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#bluna edit
emisirrelevant · 4 months
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Farewell to another show: Wolf Pack
Not gonna make this a long post, but yet another show has been lost. For those who have watched this show or were interested in it, or both, like me, Wolf Pack has been cancelled.
I am going to go grieve now. (read: watch multiple edits and then think about the headcanons I made up for each of the characters and maybe actually read the books because did you know this show was sort of/kind of loosely based of a book series?)
I truly wish the best for all the actors though. And I hope Armani, Bella, Chloe, and Tyler all get to shine even brighter in the future. Gonna miss seeing the four of them.
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alcanceress · 1 year
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Strangelove
Strange highs and strange lows
Strangelove
That's how my love goes
Strangelove
Will you give it to me?
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lesbiradshaw · 1 year
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have you watched wolf pack?
ik that’s the teen wolf spin off(?) on paramount plus (i think its a spinoff bc deucalion is on it maybe? idk) but naur i have not… i have watched a plethora of bluna edits tho and the material looks good i will probs watch if it gets renewed for a second seasons. my one comment tho is that i hate whatever they did to the werewolves’ eyes likeeeee the glowing irises was one of the only cool parts of the teen wolf werewolf design imo and now they like bulge and warp the pupils? BRING BACK THE ORIGINAL DESIGN!
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3verett · 1 year
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yo, tiktok has been showing me bluna and everlan ship edits and i'm starting to ship them!! but like, listen everett is very shippable with everyone sooooo. 🤭
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scvrllet · 2 years
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Cancelled, A Harry Potter + Modern/Social Media AU (10/?)
Feat. The boys crashing Bluna’s date. Thankfully they had just left the restaurant and wanted to explore the nearby shops.
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hopeless-wandererc · 3 years
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BETA!!
Hello lovely people! I’m currently looking for a beta/anyone willing to read some of my work and critique it. I am currently working on a harry potter world fanfic and if you’re into that and you would like to help me out please let me know! I would even be open to creating a ‘deal’ were we beta eachothers work! I do ask that whoever is reading the work has some harry potter background knowledge!
I used to have a beta but because we were personal friends before we began to beta eachother, it ended up not working because we ended up not working. So I’m in desperate need of someone, anyone!
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So I've been rereading dark!Hermione fics and let me tell you
My all time favorite is Lady of the Lake on ffnet, it's hella long, and I've read it 3 times. The political mastery is absolutely beautiful, presenting a side that I didn't consider. It's explores the possibilities of the plot in depth. The characters are fantastically well written, and honestly I'd read fanfic about this fanfic. That's how great it is. Columbrina is an amazing author. Dramione.
https://m.fanfiction.net/s/10654712/1/
Next would be The Green Girl. Columbrina does it again in this incredible Slytherin!Hermione piece. It follows through all there school years, highlighting the differences as they come along. It's not stuffy or boring, but incredibly long and I love every word. 150k Dramione that I read in two days nonstop the second time around. Just absolutely stunning. There's also minor Bluna. LotL has more Bluna.
https://m.fanfiction.net/s/11027125/1/
And the final dark!hermy I started was Persephone. I'm going to warn you now, it's Tomione. That's not my thing, but the first eleven chapters I read were well done. There is explicit smut, and that's where I stopped. It's fantastic, if that's something you're into. It just squicked me out. It's 212k+
https://m.fanfiction.net/s/11132624/1/
Coming soon, my Dark!Ginny post. Follow me for more hp fic recs. I also post other fandoms.
Edit: the author is Colubrina
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kybee1497 · 7 years
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HP Moodboard - Luna Lovegood
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Additions 28 May 2017 - WIP Edition
full fic rec site: http://turbulenthandholding.weebly.com/
Is there something you think I should be reading?  Rec it to me here: http://turbulenthandholding.weebly.com/rec-something.html
Don’t forget to review what you read and spread the love!  <3 <3 <3
Amid the Chaos by @shayalonnie​ Harry/Draco/Hermione / Rated: Explicit When Harry Potter died at the Battle of Hogwarts, Voldemort destroyed Wizarding Britain. Enslaved for years, Hermione’s magic has been bound. Soon, however, she’ll discover that nothing and no one are what they seem to be. (EST HIATUS UNTIL SUMMER)
Bonded Consort by Lomonaaeren Drarry / Rating: Mature Nineteen years ago, the Potters betrothed their firstborn child to the firstborn Malfoy child. Eighteen years ago, Voldemort was defeated for good. Seventeen years ago, the Potters changed the contract so that their secondborn child was substituted for their firstborn. Now, Draco Malfoy is trying to work out what happened.
The Continuing Adventures of Severus Snape, Barista Extraordinaire  by MyWitch, Toodleoo Sevmione / Rating: Mature Why is Severus Snape working at Hermione’s local coffee shop? She is determined to find out.
The Granger Feint by @dreadpiratemary  Hermione/Marcus/Adrian / Rated: M  The Ministry of Magic is recovering from the Wizarding War. Fines? Most families can deal with those. Threatening to make former Death Eaters wards of the state with the Ministry in control of their vaults? Not so much. Marcus Flint and Adrian Pucey decide to take a gamble and enlist the biggest champion of underdogs they know. Will she accept their unlikely proposal? AdMarcMione
It Started with a Marriage Law (That They Didn’t Follow) by @ff-sunset-oasis Tomione / Rated: T / Romance-Humor ​In 1997, Ministry of Magic passed a marriage law due to the decreasing population of Wizarding Britain. Hermione knew that her boyfriend Tom would NOT be happy to hear that, as a Head Girl, she’d been paired up with the Head Boy Draco Malfoy instead of with him. Luckily, Draco’s crush on someone else might just save him from Tom’s wrath. Tomione, Drarry, Bluna & some other pairings
Outsiders by Savva Pansy/Remus / Rated: Mature / Drama-Romance / Warning: Attempted sexual assault (not main pairing) The war is over, and everything is back to … normal. Only, nothing really changed. Well, life did change for Pansy rather drastically, but for Remus - not so much. Those two are so different. Can they help each other? AU. Pansy/Remus. Drama. Romance. Angst. (warning! attempted sexual assault)
White Knuckles by @chiseplushie Drarry / Rating: Mature / Romance After fighting the quicksand of war he didnt ask for, Harry is left to adjust to a new world. Some things never change, and others change for the better. Co-written by Chiseplushie & Disillusionist9. - slow burn, eventual drarry fic.
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footballghana · 4 years
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Mercy Tagoe-Quarcoo, Ghana’s football all-rounder
She has seen it all – Player, Referee, and now Coach. Mercy Tagoe-Quarcoo belongs to the rare league of persons to have had a taste of almost all the facets of football.
An avid sportswoman, she played football to the highest level capping it with an appearance at the FIFA Women’s World Cup in 1999 in USA.
It was Ghana’s first-ever participation at the global championship and she prides herself in being a member of that golden generation.
She was also a member of the Black Queens squad that lost to Nigeria in the final of the maiden African Women’s Championship in Nigeria in 1998.
After some time on the pitch, Tagoe-Quarcoo called it a day. Her next stop was refereeing. She did excel in that field too. Named Ghana’s best referee in 2006, her exploits did not go unnoticed and she officiated at the continental level including the final match of the 2008 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations (then African Women’s Championship) between Equatorial Guinea and South Africa, which the former won 2-1.
After blowing her whistle for the last time in 2012, she explored her versatility yet again, Coaching her next destination. Currently, she is the head coach of Ghana’s senior women’s national team. A mother of two, Tagoe-Quarcoo is also a Senior Officer with the Ghana National Fire Service.
In an exclusive interview with CAFOnline.com, the 42-year old opens up on her life in football as a player, referee, and coach, amongst others. Below are excerpts;
CAFOnline.com: How did you get into football?
Mercy Tagoe: My passion for football developed at an early age. As a child, I loved everything sports. I started with volleyball, then to High Jump, where I was Western Regional champion during my secondary school days (at Fijai Secondary School). I was also involved in Tennis and Table Tennis. I used to play and watch football all the time and that in a way shaped my choice of courses at the University. I wanted to be part of Sports in any capacity. My first team was Supreme Ladies. After some time, there was a merger between Supreme Ladies and Tema New Town Ladies with another club in Tema (Ghana’s industrial and port city) giving birth to Bluna Ladies.
How was your journey to the national team, Black Queens?
I was called up for the Black Queens in 1995. At the time, there were no age group women teams. Footballers in the region constituted a Greater Accra Regional team, and most of the players came from there. I was very happy with the call up because playing for your nation is the biggest dream of every player. By dint of hard work, we qualified for the 1999 FIFA Women’s World Cup in USA, after losing to host and rivals Nigeria in the final of the maiden Women’s Africa Cup of Nations (then African Women’s Championship). Some of my teammates were Alberta Sackey, Elizabeth Baidu, Genevive Clottey amongst others and we were the first Ghanaian team to play at a women’s global football championship. Upon our return from USA, I called time on my playing career.
When did you become a referee?
Actually, I got into refereeing at the twilight of my playing career. Somewhere in 1998, I was among the successful applicants who took part in the Fundamentals Refereeing course. After, I enrolled for the next level, Class Three (3), and was accredited as such. After three years, I earned promotion to Class Two (2).
When I had my Class 2 badge, I was still playing for the national team. In 2005, I was accredited as an international referee and received my FIFA badge. At this point, I started officiating in the Ghana Premier League. Prior to that, I was handling games in the lower divisions of Ghana football (thus Division 3, 2, and 1). The highlight of my refereeing career include officiating the final match of the 2008 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations in Equatorial Guinea, and also the 2010 FIFA U-20 Women’s World in Germany. After some time, I reached the point where I realized the soul was willing but the strength of my body won’t be enough for me to continue refereeing; and at this point, I decided I took up coaching. So I went through the courses.
How has the coaching journey been so far?
Already, I had a Diploma in Coaching at the university, but I needed to get the other required certificates that will enable me coach any team in Ghana. I got my first certificate which was the CAF License C, then moved to License B and eventually License A, and that has helped me a lot in my career as a coach.
I began my coaching career with Prisco Minis, a popular Youth Club based in Tema. Later, I joined, Gye Nyame FC, a third-tier side also in Tema. In 2016, I made a leap to the top flight side to Amidaus Professionals, an as Assistant Coach, in the Ghana Premier League. Whilst with Amidaus Professionals, I went to Cameroon for a CAF Instructor’s Course, and never returned to the former upon my return. Rather, I switched to women’s football. The Management of Halifax Ladies, a second-tier side approached me and I agreed to join them. I have to put it on record that all this while it wasn’t about the money as I wanted to get a grip of the art before anything else. I took the job and qualified them to the Women’s Premier League.
When did you receive the national team call?
In 2018, I got my first shot at the national team as an assistant to then-head coach Mas-Ud Didi Dramani (now with FC Nordsjaelland in Denmark). After an international friendly with France, Didi had the opportunity to travel to Denmark, leaving the Black Queens head coach position vacant.
In the interim, I took over the Black Queens, guiding them to the title at the WAFU Women’s Championship in Cote d’Ivoire. After that feat, I was informed by the Ghana Football Association to revert to my assistant role and understudy one of the top male coaches in the country (Bashir Hayford) as the team prepared for the Total Women’s Africa Cup of Nations Ghana 2018.
Earlier this year, I was confirmed head coach of Black Queens, becoming the first female coach of the team.
What has been the role of your family to your football journey?
Fortunately, my family has always been supportive of me as a sportswoman. My children grew up seeing me as a sportswoman. They are used to it, happy and proud to have me. My husband (Daniel Anum Quarcoo) is also a sports person so he understands me. He was a goalkeeper for the national handball team. He has been my manager, counsellor, advisor, and my love.
What are some obstacles along the road?
There have been many challenges, especially as a woman and a first-timer. There are still people who are yet to accept the fact that women have the quality to coach top teams. I don’t begrudge them because they have their reasons. I believe that when you are learning on the job, it’s easier since more time equals more experience. To get here, it has been hard work because I didn’t seek favours. Another challenge is being a wife and a mother, as well as my employers (Ghana National Fire Service). The challenges are numerous, but I don’t personally like talking about them. I rather see them as motivational elements to work harder and prove to the doubters that I can really do the job.
What targets have you set as Black Queens coach?
Qualification to major competitions such as 2020 Total Women’s Africa Cup of Nations, FIFA Women’s World Cup, and the Olympic Games. Ghana participated in the 2018 edition of the Women’s AFCON as hosts. Prior to that, qualification had been difficult for some time. The same applies to both the FIFA Women’s World Cup which our last appearance was in 2007. Also, Ghana has never qualified to the Olympic Games, and its one of the things that I will want to achieve as a coach. I know it won’t be easy, but with the support of all stakeholders, we can achieve them.
Having been involved in the game for more than two decades, how do you compare the past to the present?
During my heydays, we played for the fun of it and pride; but the game has taken a business turn. I remember when we came back from the 1999 FIFA Women’s World Cup in USA, and we were given USD 500 each, we were over the moon. This was because the chance to play for the nation and wear the national jersey alone was enough. It was all about passion. During the match against Australia at the 1999 FIFA Women’s World Cup, tears rolled down my cheeks as the national anthem played out. I felt so proud in the national shirt with my hands on my chest, and knowing that my parents were watching me on television back home. That is the passion I am talking about, far different from what we see these days.
On the other hand, there is a huge shift regarding perception as parents now encourage their daughters to play football. I have been receiving calls from parents requesting for tryouts for their girls. It was the opposite when I started playing. Parents frowned on their daughters playing football and will prefer them concentrate on house chores. They perceived football as a men’s game.
Source: cafonline.com
source: https://footballghana.com/
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