defense and defenestration
‎This year we saw many hilarious performances by women, and many idiotic articles from men about how women suddenly became funny. Yes, imagine how great ‘The Mary Tyler Moore Show’ would have been had Mary, Betty White, Cloris Leachman, and Valerie Harper actually been funny. If only Lucille Ball, Carol Burnett, Gilda Radner, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus had been able to get a laugh. I guess what I’m saying is, this isn’t the year that women finally became funny. This is the year that men finally pulled their heads out of their asses.

Matthew Perry, presenting at the 2012 Comedy Awards (via theartinyourself)

Love

(via duckgirlie)

FOUR FOR YOU, MATTHEW PERRY, I ALWAYS SECRETLY SUSPECTED YOU OF BEING THE BEST.


we are shining, and we will never be afraid again

we are shining, and we will never be afraid again

damnlayoffthebleach:

Tiana and a mother-daughter pair at the movie theaters. (Princess and the Frog)
Art by Isaia
#fanart friday submission
SoLDN: FANART FRIDAY

So…this made me well up.

damnlayoffthebleach:

Tiana and a mother-daughter pair at the movie theaters. (Princess and the Frog)

Art by Isaia

#fanart friday submission

SoLDN: FANART FRIDAY

So…this made me well up.

roxanneritchi:

queerness explicitly, canonically acknowledged in children’s cartoons

IT’S TIME FOR CAKE

totes spoiled myself just so I could join this party, OMFG

aryaesque:

oldstarnewshine:

how to cut down on an enormous chunk of illegal downloading, and this is so absurdly simple that it boggles the mind:

  • make your show / movie / whatever accessible online. 
  • put ads on it so you can make money off of it, or sell a subscription to a competitive streaming service like netflix.
  • make it available
  • everywhere, meaning the country of origin and everywhere else
  • as soon as it airs (tv shows) / becomes legally available to purchase (films &cet).  not a week and a half later, not three days later, not the next morning.  as soon as.   people who are savvy about internet downloading and things are generally going to be the sort of people who hang out online and want to talk about their favorite shows as soon as they happen with their friends who are in that timezone/country.  you’ll cut down on a shitton of downloading if you just make things available legally faster.
  • square yourselves with the idea that in this age of high definition and internet streaming that seeing a film in a cinema is a premium service and should not be relied upon as a primary method of distribution.

 #this is why the illegality of piracy does not bother me #it is a necessary form of civil disobedience #it is digital revolution #if you cannot AFTEROVER TWENTY YEARS make an effort to adapt your business model #you do not deserve to be spared

SPOILERS FOR SHERLOCK, HEY

SO, I have a few feelings about Irene Adler, because while I am pretty positive the interpretation they (ugh moffat just go away) meant was offensive and facepunch-worthy, part of me finds this Irene, the parts of her that fandom is rightfully objecting too… very relatable.  

SPOILERS UNDER THERE

So, ignoring that very last scene there, which was shit in like 5 ways and not even worth salvaging, not to mention the completely fucking gratuitous part where she didn’t unambiguously win which just akldfdsksdlk, the thing we’re all like WHAT about is that hey, Irene Adler identified as gay!  Fuck you, show, please stop your attempt to maybe-imply that she lost because of her ~feelings~ for a dude!

But, well, the thing is, a lot of that seemed like… me.

Not that I am a genius dominatrix capable of beating (show!!!) Sherlock Holmes, but I am a disjunctive bisexual with romantic attraction almost entirely to lady-identified people, and absolutely terrible taste in the men that I find sexually attractive.  I like almost-assholes, is the problem: those smirky smart slight-douchebags that I could never, ever be in a relationship with because we’d kill each other but man, would I one night stand those jerks.  Because of this, or because I felt like I had something to prove at the time, or because I didn’t want to deal with it, I have occasionally told people that I’m just gay.  (Sometimes, it feels almost-true.)

When Irene told him that, well, she looked like I would have.

I probably would not want the show to attempt this interpretation, because I wouldn’t trust them with it.  It is hugely problematic that, as someone said, the only sexual fluidity allowed is for queer people to like the opposite sex (while Gatiss and Moffat go off being tremendous douches about the very thought that ~little girls~ could possibly think Sherlock and John could be together (fuck. you.)).

But, well, fandom fixes things, and for me, so much of Irene’s character was absolutely perfect, and so little is required of me to fix her (she was attracted, sure, though that end “begging” was totes fakery because she works with what she’s got k, then she escapes, finds her copy of the phone, and later text-invites S&J on a double gaydate, delete that last scene and we’re golden) that, well, I’m gonna roll with it.  Whatever, show.  Whatever.

People often say that ‘beauty is in the eye of the beholder,’ and I say that the most liberating thing about beauty is realizing that you are the beholder. This empowers us to find beauty in places where others have not dared to look, including inside ourselves

Salma Hayek (via beautifulqalb)

Salma Hayek is officially beautiful inside and out!

(via chubbyfashion)

selfsexytime:

deejaybird:

“Uhura” comes from the Swahili word UHURU meaning “freedom”. Uhura was pretty much the first ever black main character on American television who was not a maid or a domestic servant in 1966. TV network NBC refused to let Nichelle Nichols be a regular, claiming Deep South affiliates would be angered, so Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry hired her as a “day worker,” but still included her in almost every episode. She actually made more money than any of the other actors through this workaround, and it was kept secret from the other actors, but it was still a humiliating second-class status. The network people made life hard for Nichols, constantly trying to pare down her screen time, purposefully dropping racist comments in her presence and even withholding her fan mail from her.This deplorable state of affairs led Nichols to make the decision to quit after the 1st season, but then she happened to meet the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. who pleaded with her to stick with the show because as a Black woman she was portraying the first non-stereotypical role on television. 

Relevant to all my interests.

selfsexytime:

deejaybird:

“Uhura” comes from the Swahili word UHURU meaning “freedom”. Uhura was pretty much the first ever black main character on American television who was not a maid or a domestic servant in 1966. TV network NBC refused to let Nichelle Nichols be a regular, claiming Deep South affiliates would be angered, so Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry hired her as a “day worker,” but still included her in almost every episode. She actually made more money than any of the other actors through this workaround, and it was kept secret from the other actors, but it was still a humiliating second-class status. The network people made life hard for Nichols, constantly trying to pare down her screen time, purposefully dropping racist comments in her presence and even withholding her fan mail from her.This deplorable state of affairs led Nichols to make the decision to quit after the 1st season, but then she happened to meet the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. who pleaded with her to stick with the show because as a Black woman she was portraying the first non-stereotypical role on television. 

Relevant to all my interests.

bana05:

I wanted my first-year film students to understand what happens to a story when actual human beings inhabit your characters, and the way they can inspire storytelling. And I wanted to teach them how to look at headshots and what you might be able to tell from a headshot. So for the past few years I’ve done a small experiment with them.

Some troubling shit always occurs.

It works like this: I bring in my giant file of head shots, which include actors of all races, sizes, shapes, ages, and experience levels. Each student picks a head shot from the stack and gets a few minutes to sit with the person’s face and then make up a little story about them. 

Namely, for white men, they have no trouble coming up with an entire history, job, role, genre, time, place, and costume. They will often identify him without prompting as “the main character.” The only exception? “He would play the gay guy.” For white women, they mostly do not come up with a job (even though it was specifically asked for), and they will identify her by her relationships. “She would play the mom/wife/love interest/best friend.” I’ve heard “She would play the slut” or “She would play the hot girl.” A lot more than once.

For nonwhite men, it can be equally depressing. “He’s in a buddy cop movie, but he’s not the main guy, he’s the partner.” “He’d play a terrorist.” “He’d play a drug dealer.” “A thug.” “A hustler.” “Homeless guy.” One Asian actor was promoted to “villain.”

For nonwhite women (grab onto something sturdy, like a big glass of strong liquor), sometimes they are “lucky” enough to be classified as the girlfriend/love interest/mom, but I have also heard things like “Well, she’d be in a romantic comedy, but as the friend, you know?” “Maid.” “Prostitute.” “Drug addict.”

I should point out that the responses are similar whether the group is all or mostly-white or extremely racially mixed, and all the groups I’ve tried this with have been about equally balanced between men and women, though individual responses vary. Women do a little better with women, and people of color do a little better with people of color, but female students sometimes forget to come up with a job for female actors and black male students sometimes tell the class that their black male actor wouldn’t be the main guy.

Once the students have made their pitches, we interrogate their opinions. “You seem really sure that he’s not the main character – why? What made you automatically say that?” “You said she was a mom. Was she born a mom, or did she maybe do something else with her life before her magic womb opened up and gave her an identity? Who is she as a person?” In the case of the “thug“, it turns out that the student was just reading off his film resume. This brilliant African American actor who regularly brings houses down doing Shakespeare on the stage and more than once made me weep at the beauty and subtlety of his performances, had a list of film credits that just said “Thug #4.” “Gang member.” “Muscle.” Because that’s the film work he can get. Because it puts food on his table.

So, the first time I did this exercise, I didn’t know that it would turn into a lesson on racism, sexism, and every other kind of -ism. I thought it was just about casting. But now I know that casting is never just about casting, and this day is a real teachable opportunity. Because if we do this right, we get to the really awkward silence, where the (now mortified) students try to sink into their chairs. Because, hey, most of them are proud Obama voters! They have been raised by feminist moms! They don’t want to be or see themselves as being racist or sexist. But their own racism and sexism is running amok in the room, and it’s awkward.

This for every time someone criticizes how characters of color and female characters of color especially are treated in text and by subsequent fandoms.  It’s never “just a television/movie/book”. It’s never been ”just”.