☆ Daidouji Tomoyo / Kinomoto Sakura // Cardcaptor Sakura "Neko Version"
☆ Resin kit / 1/6 / T's System
☆ Wonder Festival 1999 [Summer]
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Y'all you don't understand. My new job is so sooo haunted! I finally had a good ghost story to send to To Many Spirits! This is devastating!!
Now I'm stuck here working at this haunted ass building during the graveyard shift for no fucking reason. I have to tell all the ghouls I see out of the corner of my eye that vanish if I turn to look and that lady who was whispering to me in the empty garage that they gotta give it up. No more motion sensing lights flickering on with no one near, no more motion activated security cameras trying to capture intruders and picking up nothing.
There's no point to all that silliness now. Watcher is dead boys, pack it up. 😞
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List 5 facts about a favorite sim of yours, and send this to simblrs whose sims you adore ✨️
thank you so much for sending this to me!! ✨️💜 i really appreciate it!! and i'm so sorry for letting this sit in my inbox a long time 😭
i may talk about him a lot, but it's never enough, so here are five new facts about the king of my blog aka grant 👑
when grant wants to feel something, he'll watch videos of the curiosity rover on mars singing happy birthday to itself 🎂 it's so incredibly sad but cute to him, so it immediately turns on the waterworks lolol 🥲
objectively, grant is NOT a car guy; he's 110% an airplane guy. however, he owns a car that makes him look like a car guy and gets him approached ALL THE TIME by people who want to talk cars. it's a 1960 ford galaxie and it looks like this, except i think it would be a nice shade of light, almost minty green or maybe blue (no, i haven't decided, and probably won't because there's no cc version of this car for the sims 4, so we'll never see it lol) 💚💙
why is that his car? 🚗 well, it was his grandparents' car, which he bought off them when they wanted to replace it; they have never had a garage or a carport in their entire life, so the car was exposed to the elements for fifty years, and it was, thus, fucked up. they were also tired of fixing it. however, it's a sentimental car because aoife and joseph met working on the same production line at a ford auto factory, and this car was the first one they bought as a couple in their marriage (even though aoife ironically does not know how to drive lmao). they wanted it gone but also didn't, you know, so grant bought it because he also didn't want to see it gone; he'd spent his whole life sandwiching into that backseat with 8 billion of his cousins. oh, aaandddd he bought it even though the necessary repairs were extensive, which he did all by himself with help from his grandparents and uncle (aka people who know shit about cars)
a shorter fun fact: he smokes luckies 🫢
grant has been on TV before! it was very brief, for like five seconds, but he was interviewed by his hometown news station after his high school hockey team won the state championship game one year and he was granted the MVP title. he was very nervous, and his friends ended up nicknaming him "mr. team effort" because his entire interview was him just saying things like, "oh, um, well, it was a team effort, and we worked really hard...together...as a team..."
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🌴🥥 Tenim el plaer de presentar-vos les artistes que vindràn este 2024 a la Festa Tropical! 🥥🌴
🍯🐝 MEL DE ROMER! Reggae amb veu en directe! @xxlandraxx & @s.soler
👻🏄♀️ MIMI GHOST (SONG SELECTOR)! Exòtica, Surf & Garage! @ghost_transmission
👩💪 ANNA FIRM! Calypso, Ska & Boogaloo! @annafirmstand
😺🏳️🌈 NINE MILE SOUND SYSTEM! Sonoritzant el sarao! @ninemilesoundsystem
⏰ RECORDEU! Tenim una cita el día 20 DE JULIOL de 19:00 a 00:00!
📍On? ON VA A SER! A L'ATENEU POPULAR DE XÀTIVA!
ℹ️ I atentes! Que d'ací poc vos contarem quines associacions i distris acudirán per primera vegada a la Festa Tropical 😜
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☆ Ganyu // Genshin Impact
☆ Resin kit / 1/7 / T's System
☆ Wonder Festival 2022 [Winter] ¥16,000
☆ Sculpt Miyagawa Takeshi
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Split System — Vol. 2 (Drunken Sailor/Goner)
Split System pounds its songs so hard, jacking ragged sing-along choruses up on pummeling beats, stringing barbed wire tangles of guitar slashing over antic, mobile bass. There’s nothing fancy going on here, just block simple punk songs walloped to extremity, but the ferocious drive is the thing. This band, from Melbourne, channels a rambunctious garage punk vibe that is 100% pure.
The band came together in Melbourne during the COVID lockdown—indeed, their first album (Vol. 1) was recorded remotely with all five members emailing in their parts. Now after a steady stream of local gigs and one, much-discussed rampaged across Europe, the band has honed an unstoppably live aesthetic. One guitar cowers under the assault of Arron Mawson, the force behind Stiff Richards, Doe Street and others and the head of Legless Records. Ryan Webb of Speed Week mans another. The singer is the rail thin, heavily tattoo’d Jackson Reid Briggs, best known for his band Jackson Reid Briggs and the Heaters. Deon Slaviero puts a bouncing, driving low-end under Split System’s frenzies, while drummer Mitch McGregor batters at blur speed on the kit.
You can hear Split System’s Aussie roots in these blistering cuts—the butt-headed primitivism of the Chats, the force and simplicity of Eddy Current Suppression Ring, hints of Royal Headache’s overdriven hookiness. You might even catch a whiff of the Saints in “Dave” in the clashing rush of guitars and hoarse, wounded sweetness of the vocals. There is, as the Bible tells us, nothing new under the sun, but conviction and commitment will go a long way towards making things fresh. Split System’s songs rock hard enough that you forget what they remind you of.
Vol. 2 starts in a fury (“The Wheel”) and manages to pick up steam as it goes. The second half of the disc is better than the first. “End of the Night,” just after the midpoint, sticks a defiant fist in the air, its chorus ravaged and god-damned catchy. “The Drain” juddering into view on a stripped wire bass line, flares into doomed lyricism with its splayed power chords. “Just want to wash it all the way,” yowls Briggs, as the song swirls like forest flames or melted ice caps around him. And holy cow, what a way to end things with “Kill Me” a rain of guitar strums beating down, a charged rush of rock desolation crashing around. “Everything’s trying to kill me,” Briggs sings. Here’s a band yelling into the maelstrom. Here’s a rock group not backing down. Here’s a bunch of guys sticking middle fingers into the air and they’re not dead yet — and neither is rock and roll.
Jennifer Kelly
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