#Daniel Goodfellow
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melting-abs · 10 months ago
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fat ray 33
Olympics are starting tonight ! Would need à fat ray to really enjoy it
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menarchive · 10 months ago
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daniel goodfellow
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jxmieswxnter · 5 months ago
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okay but with new FB info coming out about the next season, like, I'm very excited for so many things but I shall compose a list, in no particular order
the return of Eddie Devine. he did not have a good introduction - not because of writing quality, he was just a little shit - but he seemed to ease up on Sullivan at the end, so I'm excited to see him again, hopefully some bonding, and some Eddie redemption
Sullivan's parents. so exciting. his father is in two eps and his mother in one, by the looks?? I'm excited to see the dynamic, not just because this man and his parents, but Mrs D with them, how Brenda will act around a presumably retired copper, all sorts
Mrs Goodfellow has a name now? after all this years?? I'm excited to meet Violet, for her to have lines, a personality, I'm ready you know, it's been a long time coming
Lady Felicia in two episodes, fantastic
Flambeau is back again as always
Angela Rippon is in an episode and she will be dancing and I am so excited
also John Hopkins. not dancing but he's there. if you know me, I love Midsomer Murders, and I love Dan Scott, and I just really like John and his work so it'll be great to see him in this
more amateur dramarics
Colin McFarlane in an episode too which will be fun
Cannon Fox is back the fucking I love to hate
more dancing, so like a continuation of that s11 ep, which is awesome. I love added continuity and also utilising Ruby-May's own dancing skills
Blind 'Arry again
Anita Dobson
for the record I'm excited about the whole season because it just seems really strong so far from what we know, and I'm really excited
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silverskinsrepository · 2 years ago
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Dan Goodfellow
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feliciamontagues · 1 year ago
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Sgt. Goodfellow in Every Episode
↳“The Sins of Others” (Series 5, Episode 11)
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feliciamontagues · 2 years ago
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Sgt. Goodfellow in Every Episode
↳“The Lepidopterist's Companion” (Series 5, Episode 9)
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feliciamontagues · 2 years ago
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Sgt. Goodfellow in Every Episode
↳“The Alchemist's Secret” (Series 5, Episode 10)
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constantineinhell · 2 months ago
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boomgers-blog · 11 months ago
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Un pacto de silencio y una oscura verdad… “Bajo El Puente”
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La miniserie está basada en el libro homónimo de Rebecca Godfrey sobre la historia real de 1997 de Reena Virk, una niña de catorce años que fue a reunirse con sus amigos en una fiesta y nunca regresó a casa.
A través de los ojos de Godfrey y de una agente de policía local, la serie nos adentra en el mundo oculto de las jóvenes acusadas del asesinato, revelando sorprendentes verdades sobre el improbable asesino.
Estreno: 10 de julio de 2024 en Disney+
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Producida por ABC Signature, la miniserie cuenta con las actuaciones de Lily Gladstone, Riley Keough, Vritika Gupta, Ezra Faroque Khan, Archie Panjabi, Chloe Guidry, Daniel Diemer, Anoop Desai, Javon ‘Wanna’ Walton, Aiyana Goodfellow, Izzy G., entre otros.
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duckprintspress · 3 months ago
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Happy International Fanworks Day!
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Duck Prints Press is a press with roots deep in fandom – for those who don’t know, we were founded to work with fancreators to publish their original work, and every single person involved in the press, owner and all, is a fandom member through and through. Thus, we thought it would be fun to celebrate International Fanworks Day (February 15th!) by sharing our favorite fanfics! We asked our blog rec crew to each pick one (1) favorite, and here’s the result – our 21 all-time favorites (it definitely betrays a little how many of us, myself included, have been in the Destiel trenches, lol). The contributors to this list are Nina Waters, Sanne, Neo Scarlett, Meera S., Shannon, Rascal Hartley, E. C., Sebastian Marie, boneturtle, Zel Howland, theirprofoundbond, Rhosyn Goodfellow, Shadaras, S. J. Ralston, Alessa Riel, Linnea Peterson, polls and 4 anonymous contributors.
4 Minute Window by Speranza (Captain America (Movies), Marvel Cinematic Universe)
a soul missing home by Aletea (Our Flag Means Death (TV))
Ordinary World by Kholran (沙海 | Tomb of the Sea (TV), 盗墓笔记重启 | The Lost Tomb Reboot (TV), 盗墓笔记 – 南派三叔 | The Grave Robbers’ Chronicles – Xu Lei)
The Children of Sodom by bacchantetriste (Historical RPF, French History RPF, French Revolution RPF, 18th Century CE RPF)
No Bangs Without Foreign Office Approval by reckonedrightly (Sherlock (TV))
every good intention (is interpolation) by TrashcanWithSprinkles (原神 | Genshin Impact (Video Game))
The Widow, The Hawk, and The Horse by Kestrel18 (Marvel Cinematic Universe)
Under The Midnight Sun by NorthernSparrow (Supernatural (TV 2005))
from pain, awakening by Rethira (Fire Emblem: Soen no Kiseki/Akatsuki no Megami | Fire Emblem Path of Radiance/Radiant Dawn, Fire Emblem Series)
once more, with feeling by ghost_teeth (The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys (Comic), Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys – My Chemical Romance (Album))
Digging for Orchids by betts (天官赐福 – 墨香铜臭 | Tiān Guān Cì Fú – Mòxiāng Tóngxiù)
Qualia by imogenbynight (Supernatural (TV 2005))
How To Groom Your Angel by allthebeautifulthings9828 (Supernatural (TV 2005))
The Devil Went Down to Georgia (And Then Went Down on Johnny) by notbecauseofvictories (Devil Went Down to Georgia (Song), Devil Went Down to Georgia – Charlie Daniels Band (Song))
Built To Fall Apart (and Back Together) by oneshinyapple (Spider-Man (Comicverse), Fantastic Four (Comicverse), Marvel (Comics))
In the Land of Gods and Monsters by madmaenad (全职高手 – 蝴蝶蓝 | Quánzhí Gāoshǒu – Húdié Lán, 全职高手 | The King’s Avatar (Cartoon))
Divergence by Entomancy (The Yogscast, Yogscast)
Widdershins by beederiffic (The Eagle of the Ninth)
The Student Prince by FayJay (Merlin – Fandom)
That’s How the Light Gets In by sylviarachel (Sherlock (TV))
All Your Instruments by kalliel (Supernatural (TV 2005))
Go forth, and get your read on! And don’t forget to kudos and comment.
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ginandoldlace · 11 months ago
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British Olympic Diver Daniel Goodfellow
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blueskywalkerworld · 1 year ago
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Tom Daley, Daniel Goodfellow
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ao3feed-samjack · 6 months ago
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princeoftherunaways · 1 year ago
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2023 book recs! (to read and to skip)
inspired by @deanmarywinchester's incredible rec list and general reading reviews!
RECOMMEND:
The Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells: I love you autistic androids. forever and ever. I'm pretending the adaptation is not happening bc I don’t think the screen can do it justice so I’m simply enjoying every single page of these books before there’s inevitable show Discourse. I love the plots and the dialogue and just like murderbot I too wish I could be left alone to watch my shows.
Something That May Shock and Discredit You by Daniel Lavery: this book has a couple excerpts on here that make the rounds and piqued my interest and holy shit. if you are trans and queer and probably autistic. read this book as fast as you can. I felt seen in every word and also. Absolutely read to filth.
The Traitor Baru Cormorant (the masquerade series) by Seth Dickinson: I think I finally started this series because of my bestie @ofbowsandbooks (as is the case with so many things) but who's to say. either way I read this towards the beginning of the year and have not stopped thinking about it since. if you read it. please listen to so much (for) stardust by fob. I cannot recommend the specific kind of damage it does to you while rotating baru and tain hu in your mind. just. tailored to me in so many ways (fantasy story about imperialism and masks and lying and the terrible power of math) so I do admit bias there.
Settlers by J Sakai: If you can only read a book or two about understanding why colonialism/capitalism is at the root of all evil...read this book. It's at the top of my general list of political nonfic recs (next to capitalism & disability by marta russell and border & rule by Harsha Walia). I like to describe it as a leftist pov of us history that pulls apart some of the liberal/white "optimism" of People's History of the US.
They Can’t Kill Us Until They Kill Us by Hanif Abdurraqib: I think this was also based on an excerpt I saw on here. I finally started getting into memoirs/essay collections this year and WOW. I mean, even if that genre isn't your thing, you should still read this book. It's just so so good, and utilizes unique topics (particularly music, I love his FOB essay) to explore both small personal moments and larger existential issues.
The Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon: This is considered a staple of anticolonial movements & education for a reason. Definitely helpful for understanding the global decolonial revolutions of the 1960s.
Decarcerating Disability by Liat Ben-Moshe: An incredible study of abolition from a disability lens. Clear (if a bit repetitive at times) but overall an engaging read that definitely brings a much needed addition to larger abolition texts.
Chain-Gang All Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: I read this one after seeing @deanmarywinchester's posts about it. I read it in two days and it knocked me so hard on my ass. Especially as someone who was obsessed with the hunger games in middle/high school. Just. Wow. holy shit. we knew this already but abolish prisons police etc etc and also we have GOT to be done with tiktok. and alexas. and just being okay with casually reposting/consuming videos and images of violence against people of color and and and -
Exile & Pride by Eli Clare: transmasc disabled PNW crew rise up!!!! the trauma of growing up as all these things in a small rural town!!! I have very rarely felt so deeply seen and understood as when I was reading this book. It's heavy emotionally & topically, so warnings there. I did struggle a bit with it but only because of how deeply some of his story reflects my own.
Innocence & Corruption by Aiyana Goodfellow: This book and its author demand a fundamental shift from how we as a society view and treat children. If you are planning on having kids, have kids in your life, are a teacher, etc etc, cannot emphasize enough how important this book is to remind us that kids are people now, and they deserve autonomy, respect, and support.
Honorable Mentions:
he who drowned the world by shelley parker-chan : this was moved down a category only because the book before this one (she who became the sun) is literally just setup for this sneaky gut punch. So as a duology, could be stronger. this book as a standalone? Wow. There's some banger lines and concepts and characters in there. (Wang baoxiang. Just. Oh boy). Definitely fascinating in convo with baru cormorant, and I think a reason it's lower for me as well is because the lens of hwdtw is much more of an internal power turmoil than a study of imperalism, which I'm biased towards interest-wise. I read this purely because of @ash-and-starlight's incredible art, so please go check that out if you read the book - It is absolutely worth the read for their art.
the Black Jacobins by C L R James: I'm a french revolution bitch. it was a special interest of mine as a kid and got me invested in history. that said, we gotta talk about france's fuckery. which is to say, slavery/genocide/colonialism etc etc. This book is somewhat tricky to read at points, especially in keeping track of who's who, but a really incredible explanation of the beginning of Haiti's fight for independence. If you enjoy French or Caribbean history, anticolonial revolutions, and some of the nitty-gritty details of history textbooks, this is for you.
life under the jolly roger by Gabriel Kuhn: who here has seen black sails. (thee gay pirate show. Original edition.) strikes a good balance between an understanding of what pirates have/can/could represent, and absolutely clarity about their actual violence, legacy, and politics. Informative without being drawn in by the romanticism or dismissing its power completely.
the essential June Jordan: Politically relevant and also just lyrically beautiful poetry.
hell followed with us by Andrew Joseph White: trans horror fans w/ Christianity beef, this is for you. I am NOT a horror fan, but it was so well done and resonant with me that I stomached the gore for it and do absolutely recommend. if that’s your thing
DO NOT RECOMMEND:
the invisible life of addie larue by ve schwab: I love VE and am a bit of an apologist for her prose over plot bc her worldbuilding is always so cinematic to me, but this was such a frustrating waste of a brilliant concept. It was just...boring? Neither Addie nor Henry are particularly interesting (Henry's relatable, but again, not engaging as a character) and for someone who's been alive for a long time, I expected more unique flashbacks and worldbuilding. I expected the ten thousand doors of january, but this was not that, although I think at its soul it wanted to be.
the lies of locke lamora by scott lynch - Been meaning to read this forever since it was recommended a lot on here if you liked six of crows. I would say a similar setup (dickension fantasy) but that's about it. Characters aren't that likeable or clever, the action is slow, and I take issue with the ending.
unwieldy creatures by addie tsai - I so badly wanted this book to be good. It was not.
a day of fallen night by samantha shannon - It was fine, it's just such a long book I think time is better spent elsewhere, ya know?
provenance - second ann leckie book that i've finished unimpressed. despite murderbot being top of my list, this similar vibe of sci-fi did not strike me as one with such a unique clear voice. It just felt like a more inclusive version of many average space books.
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