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#angela wheatley
thebestofeo · 1 year
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[• People vs. Richard Wheatley - 23x09 •] #SVU
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more-hats · 2 years
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Elliot Stabler really out here banging all the mob boss’s and gang leader’s wives 😂😂😭😭😭
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ragingstillness · 8 months
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Damn Angela, your balcony garden is sick!!!
I wanna live there.
Seconds later:
Damn Elliot, very poor choice. If you had to fuck away the sadness couldn’t it be with Olivia (I know he’d never do that to her but a girl can dream)
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sea-sands · 1 year
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milquetoast-on-acid · 2 years
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Did Angela really think that taking Richard down was gonna win her Elliot!? She was manipulated by Richard, yes but she still did kill Kathy. Even if Elliot wasn't already in love with another woman. He still wasn't gonna.
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cor-ardens-archive · 2 years
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The Magic Toyshop (1987, David Wheatley)
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bensonnstabler · 1 year
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pumpkinsy0 · 3 months
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i remember i had this portal au for the outsiders and i made it a post months ago but now i cant find it </33
i do know like the 2 main characters were like pony, angela, and curly i dont think i had a set “whos who” and “what happened” plot for the au so ill just
make one here
ALRIGHT SO
angela is GLaDOS, pony is chell, and curly can b wheatley i think thats pretty fitting for all of em
spoilers for portal atp of the post
angela glados backstory: really not much to change here!! if u dont know in portal glados used to b this human called caroline but long story short she was forced to live forever through glados but like oddly enough they r two different characters kinda??? its hard to explain but yea!!! but for this au im making it so that angela knew who she was before hand and shes still bitter and angry at everything and everyone, still violent, still has her fascination w getting ppl to solve the puzzles for science, and still tries to kill bc #girlboss
pony chell backstory: chell doesnt exactly have a set backstory so for this au ill just say that pony joined aperture bc he was broke as hell and his family rlly needed the money so he signed up to b a test subject
curly wheatley backstory: like i said, pretty much same backstory as wheatley, made as an extention of glados (or angela in this case) to make her docile and less violent, BUT BUT BUT instead of glados wanting to get rid of wheatley like in the game, angela lets him stick around bc she finds him interesting :P
im gonna b so honest w u this au isnt rlly lore based more like a what if, i thought of angela being rude and making snarky comments while ponys solving puzzles in a cool suit while curlys just being his regular idiot self and my neurons activated
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No because do u guys remember when George wore that hunting outfit with his niece (so he obviously wasn't hunting) and people were up in arms about it but now that Carlos has actually gone hunting there's just silence. Now I'm not saying you guys should be hating on Carlos but like either keep the same energy for everyone or just admit that you selectively get outraged depending on the driver.
And I'm not gonna get too deep into it bcs it's 1am and I'm tired but there's a reason why Valtteri was so hated and then suddenly everyone loved him when he left Mercedes, there's a reason why Angela gets called lewis plaything only for everyone to be outraged when a certain RBR strategist gets called a snake (call out ALL misogony or none) and there's a reason why everyone loved George in Williams and not so much in Mercedes and there's a reason why Toto gets called disrespectful for insinuating that Jonathan Wheatley got inside masi's head only for everyone to teehee over Christian horner saying girls watch F1 for the attractive men. There's a reason why Shaila Ann Rao's ability/credibility gets questioned but the 4 ex ferrari members who are now part of the FIA have never been subject to any criticism.
Edit: Yall totally criticised Mercedes for team orders everytime they happened but when it's RBR 'Max is the better driver', yh so was Lewis. Never saw hate from RBR stans on team orders when it was RBR themselves. Is the issue team orders or the team issuing the team orders?
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rahleeyah · 3 months
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5 & 6 for the fic writer asks 🙏
oh I love these thank you!!
5) If you had to choose a favourite out of all of your multi chaptered stories, which would it be and why?
I am once again going to focus on EO, because it'd be impossible to pit like svu vs blake vs spooks. can't be done. but of my eo fics, my favorite multi chapter one is probably...hell of a view. it wasn't my first eo fic (haunted my beloved) but it was the first big one. and I do love it, desperately, and I think it's the most cohesive. that's the one where I didn't lose the plot. the others I love - instinct for example is I think better written and the smut is way more fun, I'm still amazed I actually finished hof, the premise of Manhattan serenade is one of my faves.- and there's good things about all of them but almost every single story I can point to a part of it and say "I wish I hadn't done that" or "I fucked that up" and hell of a view isn't perfect and there's stuff I'd love to change about it but it is the one that clings most accurately to its initial premise and I'm proud of that.
6) If you had to delete one of your stories and never speak of it again, which would it be and why?
again, just looking at eo. I was gonna say I would erase Mia Bella and write another Mia story with a very different plot but that's kind of not really the point of the question, is it? redoing the story is sort of speaking of it again. I could say one of the Angela Wheatley one shots no one cares about anymore but that's sort of cheating, isn't it? I would erase in the blood and completely redo the plot of that one, too. but to literally erase and never speak of it again? I don't know they're all my babies. fuck it, Mia. because I love Mia as a Concept but when it came down to writing the fic, I was never actually going to get it written if it was just eo hanging out and Elliot getting to know Mia that kind of low stakes domestic fluff doesn't inspire me. I needed something more dramatic to drive the story but I'd throw the kidnapping plot away if I could. still have Mia be sick and Elliot offer her his liver or whatever just, without all the unnecessary theatrics.
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sims-your-way · 1 year
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Influential Black Women in History Framed Portraits
Black History Month Special. Set of framed portraits featuring just a handful of amazing influential Black women throughout history.
I was inspired to make this after watching The Watcher’s Puppet History episode on Bessie Coleman. Watch it for yourself here.  I was both angry and sad that I had never heard of this woman at all - ever. So I decided to make this portrait set featuring Black women who did extraordinary things that I don’t think the majority of people have ever heard of. This is why I didn’t include more well-known figures such as Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks, Coretta Scott King, or Michelle Obama - everybody knows who they are and I wanted to broadened everyone’s knowledge just as mine was when I did my research. The only woman here that I knew of was Marsha P. Johnson.
Here’s a list of the women in these portraits: Phillis Wheatley (1753 - 1784) Fannie Barrier Williams (1855 - 1944) Maria 'Molly' Baldwin (1856 - 1922) Lillian Parker Thomas (1866 - 1917) Madam C.J. Walker (1867 - 1919) Mary McLeod Bethune (1875 - 1955) Nannie Helen Burroughs (1879 - 1961) Lyda D. Newman (about 1885 - unknown) Bessie Coleman (1892-1926) Daisy Bates (1914 - 1999) Sister Rosetta Tharpe (1915 - 1973) Katherine Johnson (1918 - 2020) Shirley Chisholm (1924 - 2005) Audre Lorde (1934 - 1992) Claudette Colvin (1939 - present) Angela Davis (1944 - present) Marsha P. Johnson (1945 - 1992) Mae Jemison (1956 - present)
To learn more about these women, click the “Keep Reading” below.
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Phillis Wheatley (1753 - 1784) Taken from her native Gambia, she was brought to Boston in the mid-18th century and enslaved to the family of John Wheatley as a domestic. Aware of her intelligence, the Wheatley's taught her how to read and write. She eventually became a well-known poet in both New England and England, with her work "An Elegiac Poem, on the Death of that Celebrated Divine, and Eminent Servant of Jesus Christ, the Reverend and Learned George Whitefield," celebrated on both sides of the Atlantic. (Chicago Tribune)
Fannie Barrier Williams (1855 - 1944) She was an influential educator and activist who was a staunch advocate for freed slaves in the South. She spoke at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893, expressing her concern over the lack of Blacks on the Board of Control for that cultural event. She helped found organizations such as the National League of Colored Women, the National Association of Colored Women, and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. She also supported women's suffrage and in 1907, was the only African-American chosen to eulogize Susan B. Anthony at the 1907 National American Women Suffrage Association convention. (Chicago Tribune)
Maria 'Molly' Baldwin (1856 - 1922) She was a teacher and civic leader in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She became master of the Agassiz School, a public school for middle-class white children, in 1916. She was one of only two women masters in Cambridge schools and the only African-American in New England with that distinction. During Baldwin's tenure, the Agassiz School was considered one of the best in Cambridge. The 12 teachers who served under her were all white. (Chicago Tribune)
Lillian Parker Thomas (1866 - 1917) She gained a reputation as an effective collaborator and organizer while working as a journalist for the Indianapolis News, where she was the first African-American to write a regular column. Thomas used her contacts and influence at the newspaper to further the cause of racial equality. She was also involved in the founding of the Woman's Improvement Club, which helped African-Americans get health care. (Chicago Tribune)
Madam C.J. Walker (1867 - 1919) Before Mary Kay, there was Madam C.J. Walker. Walker is widely regarded as one of the first ever self-made American female millionaires. She created hair-care solutions and remedies with Black women in mind and sold them door-to-door. She eventually created a brand people recognized, widely manufactured her products, and hired 40,000 ambassadors since the company's inception to help her sell her products. (Teen Vogue)
Mary McLeod Bethune (1875 - 1955) After struggling to go to school and working on a plantation to help support her family, she became an educator and, in 1904, founded the Daytona Educational and Industrial Institute for Girls. Her educational activism and leadership set her up to be a political activist. She went on to found the National Council of Negro Women, and worked in Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration, where she served as the informal "race leader at large." (Teen Vogue)
Nannie Helen Burroughs (1879 - 1961) Born to former slaves in Virginia, she was a leading educator, feminist, and suffragist in the Washington, D.C., area. After she was rebuffed for a teaching job in the Washington, D.C., school system, Burroughs founded a school for girls and women, the National Training School for Women and Girls, in 1909. She served as the school's president until her death in 1961. (Chicago Tribune)
Lyda D. Newman (about 1885 - unknown) She gravitated toward a career involving the hair-care industry. Newman got a patent for her invention, the first synthetic hairbrush, in 1898. Her innovation allowed for easier access to the bristles in order to clean out the brush. In addition, she introduced synthetic bristles. Before her invention, brushes used animal hair, such as a boar’s. Her invention made brushing long locks a more hygienic process. (Teen Vogue)
Bessie Coleman (1892 - 1926) She was the first African-American woman and first Native American to hold a pilot license and was the first Black person to earn an international pilot's license. She then became a high-profile pilot doing notoriously dangerous air shows in the United States. She was popularly known as “Queen Bess” and “Brave Bessie”, and hoped to start a school for African-American fliers. Her pioneering role was an inspiration to early pilots and to the African-American and Native American communities. (Wikipedia)
Daisy Bates (1914 - 1999) She an American civil rights activist, publisher, journalist, and lecturer who played a leading role in the Little Rock Integration Crisis of 1957. As the leader of the NAACP branch in Arkansas, Bates guided and advised the nine students, known as the Little Rock Nine, when they attempted to enroll in 1957 at Little Rock Central High School, a previously all-white institution. (PBS)
Sister Rosetta Tharpe (1915 - 1973) She is one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. Her flamboyance, skill, and showmanship on the newly electrified guitar played a vital role in the conception of Rock & Roll as a genre of music. She gained popularity in the 1930s and 1940s with her gospel recordings, characterized by a unique mixture of spiritual lyrics and electric guitar. She was the first great recording star of gospel music, and was among the first gospel musicians to appeal to rhythm and blues and rock and roll audiences, later being referred to as "the original soul sister" and "the Godmother of rock and roll". She influenced early rock-and-roll musicians including Little Richard, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Eric Clapton. Tharpe was a pioneer in her guitar technique; she was among the first popular recording artists to use heavy distortion on her electric guitar, presaging the rise of electric blues. Her guitar-playing technique had a profound influence on the development of British blues in the 1960s. (PBS)
Katherine Johnson (1918 - 2020) She was profiled in the film “Hidden Figures” as a NASA mathematician whose trajectory calculations helped astronaut Alan Shepard become the first American in space. Her skills were crucial in calculating orbital equations that led to the success of astronaut John Glenn’s Friendship 7 mission in which he orbited the Earth successfully. Johnson also was a pathfinder in her native West Virginia, where she was among the first African-Americans to integrate West Virginia University. (Chicago Tribune)
Shirley Chisholm (1924 - 2005) She made history by being the first Black woman elected to Congress in 1968. She served as a representative from New York for 14 years, advocating for early education and child welfare policies. She eventually ran for president as a Democrat in the 1972 race, becoming the first Black candidate to run for a major party nomination. Chisholm's infamous campaign slogan was “unbought and unbossed." She was also one of the founding members of the Congressional Black Caucus in 1971, as well as the Congressional Women's Caucus in 1977. (Teen Vogue)
Audre Lorde (1934 - 1992) This lesbian, Black, female poet’s 1973 collection, “From a Land Where Other People Live”, was nominated for a National Book Award and increased America’s awareness of intersectionality of race, gender, and class that can put particular groups at a disadvantage or lead to discrimination. Lorde’s identity shaped her speeches and writings about the struggles of women, Black people, and the LGBTQ community. (Teen Vogue)
Claudette Colvin (1939 - present) Though we've all heard the story of Rosa Parks refusing to give up her seat on the bus in Montgomery, Alabama, most of us don't know that Colvin did the same thing — nine months before Parks did. She was only 15 at the time, and was one of the first Black activists to openly challenge the law. (Teen Vogue)
Angela Davis (1944 - present) She was a major activist in the late 1960s and early '70s. Profoundly affected by her childhood in the segregated city of Birmingham, Alabama, she joined the Communist Party and became an affiliate of the Black Panthers as a young woman, and ran as the Communist vice-presidential candidate in 1980 and 1984. She was arrested, tried, and acquitted for her role in a Black Panther courtroom shootout. She went on to have a distinguished academic career at institutions including Pomona College, Rutgers, and Vassar, and has remained politically active. (Chicago Tribune)
Marsha P. Johnson (1945 - 1992) She was a Black transgender woman and activist most known for her involvement with the Stonewall Inn riots — a 1969 uprising against police brutality by New York City's LGBTQ community. Johnson went on to become a prominent voice in the fight for LGBTQ equality and was an activist during the 1980s AIDS epidemic. (Teen Vogue)
Mae Jemison (1956 - present) She was the first Black woman admitted to the astronaut training program, in 1987. In 1992, she became the first Black woman to fly to space on the space shuttle Endeavour. (Teen Vogue)
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lesbenson · 1 year
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tonight's brain worm is liv's face when angela wheatley admits to having fallen in love with elliot
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bad-lobcorp-aus · 2 years
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AU where Angela has the personality of Wheatley from Portal 2.
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A: The Characters, Pt 2
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Amanda Amanda the Adventurer | Amanda Fisher Ash VS Evil Dead | Amanda Hansen Happy! | Amanda McKee Livewire | Amanda Stern Detroit Become Human | Amanda Waller DC Universe | Amaya Jiwe (Vixen) DC Comics/Universe | Amari Peters Amari and the Night Brothers | Amber Get Even | Amber Easy | Amber Bennett Invincible |
Amie Sammuelson Conde Eagles SVT | Amina Ramsey Star Trek: Lower Decks | Amira Rashid Monster Prom | Amma Treadeau Beautiful Creatures | Amy Bellafonte The Passage | Amy Granderson The Last Ship | Amy Symonds Between |
Ana Hamilton The Young and the Restless | Ana Spanakopita Bojack Horseman | Anacostia Quartermain Motherland: Fort Salem | Anastasia Anastasia | Anaya Imanu Tomb Raider | Andra Master of the Universe | Andrea Star VS The Forces of Evil | Aneela Kin-Rit Killjoys | Angel Dynamite Scooby Doo Mystery Incorporated | Angel Evangelista Pose | 
Angel Salvadore XMen | Angela A Low Down Dirty Shame | Angela Abar (Sister Night) Watchmen | Angela Goddard Lost in Space | Angela Lewis Boomerang | Angela Moore Boy Meets World | Angela Vaughn Our Kind of People | Angela Wheatley Law & Order: Organized Crime |  Angrboda God of War: Ragnarok | Ani Achola 13 Reasons Why | 
Anissa Pierce Black Lightning | Anita Friday the 13th Pt 5: A New Beginning | Anita Babymother | Anita Fite/Goodman DC Comics| Anna Love, Lies and Records | Annalise Keating How to Get Away with Murder | Anne Body Bags: The Gas Station | Anne Flatch Trial and Error | Annie The Walking Dead | Annie Carbey The Nevers | 
Annie Keller Monsterland | Annie Pearson This Is Us | Annie Sawyer Being Human UK | Antigone Domina | 
A Pt 3
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eatingfood · 1 year
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taurus women pioneers that show how resilient and determined we are:
Florence Nightingale, Mary Wollstonecraft, Phillis Wheatley, Charlotte Brontë, Louise Glück, Daphe du Maurier, Eve Babitz, Angela Carter, Lee Miller, Jacqueline Cochran, Mary Borden and Sophie Scholl
#<3
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storiesofsvu · 1 year
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'We tried our best.' ANGELA WHEATLEY
Added!
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