au-bound
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Hannah • 27 • book nerd with very few consistencies in my posting choices
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narrator who's terrible at social cues & describes every facial expression as "unreadable"
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David Corenswet and Nicholas Hoult recreate iconic scene from "The Princess Diaries" to promote the new "Superman" movie
#they've been doing the most qith this movie's publicity#ngl I'm going to watch it due to just that fact because i could care less about dc but the grip these boys have on me...#this and the princess bride quote one are my favs
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Spin this wheel first and then this wheel second to generate the title of a YA fantasy novel!
(If the second wheel lands on an option ending with a plus sign, spin it again)
Share what you got!
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baby dragons whose scales are much more shiny and iridescent in order to hide in their parents' hoards
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yo mr white can you sign my permission slip so i can go to the aquarium bitch
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shoutout to anthropomorphic snakes in animated movies doing poses that would normally require arms by creatively using their coils as arms instead. gotta be one of my favorite genders
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I know this is going to make me sound pretensions but I have to get it off my chest. I feel an unimaginable rage when someone posts a photo and is like "this picture looks like a renaissance painting lol" when the photo clearly has the lighting, colors and composition of a baroque or romantic painting. There are differences in these styles and those differences are important and labeling every "classical" looking painting as renaissance is annoying and upsetting to me. And anytime I come across one of those posts I have to put down my phone and go take a walk because they make me so mad
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One of my favourite bits of media history trivia is that back in the Elizabethan period, people used to publish unauthorised copies of plays by sending someone who was good with shorthand to discretely write down all of the play's dialogue while they watched it, then reconstructing the play by combining those notes with audience interviews to recover the stage directions; in some cases, these unauthorised copies are the only record of a given play that survives to the present day. It's one of my favourites for two reasons:
It demonstrates that piracy has always lay at the heart of media preservation; and
Imagine being the 1603 equivalent of the guy with the cell phone camera in the movie theatre, furtively scribbling down notes in a little book and hoping Shakespeare himself doesn't catch you.
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