“He got bit by an animal and became that animal.” -Ruth, Widows Bay
Don’t sleep on this one! It’s on AppleTv ❤️

roma★

blake kathryn
Game of Thrones Daily
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Product Placement
Three Goblin Art
we're not kids anymore.

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

@theartofmadeline

Love Begins

#extradirty
YOU ARE THE REASON
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Sweet Seals For You, Always
𓃗
noise dept.

Kaledo Art
$LAYYYTER

seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Brazil
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Canada
@freerangenoodles
“He got bit by an animal and became that animal.” -Ruth, Widows Bay
Don’t sleep on this one! It’s on AppleTv ❤️

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
The reason my favorite hockey player is Denver Barkey is simple. He had enough talent to be a first rounder, but talent isn't what actually gets picks 15-50 drafted. It's potential. And the nhl did not see his potential because they saw his height/weight instead. Not until pick 95 rolls around in the third round. Not until those flyers scouts out in Ontario came back with a list of guys no one else was gonna pick first.
At every turn this kid has proven he deserves to be out there, and people don't believe it even when they see it. 102 point season the year after he fell to 95 in draft. The response online is to say his stats are lopsided because the London Knights are stacked. They don't mention that Dickinson and Cowan’s stats are just as boosted by Barkey, who recorded 67 assists to 35 goals.
That's a playmaker, and an unselfish one at that. Someone who steps on the ice and makes all 4 other guys look better.
On the post announcing his captaincy for the London Knights, there are just as many complaints as congratulations. People saying London’s top guy didn't earn his place, even though HIS TEAM and his coaches all chose him.
When podcasts would talk about Philadelphia prospects in the pipeline, his stats would be overlooked for his size. They'd say, “okay, he can do that in the OHL, but” and then they'd say “sure, he can do that in AHL, but” and then he's called up and they keep him. The flyers organization takes him to the big leagues and realizes that he’s supposed to be up with them. That he's not good at hockey for a small guy, he’s good at hockey for a hockey player.
video I really liked from a college english instructor on why AI can't write
It's crazy how load-bearing denver barkey is to the flyers considering that last year no one even expected him to get called up yet. If he ever gets traded at least half of the roster will fall into a deep depression. The rookies would be lost without his guidance. Trevor Zegras' mental health hangs in the balance. It may be the final straw for michkov. he is 21 yrs old and hasnt played a full season yet
Denver Barkey being on absolutely nobody’s list of Top Flyers prospects expect Danny Fucking Briere, who knew from the start. Denver Barkey who showed up to camp and dragged all his playoff baby flyers friends because they’re supposed to show how bad they want it and it’s always about showing how bad you want it. That’s how you get picked even in the third round, even after everyone who’s taller but not BETTER than you goes first. It’s how you get called up “for a weekend” and stay for the season because they see how good you are once you have the stage to show off. And you’re up and in the show and still all people on podcasts can say is how you aren’t ready and how your size is a liability. How still, after you played in playoffs and helped beat Pittsburgh, people make the lists of Top Prospects and you aren’t on them. Then, finally. 3 videos of skating at Dev Camp air and suddenly it’s all anyone can mention. How good you look on the ice. How confident and sure. People are finally saying this kid is the future, a leader(because you made sure to say it in every fucking interview they have you do). Finally, they’re talking about a kid who captained a memorial cup winning team like he’s a contender. Finally, they’re saying what he’s probably known the whole time.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Sweet dreams! 1940. Source.
[flyers]
like. are they wrong tho?
starting a series I’m calling “Stuff I like in Baseball”
The big stretch the first baseman has to do to catch the ball and remain on base
When a pitch rolls away and the catcher has to look all threatening at the base runners when he gets it
When the batter strikes out so bad and he can tell
When the fielder gives up trying to catch the home run ball
When the second baseman tries to catch a ball twenty feet above him
more to come
‘beyond the scope of this paper’ is a dear friend to me. I Am Not Fucking Talking About That
Incorporating “the dressing room wasn’t pushing for him to stay” into my vocabulary immediately.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Murderbot TV episode 6
I am thoroughly impressed by both your photo editing skills and the hilarious result 🤣
Anthony Machuca, Wake up Steve, our bowls are empty
Do y'all have any favorite card games?
I know this is the jaded post-irony website and we all wanna be funny, but I am genuinely asking. Please, tell me about a good memory you have with some loved ones and a stack of standard playing cards.
"average small seaside town has 3 curses on it" factoid actualy just statistical error. average small seaside town has 0 curses on it. Widows Bay, Located in New England & who’s residents experience the horrors everyday of the week, is an outlier adn should not have been counted
accidentally wrote "maid of horror" and I think I'm on to something actually. new wedding role responsible for releasing a chainsaw clown into the chapel if things get boring

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Widow's Bay 1.10 "We Hope You Enjoyed Your Time!"
One thing I’ve seen happens in this fandom- and honestly sometimes in real life discussions about Hudson too- is that people end up flattening all POC experiences into one universal experience.
Race absolutely matters. Racism absolutely exists. But different racial groups are stereotyped in different ways, and those stereotypes can produce completely different social expectations.
For example, I’ve seen people criticize Rachel and Jacob for joking about Hudson being unintelligent because he’s a person of color. If Hudson were Black, I would understand that criticism more, because there is a long history of anti-Black stereotypes portraying Black people as unintelligent. But Hudson is Asian. Asian men are stereotyped in almost the opposite way. They’re often assumed to be intelligent, studious, and academically successful. The stereotype is still racist, but it’s a different stereotype. It doesn’t suddenly become an anti-Asian stereotype just because we’ve replaced “Asian” with the broader category of “POC.”
The same thing happens constantly in fanfiction with Shane.
A lot of writers portray Shane as being afraid to fight because he knows he’ll be judged more harshly than white players. I understand where that idea is coming from, but as a black person I’ve never found it particularly convincing.
If Shane were black, that analysis would make more sense to me. Black men are often stereotyped as aggressive, which means behavior that is considered acceptable from white athletes is often interpreted differently when black ones do it.
But asian men occupy a very different place in the racial imagination. They’re frequently stereotyped as passive, non-threatening, weak, nerdy, emasculated, etc. If racial stereotypes were influencing Shane’s approach to hockey, I could just as easily imagine the opposite dynamic: feeling pressure to prove he’s aggressive enough to belong. Maybe he’s fighting TOO much.
But that doesn’t make sense for Shane. He’s the league’s golden boy. He’s polite, media-friendly, and heavily inspired by Sidney Crosby. He’s a superstar. Fighting is often delegated to players lower on the depth chart whose role is specifically to provide physicality. Star players generally aren’t expected to be enforcers. Teams usually want their elite talent scoring goals, not sitting in the penalty box after dropping the gloves.
So Shane not fighting much doesn’t strike me as evidence of racial pressure. It strikes me as evidence that he’s Shane Hollander.
Crosby is a useful comparison here. For years, people mocked him for not being physical enough (and for talking to the refs too much). They questioned his toughness and masculinity. They called him “Crybaby Crosby” or “Cindy Crosby.” Fans edited photos of him in dresses or makeup. The criticism wasn’t really about hockey. The joke was that he wasn’t a “real man.”
And that’s a white player.
Imagine how much worse those conversations could become if the player in question were Asian.
That’s the kind of racial dynamic I could actually see affecting Shane: not people thinking he’s too aggressive, but people questioning whether aggressive ENOUGH.
There’s a good chance that if Shane fought exactly like many white players, he probably still wouldn’t be viewed as tough enough. Meanwhile, if a Black player fought exactly like those same white players, he might be interpreted as more aggressive.
People often criticize Rachel for not doing much racial analysis in the books. But sometimes fandom fills that gap with racial analysis that feels disconnected from both hockey culture and the specific stereotypes that affect different racial groups.
Not every POC experience is interchangeable.
A stereotype that affects Black athletes is not automatically a stereotype that affects Asian athletes. A stereotype that affects Latino athletes is not automatically a stereotype that affects Indigenous athletes.
If we’re going to talk about race- and we should- we have to talk about the actual racial dynamics at play, not just substitute “person of color” for a more specific analysis.
Sometimes no racial analysis is better than bad racial analysis.
Also, I understand that a lot of fanfiction writers aren’t hockey fans, which is completely fine. But I do think it can create a bit of a blind spot. People will research (if they even bother to research lol) maybe the rules, the stats, the league structure, etc., but not necessarily the culture surrounding the sport.
And hockey culture matters.
Hockey is one of the only major sports where players are allowed to drop their gloves and just start throwing punches. Losing teeth is practically a badge of honor. Violence isn’t some weird exception to hockey culture- t’s part of the culture.
The expectation isn’t simply that players avoid violence. A lot of the time, the expectation is that they embrace it.
One of Rachel’s other books, Tough Guy, is literally about a player whose whole struggle is that everyone expects him to fight because he’s huge. He’s a giant enforcer, and people assume physicality should be his role whether he wants it or not. The conflict isn’t that everyone thinks he’s too aggressive. The conflict is that hockey culture expects him to be aggressive.
(Honestly, if they can’t find a 6’7 white redheaded actor who perfectly matches the description, they could probably get away with casting a 6’2 Black guy and nothing would change).
That’s why I think people sometimes miss how much hockey culture itself matters when discussing race in fandom.
There are even real-world examples of this conversation. When the Team USA Olympic roster was announced, a lot of people were confused about why Jason Robertson wasn’t selected despite being the highest-scoring American player. And one of the arguments that kept coming up was that players like Robertson aren’t always perceived as bringing the same level of physicality or aggression as some of the other stars who made the team.
Whether you agree with that assessment or not isn’t really the point. The point is that toughness, aggression, and physicality are things hockey people talk about constantly when evaluating players.
Which is why I struggle with fandom interpretations that assume every racialized hockey experience would look the same.
I hope my rambling made sense and thanks for reading if you got this far lol.