This what I mean when I say science writing is terrible and you need to actually go back to the academic publications themselves to get whatās going on
Frequent enough issue that there's a greeting card about it...

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This what I mean when I say science writing is terrible and you need to actually go back to the academic publications themselves to get whatās going on
Frequent enough issue that there's a greeting card about it...

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just casually leaving this here for no particular reason
You know what? Fuck it I'm adding more context. Sesame Street has talked about the topic of death more than once and it's done with such gentle carefulness without watering down or censoring the heaviness of the situations. It treats heavy subject matter with respect and dignity and has been for DECADES. From the early 1980s:
To 2025:
Hell, they even cover the devastating heaviness of MASS SHOOTINGS without censoring or watering anything down.
They've been doing this for YEARS, and it's ALWAYS handled with dignity, respect, seriousness, understanding, and love.
Whenever I see people censoring words because it "might offend" someone or the big ad companies that are currently trying to run everything? I just want to say to them: "What? Is Sesame Street too mature for you?" Because really...what the hell are we doing.
I'm back with even more examples! Sesame Street once again to this day is out here handling extremely difficult subject matter with incredible care and respect. "We can't let kids learn about uncomfortable things!" Oh, really now? Even though they're things that happen in everyday life that they'll face one day at some point anyway? Interesting. Let's see what else this show has covered that people (for some reason) think should be avoided and hidden. Here's more on death of loved ones and greif:
Or how about when someone is put into the foster care system because their home isn't safe anymore and their needs aren't being met?
Maybe some discussions about group therapy/getting help and support?
Hey look! Here's a segment about gender expression vs taught expectation, including unlearning harmful biases and what to do when you hurt someone on accident because you didn't know it was wrong!
Look! The topic of race and diversity! The importance of unity and equity!
They even also have a more allegorical take on discrimination and being looked down on for who you are, featuring Big Bird. The conflict is about how he's not being let into a club because the one bird running the club personally decided he didn't want someone like Big Bird there.
Big Bird goes out of his way to keep changing parts of himself in order to "prove" he can fit into this club if he just changed enough. The truth comes out though, and there's nothing he can do to gain the approval of that bird. He will never be good enough in his eyes, and Big Bird starts to hate himself. His real friends see this finally put their feet down, emphasizing that you should never change yourself just to fit into one singular narrow idea someone else has.
There's A LOT of different situations this can be an allegory for. Racism, sexism, homophobia, basically ANY form of exclusion is put on full blast in this 15 minute clip. Sesame Street can be both blunt and allegorical when approaching difficult topics, and it NEVER misses or looses the point.
It does an exceptional job in both styles of representation WITHOUT watering anything down. The more sanitized everything gets, the more radical Sesame Street is suddenly considered, hence why so many "particular groups" want it gone. Hmmm! I can only imagine why that could be, in this current political climate! (I'm being sarcastic)
When Sesame Street is suddenly labeled as "questionable" or "politically/agenda motivated" content...it says A LOT about where we currently are and who gets to decide what's "best" for kids or not. Don't fall for the censorship and topic-dodging excuses that are covered by the "But think of the children!!!" movement. Never fall for it, because you know which side you're on if you do.
Sesame Street proves kids can be taught and trusted with learning about these topics when it's handled with the right amount of understanding and care. It shows what all this "controversy" is all really about. What it's always been about, actually.
Don't fall for it, always side with Sesame Street.
me holding a gun to a mushroom: tell me the name of god you fungal piece of shit
mushroom: can you feel your heart burning? can you feel the struggle within? the fear within me is beyond anything your soul can make. you cannot kill me in a way that matters
me cocking the gun, tears streaming down my face: IāM NOT FUCKING SCARED OF YOU
Hey OP? What the FUCK does this mean?
decay exists as an extant form of life
Thatās a terrifying answer, have a nice day
[ID: Six screencaps from Taskmaster. Joanna Page says earnestly, "The thing is, being brave isn't about always succeeding. Being brave is about having a go, and there's nothing wrong with failing." The studio audience cheers. Greg Davies gives them a disgusted V-sign and says, "Oh, fuck off! You've come to the wrong place." End ID.]
āI love what happened with Bethās character this season in that she still retained what makes her original but thereās a clear growth that has happened, not just in her behavior and her relationship but in her confidence as a person and you really see it blossoming in scenes like this and Beth really knocked these scenes out.ā āAnd theyāre subtle. Theyāre not big giant crying emotional scenes, theyāre just little⦠an assertion of power.ā - Dean Devlin and John Rogers, The Long Goodbye Job DVD Commentary

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No matter how good your writing is, there will always be someone who doesnāt like it
Do NOT change the story to make it palatable to them. They will never like it. There is nothing you can do to make them like it
But there are so many people out there who will like it. And if you tone down the things that make other people not like it, youāre also toning down the things that make these people really like it
Would you rather have a story thatās loved and hated, or a story that nobody finds notable, and thus is easily forgotten?
Donāt tone yourself down to make people like it ā tone yourself up. Make it so unapologetically you that instead of merely disliking it, they absolutely hate it
Because at least then youāve left an impression on them, and how your story made them feel will stick with them, whether they like it or not
HAPPY PRIDE MONTH š³ļøāš
To all of us whoāre just a mess ā¤ļøš§”ššššš¤
Oh boy, this is getting notes again!
Hi, everyone, enjoy the little cartoon, avoid the notes and yes, I still fully identify as queer c: š³ļøāš
eva stratt online shopping coping mechanism
I think 'redemption arc' has become shorthand for everything from antagonists becoming friends with the protagonists to shitty people becoming slightly less shitty to morally grey and destructive characters just getting some depth to their characterization and explanation of why they're like that. What it SHOULD mean is seeing a character gradually acknowledge and change harmful patterns of behavior and make amends. It's redemption because it involves moral and material improvement and it's an arc because it takes time.
I also think all these other kinds of arcs are equally as significant and interesting. Not everything needs to be a redemption arc and everything shouldn't be lumped together under that trope - what's important is the execution and what kinds of character arcs are fitting for a story.

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As a society we have benefited so much from successful public health measures that we now have the privilege of declaring that we must not need them anymore
Bitch before enriched flour, neural tube defects like spina bifida were far more common. Even now, spina bifida clinicians and researchers are begging to have salt and maize fortified to reach groups that donāt use as much flour. Before iodized salt, the United States had a fucking GOITER BELT. Eleven years after the introduction of fluoridated water, a city in Michigan found the rate of dental caries among school children dropped a staggering 60%ā in an era where tooth decay regularly fucking killed people
Iām literally not even going to start on vaccines, which are among the most successful and robustly studied public health measures in world history
You might say āoh well today we all have access to vitamins and toothpastes and dentists so we donāt need those things in our food suppliesā and boy do white people on social media loooove to fucking say that. But hereās the thing: no, people donāt all have easy access to those things. Thatās privilege talking yet again
Public health measures are so effective we forgot collectively why we needed them to begin with
Big fan of characters realizing they don't get to die. They have to live. And grow. And be a person. And deal with shit they thought they'd never have to. And be fucked up about it. I would like more of this. Enough dying for honor or as redemption. It ain't. You're just a corpse. There is no moral value in dirt time.
your life is not an optimization problem
as in you'll never achieve the perfect daily routine, sleep schedule, coping mechanisms, mannerisms, fashion sense etc. even after years and years of healing and improvement and self-discovery. you will never be so good at life that you manage to utilize every waking moment. its great to be productive and all but sometimes you'll suck ass. sometimes you'll take eight hours to be done with a twenty minute job. you'll prioritize the wrong thing. you'll sleep for 12 hrs just to avoid being awake. you'll relapse. and you'll relapse again. you'll forget to turn in the assignment. you'll order too little food. life is far too large and complex for you to even experience it completely, much less try to make sense of and control it. you can't. please give up on that and be at peace with the hours you lose. they are not separate from your life.
i read an interview with a mathematician recently where she talks about the commonalities between math and literature and the idea that playfulness is a key part of doing both of those things. thereās a lot of fun to be had in turning a concept over and over, finding novel ways to look at it or combine it with other things, and i think that idea of playfulness also applies to analysis + critique. looking at a story through different lenses to see what new insights you can gain, reading intertexts and learning about the context in which it was created. finding a new bit of theory and saying hey wait a minute, i can use this to talk about [insert favourite media here]! itās fun!
if i can get on my professional educator soapbox for a moment i think the reason a lot of people struggle with the idea that analysis and critique can be fun is that our education system in general is not designed to make the intellectual process seem particularly fun, or like something that can be approached in a playful manner (see also: the mathematicianās lament). thinking deeply about things for the sake of thinking deeply about things seems ridiculous because itās associated with the stress of grades and too much homework and general bad pedagogy. it creates a lack of confidence in oneās own intellectual abilities that makes even the act of trying seem like too much. and itās not at all impossible to grow past this and find the fun in the intellectual process but you do have to push past a lot of that fear and anxiety first
hereās the original article as well as a mathematicianās lament

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Dedicated to my cat, who is very vocal about my bed time.
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I want to apologize to @homunculus-argument for assuming their claim that pigeons can identify cancer was a shitpost.
As I stated earlier:
(original photo source)