanisms with which we are fitted in our formative years. How are we composed, mixed, alloyed, wired, patched, rigged up, constructed brick by brick, or chipped and chipped and chipped like the knapping of flint? (Pick your metaphor, I suppose).
Niall is bullied, abused, assaulted, raped, dismissed, mocked and belittled, again and again and again. As a child, as an adolescent, as an adult. His opinions, views, fears, doubts and worries are minimised and invalidated repeatedly. If we are supposed to learn moral courage, compassion, and emotional intelligence from adults/elders/family, then who, precisely, was modelling any of these things for Niall?
Ruben is raped, abused, (implicitly) neglected, left behind and passed around from home to home, institution to institution. He is everyone's problem because he is no one's responsibility. (And certainly should never have been Niall's). If we are supposed to develop a sense of self-control as we grow, to understand boundaries and autonomy, to learn to recognise the necessary barriers between self and other, how, exactly, was Ruben meant to grasp any of this? Who is showing him the way, and making him feel safe?
Of course, these are explanations for their behaviour, not excuses. Or are they? Where does one end and the other begin? At what point can we say that decisions made as an adult should not be allowed to sprout from the muck of our childhood any longer? Our 20s, 30s, 40s? When, when?
And is it even possible to do otherwise?
I've personally been frustrated with reviewers and critics who have found Niall and Ruben crudely drawn or unbelievable, and most effectively read only as metaphors of masculinity, because those critics haven't the experience or wit to imagine real people living such lives.
I am in my 30s, a parent, a homeowner, employed, responsible, sensible...an adult by any metric. I still make decisions that have their origin in childhood experiences and trauma. It is draining to be constantly on guard against an earlier iteration of yourself, to act in opposition to wiring installed by a shoddy workman. And, obviously, there is plenty to be said for the way in which boys/men are permitted or quietly encouraged to react to trauma, and the ways in which women are disallowed these modes of expression. (And must, like women generally do, perform the cleaning up afterwards).
Nevertheless, reckoning with abuse means that it costs you to fight your worse instincts, just as it costs you to pursue them when you fall into old patterns.
So, when do you get to put down the burden of such work?
(When you die).
Any idea where Noel is currently living? Asking for fanfic purposes.
I do think that the show's message will go right over a lot of people's (men's) heads.
It feels like Ruben's idea of masculinity is not questioned enough. Many men will only see that Niall betrayed Ruben in what they presume to be the worst way possible (by sleeping with "his" wife), and have understanding for it, and not question how Ruben's idea of what being a man should look like was shaped by his father, and that the damage he suffered from the sexual abuse - the emasculation he felt - made it feel like a threat to his life and self when Niall, right in the wake of Ruben disclosing to him, revealed his betrayal. Ruben was one huge, gaping wound, and then instead of allowing it to stop bleeding, Niall dug in the knife. That was the moment when Ruben died, inside, everything else was really just a delay.
However, women aren't property, children aren't property either, and so even a deeply felt betrayal like that is not actually a reason to break unless you are already so fractured that you're glued together by nothing but spit and poorly applied band-aids.
If only Niall could have reacted differently. If only Niall could have gotten out of his violently selfish headspace and been able to carry that burden. For once in his life. If he could have found a way to support Ruben emotionally, in that moment, I think that there might have been something to save. But his own capability for empathy was so diminished in the end, he was almost as much of a hollow shell as Ruben was.
I do wonder, a bit, how Niall would have grown up if it hadn't been for Ruben. How much of his dependence, of his immaturiy, was caused by circumstance, and how much of it was intrinsic to who he was? Impossible to know.
Half Man
The title hits hard, after all that.
You could probably write an essay about both men are perpetually dimimished by the abuse inflicted on them, to the point where they inflict abuse on others.
Both self-destructive in their own way. Both unable to control their worst urges - Ruben the violence, Niall the dependence - both in a prison of their own making. Both unable to be honest, and even if they were, it doesn't help them turn their life around in the long run.
This show is layered as fuck. No heros there, just damaged people failing at even really trying their best.
"It all catches up with you in the end. Compartmentalizing is just taking something from your mind and putting it on your soul."
Jesus. That's a truth that hits hard.

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What I like about Half Man is that it challenges the viewer and so many people don't understand it at all.
Not that I understand it (I certainly won't before the finale), but there are so many viewers who are hopelessly lost and unable to tell what the show is even about.
What scares me, however, is how much of the discourse just blatantly ignores that Ruben is a violent, murderous psychopath because Niall happens to evolve into a bit of a scumbag.
I partly fell into that trap too, so I probably shouldn't blame them, but it's honestly scary how the desctructive potential of Ruben is just put down to circumstance, "poor guy can't help himself", whereas Niall, who has been in survival mode since Ruben re-entered his life as a teenager, is seen as the worse person.
What I like about Half Man is that it challenges the viewer and so many people don't understand it at all.
Not that I understand it (I certainly won't before the finale), but there are so many viewers who are hopelessly lost and unable to tell what the show is even about.