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#scott and bailey out of context
maiagaru · 1 year
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Scott and Bailey Out of Context · s01e02 · Surprise
Fireplace.
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littlechillis · 1 year
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say that again..... but slowly....
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zepuckinghockey · 10 months
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It's NHL wedding season! I'm aware of 10 NHLers who got married over the July 7-8, 2023 weekend as well as two related weddings. As best as I can, I've listed them out including as many verified player guests as I could find. Shoutout to the server for helping me ID a lot of generic looking faces. I've got some teams listed for context.
Feel free to let me know of people I've missed! This list has been edited on September 9th. I'm pretty sure wedding season is over, but feel free to message me with someone I missed.
June 16th, 2023 Weddings:
Kyle Clague - Sabres Notable Guests: Nolan Patrick
July 4th, 2023 Weddings:
Colin Blackwell - Hawks Notable Guests: Alex Kerfoot
July 6th, 2023 Weddings:
Tyler Bertuzzi - Red Wings Notable Guests: Michael Rasumussen, Zach Nastasiuk
July 7th, 2023 Weddings:
Alex Nedeljkovic - currently Penguins (previously Canes, Red Wings) Notable Attendees: Scott Wedgewood
Jordan Binnington - Blues Notable Attendees: Jordan Kyrou, Marco Scandella, Sammy Blais, Faulk, Perron, Logan Brown, Joshua Leivo, Vince Dunn, Robby Fabbri, Joel Edmundson, Robert Thomas, Oskar Sundqvist, Colton Parayko, Jake Walman
July 8th, 2023 Weddings:
Tyson Barrie - currently on the Preds (previously: Oilers, Leafs, Avs) Notable Attendees: everyone. Sidney Crosby, Nathan MacKinnon, Mitch Marner, Zach Hyman, Connor McDavid, Alex Kerfoot, John Tavares, Jack Campbell, Justin Holl, Evander Kane, Darnell Nurse, Mike Smith, Bayne Pettinger, Tyler Ennis, Colin Wilson, Michael Hutchinson, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Cody Ceci, Evan Bouchard, Luke Schenn, Devin Shore, Gabe Landeskog
Vinni Lettieri - currently on the Wild (previously Ducks) Notable Attendees: Trevor Zegras, Jake Bischoff, Tony DeAngelo, Jimmy Vesey, Kevin Hayes, Brady Skjei, Kevin Shattenkirk, John Gibson, Zach Bogosian, Sam Carrick, Jake Gardiner, James van Riemsdyk
Sam Reinhart - currently on the Panthers (previously Sabres) Notable Attendees: Mason Marchment, Brandon Montour, Owen Tippett
Chandler Stephenson - currently on the Knights (previously Caps) Notable Attendees: Will Carrier, Reilley Smith, Mark Stone, Cody Eakin, Jack Eichel, Alex Tuch
Sam Girard - currently on the Avs (previously Preds) Notable Attendees: Nicolas Aube-Kubel, Ryan Graves
Dylan Gambrell - currently on the Leafs (previously Sharks, Sens) Notable Attendees: Mathieu Joseph, Austin Watson (thanks anon!)
Gustav Forsling - currently on the Panthers Notable Attendees: Alex Wennberg, Marcus Hogberg, Patric Hornquist, Lucas Carlsson, Erik Gustafsson
Tyler Motte - (Rangers, Blue Jackets, Blackhawks, Senators, Canucks) Notable Attendees: Brock Boesser
Brett Richie - (Yotes, Flames)
Emerance Maschmeyer & Genevieve Lacasse - WoHo Olympic gold medalists Notable Attendees: Sarah Nurse, Erin Ambrose, Laura Stacey, Marie-Philip Poulin, Haley Irwin, just like all the big woho names
Dominik Tiffels - German hockey player Notable Attendees: Leon Draisaitl
Frankie Borrelli - Barstool Sports and Fore Play Golf Notable Attendees: Brock Nelson, Matt Martin, Adam Pelech, Scott Mayfield, Josh Bailey - info thanks to @barzyblogbabe
Morgan Reilly - Leafs Notable Attendees: his wife Tessa Virtue
July 13th, 2023 Weddings:
Dryden Hunt - Rangers Notable Guests: Kyle Burroughs
July 15th, 2023 Weddings:
Tyler Seguin - Stars (Bruins) Notable Guests: Jamie Benn, John Klingberg, Scott Wedgewood, Jesse Blacker, Mason Marchment, Ty Dellandrea, Justin Dowling
Luke Kunin - (Sharks, Wild) Notable Attendees: Colton Sissons, Matthew Tkachuk, Brady Tkachuk, (Taryn Tkachuk)
AJ Greer - Bruins (Avs, Devils) Notable Attendees: Scott Kosmachuk
Andy Andreoff - (Kings, Flyers, Islanders) Notable Attendees: Sean Couturier, Scott Laughton, Shayne Gostibehere, Erik Gudbranson, Milan Lucic
Juuso Valimaki - Coyotes
July 16, 2023 Weddings:
Kevin Hayes - Blues (Flyers, Rangers, Jets) Notable Attendees: Johnny Gaudreau, Tony DeAngelo, Brady Skjei, Jimmy Vesey
July 20th, 2023 Weddings:
Lawson Crouse - Coyotes Notable Attendees: Phil Kessel, Shayne Gostibehere, Liam O'Brien, Nick Schmaltz, Darcy Kuemper, Taylor Hall, Jacob Bryson, Travis Konecny
July 21st, 2023 Weddings:
Nicolas Aube-Kubel - Caps (Avs) Notable Attendees: Anthony Mantha, Julien Gauthier
Brady Tkachuk - Sens Notable Attendees: Matthew Tkachuk, Josh Norris, Thomas Chabot, Mark Stone, Mathieu Joseph, Luke Kunin, Christian Fischer, Ryan Donato, Robert Thomas, Alex Debrincat, Cam Talbot, Nick Holden, Quinn Hughes, Jack Hughes, Luke Hughes, Jake Sanderson, Shane Pinto, Dylan Gambrell, Colin White, Jacob Chychrun, Kevin Hayes
Juuse Saros - Predators Notable Attendees: Eeli Tolvanen, Kevin Lankinen
Tanner Jeannot - Lightning Notable Attendees: Brett Howden, Noah Gregor, Jayden Halbgewachs, Jeremy Lauzon, Alex Carrier
July 22nd, 2023 Weddings:
Alex Kerfoot - Coyotes (Maple Leafs) Notable Attendees: Justin Holl, Colin Blackwell, John Tavares, Morgan Reilly, Michael Bunting, Mitch Marner, Jake Muzzin
Nick Paul - Lightning (Senators) Notable Attendees: Chris Driedger, Drake Batherson, Thomas Chabot, Anthony Cirelli, Alex Killorn
Keith Kinkaid - (Devils, Canadiens, Rangers, Bruins, Avs)
July 24th, 2023 Weddings:
Anthony Mantha - Capitals Notable Guests: Nicholas Aube-Kubel, Julien Gauthier, Nick Jensen, Jonathan Benier
July 27th, 2023 Weddings:
Pavel Zacha - Bruins (Devils) Notable Attendees: Nico Hischier, Jesper Bratt
July 28th, 2023 Weddings:
Karson Kuhlman - Islanders (Kraken, Jets) Notable Guests: Kasimir Kaskiskuo
July 29th, 2023 Weddings:
Connor Murphy - Blackhawks (Coyotes) Notable Attendees: Sean Kuraly, Anthony Duclair, Dylan Strome, Jonathan Toews, Alex Debrincat, Taylor Raddysh, Mackenzie Entwistle, Brandon Hagel
Mitch Marner - Leafs Notable Attendees: Best Boy Zeus 🐶, Matt Martin, James Van Riemsdyk, Jake Gardiner, Tyler Bozak, Connor Brown, Justin Holl, Nazem Kadri, Willy Nylander, Zach Bogosian, Kyle Clifford, Jake Muzzin, Auston Matthews, Alex Kerfoot, Michael Bunting, Freddie Anderson, Rasmus Sandin, Morgan Reilly, Tyson Barrie, Connor Carrick, Joe Thorton, Patrick Marleau, Zach Hyman, Jack Campbell, TJ Brodie, Tyler Ennis, John Tavares, Timothy Liljegren
Ethan Bear - Canucks (Oilers, Hurricanes) Notable Attendees: Mat Barzal, Caleb Jones, Jujhar Khaira, Riley Stillman, Thatcher Demko, Austin Strand
Boone Jenner - Blue Jackets Notable Attendees: Zach Werenski, Seth Jones, Nick Blankenburg, Cole Sillinger, David Savard, Andrew Peeke, Scott Laughton, Elvis Merzlikins, Erik Gubranson
July 30th, 2023 Weddings:
Ryan Donato - Blackhawks (Kraken, Bruins) Notable Attendees: Jared McCann, Yanni Gourde, Matty Beniers, Adam Fox
August 3rd, 2023 Weddings:
Kevin Lankinen - Predators Notable Guests: Eeli Tolvanen
August 4th, 2023 Weddings:
Taylor Raddysh - Blackhawks (Lightning) Notable Guests: Dylan Strome, Connor Murphy, Anthony Cirelli
Kevin Hayes (2.0) - still Blues (Flyers, Rangers, Jets) Notable Guests: Keith Yandle, Scott Laughton, Shayne Gostibhere, Travis Sanheim, James van Riemsdyk, Brady Tkachuk, Matthew Tkachuk, Johnny Gaudreau, JT Miller, Zach Sanford, Tony DeAngelo, Brian Dumoulin, Brady Skjei, Paul Carey
August 5th, 2023 Weddings:
Conor Garland - Canucks (Coyotes) Notable Guests: Ryan Donato, Jakob Chychrun, Clayton Keller
Brendan Dillon - Jets (Capitals) Notable Guests: Tom Wilson, TJ Oshie, Jordie Benn, Jamie Benn, Trevor van Riemsdyke, Nic Dowd, Nick Jensen
Charlie McAvoy - Bruins Notable Guests: Hampus Lindholm, AJ Greer, Connor Clifton, Noel Acciari, Taylor Hall, Conor Sheary, Brad Marchand, Jake Debrusk, Matt Gryzeleyk, Derek Forbort, Brandon Carlo, David Krejci, Tuukka Rask, Jeremy Swayman, Charlie Coyle, Krug Torey, Matthew Tkachuk, Casey Fitzgerald, Colin White, Patrice Bergeron
Austin Watson - Senators Notable Guests: Cam Talbot, Anton Forsberg, Jarred Tinordi, Nick Paul, DJ Smith, Dylan Gambrell, Nick Holden, Thomas Chabot
Gage Quinney - Knights Notable Guests: Zach Whitecloud, Nicolas Roy, Jake Bischoff
Micke Rosell - player agent Notable Guests: William Nylander, Alex Nylander, Sam Ersson, Marcus Bjork
Joonas Johansson - Avs
August 6th, 2023 Weddings:
Dylan Larkin - Red Wings Notable Guests: Sam Gagner, Tyler Bertuzzi, Trevor Zegras, Kyle Connor, Troy Stecher, Marc Staal, Jeff Petry, Darren Helm, Zach Werenski, Mitchell Stephens, Riley Sheahan, Cole Caufield, Jack Hughes
August 11th, 2023 Weddings:
Shea Theodore - Knights Notable Guests: Ryan Reaves, Marc-Andre Fleury, Nick Holden, Mark Stone, Chandler Stephenson, Alex Tuch, Dylan Strome, Erik Haula, Jaycob Megna, Will Carrier, Jack Eichel, Alex Pietrangelo
Ryan Hartman - Wild Notable Guests: Matt Dumba, Marcus Foligno, Jared Spurgeon, Cam Talbot, Kirill Kaprizov, Jordan Greenway, Jon Merrill, Alex Goligoski, Jake Middleton, Mason Shaw, Calen Addison, Nick Schmalt, Matthew Boldy, Brandon Duhaime, Connor Dewar, Luke Kunin
August 12th, 2023 Weddings:
Chris Kreider - Rangers Notable Guests: Mika Zibanejad
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effieandtim · 3 months
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From Jonny's Time interview from 2022
Hollywood hasn’t historically been friendly to openly gay actors: in the past, it was likelier you’d find “straight people playing gay roles, winning awards for it, and then being told that they’re brave,” says Bailey, “which is so demoralizing.”
Jonny has been on record that he thinks people should be able to play whatever and that the conversation should be about giving out gay actors more roles not if only gay actors should play gay roles. But when straight actors play gay roles multiple times I start to judge them, I'm judging Paul and Josh because this movie they're doing won't be their first gay role for either of them.
hmm see i get your point and i think it’s well within your right to judge them for this especially bc it will be more than once - it’s a valid criticism but i just levy it at the production too and the awards more.
bc again it goes back to the same conversation - who can play what characters.
having said that, i think we all agree that there’s something different when you watch queer actors in queer roles and fellow travelers has been such a good example of it.
not saying that straight actors would disrespect those characters, but at the end of the day, the internal struggle regarding their sexuality is something that they would never be able to relate to and thats just a fact i think
it’s not their lived experience and i like those actors who at least acknowledge that fact and dont speak over those who have experienced that struggle
edit: in case anyone is reading this out of context, we’re talking about andrew scott being snubbed for all of us strangers and the consequent conversation about paul being a straight actor getting a nom for playing a queer character while andrew being a gay actor not getting a nom for a queer character even though the film is all about him
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lonely-night · 6 months
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scott and bailey out of context
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themovieblogonline · 9 months
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FROM Season 1 Episode 4: DEEP DIVE and BREAKDOWN
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Thank you FROMily, We are FINALLY back with another recap of our favorite “Where Are We?” show FROM Season 1 Episode 4. We're picking up where we left off last week with Frank camping overnight in the box. This week's episode is titled “A Rock and a Farway” which is where we dive deeper into the mystery and magic of FROMtown.     https://youtu.be/k09_mZzMXkI FROM Season 1 Episode 4 The phrase "A Rock and a Hard Place", from which this seems inspired, is an expression that means being faced with a difficult and challenging situation where one has to choose between two equally undesirable options. It conveys a feeling of being trapped with no easy way out. The origin of this phrase can be traced back to the early 20th century in the United States. It was originally used in the context of mining and referred to a worker who was stuck between two immovable obstacles while attempting to mine for minerals or precious metals. One obstacle was the "rock" and the other obstacle would be the "hard place" (a narrow passage with little room to maneuver). Over time, the phrase became more commonly used in a figurative sense to describe any challenging situation where one faces two difficult choices or options with no clear solution. Between a Rock and a Farway seems like a fun play on the phrase but definitely fitting considering the circumstances of the residents of FROMtown as we talk more about this show… Synopsis: FROM unravels the mystery of a nightmarish town in middle America that traps all those who enter. As the unwilling residents fight to keep a sense of normalcy and search for a way out, they must also survive the threats of the surrounding forest; including the terrifying creatures that come out when the sun goes down. The series stars Harold Perrineau (Lost) leading an ensemble cast that includes Catalina Sandino Moreno (Maria Full of Grace, The Affair), Eion Bailey (Band of Brothers, Once Upon a Time), Hannah Cheramy (Under Wraps, Van Helsing), Simon Webster (Strays), Ricky He (The Good Doctor), Chloe Van Landschoot (Charity, Skin), Corteon Moore (Utopia Falls), Pegah Ghafoori (The Perfect Wedding), David Alpay (Castle Rock), Elizabeth Saunders (Clarice), Elizabeth Moy and Avery Konrad (Honor Society). New series regulars joining Season 2 include Scott McCord (East of Middle West), Nathan D. Simmons (Diggstown, This Hour Has 22 Minutes), Kaelen Ohm (Hit & Run, Eumenides Falls), Angela Moore (A Series of Unfortunate Events, Maid), AJ Simmons (Reacher) and Deborah Grover (My Next Door Nightmare, Jann). Read the full article
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jazy3 · 3 years
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Thoughts on Grey’s Anatomy: 18X01
SPOILERS AHEAD!!!
I was really excited for the Premiere and I have never been so disappointed in my life. It took me a few days to write this review because I’m just so unimpressed. I feel like the only interesting parts of the Season 18 Premiere were the Meredith and Hayes FaceTime call, Levi in that outfit and Jo with that hair, and the interviews. That's it. I mean Teddy and Owen’s two weddings were interesting if you’re a Teddy and Owen shipper, but I never have been so that didn’t really do anything for me.
The pacing of the episode was super slow and it was just altogether boring. There were also just so many inconsistencies. For example, Teddy and Owen originally planned to get married at the park with just Megan, Farouk, Evelyn, Leo, and Allison which doesn’t make sense because prior to their break up they were talking about planning their dream wedding. Now they finally get married and Richard didn’t even know about it? They asked Megan to fly in, but they didn’t tell their friends at the hospital after they just all attended Maggie and Winston’s wedding two weeks earlier?
It’s also not clear if Meredith knows that they got married which is weird because she’s the main character of the show and was an integral part of Owen’s previous two weddings one of which was held at her house. Also, Amelia and Link weren’t there and it’s not clear if they even knew about the wedding which is weird because Meredith, Amelia, and Link were all present when Owen proposed to Teddy at Christmas at Meredith’s house and they are all co-parenting Leo together.
While I appreciated the shift to a lighter tone and that they chose to have this season exist in a post-COVID alternative universe where we can see the actors faces again without the PPE and return to escapism the Premiere didn't pack the punch I was expecting. The premieres are usually super shocking and action packed and this one just wasn't. It was just boring and all of the most interesting stuff happened off camera during the two weeks between the Season 17 Finale and the Season 18 Premiere which is just stupid.
I saw the priest getting hit by one of the cyclists coming a few minutes before it happened based on the promo and the context of the scene and there wasn't a big shocking event like there usually is. The pace of the Premiere really felt off to me. My friend Amy who I watch with every week described it as the pacing you usually associate with a nice stroll through a moonlit garden. Fine for episode two or three or a connecting episode but not the Premiere. I feel like they really misjudged what fans were looking for and I’m hoping that they do the work and course correct now that the Premiere has aired and the completely dismal fan reaction as come out.
One of the few bright spots for me was the introduction of Peter Gallagher as Dr. David Hamilton. I love him as an actor! He's great! His recent roles in Grace and Frankie and Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist were fantastic! I was super excited when I heard he was coming to Grey's. I like Dr. Hamilton so far and I'm interested to see how his relationship with Ellis and Meredith having dreams about her mother following her battle with COVID will play into the story this season. While it would be interesting to see Meredith work in Minnesota temporarily like Cristina did back in Season 9, I don't want her there permanently. Seattle is as much a character in the show as any of the main characters we've come to love, and something would be missing for me if she moved.
To be perfectly honest, it doesn't make much sense to me for Meredith to move to Minnesota permanently when she only knows a few people there. Who would watch her kids? If she's going to move to me, it makes more sense for her to move to Kansas where Alex is or Switzerland where Cristina is. Her kids have already lost their father and so many other caregivers and Meredith has stuck it out in Seattle for so long after everything that's happened that her moving to Minnesota for me would be bonkers.
Also, where were her kids in the Premiere? All of the interviews that came out prior to the Premiere talked about how Meredith’s focus at the beginning of the season would be on her work and her kids, but they were nowhere to be found in the Premiere and it’s not clear whose watching them while Meredith is in Minnesota. The interviews also made it seem like Meredith and Hayes would still be circling each other at the start of the season with quotes about how timing hadn’t been on their side, that they still needed to have an official drink and go out on a date, and that while Meredith wasn’t looking for a relationship one might find her.
That had literally nothing to do with the Premiere we saw whatsoever! The kids were MIA and it turned out that Meredith and Hayes started dating off screen following Maggie and Winston’s wedding and we didn’t get to see ANY of the firsts they talked about so much over the last two seasons. So stupid. The Premiere was a total rip off. I hate that Nick Marsh is back and I’ve never gone from liking a character and an actor to hating them in such a short period of time ever. My God. I’m so pissed off about this. What the hell were they thinking? Why did they think we would want this at all?
Don’t get me wrong, I loved Nick Marsh as a character and Scott Speedman's portrayal of him when he first showed up in Season 14. I was all ready for him to be Meredith's next great love and I was on board. But then he disappeared and was never heard from again and it was reported that Speedman wanted to take a break from TV for a while so I mourned the loss of what could have been and moved on. I sat through the out of character nonsense that was the DeLuca storyline in the belief that eventually that storyline would end, and Meredith would get a real proper love interest that made sense and would be her post-Derek endgame.
So, I was really excited when they introduced Hayes and I have really come to love his character and his budding relationship with Meredith. I feel like I've been waiting forever to finally see them go on a date and I am super pissed off that we didn't get to see it. I would have loved this storyline with Nick if they had introduced it at any previous point in time, but now after they've spent so much time setting up Meredith and Hayes it's just infuriating. I feel immense rage over how they handled Meredith and Hayes and Meredith and Nick’s storylines in the Premiere. I'm so angry. The whole thing just made no sense. That Premiere should never have aired. It never should have gotten past the draft stage. It was that bad. The first date and all of the firsts that come with a new relationship are the most exciting parts of a romantic storyline for me and I love seeing all of that on screen. They hyped Meredith and Hayes’ relationship up so much and even had the two of them talk about 'firsts' and dating after death so for their first date to happen off screen along with Austin's panic attacks and bad reaction to his Dad starting to date again is just such a rip off.
I have stuck with this show through thick and thin and for them to reward that loyalty by having the most interesting parts of that storyline happen off screen while showing a bunch of stuff on screen with other characters that they could have just told us about? So ridiculous. I was so excited for this season and now I'm just angry. I'm hoping that they are building to a big mid-season finale where Meredith is going to return to Seattle and by that time Bailey will have helped Hayes out with Austin and the two of them will finally get together on screen but I'm starting to feel like every time I get invested in one of the Meredith's new love interests, they pull the rug out from under me and I'm getting really fed up.
In other news, I'm not too surprised that Megan and Riggs broke up off screen only because Virgin River, which I love, just got picked up for two more seasons and I imagine Martin Henderson is busy filming that and it looks like Megan is going to be around for a while and they had to explain it somehow. I loved Meredith and Riggs together and I hated how they ended that storyline so I'm not sad about them breaking up off screen.
The Premiere also broke my heart over Amelia and Link’s storyline. It’s just so stupid. It’s drama for drama’s sake that’s all it is and it’s tired. When did marriage become so important to Link? In the span of a few months, he went from being totally fine with not getting married and checking in with Amelia every few weeks on how she felt to convincing himself that Amelia wanted him to propose so he did so at her sister's wedding and used her dead brother's children to do it. Amelia's right the whole thing was super messed up and manipulative and she was right to say no.
Link decided marriage was important to him and that fostering Luna would be totally fine without ever talking to Amelia. Yes, Amelia should have shared her thoughts with him too, but he also should have paid attention. Now their otherwise healthy relationship is over because she doesn't want to participate in an archaic ritual that involves signing a contract and exchanging vows? That's just stupid. I hope they find a way to work it out and get back together because I really like them as a couple.
I like Dr. Michelle Lin the new Head of Plastic of Surgery that Bailey and Richard are looking to hire. I thought for sure after that photo of the other guy made the rounds on social media that he was going to be the new Head of Plastics, but then he said that he doesn't do "free" and I knew he was out. I'm excited for there to be another female surgeon of colour on the show as the gender and racial balance on the show has been more white and male as of late and I think Grey's is at its best when you have a roughly equal number of women and men and as many different races being represented as possible.
I think it makes the storylines more interesting and authentic and personally gives me more characters that I can identify with. This new doctor seems driven, determined, and could have a potentially interesting dynamic with Richard and Bailey. She’s also giving me some Cristina Yang vibes and I’m all for that. I love Cristina. Always have. Always will. That being said, I'm a bit confused as to where they are going with Jo's storyline as I thought for sure the new Head of Plastics would be a guy and her new love interest. But Bailey did say they still needed to hire a new general surgeon and a new neurosurgeon so maybe one of them will be for her?
I can't really say that there was anything I loved about the Premiere which is disappointing. Jo's parenting hair dye mishap was funny, Levi's outfit cracked me up, and I liked that Bailey agreed to help Hayes out, but that's about it. The thing I was most excited for coming into this season was Meredith finally being back on her feet and seeing the romantic storyline between her and Hayes finally come to fruition.
Finding out that she's going to be in Minnesota for the foreseeable future, she and Hayes started dating off screen but had to call it quits because seeing his Dad date someone new caused Austin to have panic attacks, and finding out that Nick Marsh is back? I hated it. I don't understand how the same person who wrote the Season 16 masterpiece “Snowblind” with that amazing snow scene between Meredith and Hayes wrote the Premiere. I just don't understand. I really hope they're not going to do a love triangle with Meredith, Hayes, and Nick because that would just be so stupid.
She's a forty something award-winning surgeon who's a widowed single mother of three. Love triangles made sense when she was young intern, but at this point it's just dumb. I also didn't feel the chemistry this time around between Meredith and Nick like I did the first time. It felt forced and flat. I like Maggie and Winston together, but I didn't find their storyline in the Premiere particularly engaging. I'm glad that Amelia stayed true to herself, but I hate that Link has decided marriage is the only way forward and that they're still fighting.
The only moment that really made me laugh out of the hour was when Jo opened the door and Levi was in that ridiculous outfit. I loved the FaceTime call between Meredith and Hayes, but I hated the context. Honestly, I'm not really excited about any upcoming storyline this season which makes me really sad. I'm usually super positive and hopeful when it comes to this show, but this episode just stomped all over my dreams. All I can hope for now is that they pull a twist and everything I was hoping for happens in the mid-season finale otherwise I don't think I'm going to like this season very much.
Until next time!
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princeescaluswords · 3 years
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I see you are a huge fan of fics where Scott McCall dies. Don't worry! More content coming right up! ;)))
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As a matter of fact I do enjoy fiction where Scott dies, so thank you very much.
Indeed, my first multi-chaptered Teen Wolf fanfiction, completed all in the way back in 2016 when I was new to both fandom and fanfiction and called Army of Ghosts, has Scott dying in the first chapter. He’s blown up in an ambush and then purposefully dismembered, and the rest of the story is an exploration of how Stiles copes with it. Hint: not well. It’s quite a dark story.
You see, there’s nothing wrong with Dark Fiction, by which I mean fiction which explores activities or events that are rejected as undesirable by modern society, in a way that centers the narratives on the activities or events in and of themselves, and not simply as obstacles for the protagonist to overcome. I believe that not only should these stories exist but they serve a valuable purpose when it comes to understanding the people around us.
My objection has always been to what I call Exploitative Fiction, by which I mean fiction which portrays activities or events that are rejected as undesirable by modern society, in a way that ignores context, consequences and even logic, with the end goal being to present those activities or events as positive experiences for a purpose not directly connected to the activity or event itself.
That’s wordy, isn’t it? Let me give you some examples then to help clarify. I consider it Exploitative Fiction when rape is presented as a step on the path to love, where physical coercion into the sexual act is seen as evidence of passion, but the consequences of employing violence as a shorthand for possessive desire are simply negated because the goal of the story is romantic rapture. I consider it Exploitative Fiction when a slave falls in love with their owner and they develop true feelings for each other, but they still exist within the same slave-owning society, yet the context of that relationship is ignored simply to produce the most intense version of you-and-me-against the world. I consider it Exploitative Fiction when writers create a fanfiction collection called 101 Ways to Kill Scott McCall, in which it is a safe bet that these aren’t explorations of how his death affects others but merely vessels for the unbridled rage of people furious that MTV decided to film a television show with a minority heroic protagonist as the lead.
The reaction to this caution is for individuals to purposefully confuse Dark Fiction and Exploitative Fiction, attempting to shift the argument by obscuring the difference. They employ the motte-and-bailey fallacy, where they point out that Exploitative Fiction is a form of Dark Fiction but choose to defend Dark Fiction, which isn' t the topic. In other words, when someone says “Hey, maybe you should be careful when sharing a story where a traumatized sixteen-year-old with abandonment issues enters into a relationship with a middle-aged millionaire white male serial killer, whose very presence will isolate the teenager from his family and friends, that you don’t present it as a flawless gateway to perfect happiness?” they respond with “You just want everything to be sunshine and rainbows and good triumphing over evil, you Puritan Scold!” and suddenly a person wondering why a story straight out of the discarded scripts of To Catch a Predator is being used as spank-bank material is labeled as Goody Chastity, Implacable Enemy of Joy and Sexy Fun.
“But PEW,” you say, “Isn’t this just your opinion?” And my reply is “Yes, it is my opinion, but it’s not just mine. Let’s talk about Kyle Rayner’s girlfriend.”
For those who don’t know, the term “fridging” came about from an issues of Green Lantern, where a supervillain killed Kyle Rayner’s girlfriend and stuffed her into a refrigerator for him to find. Whatever someone may think of that particular storyline, it started a conversation about female characters being killed as a function of a male character’s development. Having a supervillain brutally murder the loved one of a hero is pretty dark. It’s Dark Fiction. No one said that supervillains can’t murder or can’t murder certain people or that the hero can’t react to those murders. The complaint was that the female character existed solely to be murdered. Her only function in the story was to generate Kyle’s angst, to set up a situation where his character is explored. She was Exploited.
Why is this a big deal? Because it happens a lot, and not just in comic books. In television, in movies, in literature, women are often reduced in narrative function again and again to shortcuts for male character development. Better scholars than me have written about this exhaustively and pointed out how this fictional exploitation feeds into real-world exploitation (and vice-versa). It’s not hard to find a significant amount of public research.
So yeah, in posts like this one, I complain about Exploitative Fiction in the fandom community to which I belong. Because it doesn’t take a literary critic to read these stories and perceive that the goal of the story isn’t to explore the darkness in which Stiles and his killer boyfriend (whether that be Derek or Peter) murder his best friend, it’s the satisfaction of rage that their white favorites weren’t the focus of the show. Again, again, and again in humiliating, degrading detail Scott is murdered or maimed or stripped of power, in one-sided beat downs that follow no discernible internal rules but one: white male characters must win. It’s not about a power struggle or logical consequences, it’s about punishing a character for daring to be the lead, and it’s racist.
You know how I know that? Because I have never found a story where Stiles and Peter hunt down and murder Isaac Lahey for the crime of abandoning the Hale Pack, slandering Peter, or physically attacking Stiles twice. Because I have never found a story where ArchSpark Stiles tortures Jackson or strips him of his lycanthropy because he almost killed the Hales and his father, rejected Derek, and was forced to serve Gerard. Because I have found few stories where Stiles is murdered by Peter because he was plotting against him, and the evidence is that Stiles said mean things about him. It’s nine hundred and ninety times out of a thousand, it's Bad Alpha/Friend Scott, or if it’s not Scott, it’s Sinister Tree Wizard Deaton. And the sample size, my friends, is very large.
So no, I’m not against Dark Fiction. In my fiction, Scott has been killed, maimed, and imprisoned. (I’ve actually been accused of being obsessed with putting Scott in jail.) I’ve explored the consequences of these actions on Scott and the people around him, and it hasn’t always been a happy ending. I look forward to reading stories where he has endured terrible trauma. I’m reading one right now that I’m simply head-over-heels about. I just think that Exploitative Fiction needs to be addressed, head on, especially when it feeds fandom racism.
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georgefairbrother · 3 years
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This week in 1979, (June 21st), a court verdict brought at least some closure to one of the most dramatic political scandals of 1970s Britain.
The BBC reported;
“…Former Liberal Party leader Jeremy Thorpe has walked out of the Old Bailey a free man, after a jury cleared him of the attempted murder of Norman Scott. Mr Thorpe, who resigned as leader in 1976 amid allegations that he had had a homosexual affair with Mr Scott, hailed his acquittal as 'a complete vindication'…”
It took the jury 15 hours of deliberation spread over three days to reach its verdict, with Thorpe and three co-defendants all cleared of the charges.
Jeremy Thorpe (1929-2014) had been leader of the Liberal Party since 1967, and was at his most powerful during the double election year of 1974 when he declined Edward Heath's offer to form a coalition which would have kept the Tories in power. Thorpe had held the constituency of North Devon since 1959, but was voted out at the 1979 general election, on the eve of his highly publicised trial.
It had been alleged that Thorpe had been in a relationship with Norman Scott (real name Norman Josiffe) in the 1960s, at which time homosexuality was illegal. Scott had become talkative and troublesome during the 1970s, including revealing the relationship in open court during an unrelated legal action, and even though by then same-sex relationships were legal, publicity of this nature, in the context of the time, would have ended a political career. It was alleged that Jeremy Thorpe ordered a ‘hit’ on Norman Scott, through an intermediary, to be carried out by Andrew Newton. Scott survived by virtue of the fact that Newton’s gun had jammed, although he had managed to kill Scott’s dog, for which he was convicted.
Despite the acquittal, Thorpe’s reputation and career did not recover, and attempts to serve in other facets of public life were frustrated. He died after a long battle with Parkinson's Disease in 2014.
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homorazzi · 5 years
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OUT magazine’s annual celebration of the most influential LGBTQ people of the year is here. The 2018 OUT 100 list marks the most diverse one yet with numerous trans, non-binary, women, people of color, and honorees under the age of 35 who are being celebrated.
The publication not only unveiled the full list, but the four collectible covers snapped by photographer Martin Schoeller. The Queer Eye cast, Bobby Berk, Karamo Brown, Tan France, Antoni Porowski, and Jonathan Van Ness, snagged the honor of being Entertainers of the Year. Meanwhile, Billy Porter, SOPHIE and Emma Gonzalez snagged Performer of the Year, Artist of the Year and Newsmaker of the Year respectively.
Queer Eye Cast On Original Fab Five
“The original show was a trailblazer,” says Van Ness, the new grooming guru with a wealth of sassy quips to match his pristine cascade of hair. Berk, the design expert whose religious struggles have enriched his on-air narrative, adds, “I love that we’re able to take such a groundbreaking show from a pivotal time in my development and still make it work today.”
Billy Porter On Challenges He’s Faced In Industry
“I was pigeonholed into the only thing that the industry could handle at the time: the magical fairy faggot,” Porter says. “Don’t get me wrong: What I was given was an opportunity to stop the show, but when it came to my humanity, nobody wanted to discuss that.”
SOPHIE On Her Music
“My music is political, but talking about politics is boring,” she says. “I’d rather have a more emotional conversation through the music. You can say something more multidimensional. Pop music is the most relevant format we have to discuss anything. A song can have meaning to people anywhere, without any context.”
Emma Gonzalez On Changing Narrative On Gun Law Reform
“One of the coolest experiences for me was the Peace March in Chicago on Friday, June 15,” she says, explaining that activists in Chicago organized marches every Friday to combat the city’s high rate of gun violence in the summer months. “We marched through the streets and neighborhoods, and we were all chanting, screaming, and singing. And we brought the press with us to shine more light on the event.”
Additional award recipients went to Cynthia Nixon (Hero of the Year), Jeremy Scott (Stylemaker of the Year), Renee Richards (Legend) and Randy Barbato & Fenton Bailey (Media Pioneers). Check out a few select images from this year’s OUT 100 gallery below.
Clemons Kiersey
Wanda Sykes
Adam Rippon
Queer Eye Cast
Kim Petras
Cynthia Nixon
Ryan Murphy
Kate McKinnon
Gus Kenworthy
For the complete OUT 100 gallery, click here.
Other notable OUT 100 honorees in specific categories include the following:
Music
Brendon Urie, lead singer of the smash-hit band Panic! At the Disco Kehlani, breakout artist who’s collaborated with Demi Lovato, Halsey, and G-Eazy, to name a few Lauren Jauregui, member of the girl group Fifth Harmony who’s carving out her solo career MNEK, a London-based artist succeeding with his own brand of queer R&B Samantha Ronson, celebrated artist and DJ who returns this year with a new band
TV & Film
Kate McKinnon, the ever-reigning jewel of SNL who’s successfully crossed over to movies Hannah Gadsby, the Tasmanian comedy who became a sensation with her Netflix special Nanette Mj Rodriguez, Indya Moore, and Dominique Jackson, the breakout trans female leads from Pose Rupert Everett, a renowned actor who outdid himself this year as the writer, director, and star of the movie The Happy Prince Justin Simien, the uncompromising creator of the film and series Dear White People Max Mutchnick, the Emmy-winning creator of Will & Grace, and its triumphant reboot Daniela Vega, breakout Chilean actress whose film A Fantastic Woman won an Oscar this year
Sports
Gus Kenworthy, Olympic snowboarder whose on-air kiss with his boyfriend made national news Adam Rippon, Olympic figure skater whose vocal opposition to the powers that be made him a hero Layshia Clarendon, WNBA player who’s become a sought-after MVP in her sport Collin Martin, professional soccer player who inspired countless people by coming out this year Sue Bird, another WNBA player who rivals Clarendon in both notoriety and skill
Fashion
Steven Kolb, the president and CEO of the CFDA Sue Y. Nabi, former president and CEO of L’Oreal and Lancome, and founder and CEO of Orveda Jeremy Scott, the hugely successful creative director at Moschino The Blonds, fashion design duo (and couple) who’ve been breaking boundaries for 18 years Willy Chavarria, designer whose eponymous label reached a peak this year Becca McCarren-Tran, founder and designer of the gender-inclusive and body-positive sportswear line Chromat
Activists, Politicians & Community Organizers
Danica Roem, trans politician elected to the Virginia House of Delegates Kimahli Powell, Executive director of Rainbow Railroad Adam Eli, activist for Gays Against Guns, queer Jewish rights, and more Stan Sloan, Executive director of the Family Equality council Amber Hikes, Philadelphia’s new director of the Office of LGBT Affairs Nick Fager, founder of the medical service Lighthouse LGBT, as well as QueerTherapy
For the full OUT 100 list, head over to OUT.com.
Related Stories:
Gus Kenworthy & Adam Rippon Are American Idols For OUT Magazine
OUT Magazine Reveals 2018 Most Eligible Bachelors List
Andrew Garfield Hasn’t Closed The Door To Being Sexually Attracted To A Man
OUT 100 2018 Honorees Include Queer Eye Cast, Billy Porter, Gus Kenworthy, Kim Petras & Plenty More OUT magazine’s annual celebration of the most influential LGBTQ people of the year is here. The…
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maiagaru · 2 years
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Scott and Bailey Out of Context · s03e05 · Witness
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thesinglesjukebox · 6 years
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TRAVIS SCOTT - STOP TRYING TO BE GOD
[6.33]
A title that amazingly I have not seen in any comments section anywhere...
Jacob Sujin Kuppermann: Travis Scott embodies all the worst tropes of modern pop-rap. He's an autotune-heavy style-biter who's more content to let his more-famous friends and more-talented producers carry him than actually rap anything interesting. When he does deign to perform, he vacillates randomly between codeine'd out mumbling and ear-piercing screaming. That said, he's extremely good at what he does, especially on his most recent album, the grandiose Astroworld. Of all the songs on that record, "Stop Trying to Be God" is the most extravagant by far, running longer than five-and-a-half minutes on the record and featuring contributions by Kid Cudi, Philip Bailey, James Blake, and (implausibly) Stevie Wonder (on harmonica, natch.) A song as overstuffed and pretentious as this plays to all of Scott's strengths. His boasts may not make any sense, but they sound as incredible in their word salad as any progressive rocker's declarations when placed against Scott, CuBeatz, JBeatzz and Mike Dean's production, which feels spacious like a cathedral. The featured guests fill that space well. Stevie Wonder is the MVP -- how could he not be, with his harmonica cutting through the track at every turn? -- but everyone acquits themselves nicely. And for once Scott gets to position himself as ringleader of a grand spectacle, rather than marginalized on his own song. [8]
Tim de Reuse: Woozy, half-awake, defeated, an inward talking-to after a long night of needlessly exhausting yourself -- it's got a mood going, certainly. Scott's verses don't do a great job of making the listener empathize with those afflicted with the ills of money and fame, unfortunately; the only truly poignant lines come from the little James Blake sub-song that someone spliced in. The real success is in the atmosphere, which links together its stylistic references with dream logic. Stevie Wonder's harmonica is surreal enough to grant emotional heft to the final minute of foggy moaning. [7]
Alfred Soto: His slurring more eloquent than Drake but no less noxious in pint glass portions, Travis Scott stretches on "Stop Trying..." and reaches. Credit the still impressive coloration of Stevie Wonder's harmonica, an Aquemini-era Outkast album track whose surliness is earned. [7]
Stephen Eisermann: The beat is littered with enough sound effects and harmonica that the song sounds almost otherworldly, but even in conjunction with the vocals from Stevie Wonder, James Blake, and Kid Cudi, this song is nothing more than an interesting-sounding piece of art, like a pretty painting with no moving context. [5]
Iain Mew: A pedestrian haunted house/teacup ride combo, almost saved when they start trying to do something else and the ride trundles into a surreal subterranean mass. Ambition and scale can't be enough on its own without more of an idea of purpose, but coupling it to the unexpected is at least something. [5]
Ashley John: In June I was waiting in line for hot chicken in Nashville, standing in front of two separate but indiscernibly different groups of 20-something boys in the area for Bonnaroo. They were doing the back-and-forth of festival-going, trading lines like "the lineup is soooo sick" with "would be sick if someone brought out Travis." Later in June I started a new job and sat at lunch with a few fellow new hires, and we started talking about recent releases. Someone brought up Travis Scott and how Astroworld was never coming. Another assumed the natural opposition with evidence via stitched-together social media posts. Travis Scott is perfect at this role: the type of musician you long after because the longing feels better than the fulfillment ever could. Astroworld borders on great, and "Stop Trying to Be God" is one of the best among it, but Travis Scott himself is better as a vessel for whatever we need him to be -- a small-talk starter, a bridge over a lull in conversation, background beats to spur a head nod in summer office air conditioning. [6]
[Read, comment and vote on The Singles Jukebox]
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unknought · 7 years
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Is there a particular trend in recent posts that you dislike more than usual? This response (and the reaction to it) are surprising to me, and so while I don't want to ~start a discourse~, would you be willing to give a general, vague idea about what you find *so* bad about it recently? (Since I'm really basically clueless as the reason for the reaction, and would very much like to be aware of the general idea of these criticisms so that I don't feel like a blind sheeple. Thanks.)
So to be clear I'm not saying that slatestarcodex has gotten a lot worse lately. I'm not sure if it has, but I do know that in the past year or so my own reaction to it has gotten a lot more negative, to the point where whenever I've visited the blog in recent months I've gotten a lot more frustration than insight out of it.
I don't have the energy or inclination to write a criticism that would be fair to Scott or convincing to anyone, but my general complaints look something like this: Most of the arguments he rebuts are either complete strawmen or weak versions of arguments which have much stronger versions in common usage, and the rebuttals tend to be written in a way that fails to really engage with where his opposition is coming from. A lot of what he writes is to some degree an attempt to defend his ingroup (variously nerds, rationalists, Bay Area techies, and just smart people) from perceived attacks which are usually overstated and sometimes entirely imaginary. He has a tendency to a sort of contrarianism (he's one of the rare few willing to speak the truth that others find politically inconvenient!) that interacts pretty poorly with the strawmanning/weakmanning previously mentioned. Very frequently he ends up defending claims that are technically true but ignoring the context and signalling effect of what he's saying and how he's saying it. To put it in the jargon, I guess, he is building a lot of superweapons and defending the mottes of a lot of pretty awful baileys.
(I do not want people to reblog this, I am not interested in starting a debate, and this is probably getting deleted in a day or two. I'm not trying to convince anyone else to stop reading the blog, or even to read it more critically. I'm just describing my own feelings about it because I was asked, because it might be useful to other people to know that this is a reaction which exists, and because it might be validating to people who feel similarly but haven't felt comfortable voicing those criticisms.)
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lonely-night · 6 months
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scott and bailey out of context part 273427643
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littlewalken · 7 years
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What’s on my Kindle
Part of making a list of all the books I have be they analog, digital pdf, or digital Kindle (which is what the k means). 
So, um, make your own jokes/assumptions about the kind of person I am based on my partial library. They’re all real books and quite a few are free public domain.
Adventures of an American Girl in Victorian London- Elizabeth Banks (k) Adventures of Pinocchio-Carlo Collodi (k) The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes-Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (k) The Age Of Innocence- Edith Wharton (k) Alice’s Adventure in Wonderland-Lewis Carroll (k) American on Purpose-Craig Ferguson (k) And the Universe So Big: Understanding Batman The Killing Joke-Julian Darius (k) Anne of Green Gables, Avonlea, The Island-LM Montgomery (k) Appropriate clothes for the High School Girl- Virginia M Alexander (k) The Artist’s Complete Guide to Facial Expression- Gary Faign (k) The Awakening and Selected Short Stories- Kate Chopin (k) Backstreet Mom-Denise McLean (k) Batman and Psychology: A Dark and Stormy Knight-Travis Langly (k) Batman at 45 part 1-4-Chris Gould (k) Batman a Celebration of 75 years-Bob Kane (k) Batman: Battle for the Cowl-Tony Daniel (k) Batman: Death in the Family (includes new Robin)- Jim Starlin (k) Batman: Under the Red Hood- Judd Winick (k) Becoming Batman- E Paul Zehr (k) Behind the Burley Q:The Story of Burlesque in America- Leslie Zmeckis (k) all colored fairy books Andrew Lang (k) The Bobsey Twind or Merry Days Indoors and Out- Laura Lee Hope (k) The Book of Hallowe’en- Ruth Edna Kelley (k) The Book of Household Management- Mrs Beeton (k) The Book of 1001 Nights v1&2 (k) Boy and Girl Wonders: Robin in Cultural Context- Mary Borsellino (k) The Brain and Voice in Speech and Song- FW Mott (k) The Burlesque Handbook- Jo Weldon (k) The Call of The Wild- Jack London (k) Candidie- Voltaire (k) Carmilla- Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu (k) The Castle of Oranto-Horace Walpole (k) Celebrated Crimes-Alexandre Dumas (k) The Circus Age- Janet M Davis (k) Circus and Carnival Ballyhoo: AW Stencil (k) Circus Bodies: Cultrural Identity in Aerial Performance- Peta Tait (k) The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce vol 1&2 (k) Come Hither: A Commonsense Guide to Kinky Sex (k) The Complete Works of Nellie Bly (k) Cured: The Tale of Two Imaginary Boys- Lol Tolhurst (k) A Curious Man: The Strange and Brilliant Life of Ripley- Neal Thompson (k) Daily Life in Victorian London- Lee Jackson (k) Danse Macabre- Stephen King (k) Dark Places (Locations)- Barry Curtis (k) Dear Boy: The life of Keith Moon- Tony Fletcher (k) Death At SeaWorld- David Kirby (k) Demonology and Devil-lore- Daniel Conway Moncure (k) Depeche Mode: The Biography- Steve Malins corrected from analog version(k) Dick Greyson, Boy Wonder- Kristen L Geaman (k) The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History- Kathrine Ashenburg (k) The Discoverie of Witchcraft- Reginald Scot (k) The Discovery or Witches- Mathew Hopkins (k) Dolly and I: A Story for Little Folks- Oliver Optic (k) The Dominion in 1983- Ralph Centennius (k) Drawing Drapery from Head to Toe Dover- Cliff Young (k) Dyatlov Pass Keeps It’s Secrets- Irena Lobatcheva (k) Electric Dreamland: Amusement Parks, Movies, and American Modernity- Lauren Rabinovitz (k) Elizabethan Demonology- Thomas Alfred Spalding (k) Emma- Jane Austen (k) Enchanted Hunters: The Powers of Stories in Childhood (k) Famous Imposters- Bram Stocker (k) Fancies and Goodnights v1&2- John Collier (k) Fashion Victims: The Dangers of Dress Past and Present- Alison Matthews David (k) Fashionably Fatal- Summer Strevons (k) Faust- Johan Wolfgang von Gothe (k) Female Masculinity- Judith Halberstam (k) Fetish, Fashion, Sex & Power- Valerie Steele (k) Fifty-Two Stories For Girls (k) Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions- Edwin Abott (k) Forensic Sculpting Step by Step in Photographs- Seth Wolfson (k) Frankenstein- Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (k) Freak Show: Presenting Human Oddities for Amusement- Robert Bogdan (k) The Freak-garde: Extraordinary Bodies and Revolutionary Art- Robin Blyn (k) Freaks: We Who Are Not As Others- Daniel P Mannix A General History of the Pyrates- Daniel Defoe (k) The Girl of the Period and Other Social Essays vol1&2- Eliza Lynn Linton (k) Godey’s Lady Book 1851 vol 1&2 (k) The Golden Asse- Apuleius (k) The Great God Pan- Arthur Machen (k) Gulliver’s Travels- Jonathan Swift (k) Harper’s Monthly 1850 vol1&2 (k) The Haunting of Hill House- Shirley Jackson (k) Heidi- Johanna Spyri (k) The History of the Devil- Daniel Defoe (k) Hold Up Your Head, Girls!- Annie H Ryder (k) Horrible Prettiness: Burlesques and American Culture- Robert C Allen (k) The House of Souls- Arthur Machen (k) The House of Seven Gables- Nathaniel Hawthorne (k) How to Be a Victorian: A Dawn to Dusk Guide to Victorian Life (k) Hustlers, Harlots, and Heroes- Kirsta D Ball (k) Hysteria: The Disturbing History- Andrew Scull (k) If Walls Could Talk: An Intimate History of the Home- Lucy Worsley (k) Illuminated Manuscripts- John William Bradley (k) In A Glas Darkly vol 1-3- Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu (k) Inside Pee-wee’s Playhouse- Caseen Gaines (k) The Invisible Man- HG Wells (k) Irish Witchcraft and Demonology- ST John Seymour (k) The Island of Dr Moreau- HG Wells (k) Jane Eyre: AN Autobiography- Charlotte Bronte (k) Jim Henson: The Biography- Brian Jay Jones (k) Jimmy Page: Magus, Musician, Man: An Unauthorized Biography (k) LaVie Electrique- Albert Robia (k) Ladies’ Clothing in the 1830s- Sarah E Mitchel (k) Lady Susan- Jane Austin (k) Lair of the White Worm- Bram Stoker (k) The League of Regrettable Superheroes- Jon Morris (k) The Legend of Sleepy Hollow- Washington Irving (k) The LEGO Adventure Book vol 1-3- Megan H Rothrock (k) The LEGO Neighborhood Book: Build Your Own Town!- Brian Lyles (k) Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft- Sir Walter Scott (k) Liberace Extravaganza!- Connie Furr Soloman (k) Liberace: AN American Boy- Darden Asbury Pyron (k) Life as a Victorian Lady- Pamela Horn (k) Life in a Victorian Household- Pamela Horn (k) The Life of PT Barnum- Joel Benton (k) Listening to Whales: What the Orcas Have Taught Us- Alexandra Morton (k) Little Lord Fauntleroy- Frances Hodgson Burnett (k) A Little Princess- Frances Hodgson Burnett (k) Little Women- Louisa May Alcott (k) Lock and Key k Kipling- My Own True Ghost Story, The Sending of Dana Da, In the House of Suddhoo, His Wedded Wife Doyle- A Case of Identity, A scandal in Bohemia, The Red-Headed League Castle- The Baron’s Quarry Weyman- The Fowl in the Pot Stevenson- The Pavilion on the Links Collins- The Dream Woma Anonymous- The Lost Duchess, The Minor Canon, The Pipe, The Puzzle, The Great Valdez Sapphire Dickens- The Haunted House, No 1 Branch Line: The Signal Man Bulwer-Lyton- The Haunted and the Hunters, The incantation DeQuincey- The Avenger Maturin- Melmouth the Wanderer Sterne- A Mystery With A Moral Thackeray- On Being Found Out, The Notch on the Axe Anonymous- Bourgonef, The Closed Cabinet Crawford- By the Waters of Paradise Freeman- The Shadows on the Wall Post- The Corpus Delicti Bierce- The Oblong Box, The Gold-Bug Irving- Wolfert Webber, Adventure of the Black Fisherman Brown- Wieland’s Madness O’Brien- The Golden Ingot, My Wife’s Tempter Hawthorne- The Minister’s Black Veil Anonymous- Horror a True Tale Cherbuliez- Count Kostia Bourget- Andre Cornelius Anonymous- The Last of the Costellos, The Lady Betty’s Indiscretion Pushkin- The Queen of Spades Jelihovsky- The General’s Will Dostoyevsky- Crime and Punishment Checkoff- The Safety Match Krestovski- Knights of Industry Begsoe- The Amputated Arms Larssen- The Manuscript Ingemann- The Sealed ROom Blicher- The Rector of Veilbye Molnar- The Living Death Marus- 13 at Table Elck- The Tower Room Train- A flight in to Texas Woodward- Adventures in the Secret Service of the Post Office Department, An Erring Shepherd, An Aspirant for Congress, The Fortune of Seth Savage, A Wish Unexpectedly Granted, An Old Game Revived, A Formidable Weapon Lang- St Germaine the Deathless, The Man in the Iron Mask, The Legend, The Valet’s History, The Valet’s Master, Original Papers in the Case of Roux De Marsilly Houdin- A Conjurer’s Confession, Self Training, Second Sight, The Magician Who Became Ambassador, Facing the Arab’s Pistol Abbott- Fraudulent Spiritualism Revealed, A Doctor of the Occult, How the Tricks Succeeded, The Name of the Dead, Mind Reading in Public, Some Famous Exposures Carrington- More ticks of Spiritualism, Matter through Matter, Deception Explained by the Science of Psychology Anonymous- How Spirits Materialize The Lone Ranger Rides- Fran Striker (k) The Lost Prince- Frances Hodgson Burnett (k) Love and Frienship- Jane Austen (k) Lucy Maud Montgomery short stories (k) Madamoiselle de Maupin- Theophile Gautier (k) Maggie, a Girl of the Streets- Stephen Crane (k) Magic and Witchcraft- anonymous (k) Make Room for TV- Lynn Spigel (k) The Mammoth Encyclopedia of the Unsolved- Colin Wilson (k) The Man in the Iron Mask-Alexandre Dumas (k) The Man With Two Left Feet and Other Stories- PG Wodehouse (k) Mansfield Park- Jane Austen (k) Maps of the Imagination: The Writer as Cartographer- Peter Turchi (k) Mark of Zorro- Johnston McCulley (k) Mary Schweidler, the Amber Witch- Wilhelm Meinhold (k) Medical Muses: Hysteria in 19th Century Paris- Asti Hustvedt (k) Medieval Underpants and Other Blunders- Susanne Alleyn (k) Memoirs of a Muppets Writer- Joseph A Bailey (k) Memoirs of Extraordinary popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds- Charles Mackay (k) Memoirs of Fanny Hill- John Cleland (k) Men in Bras, Panties, and Dresses- Dr Vernon Coleman (k) The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood- Howard Pyle (k) Metamorphosis- Franz Kafka (k) Miss Lucy’s Victorian Scrapbook- Lucy Booker Roper (k) Modern Magic- Maximillian Schele de Vere (k) Modern Women and What is Said of Them- E Lynn Linton (k) The Monk; a romance- MG Lewis (k) Monkee Business- Eric Lefcowitz (k) The Monster and Other Stories- Stephen Crane (k) Monsters in America- W Scott Poole (k) Monsters: Evil Beings, Mythical Beasts, and All Manner of Imaginary Terrors- David D Gilmore (k) The Most Disgusting Jobs in Victorian London- Henry Mayhew (k) Movie-Made America:A Cultural History of American Movies- Robert Sklar (k) A Muse and a Maze: Writing as Puzzle, Mystery, and Magic- Peter Turchi (k) My Man Jeeves- PG Wodehouse (k) The Mysteries of Udolpho- And Ward Radcliffe (k) Mythical Monsters- Charles Gould (k) Neil Patrick Harris:Choose Your Own Autobiography (k) Never Done: A History of American Housework- Susan Strasser (k) Never Enough: The Story of The Cure- Jeff Apter (k) New Kids on the Block’s Hangin’ Tough (33 1/3)- Rebecca Wallwork (k) Night Shift- Stephen King (k) Nightmares in Red, White, and Blue- Joseph Maddrey (k) The North American Medical and Surgical Journal July 1826 (k) Northanger Abbey- Jane Austin (k) Orca: The Whale Called Killer0 Erich Hoyt (k) The Origin and Nature of the Emotions- George Washington Crile (k) The Original Folk and Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm (k) Out of Sync: A Memoir- Lance Bass (k) Personal Geographies: Explorations in Mixed Media Mapmaking- Jill K Berry (k) Persuasion- Jane Austin (k) Peter Pan- JM Barrie (k) The Phantom of the Opera- Gaston Leroux (k) The Philosophy of Horror- Thomas Fahy etc (k) The Physics of Superheroes: Spectacular Second Edition- James Kakailos (k) The Picture of Dorian Gray- Oscar Wilde (k) Picturing Disability: Beggar, Freak, Citizen, and Other Photographic Rhetoric- Robert Bogdan (k) Prester John- John Buchan (k) Pride and Prejudice- Jane Austin (k) The Prisoner of Zenda- Anthony Hope (k) The Psychology of Beauty- Ethell Dench Puffer Howes (k) Queen Unseen- Peter Hince (k) Queen: The Ultimate Illustrated History- Phil Sutcliffe (k) Raggedy Ann Stories- Johnny Gruelle (k) Right Ho, Jeeves- PG Wodehouse (k) Robin the Boy Wonder: A Celebration of 75 Years (k) A Room With A View- EM Forster (k) Salem Witchcraft v1&2- Charles Wentworth Upham (k) Sawdust and Spangles Stories and Secrets of the Circus- WC Coup (k) The Scarlet Letter- Nathaniel Hawthorne (k) The Scarlet Pimpernel- Baroness Emmuska Orcsy (k) The Science of Monsters- Matt Kaplan (k) The Scrap Book vol 1 #1-6 from 1906 (k) The Secret Garden- Frances Hodgson Burnett (k) The Secret History of Wonder Woman- Jill 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post-febrile · 7 years
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Madi Scott. Madi Scott has a name and a history and a family and her own internal conflicts and motivations. So when I see posts lamenting the fact that she's also in love? That she's deeply, deeply loved by one of the show's main characters? Posts fretting over the fact that she doesn't fit neatly into the "strong black woman who don't need no man" trope?I want to fucking scream. The urge to scream is actually keeping me from falling asleep right now. Because there is no fucking shortage of black woman characters who exist solely to serve as emotional support for other characters. You don't know how many fucking black woman characters that I have loved over the years who weren't even given a fucking LAST NAME (Michonne, Guinevere, the Maroon queen, for fucks sake) or whose connection to their history/roots/family were flat out ignored (never fucking forget Alisha Bailey being buried in a ditch in the fucking woods without a single family member present). And then there is Madi, who we've seen: confronting and then mourning her absentee father and negotiating diplomacy, the legacy of slavery, and the future of the entire Maroon community with her mother AND coming to terms with her role as future queen AND forging a partnership with the pirates AND managing tensions between her people and the pirates AND leaving the comfort of the Maroon camp - the only home she's ever known - to sail the high seas AND marching to war alongside her newfound allies AND falling in love AND saving others in peril and (gasp) falling into peril and needing to be saved (which is downright subversive given the many black fictional characters who exist solely to save other, often white characters (Bonnie fucking Bennett) And despite all this, over and over I see concern trolling posts handwringing over her "lack of development." And I shouldn't be surprised but I am anyway because from where I am standing, Madi is one of the most well-developed black woman characters I've ever encountered. And like, you don't get to erase all that she is, you don't get to deny her rich characterization and backstory and the historical context upon which her character is founded because you don't dig her and Silver together or because she disrupts your fave ship. And you don't get to tell black women, real or fictional, that their chief role in life is to be "strong, standalone and independent black FEMALES that don't need no man." Black women can love and be loved and be strong. And you will fucking deal.
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