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Yeah pretty sure they are planing something:
Like, think about it.
-They reteased several plot elements only to not do anything with them.
-Several things are left unawnswered
-there is the big question of “what now”
-we still don’t know what happened to father time.
-Celena wasn’t plot relevan despite having been teased as being plot relevant.
So to conclude, nah, aint buying it. This might be the last season but I doubt this will be the last of star vs the forces of evil.
They most likely will make a tv movie or something. Or maybe even a sequel series. Who knows.
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I have so many SU memes to look up tomorrow
And so many Vailskibum94 and The Roundtable to watch...
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I’m still a bit shaken from the SU Season 6 finale guys
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[MAJOR spoilers for Steven Universe]
OH MY GOD THAT FINALE WAS AWESOME
OH MY GOD OH MY GOD
THE NEW FUSIONS AND THE NEW OUTFITS AND THE DIAMONDS REFORMING AND LARS AND THE OFF COLORS COMING BACK TO EARTH AND THE CORRUPTED GEMS BEING HEALED OHMYGODICANTWAITFORSEASON7ANDTHEMOVIE-
IT WAS WORTH THE WAIT
ALL THE HIATUSES
IT WAS WORTH IT
CRYSTAL GEMS FOREVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Imagine this
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💝 Hatsune Miku from Vocaloid is a Magical Girl! 💝
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EVEN MATPAT HATES MATPAT
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MatPat from Game Theory hates MatPat!
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reblogging cause why not
Unpopular Opinions
• There are only 2 genders - Male and Female
• Pansexuality is just a fancier name for Bisexuality. Even if you believe that there are more than two genders, there are only two sexes. Bisexuality is the attraction to both the sexes.
• You need dysphoria to be transgender. Being trans is not a choice. It’s a very difficult thing to deal with and by saying it’s a choice you are demeaning the struggles that actual trans people face.
• The Fat Acceptance / Health at Every Size movement is bullshit. It’s absolutely okay to be fat. It’s absolutely not okay to spread misinformation that being fat is healthy or that losing weight is impossible.
• The feminist movement is more of a leftist movement than a movement for women right now.
• Reverse racism isn’t a thing because it’s just called racism. If you dislike or are prejudiced against a person simply due to their skin tone, that’s being racist.
• MOGAI identities and neopronouns are not only silly, they are genuinely harmful to the LGBT community.
• Your race, gender and sexuality are only a minor part of you. They do not make you special. They are not your personality.
• Men face struggles too. Men are more likely to be victims of violent assault and almost never win child custody battles. There are hardly any male only centres for victims of sexual assault. Men do get sexually assaulted a significant amount more than people consider as the definition rape only includes penetration, skewing the statistics. Forced oral sex and the like is not counted, which is why male rape statistics seem so low at first glance.
• Women are not inherently goddesses. Men are not inherently evil.
• There is nothing wrong with being cis, white and male. Not being these things also doesn’t make you a better person.
• Words only have the power you assign to them. It’s silly to be afraid of them, irrespective of their usage in the past. All words have a history. By being afraid of them, you only give them more power and continue to dwell in the past.
• It’s absolutely okay to eat the food of and wear the clothes of other cultures as a means to immerse yourself and learn more. Segregation does no good, it never has.
• Your mental illness doesn’t cure you of your sins. It’s not a get out of jail free card if you were present, aware and in control of what you were doing.
• Your political leaning does not automatically make you a good/bad person. Your actions do.
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unpopular opinion
This is probably going to get me a lot of hate but my least favorite book is *inhales* Ship It by Britta Lundin.
No offense to those who like it, but I really, really did not like this book. All the characters came off as unlikable, especially Claire and Tess. (Did I mention how Tess basically outed Claire to her mom? And how Claire wrote a real life fic about people she knew without their consent?)
So yeah.
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This is actually kinda canon because she said she loves Madoka so-
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Today’s Lesbian Character of the Day is: Homura Akemi from Puella Magi Madoka Magica!
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why am i on here again?
idk.
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UPDATE: Watched the trailer. Maybe I’ll give it a chance, from what I’ve heard this show is actually good...but I’m still not really keen on its involvement with Heathers. If I end up liking the show I’ll still think of it as not-Heathers.
Well, it is a reboot...
Turns out the Heathers reboot wasn’t really cancelled...
But apparently it’s just Season 1 with 9 episodes (the last two were combined)
Also I don’t think there’ll be a Season 2…
PHEW.
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No offense to Jelsa shippers but
Ralph x Elsa is more likely to happen because of the sequel
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I agree (no offense to people who like this book but this was the worst book I’ve ever read)
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This was a good idea gone bad. Like, really bad. Ship It by Britta Lundin is written as a serious twist on the film industry and what can and can’t be done to a show by the relationship of fans and those who help make the show happen. Something that several fandoms need to learn (you know who you are). 
However, this is read as an embarrassing take on the concept of fandom and shipping with a character who is entitled and doesn’t at all get any consequences for her actions. At all. Guys, she hacks someone’s Twitter account and threatens to post things on there without his consent unless he makes her ship in his show canon. She betrays two people’s basic human trust after they talk to her about things that make them uncomfortable in confidence, and she still doesn’t get into trouble. 
And yet somehow, I am supposed to be relating to this character or cheering for her by the end of it? 
Well, let’s take a look. 
Ship It starts with Claire, one of our protagonists, going to a panel for her favorite show Demon Heart and asking the panel about her ship of the two main character who are men and obviously should be shipped together. The other protagonist, Forest, does not think that they should be or that his character is gay - something that many real life actors and actresses are forced to address in show business. This dismissal of Claire’s question causes her to run from the panel in tears and fling herself onto her hotel bed to cry. I am not kidding.  
What follows is a story about Claire being taken along on the convention tour so try and do damage control. Along the way, her goal is to talk to the writer of the show to try and convince him to make her ship canon, and she gets to know Forest, his co-star who plays the character she ships him with, and a fellow fan of the show, POC pansexual Tess who she is totally not gay for - right?
When I first read the blurb, the set up for the story felt like every 2012 fan fiction that began with someone’s drunk/abusive mother waking the narrator up and telling them that they have to pack because they have just been sold to a band. But then I read about Tess’s involvement in the story and how her being there causes Claire to question  her sexuality, something that many teens can relate to. I took a breath and grabbed the book, praying that it was at least well written. 
Man, oh man, was I wrong. 
The entire time I was reading this, I wanted to punch Claire in the face. She represents everything that is wrong with fans who go to extremes for shipping. Granted, her opposite narrator, Forest, can be a bit of an asshole when dodging fans asking about his character’s sexuality, but he does eventually open up to Claire about his life and his own fears for his acting career. That being that his father is sorta thinking this acting thing is a phase and that Forest is scared to give up and become a nobody from a small town in Oklahoma. 
Claire is surprised to learn this about forest and she does the most rational thing ever; she turns around and writes RPF about Forest, revealing this new found knowledge by turning his father into an abusive asshole who scarred Forest’s back and a sex scene between him and his co-star. Because, what else are you supposed to do?
Later, she organizes a fan strike from her tumblr to not ask any questions at another panel until the runners for the show agree to start talking about her ship and possibly make it canon. However, Forest gets understandably frustrated and shuts the protest down by calling out the shippers. Claire counts it as a victory when the fans get upset at Forest and thinks that by banning together, she - er, I mean, the fans - may get what they want… even though Forest’s career, as well as the crew and cast, are no doubt under scrutiny now.
However, remember I mentioned a girl named Tess earlier? Tess is actually one of my favorite characters in the book, and personally, I would have enjoyed a book about her instead of Claire. Tess is a curvy black girl who is pansexual and a fan of the show, but she struggles with being an ‘outed’ fan because of how society treats fans and fandom - a good topic to bring up, but the book brushes over it. 
Tess points out to Claire that life and fitting in is hard enough for her with her race and sexuality being used against her and she doesn’t want to out herself as a fangirl as well because it would ruin what friendships and relationships she has with people. 
This actually causes an argument between the girls, with Tess telling Claire that maybe she should stop trying to push her ship onto the show runners because ultimately, this could hurt the show more than help it. Claire tries to reason that this will help the LGBTQ community and Tess actually gives my favorite quote of the entire novel:
“’I stopped caring what the show runner thinks because a character can be anything in fic. They can be black or queer or fat or whatever the fuck I want and I don’t need anyone’s permission. So just ship what you want to ship and stop caring so much about what Jamie and Forest think!’
‘But they’re wrong,’ I kind of yell. ‘And someone has to tell them that. Why don’t you see that? The world would be a better place if there were more queer characters, more black characters, more of everything that’s not the same old same old.’
‘But you’re not pushing for more black characters, are you? You only care about one thing.’
‘That’s not true.’
‘Of course it is! You know how many black characters have been on Demon Heart? Like two, and they were both demons. Now they’re dead. You’ve never mentioned it. You only care about the thing that affects you.’
‘I do care about that. But look, we can still make SmokeHeart queer, but we can’t turn them black. That’s not how it works.’” (238, if you wanna see).
This is actually a good point that is brought up in the book and for one moment, I actually thought something smart was going to come out of the resolution of this book. Tess points out that fans usually freak out over the sexuality of the characters, but right now in media, people aren’t harassing show runners to make POC characters. Claire refuses to acknowledge this, and basically just says it’s more important to make characters gay than it is to push for ALL forms of diversity that there should be in media. 
Tess even goes on to admit that Claire isn’t being honest with herself and works it in that Claire is denying her own sexuality as being bisexual/queer (the book never specifies and somehow tries to make this a big deal in the plot) and Claira brushes her off. 
After this, the two are tense and Tess tells her that her friends are coming, the ones who don’t know about her being a fangirl.
Claire takes this knowledge, still upset and thinking that Tess is in the wrong for telling her to give up on harassing the Demon Heart crew, and outs Tess as a fangirl in front of all her friends when they are out for sushi, after which her friends are confused and look to Tess a little oddly. Claire even goes as far as trying to play the victim when she leaves, to leave Tess to clean up her mess.
And somehow, I am supposed to be wanting Claire and Tess to be together by the end of this book when Claire chooses a ship over POC representation and then outs her about a secret Tess has every right to keep to her friends? 
You know, I’m really not sure. 
Claire then hacks the Twitter account of one of the show runners for Demon Heart and basically blackmails him into getting her ship canon but he makes a good point - he doesn’t have that say in the end. It’s the studio who want to appeal to a wide audience, it’s the actors who want their characters to say certain things, it’s the writers who all want to put in their own story. But Jamie, the show runner, is so twisted in Claire’s narration of him that we are led to believe that he is just a horrible person instead of someone who wants to tell his own story but has to go through an insane amount of walls to even tell a small portion of it. Jamie does admit to queer baiting to get people to continue to watch the show, but Claire still plays the victim when he just walks away from her saying that he’s had enough of her (along with something about suing but I don’t really remember). 
The show launches the last episode of it’s first season while they are wrapping up the panel tour and in a big ‘twist reveal’ kill Forest’s character on the show, and Jamie says that he has to put an end to Claire’s ship or they will never stop hearing about it. He fires Forest and says he cannot return for a second season, of which Forest is obviously devastated for as his biggest fear of becoming a nobody in the acting world may happen. 
Forest, in that fit of anger, goes on Twitter and thanks the fans for their support in his role, but explains he won’t be coming back. He then tweets again, saying to blame Claire. She gets angry over this and goes to confront him, and he tells her that Jamie fired him so that she would stop her pursuit of the ship in the show - and then confronts her about writing RPF of him and his costar having sex in his trailer and twisting everything he told her in confidence to make his dad seem abusive. Claire tries to defend herself, and Forest yells that he isn’t gay. This leads to one of the most frustrating exchanges of dialogue. 
Claire insists that Forest is just being homophobic. 
Forest says that he isn’t, he’s just straight and she had no right to write that about him. 
Claire gets frustrated and yells (and this is actually what she says) “They’re just dicks, you dick!” 
Cue me wanting to rip up a book for the first time ever. 
From there, things happen and it’s the low for the characters, and so on and so on and they all finally get to talk and make up for their anger. Somehow, Claire’s sexuality is still a big deal and she outs herself to the world at a final Demon Heart panel as queer (again, how is this relevant to the plot?!) and this gives Forest the courage to stand up and make a really big queer bait of him encouraging the shippers and then kissing his co star on stage. 
Of which in the next chapter is revealed to be a lie and the two brush it off and say if they see another shipper it will be too soon and it is revealed that Forest is seeing one of the women who works in the PR for the show. 
Wait what?!
I read all of that for Claire not to actually learn anything from her actions, be entitled and pouty and enabled by terrible characters all throughout the book only for her big moment to be outing herself as queer - when that wasn’t even a good plot thread to the book over all?! The hell!
Ship It is pandering to every fan fiction reader who wants to live out Claire’s chance of making their ship real and not being able to separate shipping from reality. 
This author wrote a character who enjoys fandom without realizing what fandom actually is - it’s a space for fans to come together to share how they all interpret this amazing media that they have banded around. In fandom, you can ship what you wanna ship, and you can certainly have power over race and design and so on. 
But there comes a line between fan fiction and canon media - and then another between those and reality. Claire is a fan who dangerously mixes all three together and never once gets punished for it. The story we are supposed to focus on, somehow, is Claire struggling with her sexual identity, something that comes up at the weirdest times and is a completely confusing plot point to the entire story with the way that this all came about. If you wanted a story about a girl questioning her sexuality, give her more scenes with Tess that don’t point to a delusional, toxic relationship and maybe, just maybe, don’t have a show panel as your setting for the supposed love story to bloom. 
Do not waste your time with this book; I still don’t understand how someone was able to publish this completely. I don’t understand how this got through dozens of people and not one of them said that maybe they should look this over again and try to reorganize everything. 
But hey, maybe a book about the evils of queer baiting is a little bit of a queer bait itself. 
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I’m relieved this is satirical
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This seriously pisses me off. As if the world doesn’t have enough hate in it, you call a frustrated POC a “racist”?
Newsflash, POC can’t be racist. This behavior is a crucially cathartic process known as decolonization and it should be encouraged more as we move into the future. It’s 2018 after all
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why
Demihomoromantic Lithopansexual Venufluid Demigirl Pride Flag
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Demi-: an a-spectrum orientation where one does not experience romantic attraction to a person until they have developed an emotional connection to them.
Homoromantic: romantic attraction to the same gender.
Litho-/Lith-/Akoi-/Akoine-/Apo-: feeling sexual attraction, but having no desire to have interactions or have feelings reciprocated.
Pansexual: sexual attraction to all genders, or regardless of gender.
Venufluid/Femfluid: genderfluid but mostly/only fluid with feminine genders.
Demigirl: a gender identity that feels partially like a girl/woman, and partially like some other gender.
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I respect your opinion, although I still keep my own. If you like the show, that’s okay I guess. I just don’t really like it. Maybe I’m just annoyed by the actors looking nothing like the original characters.
Turns out the Heathers reboot wasn’t really cancelled...
But apparently it’s just Season 1 with 9 episodes (the last two were combined)
Also I don’t think there’ll be a Season 2…
PHEW.
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can’t wait for SGE book 5
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