Tumgik
#it was simply amazing
deadsh33p · 2 years
Text
i miss drawing depressed meowth lmaooo
7 notes · View notes
emiliano-77 · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
6K notes · View notes
hellishfig · 1 month
Text
for the amount of time i spend thinking about erika ishii, i do not post about them NEARLY enough
everything i've ever seen them in, they have been fully dialed in. they understand the genre, they understand the character they're playing, and they NEVER. FUCKING. MISS
my current dnd character is actually based on multiple characters of erika's that i enjoy. my character is a witch (like ame of worlds beyond number fame [thank you to the witch class playtest]) but she is also a brewer who grows weed and shrooms, and deals them, and does them (and her personality is very much modeled off of danielle barkstock in dimension 20's the seven)
i feel that many of my favorite moments from erika are often focused on other characters. but many of those character moments would not have been possible without erika's incredible roleplay and sense for storytelling
and when the moment IS focused on erika's character? spellbinding. groundbreaking. from ame talking to orima in the overgrown shrine to danielle getting a nat 20 at the masquerade ball, i always fall into the scene and feel it so deeply due to erika's skill and poise and commitment to the story being told
tldr i think erika ishii is incredibly talented and wonderful
2K notes · View notes
tagerrkix · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
WHERE IS HE D:
(sorry for deleting and posting this again 🙇‍♂️🙇‍♂️ one tiny insignificant thing was bothering me and when I edited it it wouldn't show on reblogs and that kinda made me go 😠😠😠)
2K notes · View notes
salted15 · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
tried gradient mapping a second time !! i will never do it again WIUERGKFDJSHKKFD
ko-fi
1K notes · View notes
softiedingo · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I just woke up and then there's this man wearing a tight leather jacket 🥹
1K notes · View notes
glassiskies · 4 months
Text
I think this is the most angelic shot of aziraphale ever. and I mean ever. and it’s him lying to gabriel to thwart the will of god. isn’t that beautiful
Tumblr media
575 notes · View notes
thelovelyliz · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
HMMMMMMMMMMMM
HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM
HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM
591 notes · View notes
uncanny-tranny · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Every now and again, I remember this meme (usually after seeing this exact situation) and I always want to spread it.
5K notes · View notes
bu99erfly · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
HYEJU SENSITIVE, 231016
586 notes · View notes
thelockedtombstuff · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Hello, I have Ianthe Tridentarius the First brainrot, uwu
She’s the whoriest whore who ever whored
5K notes · View notes
fairysylveon · 7 days
Text
Tumblr media
silly little meme drawover I did
161 notes · View notes
emiliano-77 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
3K notes · View notes
theoriginalsupermodels · 10 months
Photo
Tumblr media
Thierry Mugler - Fall 1984 RTW
730 notes · View notes
fairweathermyth · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
RESERVATION DOGS (2021-2023) RUTHERFORD FALLS (2021-2022)
Jana Schmieding as Bev and Reagan Wells Bobby Wilson as Jumbo and Wayne Geraldine Keams as Grandma Mabel and Rayanne Kaniehtiio Horn as Deer Lady and Feather Day Kimberly Guerrero as Auntie B. and Renee Thomas Dallas Goldtooth as Spirit and Nelson Renville Devery Jacobs as Elora Danan Postoak and Jess Wells
450 notes · View notes
nuka · 1 month
Text
I think what makes Our Flag Means Death so remarkable in terms of representation is not just the broadness of it, but the depth.
We have an indigenous lead character, but he's not only that. He's also queer. He's a romantic interest. He's middle-aged. His arc portrays surviving trauma and abuse. It also portrays mental illness. And it portrays breaking free from toxic masculinity. And it never tries to put him in a box when he explores his masculinity and femininity.
We have a non-binary character, played by a Puerto Rican NB actor, but their arc is not about their gender identity and their coming out is simply a case of "Just keep calling me Jim". They have a romantic/sexual relationship with a black character, and never is this relationship or either of their sexual orientations or Olu's sex appeal as a fat person or "who even is the man in this relationship hahaha" questioned. When they get into a poly relationship, it's just accepted, instead of questioned or even defined.
These are just a couple of examples. It's not that Our Flag Means Death is the only or the first show with queer/BIPOC/disabled representation, because it's not. What makes the show remarkable is the unique combination of queerness, ethnicity, age, disabilities, life experiences, etc. that each character carries within themselves, yet none of these characters exist solely to appear as representation of any minority on screen. Their identities are not glued onto them, they're ingrained, but in the end, they're just people. Just like in real life. Identities do not work as plot points. Being queer is not a plot point. Being non-binary is not a plot point. It's just a small part of the whole complex experience of life.
OFMD is a perfect example of telling a queer story that doesn't focus on telling a story directly about the queerness itself. Because we have stories about queerness already. We have so many of them that it just feels like tokenism at this point to see yet another story about coming out or forbidden love or anything like that, even if it's well made.
This show took me by surprise with every new way of representation it offered, because each time it did the total opposite of what I expected. It took all the tired tropes and said, "Yeah, see these? We're not gonna do any of that." It delivered something I never thought I'd see on screen.
It never explains the characters' identities to the audience. It simply shows them exactly the way they are and lets you decide whether you see yourself in them, and I think that also allows the audience to question their own identities, to explore gender and sexuality freely without immediately putting labels on things.
People who never thought they might be trans or non-binary or queer in any way discovered their identities through the show. People who struggle with mental illness or trauma saw someone like themselves portrayed with kindness and respect on screen and were finally able to extend the same kindness to themselves. People who are always left out of romantic stories because of their age or body shape or the color of their skin finally saw themselves portrayed as desirable and worthy of love and romance.
That is why so many of us feel that, in the words of Ruibo Qian: "OFMD woke me up."
196 notes · View notes