hillbilly & ack ack + shoulder pats
369 notes
·
View notes
Hillbilly!Hogarth Hughes & Punk!Hiro Hamada [Commission by @n3rdx]
Once again, @n3rdx has blown my mind with this sketch commission of Hogarth and Hiro. Idea came from an art piece by @spicyraeman.
Thanks again, Kalatl!!! 😍😍😍
102 notes
·
View notes
I grew up not far from JD Vance. Loads of what he said in his book was utter offensive bunk, so I called attention to this at a big dinner where he was the honorary speaker (2017ish). I *may* have been a plant of sorts—a lone liberal who got her ticket via a friend in business for the express purpose of rumbling him. I made the audience laugh, and he couldn’t answer my questions anyhow. Of course he didn’t expect someone from Appalachia to turn up, especially a NB feminist with a PhD who spends her time fighting for social justice and equity. I accused him of being racist/race blind. He panicked & left without answering more.
So there’s that. (I didn’t know then that he would be adding so many other ‘isms ‘to his resume. Like fascism.)
95 notes
·
View notes
Wizard hillbilly is friendly and gives you a hug
He invites you to sip from his liquor jug
Moonshine infused with many spells
But very strong and harsh as well
Usually won’t make you blind
But if it does, it opens your astral mind
And in that state you can finally see
Our spirits all wear overalls, just like the hillbilly
72 notes
·
View notes
I've only had Hillbilly and Ack Ack for two and a half episodes. but if anything happened to them, I'd kill everyone in this room and then myself.
124 notes
·
View notes
Hillbilly Women (1974) by Kathy Kahn
A Book of Heroines
They live in the towns and hamlets of southern Appalachia. They are the women of the coal-mine camps and mill towns; they are members of a fiercely proud sisterhood. For in spite of enormous abuse from mine and mill operators, welfare agencies, corrupt union officials and their hun thugs, these women remain undaunted.
Hillbilly Women tells their stories in their own words--sometimes angry, sometimes tender, always compelling and direct. This is a vivid and moving picture of hillbilly life: its tragedies, its rewards, and its indominable resiliency.
The Browne Popular Culture Library (BPCL), founded in 1969, is the most comprehensive archive of its kind in the United States. Our focus and mission is to acquire and preserve research materials on American Popular Culture (post 1876) for curricular and research use. Visit our website at https://www.bgsu.edu/library/pcl.html.
87 notes
·
View notes