Talking with writers online

pinecesttrain:

nautiscarader:

insomination:

alwaysboth:

elexuscal:

Their stories: Amazing grammar, soaring vocabulary, beautiful imagery and prose which flows like a river.

In chats: no capitalisation or punctuation, swears like a sailor, misspellings everywhere, acronyms and abbreviations every five words, idek

#listen #listen do u know how much braining it takes to make the words go? #it is a lot #it’s like wearing fancy clothes all day #and then when you’re at home and comfy #u just put on ur pj’s ( @feynites)

I have never related to a statement more than “do you know how much braining it takes to make words go?”

@noblesnook

Its like dancing, except context instead of music. You don’t waltz to Major Lazer and you don’t dagger to Strauss

I would feel attacked, but I’m more like the goblin that lives in a dog house in the corner. Also I bite.

8bitavatar:

theamazingsallyhogan:

conduition:

tbt to when the atla comic discussed cultural appropriation and absolutely nailed it

But that wasn’t the final word that the book gave on the
subject
.

To present that scene without further commentary goes
against the entire point that Avatar: The Promise was making.  

Consider: you’re looking at a comic written
by a Chinese-American author (Gene Luen Yang), drawn by two Japanese women (Studio
Gurihiru) that primarily illustrate American books, based on an American
cartoon that was done in a style reminiscent of Japanese anime (which in turn
can be partly traced back to American cartoons), helmed by two Caucasian Americans (Bryan
Konietzko and Michael Dante DiMartino), who drew heavily from Inuit, Japanese,
Chinese, and Tibetan cultures for inspiration.

The Promise was about Aang trying to clean up the mess left
when cultures that had been traditionally separated ended up being mixed (by
force), with a particular emphasis on the colonies that the Fire Nation had
left in the Earth Kingdom.  His initial
instinct was to just try to put things back the way they were and make the Fire
Nation citizens leave, but he ultimately he realized that wasn’t possible,
because he was dealing with actual people and not abstract concepts.  There were children raised in two cultures,
people from different cultures in love, people who had never set foot in the
nation they were being told they had to return to in order to make everything
neat and tidy.  Aang ultimately rejected
the calls to keep every nation/culture separate and instead created Republic
City, where people could share and mix their cultures.

As for the Air Nomad Fan Club?

image

There are absolutely jackasses out there making a mockery of
other cultures, or who want to just exploit a culture for profit, discarding it like gum that’s lost its flavor when they can’t get any more money out of it.  But when you go beyond condemning that and decide that only the
most dominant cultures can be shared, appreciated, reinterpreted, and spread,
then you effectively hand a death sentence to all other cultures. 

Cultural exchange and expansion should be made
with respect, empathy, and genuineness, yes, but it cannot be simply shut down point blank. Genuine appreciation and interest needs to be accepted and guided in a positive direction.  The point of
The Promise was ultimately that people cannot be neatly put into boxes and told
to stick to their own nation and culture.
They will make friends, they will fall in love, and cultures will mix,
change, and adapt. That’s human nature.

(The OP did touch on some of this in a later post, but it’s worth expanding on)

Reblogging for the commentary.

Booya.

sangoireseussian:

daddy-frnk:

hearse-in-reverse:

bannerinthevalley:

solitarylikeme:

tinytazninja:

dickrockerjanecrocker:

blainedarling:

heysammy:

a-sorta-fairytale:

imagine being stuck in a room surrounded by everyone you’ve ever had sex with

 #empty chairs at empty tables

imagine being stuck in a room surrounded by everyone you’ve ever thought about having sex with

oh god NO

oh god YES

Imagine your cousin sitting there wondering what he has in common with these people

what

what

what

image

“Weird, there’s Pacifica, Wendy, Candy. I wonder if this is a room of all the girls from Gravity Falls? Oh, and all the girls from the roadtrip….and Mabel…oh shit, there’s Miss Baxter from eighth grade art. Oh shit. Ooooooh shit.”

fuckyeahgravityfalls:

Don’t Color This Book!: It’s Cursed!

is finally coming out Tuesday,
July 18, 2017!

The Pines twins find themselves on a prismatic adventure
when Dipper gets trapped in a magical coloring book. The only way out is
for Mabel to color him to freedom with the help of a strange new friend
named Chamelius Pendraggin. The more Mabel colors, however, the more
things start to go awry. Can coloring be an act of bravery? Can great
shading elevate you to heroic heights? Can orange save the day? Find out
in this official Gravity Falls coloring book!