when its time to go on a walk
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

Origami Around

pixel skylines
Xuebing Du

if i look back, i am lost
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
RMH
KIROKAZE
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Three Goblin Art

oozey mess
trying on a metaphor
NASA
occasionally subtle

titsay
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
AnasAbdin

#extradirty

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from T1

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Paraguay

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from TĂĽrkiye
seen from TĂĽrkiye

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
@weird-normalist
when its time to go on a walk

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
One thing that I keep thinking about re the Half Man finale is how it's a lesson for viewers to learn how to temper our own expectations and ideas for a show and try to view it through the lens of the creator. This is something that I continue to learn how to do because it is very easy as viewers to let our own vision and ideas get the better of us as we watch something. Don't get me wrong, I do think viewers being able to bring their own ideas and perspectives can be very enriching because our own experiences and knowledge of what's being depicted informs how we engage with a show but I do think it's important for us to be slightly restrained and more intentionally open-minded as we watch.
What sets Half Man (and Richard Gadd's other show) apart is the fact that it is created and written by one singular person. So obviously the scope of it is going to be somewhat limited especially in a limited series. Baby Reindeer also really only fleshed out two characters and had every other character as existing in Donny and Martha's orbit. That was the point.
The main characters here are Niall and Ruben and every other character around them exists either to further their story and/or become collateral damage. I would have been very interested in seeing more characterisation for Lori and Maura and how these two women even became connected as their connection had a ripple effect on the lives of their sons for decades. We don't really learn much about Mona, or Alby or Ava beyond their presence in Niall and Ruben's life. And perhaps that's largely intentional. From a Watsonian perspective, all of these side characters exist as distractions or barriers for Niall and Ruben in some way and both these men tend to use them in some way to distract themselves from their own pain. It's not fair but that's the point.
The story is written by one man rather than a team of writers and showrunners with the intention of being a multi season show. And it's very obvious that Richard Gadd had a specific vision of how he wanted the story to play out.
And the ending feels intentionally unsatisfying. To the point where the last thing we see and hear right before the screen goes black for the first time is Ruben sitting back and looking at Niall's body and letting out a dissatisfied grunt.
Perhaps it would be different if it had been a more "typical" show with multiple writers who could flesh out each and every character but then I question if the show would have the same impact? It's easy and fun to speculate about the different characters around Ruben and Niall and think about how they could have been more fleshed out but perhaps it's more fulfilling for us to imagine our own characterisations and stories for them rather than what the show could have given us. Especially since, once again, there is only one person writing it. And what if more writers focusing on all the characters ended up becoming a case of "two many cooks spoil the broth" as so often happens in shows nowadays?
It's the obsessive focus on these two characters who are so wrapped up in their pain and trauma that they end up hurting not only themselves but those around them constantly while their loved ones can only be collateral damage that makes Half Man the masterpiece that it is. The beauty of art is not only in the strengths but also the limitations
One thing that I keep thinking about re the Half Man finale is how it's a lesson for viewers to learn how to temper our own expectations and ideas for a show and try to view it through the lens of the creator. This is something that I continue to learn how to do because it is very easy as viewers to let our own vision and ideas get the better of us as we watch something. Don't get me wrong, I do think viewers being able to bring their own ideas and perspectives can be very enriching because our own experiences and knowledge of what's being depicted informs how we engage with a show but I do think it's important for us to be slightly restrained and more intentionally open-minded as we watch.
What sets Half Man (and Richard Gadd's other show) apart is the fact that it is created and written by one singular person. So obviously the scope of it is going to be somewhat limited especially in a limited series. Baby Reindeer also really only fleshed out two characters and had every other character as existing in Donny and Martha's orbit. That was the point.
The main characters here are Niall and Ruben and every other character around them exists either to further their story and/or become collateral damage. I would have been very interested in seeing more characterisation for Lori and Maura and how these two women even became connected as their connection had a ripple effect on the lives of their sons for decades. We don't really learn much about Mona, or Alby or Ava beyond their presence in Niall and Ruben's life. And perhaps that's largely intentional. From a Watsonian perspective, all of these side characters exist as distractions or barriers for Niall and Ruben in some way and both these men tend to use them in some way to distract themselves from their own pain. It's not fair but that's the point.
The story is written by one man rather than a team of writers and showrunners with the intention of being a multi season show. And it's very obvious that Richard Gadd had a specific vision of how he wanted the story to play out.
And the ending feels intentionally unsatisfying. To the point where the last thing we see and hear right before the screen goes black for the first time is Ruben sitting back and looking at Niall's body and letting out a dissatisfied grunt.
Perhaps it would be different if it had been a more "typical" show with multiple writers who could flesh out each and every character but then I question if the show would have the same impact? It's easy and fun to speculate about the different characters around Ruben and Niall and think about how they could have been more fleshed out but perhaps it's more fulfilling for us to imagine our own characterisations and stories for them rather than what the show could have given us. Especially since, once again, there is only one person writing it. And what if more writers focusing on all the characters ended up becoming a case of "two many cooks spoil the broth" as so often happens in shows nowadays?
It's the obsessive focus on these two characters who are so wrapped up in their pain and trauma that they end up hurting not only themselves but those around them constantly while their loved ones can only be collateral damage that makes Half Man the masterpiece that it is. The beauty of art is not only in the strengths but also the limitations
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).
half man a flawed piece of writing but god how grateful i am for its flaws. idk if im just getting older and my tastes are changing or if it’s a subconscious averse reaction to the rise of ai slop but what a gift to have a work of art like half man where every decision made in the presentation of its story is completely intentional and carries meaning. what’s the point of art if it’s not going to be a window into one person’s freaky mind. it has friction it has texture, so much of what i watch (particularly on television) just slides off my brain these days. im much less interested in whether a work of art is “technically” well executed and more interested in whether it’s honest

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
i have a lot of feelings about the finale, but in particular i really liked the final scene. i had to watch it twice already.
spoilers for ep six below the cut
ruben: you know it's okay that you're fucked up i mean gay because my dad raped me and i came
niall: i dont really see the correlation but im sorry that happened man
ruben: i just mean because i you know
niall: well
ruben: like i put stuff in your butt and now you're gay
niall: well no and i wouldnt call that rape either
ruben: i put stuff in your butt
niall: i didnt cum or anything
ruben: you didnt cum
niall: i mean one time but i was in puberty so it was kind of you know
ruben: i guess doctor who made you gay
niall: you're not really allowed to say that i mean i was born this way
ruben: like the song
niall: well
ruben: no matter gay straight or bi
niall: your child is mine
ruben: what
niall: what
the craziest part about the whole episode is that niall admitted to hooking up with mona and fathering ruben's kid right after he also admitted to being gay. we as the audience knew that he just hooked up with mona to get back at ruben, but ruben is discovering that his brother betrayed his trust by hooking up with his wife, his child isn't actually his, the only reason his brother did this was to get back at him because his brother isn't even into women, and he went to prison & therefore missed his mother's death for beating up the wrong guy, all at the same time, right after he confessed some deeply personal info about himself and the abuse he experienced.
it absolutely makes sense to me why this would evoke a much deeper reaction and sense of betrayal than even when ruben was sent to prison the first time. while ruben made threats to niall that first time because of his 'betrayal', he moved on and didnt carry through with them, even when he was still bitter. while this time he has also lost everything in his life -- his mother, his child, mona, and even niall again because of his betrayal. and as much as ruben claims to take responsibility for his actions in this episode, we also see how he continues to engage in the same behaviors and continually blames others for provoking his violence, just the same as he did when he was young. so of course this time he will take it further, will actually try to kill niall, because ruben can't accept that his own actions have led to his life being shitty, and just like niall has been blaming his internal homophobia and his shitty life on ruben, ruben blames his violence and his shitty life on niall and niall's wrongdoings towards him.
i also noticed how when ruben confesses how his father sexually abused him, and how he had physical reactions to it and had complex feelings surrounding it, niall kinda withdrew from him. and it really brought to mind how ruben kinda did something similar to niall in a way, by basically forcing him to have sex with mona, and later on in the hospital, and at several points by groping him and just general borderline or straight up sexual harassment. neither of them mention this but i think that is a big reason why niall ends up not wanting to hear about everything -- not because he is dismissive of sexual assault, but because ruben's words bring to mind the same things he feels about ruben. and even when niall confesses being gay, he still will not vocalize how he feels about ruben, that is still the boundary that cannot be crossed, until it is finally crossed in the last moments of the show, and when niall is the ultimate victim of ruben's violence.
and while i dont think niall wanted to die per se, he is willing to walk into that barn with ruben likely knowing what will happen to him. even when he could have taken so many other steps to diffuse the situation, like calling the cops, or just not going into the barn with ruben, he always was going to do what ruben wanted. he is reckless, because he craves rubens presence and attention even when he should stay away. like niall said, it's a chemical addiction; even when niall has been away from him for years and hasn't chased him down like he did in episode 4, he is drawn right back in, and he can't resist ruben.
we can also see that just like ruben, niall has not really changed, even as he has. although he may have finally come to terms with being gay, and is getting married to a man, he still looks miserable, even before he finds out about ruben coming to the wedding. so in the end, they are back at the beginning: both niall and ruben are tortured by their own minds and unable to escape the cycle, until eventually ruben externalizes that violence like he always does, in a way he can't take back. niall says in episode 4 that he died a long time ago. i think this is true, but it is also true, probably even more so, for ruben. so their deaths at the end of the show is just an externalization of that inner death, and an outer culmination of the cycle of violence that has already destroyed them.
it turns out ruben was kind of right when he said niall liked group sex in episode 1 after all
crazy that it wasn't the assault that niall said was too much, he accepted that part with ease because it made ruben even more of the ideal "strong" man to hear that's where he came from. What pushed it into "too much" was ruben trying to talk about how he sometimes enjoyed it and how that fucked him up. That was ruben telling him "we" are gay and also letting niall in one step deeper. THAT"S when it's too much. Because as ruben describes how it felt, that it was the closest he ever felt to someone despite it also hurting him and fucking him up and not being able to talk about it, Niall realizes it's the same as him. it's closing in on the thing he can't say. How he really feels for ruben.
then ruben starts with hurting him in the barn by making him say it. say how he loves ruben, and fully rejects letting him say it's because they are like brothers or family. He takes that lie, that comfort away.
Side note... if niall had accepted any of rubens numerous sexual advances in the barn do we think they might have both survived? or would they still have done the romeo and juliet?

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
for a second u think niall’s going to reach the knife and stab ruben a second, third, fourth time. over and over until he’s dead on the ground. instead, on top of being sexually assaulted again, niall suffers a long, terrifying, painful death. and then he’s gone. still and pale. no triumphant end. no real revenge. it’s so pointless. death is so pointless. and sudden and strange. here one minute, away the next. even ruben can’t believe it. and then he just lets himself die next to the only person he’s probably ever truly loved.
"was it blood?" "was it cum?" it was both. schrodingers liquid
Richard Gadd saying Ruben gets the most violent when he’s feeling the most insecure. Ruben staying with Niall at uni while his father is trying to get custody of another kid. Then “some guy” having intentions toward Niall. Ruben clocked it at spin the bottle. I think he saw Niall dance for Alby when up in the rafters of the hall. Asking Niall to dance with him high as a kite on the glass of all the things he destroyed. Then stomping Alby’s face.
Repetition in his obsession with Benji’s intentions toward Mona when he starts spiraling about not being a father. Alby and Benji’s names sequentially following each other and being cute little nick names. Face stomping again. Prison again. Then the betrayal. Ruben’s feeling that his masculinity has been once again stollen from him.
And Niall. Poor, pathetic Niall. So twisted up in shame and violence, he finally just walks directly into it. He survived so many times. Deep down I think he thought maybe he was special. And Ruben would forgive him if Niall let Ruben hit him first. Like Alby slapping him at the bar.
Every repetition was a warning. There were places something or someone could intervene. But Niall and Ruben just didn’t have the vision to see it or the tools to stop it. They were too locked into what they both needed from each other. What scared them about each other.
Niall thinks everything is Ruben’s fault but Ruben only wants 15% of that. (How? The math does not math). Ruben, at the end, in that barn thinks Niall put him in prison for not being honest about Alby, telling the truth on the stand, his mom, Benji, Mona…. But just like Niall, it was Ruben’s reactions that put him where he was. They put too much of their hope and pain into each other. Just dousing each other in kerosene and waiting for a spark.
half man is so good at committing to itself , it never ever lost its nerve.
Half men becoming Full men episode 6
Ruben says to be groped is attack on the soul-
Ruben GROPES Niall, he IS the first sexual experience from a man that Niall has. It wasn’t an attack on soul but an entanglement of souls between these two half men.
Niall is confused when Ruben decides to say Alby groped him. Not just because he thinks Ruben is tough as can be- but because Niall doesn’t even realize that was the reaction he was “supposed” to have with Ruben, the night Ruben did that to him.
We clearly see now this twisted love both have for eachother.
Ruben reveals the closeness he felt with his father (very fucked up i am not condoning his dad) however we Niall and Audience cannot put Rubens feelings at fault. These were his first sexual experiences and deeply changed him as a person at his core.
Hypsexuality, only knowing violence as a way to express his own homosexuality- because he never got to experience this glow of a first gay sexual encounter the way we do with Niall’s fuzzy warm scene he has with Ruben.
So when Ruben says “in a lot of ways it’s the closest I’ve ever been with someone” the look of bewilderment on Niall’s face and the the broken eye contact away. Not only realizing the severity of the statement but Niall himself realizing his sexual experience with Ruben was the most blissful and safest “little death” he has ever probably experienced in his life. With Ruben on him, around him- breathing his air- smelling him. All the senses are imprinted with Ruben.
Niall is ashamed that he feels this same closeness and love for Ruben- that his body an every feeling with sex is marked with Ruben. And he is that drug he can’t get enough of- even when he’s vomiting and ill-
We see “the drug” (Ruben) act up again at the wedding when Niall thinks he’s clean of Ruben, sober of Ruben-!but Niall then seeks permission from Ruben to marry Alby. From then on this scene establishes that it would never stop, not after the marriage- Ruben would consume Niall Kennedy and Niall would let him.
Back in the barn- Ruben takes Niall’s air away, Ruben relishes in what he’s doing to Niall (he was grinding and choking him chat).
If Niall says the love he experiences for Ruben is a drug, I think Niall himself OD’d in that barn- Niall willingly follows Ruben in that barn without any sort of hesitation. He goes and pushes those barn doors apart himself.
What happens after is the drug taking full effect on Niall Kennedy’s body-
Ruben is here “to break the teacup and put it back together “ as Hannibal does time and time again with Will Graham
Ruben breaks Niall, so they can be reset in the next life just as Reuben looks forward to with his relationship with his mother.
Because death is the ultimate do over for Ruben

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
HALF MAN ENDING SPOILERS
the ending didn't feel cathartic but it felt complete. just 2 b clear the lack of catharsis isn't a criticism; we all knew it was going to end in tragedy. anything less than a murder-suicide would have been underwhelming (personally). something something cautionary tale something something. masculinity kills and stuff.
i love the ending. the story said what it had to say. incredible show. will not recommend it to anyone.