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ellievsbear

izzy's playlists!
official daine visual archive
noise dept.

gracie abrams
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

#extradirty
The Stonewall Inn
NASA
Claire Keane
untitled
Monterey Bay Aquarium

if i look back, i am lost
Mike Driver

@theartofmadeline

almost home
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
trying on a metaphor

pixel skylines
seen from China

seen from Spain
seen from Ecuador
seen from Italy

seen from Russia

seen from Türkiye
seen from France

seen from South Africa
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Russia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from Belarus

seen from Singapore

seen from Russia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States
seen from Algeria
@hyperboreanhapocanthosaurus
This is an anti-despair checkpoint! You must share something you're looking forward to before scrolling on.

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I'm loving the discussions about the role and purpose of fandom, as well and what activities are needed to keep fandoms alive and flourishing!
However... as a fandom creator (writer and artist), I sometimes feel like too much pressure is concentrated on creators. I don't know if this is a frustration others share? Not only should we keep making things, but somehow we also end up becoming these central fandom figures who can feel pressured into responding to comments (or else we're called arrogant or ungrateful), making friends (or else we're rude for ignoring well-meaning people who reach out), and being the drivers and pillars of that community (running events, responding to memes, etc. – and everything falls silent if we stop). It's a lot of work!! I don't always have the time and energy to make things for fun and then also engage in all the ways people might sometimes feel entitled to because they enjoy my works.
I really wish that more "non-creating" fans in the community would discover their fandom power!! and not just rely on the visible "producing" creators to be the only people worth engaging with. It takes nothing more than passion to write a meta-post about a character or a plot point, or to create an ask game, or to DM someone else who you see posting funny tags – not just the creator! Maybe your followers have other tips for evening out the balance a little more?
Thank you for sharing your thoughts on this, anon. This is an observation I've seen in many parts of life, not just fandom.
A lot of people feel as though they need permission or an invitation of some sort in order to contribute. That's why I always end my answers by asking people to share their thoughts. I want to make it explicitly clear that I want people to add things into the reblogs (which I can then share out for more people to see) and the replies (which people can at least read even if I can't reblog).
I have heard fans who are readers but don't write fic say that they think they can't get an AO3 account unless they plan to post something. This is incorrect, of course, but a lot of people make that assumption.
I think at least some people (I don't know what kind of percentage) assume that someone who is writing fic or posting art or making podfics and video edits etc. has some sort of expertise that "allows" them to post.
People with less confidence or with less practice etc. sometimes need an extra nudge before they realize that they're welcome to contribute too. If that's the case for you, please allow me to say:
You are welcome to post in your fandom, even if no one invites you to. Even if you think you're not good enough. Even if your idea isn't "popular."
Start a conversation. Share a thought. Talk to folks who reblog cool shit. Be a folk who reblogs cool shit. You don't have to do everything in order to do something.
As mentioned above, please do share your thoughts in the reblogs and replies to keep the conversation going.
Other things people can do:
make a rec list
make a "here's all the fics I've found in this fandom with this one trope/general vibe/very particular setup I just think is Neat" list
make a "welcome to the fandom, here's the fics that people will just assume you've read/know about to get you started" list
make a "if you liked [popular fic A] you might enjoy [less well known fics B through N]" list
More things you can do!
Create whumps lists
Create lists of shippy moments
Make screenshot collections
Record and post clips of your show to get more people into your fandom
Make incorrect quote memes
Make silly little TikTok-style edits of your favs
Make character playlists
Figure out the layout of buildings/cities
Recreate those building in the Sims or with an online floor planner or even just draw it out because holy hell writers will be so thankful for that
Make your blorbo in various video game character creations
Build a pokemon team for your blorbo
Make up silly headcanons! What does everyone do at the fair or the beach or during a fire drill?
Outline a fic idea you have — maybe you don’t have the time or energy or you just don’t feel confident enough to create it, but share it anyway!
Create outfits based on your blorbo’s design or outfits they would wear
There are so many ways you can engage with fandom that aren’t making fanart or writing fanfics. Fandom is community - Please don’t be afraid to join in!
(I've been on tumblr for 15 years, far longer than I was ever on twitter, but I've never engaged much beyond reblogging so please pardon how many times I reference fandom activities I witnessed on twitter)
Collect interviews with the author, producer, director, mangaka etc
Similarly, translate interviews
I remember someone in the haikyuu!! fandom kept a twt thread of every time two characters were in the same panel. Not sure what the tumblr equivalent would be. I guess just a regular old post with lots of additions? (Send help; i'm not sure why my brain is struggling so badly to translate twitter threads to tumblr posts)
Run a quote bot account: I'm not sure of the status of quote bots in a post twitter era, but those were quite fun. Again an example from the hq!! fandom, there was the hq!! bastille bot which would spit out a bastille lyric + a ship. The siken bot would spit out a line of poetry + a ship name. On tumblr maybe the equivalent would be a gimmick blog?
Run a ship/character week. I think these are probably the easiest kind of fandom event to run. it doesn't take more than one person, a blog, and rudimentary graphics skills.
Are socmed AUs still a thing?
Make gifs
Try to figure out the layers to a character's outfit and share your studies with the world. (I'm looking directly at you, Hoyoverse and all you're what-even-is-that how-do-they-even-put-that-on character design. beautiful, but confusing)
Update fandom wikis
Log fandom history on fanlore.org (another project run by the Organization for Transformative Works, aka the parent of ao3)
Volunteer for the Organization for Transformative Works/ao3
Fandom wikis!! One thousand blessings upon everyone who maintains fandom wikis, oh my god.
Some suggestions:
Transcribe episodes for film/audio canons
Podfic! We can always use more podfic, and most people's phones have a voice recorder.
Create bingo sheets (e.g. make a fanwork with five or more of these tropes for a bingo; read/reblog fanworks in five or more of these categories for a bingo)
Be a Your Blorbo expert consultant! If I'm writing about a character I don't have strong feelings about, but I know one of my friends is constantly reblogging and posting about them, even if it's all silly memes and "character <3"-type posting, I'll sometimes reach out to them for advice on if I'm getting Their Blorbo right. It's absolutely invaluable and I appreciate these people so much.
We are all just enthusiastic nerds on the internet. You have as much right to share your enthusiasm as anyone. One of the things I love about tumblr as a platform is that you can just start saying whatever about something you like, and you will find other people who like it too.
Socmed AUs are absolutely still a thing!
Other things you can do:
Add image descriptions to fanart/fanedits
Make crappy stickfigure comics
Share your fiber-arts/cosplays of characters
Record a podfic of one of your favorite fics (with permission!)
Act as a beta reader
Let people bounce ideas off you/offer suggestions
Poorly aged things.
IF BUYING ISN'T OWNING
PIRATING ISN'T STEALING
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1h-I3udUxdjoo43NWBVyLDr-iSj_KPzC-?usp=drive_link
Nana Visitor said that whenever they would try to renegotiate contracts between seasons for Deep Space Nine, Paramount would threaten to kill their characters in a shuttle craft accident and refused them.
No need to support Paramount, watch it all here!!!
you know what lets actually bring back lolcats, they were so simple and so benevolent. like check this out
Here’s my favorite lolcat:
Next stop: Noobshire
it’s often the cute meme’s that age well once you get past the “literally everywhere” phase.
I like this classic
More classics
I went through almost ten years of photos on my Facebook page go find this
But WAIT! DO NOT FORGET. the granddaddy:
HOLD UP THERE
SKIPPY
“I CAN HAS CHEEZBURGER” GOT FAMOUS OFF THE BACKS OF THE PIONEERING LOLCATS
THIS WAS IN THE BEFORE-TIMES
WHEN THEY WERE KNOWN AS
CAT MACROS
AND THEY DIDN’T HAVE TO MAKE ANY SENSE
AND NOW YOU WILL HAVE TO SCROLL THROUGH A FUCKIN’ FEW MORE
This is as good a place to mention a song dedicated to the subject: ’Cat Macros’ by Tom Smith, all the way from the steadily-receeding year of 2007/2008
(via Saturday Morning Cartoons: Baopu #15) by Yao Xiao
words to remember
THIS HAS MADE AN ACTUAL DIFFERENCE IN MY LIFE!!
Implementing this has improved how I feel about myself, and HOW I SEE OTHER PEOPLE!!
I’m not a burden to put up with. I’m a person who deserves respect, but does have some idiosyncrasies.
Other people aren’t barely tolerating me, they’re being patient and considerate and working hard to be polite.
And I find that when I acknowledge the good I see in other people, they feel respected and appreciated.

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[This whole channel] is just videos of models posing. Great for gesture or figure drawing practice.
Where did your first name come from?
I was named after one of my parents
I was named after a dead relative or family friend
I was named after a living relative or family friend
I was named after a religious figure
I was named after a historical figure
I was named after a fictional character
I was named after a place
My parents just chose a name they liked
Other
Having been named after a character in The Great Gatsby by my English-major dad, I thought I would ask about this.
What critters are common in your neighborhood, but really exciting to visitors?
YourWildCity.com | Patreon
I feel like a horse with no name is probably the best song in the world. Not even my Favorite song just the best
He’s literally just telling it like it is
I just saw the most Galaxy Brain gender take ever, from a cis man on reddit
[ID: a screenshot of a comment from reddit, with no username visible. The commend reads: This doesn’t make a ton of sense to me either. Setting aside the question of whether gender/sex is assigned or observed at birth, the gender I was assigned at birth was ‘boy.’ The gender I have now is ‘man’. Boys and men have different gender roles, and few adults identify as boys anymore. From this standpoint, every adult has a different gender than the one they had at birth. End ID]
Framing “girl” and “boy” as separate genders from “woman” and “man” is such an amazing take. it’s a framework that accommodates and explains so many trans experiences. Some trans people never were their AGAB. Some feel like they were their AGAB, but that that changed (usually when puberty hits, which is when you start “becoming a man/woman”. The accepted societal path is that girls grow up to into women, and boys grow up into men. But some girls grow up into men, and some boys grow up into women. This guy was a boy who grew up into a man, which generally works out pretty well for people. Some boys and girls grow up into people who aren’t men or women, even! It’s like this random cis guy skipped right over transgender 101, 102, 201, etc. and stumbled directly into Transgender Nirvana.

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Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
When Isekai's Turned Bad
This is a post that I had kinda promised @firedragon1321 to write, so let me try and write it. Because we had that conversation about isekai's, and how the genre had shifted, and how the shift felt strange, especially from a very autistic point of view. And given that I see posts about this every so often, I think it might be worth exploring.
The posts that come up again and again will usually ask this:
"When did Isekai become a trash genre?"
And the simple answer is: When Sword Art Online showed that trashy isekai is economically viable.
But I think there is a more complicated answer to this.
And yes, I have read up on this, and yes, I am going to make it y'all's problem now.
What Isekai Used to Be
Let me start with one obvious thing: Isekai used to be a genre that was primarily shojo, with a couple of shonen contenders here and there - most often in shonen in some sort of monster taming capability.
But the big influential isekais were stuff like Fushigi Yuugi, Vision of Escaflowne, Magic Knights Rayearth, Twelve Kingdoms, and InuYasha. All of those followed roughly a similar pattern: girl gets isekai's into a magic world (yes, InuYasha technically is just historical Japan, but let's face it, this historical Japan has demons and monsters and what not, so it is for all intents and purposes a magical world) and has to save it. The function of the fantastic world tends to somewhat relate to some sort of oppressive system, which actually gets addressed. Trauma in several ways is a topic of the show. The character grows from their experience, and in many examples (though not all) returns to the real world. Yes, there was usually romance involved, and Romance often was the main reason for a character possibly staying, but generally this was the structure, and the structure most of the time relied heavily on girl characters and female experiences.
Then, of course, there was the Monster Taming Isekai that was fairly big around 2000, which generally threw some kids into a world of monsters where they had monster battles, saved the world, and then were send home. Now, this was usually also sad because they would have to say good-bye to their monster friends, but that was how it usually went. The prime examples here are Digimon, Monster Rancher, and Devil Children.
There were a couple of deconstructions of Isekai back then. The most notable was Now and Then, Here and There, which was just a very traditional genre deconstruction ("okay, but what kinda trauma would a kid get if he was put into a fantasy world where he had to fight in a war").
And I guess there also was .hack//, which did on many levels also work as an isekai, especially .hack//SIGN where Tsukasa has no memory of the real world.
The Sword Art Online of it All
Okay, so technically it is not really Sword Art Online's fault. And I hate to say that, because I fucking loathe Sword Art Online. But... generally it was more the fault of Shōsetsuka ni Narō, a Japanese website that made it a lot easier to publish Light Novels online. Sword Art Online was actually not published there. But... Sword Art Online was a piece media that started as a Light Novel, and had the sort of basic set-up that would become very familiar to the Isekai genre: an overpowered protagonist is trapped in a world that works by RPG mechanics and every girl loves him. Now, SAO was very much a piece of media that was clearly borrowing heavily from .hack// and was kinda bad, but sadly it was also very, very, very successful commercially speaking.
And, well... There was Shosetsuka ni Naro, which was at the time already a website and there was a bunch of more light novels on there that were using similar tropes to SAO, and were ready for the picking for the animation studios and their producers, who were hoping to cash in on the SAO hype.
And it worked. It worked really well.
Sure, there is a bunch of flops in this genre, but sadly also a bunch of series that were really, really successful. Sure, critically most of it was bad. But that does not really matter. Quality does not matter. Sales numbers do. And those were good on a bunch of them.
Now, it should again be stated: SAO is actually - while centering a male character - still a lot closer to the old isekai stuff. The goal is still to go home eventually. At least that was how it started at some point.
And a bunch of the early adopters of the new genre still kinda used a similar framework. Often the characters explicitly were stuck in a video game, and explicitly tried to get home, and explicitly interacted with some sort of game dynamics.
But there was a thing. Why actually go home? Enter Truck-kun.
The Truck-kun Genre Shift
Okay, here is the thing. While Truck-kun got memed to death a thousand times over, Truck-kun is actually related to a very, very important aspect of the shift of the genre: the excuse to not go home.
As noted: SAO originally was very much still about people trying to escape the isekai. A lot of the transitional works that followed were also using the "trapped in an RPG and trying to escape" framing in one form or another.
And then there came Truck-kun, and shifted the genre once more.
Because Truck-kun served one specific goal: kill the character and have them reincarnate in the fantasy world with their memory. In many cases the fantasy world still for absolutely no reason still works by RPG logic (including characters having stat screens in their fictional world that is explicitly NOT an RPG, because fuck me I guess). Because that removes a big big factor from the entire story: the ability to go home.
Now, Isekai had always had this strange relation with the idea of "going home". Because, guess what... the entire selling point of the Isekai is that the Isekai is kinda cool, and home is kinda normal, and so why would you go home. In Digimon for example there was also the additional aspect of the kids having to leave the Digimon - a part of themselves - in the other world. Monster Rancher, notably, also had a big struggle about this, because Genki (who is still so neurodivergent coded) does not want to go home. He still has to. And in many isekai's the return home (that is in isekai's so clearly Campbellian in nature) is always symbolic of something: the character has grown. They have matured. And now they return home a different person, but they still return home, because obviously they need to. They have a life to live. And it is their responsibility (especially in the context of Japanese society) to grow up and be a functioning adult.
Truck-kun removes that need. Your normal life is over, go have fun in the isekai that is so much cooler than the real world. The isekai is where you are no longer the jobless loser, you are the coolest person around, and all the girls find you hot.
(And yes, there is of course still girl-focused Isekai stuff, though... frankly, I feel those are a very different beast and tell you more about gender dynamics than anything else. Put a pin into that. Maybe I talk about that another day.)
Isekai and the Millennial Curse
So, this is the moment where I am going to say something possibly controversial: I kinda think the reason that the Isekai genre shifted is explicitly related to the one-two-punch experienced in Japan through the lost decade, followed by how Japan also was influenced by the 2008 financial crisis - and the reason, actually, why western audiences around this same time became more and more entrenched with Japanese media has also to do with this.
Truck-kun removed the pressure from the genre to have a character develop, grow up, and return home. At the same time, when people stopped being able to actually grow up in the conventional sense of the matter.
Because... well, okay. Here is the thing. Media whines and whines and whines about people not having children, people not marrying, and people not settling down. And I think enough tumblrites have already written about this: "Yeah, no kidding, with what money?!" Like, Boomer-centric media, and even Gen-X stuff generally frames it as a social and moral failing of the millennials and Gen-Z people. But, uhm... Yeah, let's face it, a big part is that we just cannot afford the usual stuff, because we are in our 30s and still doing gig work in many cases for less than 50k a year, in an economy where you need to make 80k or more to even start to think to afford a home and children.
Yes, there is other shit layered on top. Like, how there is a growing rift between young men and young women, due to the different media environments, and how a lot of men are just very shit, and what not. But in the end, nothing compares to the big factor that "growing up" in the way society expected us to - the same established milestones that were modeled for us - just is not an option. I am not living in a roommate situation by choice, but because I literally cannot afford to have a fucking flat of my own!
And at the same very time there was also a shift in how media dealt with children. And I feel this... is another big part that goes unnoticed.
The Colonialisation of Child Spaces and How We Were Prevented from Growing Up
Okay, listen up here. This is where it becomes specific - especially in regards to tumblr.
Because here is the thing: there has been a noticable lack of media that is almost exclusively aimed at children during the last 10 or so years.
There is kids media. Yes. Some of it is bad. Some of it is less bad. But there is definitely not as much of it as there was when I was a child and teen. Part of this is because especially in the west we basically killed the Saturday Morning Cartoon with Streaming. And I hope you know what I mean. Gravity Falls, The Owl House, Amphibia, She-Ra, Kipo and so on are all amazing shows. But they also are all shows that at least partially were targeted at adults. I have no doubt that most of them were perfectly enjoyable for children - but... uhm, yeah, they clearly had a lot of wink-wink-nudge-nudge stuff in there for an adult audience who had grown up with other media. And... to be completely frank, one of the main issues with these shows was, that there was not an space for kids to talk about them without adults going in and "well, actually"-ing them. And I know that, because I was one of those adults.
There is very few shows out there that do not have this issue - of adults becoming overly attached and then demanding it to be for them. And this, oh well...
Look, I notice this a lot with Miraculous Ladybug. Because the show is actually a really god kids show, if you ask me. But it is that: a kids show, that is a kids show, and it is primarily a kids show, and that is okay to have. Not everything needs to be something massively meaningful. The show has actually something to say, but it still is kinda weird and fun in the way a lot of kids stuff was.
But again, this is also another topic.
The actual main issue I have is... well, pretty much everything I grew up with is still in some way or form around. Pokémon. Digimon. Dragonball. Sailor Moon. Pretty Cure. It is all still here. And it all has merchandise that specifically targets my generation.
The economic crash has basically taken our ability from many of us to hit a lot of the adult milestones that were once considered normal. The society has then blamed us for that. And then... it just decided to sell us our childhoods back again and again and again to fill whatever hole there is with it.
This also relates to the fact that there is really not a whole lot of kids media that is kids media for this generation. And that sucks.
Wait, wasn't this a blog about Isekai?
Yeah, it actually still is.
Because I think the modern shift in the Isekai genre has to do with this. The modern Isekai protagonists have failed in the "real life" in the way a lot of Millennials and Gen-Z adults have failed, as the world just had not allowed them to succeed. They are either jobless, or if they have a job, it is a hollow, meaningless office job, that barely allows them to make ends meet. And yeah, sure, the male isekai protagonist is often a misogynist pig, and a lot of isekai media just tells them that it is fine, but it also should be said that those with money, those who could change things, actively created a media context where it was more profitable for them to really, really hammer home on men that they need to hate women, to keep them isolated and women-hating, so that they would always come back into this context and spend more money in it.
The modern isekai is basically telling someone who has failed in every way that the society has already set them up to fail, and tell them: "It is actually totally okay that you failed this way, here have an escapist fantasy that you can flee into, and just don't think about reality that much. It is fine."
Modern Isekai is telling people who feel like society did not allow them to grow up, that it is actually totally okay, that they have not grown up, and that it is okay for them to refuse to grow up.
Because someone who does their work quietly and otherwise flees into their escapist fantasy is not going to complain about the real world quite literally burning.
The shift from “have an adventure, go home a better person” to “you live here now” is definitely noticeable, though there are also some where the protagonist gets to actually find the meaningful success and respect they were lacking without being awful or misogynistic (Headhunted to Another World, for example, where the protag isn’t some all powerful savior, but just clever at business).
love island should introduce a "scheming eunuch" islander who is like a smart and completely asexual islander exempt from being kicked off or being made to participate in any challenges and they're just there to provide advice and be a sort of sounding board for the other islanders when they need a disinterested party to talk things through with. but the scheming eunuch has secret goals unbeknownst to anyone e.g. a cash prize for talking a certain couple into breaking up etc.
the idea that the british empire accepted their decline with grace and peacefully and willingly withdrew from all their colonial territories and took their loss quietly is commonly expressed as fact but it's very much untrue, it's a successful propaganda campaign for them to claim that this is what happened but they were busy committing war crimes throughout their colonial territories long after supposed "independence" & they continued/continue to maintain economic control over these regions and actively killed local movements that wanted economic sovereignty, land reform, nationalization of natural resources much like the united states did/does within their sphere of influence. i say this not to minimize the atrocities the us has committed but to make a point that the uk is also guilty of these crimes up to the present as much as they'd like to pretend this was an era that ended a century ago. british colonial violence isn't something that ended after ww2 it continued throughout the 20th century and still to this day if you look at the actions undertaken by the british military and their mercenaries throughout the former empire
for the past handful of years ive seen people say stuff like "well the british empire accepted their decline with grace and pulled out when they saw the ship sinking so why can't the us do that" and it's important that you understand that the british empire didn't actually do that and neither will their son lol
i know this is shocking to many of you but this is the mainstream belief in the uk + the narrative that is pushed at a state level, in school, by the bbc, etc. and i've heard it expressed by many canadians/americans/australians as well. "they quietly withdrew" is not just a media propaganda thing but a programme the british colonial office undertook to cover up their crimes, see operation legacy
children of any species are very good at being annoying and very cute while doing that
a sphinx child based on this post
theres something i need people to understand: just because an artstyle isn’t in accordance with your personal tastes, that doesn’t mean its a bad artstyle. and shitting on people who’s art isn’t perfect, wether its because they are a beginner or not, doesn’t make you cool. it makes you kinda pathetic and stupid actually. because if they’re still developing, and you discourage them from improving by shitting on their art, then whatever fandom they’re in could end up missing out on a great artist in a few years, because the person you shat on decided to stop entirely or simply stopped sharing their art online. beginner artists, artist who aren’t satisfied with your art, people who feel stuck at a certain level of artistic development, artists who shockingly are not on par with literal Leonardo Da Vinci yet, You are valid. Your art matters. You will get where you want eventually. Never stop, keep going! I believe you can achieve anything you set your mind to, so don’t hold back for anyone!

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What category is your last name?
Son of some guy ("Johnson", "O'Brien", etc)
Job ("Smith", "Miller", etc)
Place/town ("Hill", "del Valle", etc)
Nickname/attribute ("Short", "Goodman", etc)
Hyphenated/multiple of the above
Other (describe in the tags!)
Unsure/results
the wisdom ive learnt is that becoming part of a friend group 1) takes a long time and 2) involves a lot of feeling awkward and left out at first. there’s nothing terrible about this but if you grew up chronically lonely or have any kind of trauma relating to social isolation this likely feels Really Wrong and activates danger signals. but both fortunately and unfortunately it’s just how becoming close to new people works most of the time
another thing that was not intuitive to me as someone who grew up an autistic loner: basically everyone on the planet is starved for connection all the time and almost everything people do is an attempt to reach out to another. most seemingly illogical interactions and behaviours can be explained by this. you have to take as many of these invitations as you can. even if you're wrong you still attempted to bring more warmth into the world