#type: interviews
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sebastiansource · 2 days ago
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SEBASTIAN STAN Marvel Entertainment
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harveyguillensource · 2 days ago
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Posted by FX - who would the WWDITS characters thank if they won an award?
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interact-if · 1 day ago
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Pride Month Feature #3: Under Our Skins
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Game: Under Our Skins
Author: Rowan (@if-underourskins)
Tags: Urban fantasy, romance, action (kinda)
Being hunted isn't for the weak. You've been on the run for the majority of your life, though it seems to only get more and more frequent as you age. You're a shapeshifter, whose bones, muscles and skin twist and stretch to transform, and it's why you've been looking over your shoulder all this time. 
You’re forced to flee when Officers from the Agency of Public Safety and Threat Containment (PSTC) came knocking on your door. They're who you've been running from all this time, the reason why you're alone...That is, till you end up in the town of Arden Grove and meet other shapeshifters like yourself. Do you trust them? Will they stay? Or will you end up alone once again?
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Tell me more about yourself!
I’ve mentioned this a couple of times, but I’m a huge fan of the Spiderverse franchise, and I am in a lot of different fandoms. My favourite colour is red, which is really funny because the colour scheme of Under Our Skins is blue and grey, and I’m ethnically Chinese, which is actually why Elexis (one of the ROs) is Chinese. 
I am also pansexual and genderqueer, and there are elements of that that can be seen in my characters, especially Elexis and Seraph.
2. Can you tell me a bit about what you’re working on right now and your journey into interactive fiction? What inspired the game/story you’re currently writing?
I am currently working on a shapeshifter IF, aka Under Our Skins! I started with visual novels first, back in my 2024 exam season, and quickly got hooked. The first IF I ever played was Wayfarer and that led to many ranting sessions about it (my poor friends were stuck with me raving about how much I loved the game for days) and from there, I scoured itch.io for more games like that, which is how I stumbled across interactive fiction! For the next few months, it was just me falling in love with multiple interactive fictions before deciding I wanted to try my hand at writing one. 
What inspired Under Our Skins was just a car on Pinterest, and with a lot of time on my hands and a writer’s brain, I daydreamed a scene with my first character (and said car). I liked the scene so much that I then proceeded to think about how it’d make sense and what sort of a world it’d be set in and boom, I had the (rough) settings and systems of Under Our Skins. 
Read on for the full interview!
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3. How does your work feature aspects of your queer identity / experience? 
I think that my writing will be influenced by the things I experience and observe in real life no matter what, and though there aren’t direct correlations, there are parallels in the way shapeshifters are treated and the way they adapt to society with the way queer people adapt to “pass” and more. 
Not all of them are purposeful, but when writing about the oppression of shapeshifters, I do take “inspiration” from the oppression that queer people face. There’s also the fact that the way shapeshifters cope with it, whether hiding or just dampening it to be more “normal” (and the fact that there’s a “normal” at all, when so many of them are born shapeshifters) just reminds me of what queer people have to do irl. 
The whole IF is not meant to be a commentary on queer people but I’ve definitely taken inspiration or been influenced by queer experiences.
4. What does your writing process look like? Any rituals or habits? Any tips, tricks, philosophies or approaches that have worked very well for you? 
My writing process is a mess. Right now, I have a planning doc, a writing doc and a google sheet with many different sections split to help me juggle the work of writing everything while stimulating my brain enough to get to work on the IF. It’s honestly pretty scattered, but hey, if it ain’t broke, why fix it?
For the specifics however, it’s mostly just three phases that I constantly go back to. I use an outline to roughly plot out the chapter, which I then refer to when writing. Sometimes my writing veers off the path of my outline, sometimes parts of my outline doesn’t work with what I had written before, and I leave that to the editing part to polish everything up and just hope that it turns out alright. 
As for tips and tricks, there are two very important things that I try to keep in mind when writing: a. Your first draft is going to suck and b. Know what your other characters are doing and their motivations.
For the first, when writing, I often find myself hating whatever words I was typing – to me they all fall flat and miss their mark. This ends up with me hating writing and procrastinating continuing because if it sucks, why should I continue? But here’s the thing: it’s better that it exists and sucks, then to not exist at all. Your first draft is not supposed to be perfect, it’s job is to just exist, to pave a way for your next few drafts to improve on. If it doesn’t exist, there’s nothing to refine. So yeah, my first draft is going to suck, and I need to let it suck as long as I write it.
For the second, this just helps me more in the planning aspect. Knowing what the characters are doing helps me make sure that the timelines all line up, and to help me establish certain things even though the plot doesn’t require it just yet. It makes things feel real and more logical, and it can definitely come in handy when you cross-refer back to it.
5. How do you go about portraying queer characters, queer experiences, or queer storylines in your IF? 
I think the most important part for me is that the character’s queerness is a part of their identity, and is not their only, or most notable trait, while also acknowledging it and the way it has shaped their life.
With Under Our Skins, everyone is queer – 4 out of the 5 ROs are pansexual, one RO is trans and another is a lesbian. These are a part of their identity, and while sometimes it is just what it is, it has also impacted the way others treated them throughout their lives, and in the IF. 
I think the way I write – or will be writing, since the IF is still relatively new – is entirely linked to my queer experiences and the experiences I’ve observed. Parts of my characters I take from my own experience, others from my friends and people online, and there are also parts where I have to take creative liberties almost, like writing accepting parents and homo/transphobia.
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6. Do you have favourite interactive fiction games, characters, scenes or authors that you’d like to recommend?
Here’s a list of IFs I love and adore (in no particular order):
(the famous) Infamous
Press Play
Children of Cain
Wayfarer
When Twilight Strikes
Apt 502
The six that thrive
Stygian Sun: Total Eclipse
Drink Your Villain Juice
Love After Death
The Advisor's Game
Disenchanted
and a lot more I can’t remember off the top of my head!!
7. If you were to say one thing to your readers, other authors, and/or the interactive fiction community: what would it be? 
To my readers, I’d say thank you <33 They’ve been so kind to me and the love that they’ve shown for the IF and characters is honestly so heartwarming and motivating!!
To other authors, y’all are honestly amazing and I hope that your projects work out and that you have nice lives (that sounds like a threat, help). I love so many of your works and it’s honestly an honor (?) to be an interactive fiction author when these are the people I’m standing with.
To the community, please, please be kind. Your comments, whether anonymous or not, are all directed to a person behind the screen – a person who is usually juggling their writing project alongside many, many irl responsibilities. There was a weird influx of hate recently and now that it’s mostly died down (that I’m aware of, anyway), let’s try to make it stay that way. Constructive criticism can be helpful but sending straight up hate is not and can oftentimes undermine an author’s motivation so, yeah, be kind.
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jbaileyfansite · 1 day ago
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Jonathan Bailey recieving a little 'Benson' and telling the story on how he always wanted a puppy as a child but couldn't get it at the press tour of Jurassic World Rebirth [x]
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rafaelsilvasource · 2 days ago
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Rafael L. Silva 'Connects Deeply' With a Character Uncovering Who He Is In 'The Waterfront'
In "The Waterfront," the "9-1-1: Lone Star" actor plays Shawn, who arrives from Texas with a mysterious past — and learns more than he might have bargained for.
By Maddie Ellis | June 20, 2025
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Rafael L. Silva got the call that he booked "The Waterfront" on a Friday. On Tuesday, he was already filming.
"What I was understanding from the role itself — and it was my first time experiencing this in my young career — was that, oh, they want me to really just be me," he tells TODAY.com.
"The Waterfront" follows the affluent Buckley family in a fictional North Carolina coastal town as they struggle to keep their fishery business afloat and turn to drug smuggling to make ends meet.
Silva's character, Shawn, is introduced as the new bartender at the family's restaurant. He shares that he's from Galveston, Texas, and in town because he "wanted a change." But his skills — or lack thereof — behind the bar draw suspicion from Buckley matriarch Belle (Maria Bello).
It's revealed in Episode 2 that Shawn was born from an affair between his late mother, Bebe, and head of the Buckley family, Harlan Buckley (Holt McCallany). Rather than a former bartender, Shawn is actually a law student at the University of Texas at Austin. (Silva, known for starring in the Austin-set "9-1-1: Lone Star," which ended in February 2025, calls this a "happy coincidence," adding, "Maybe Shawn and Carlos crossed paths, we don't know.")
Shawn learned the name of his father as his mother died. So, he decided to temporarily leave his life as he knew it, including his boyfriend, to meet his family.
"Shawn goes the literal distance to learn who his father is, and learning the possibility that he has a father," Silva, 31, says. "I, Rafael, moved to this country with my mom and my brother to be reunited with my own father. I was 13, and we also went the literal distance for that to happen."
Shawn likely never imagined folding into the fiercely loyal Buckley family. By the end, he’s a key member of the group, stepping up to defend Belle when a threat arrives, and coming up with a plan to save his half-sister Bree Buckley (Melissa Benoist) after she’s kidnapped.
"The places where Shawn and I may share in our own existence is this blessed ignorance of not knowing what's ahead," he adds, "but knowing that you have to let go of everything that you have in order to find out what you're capable of having or receiving in the future.
"That's something that I truly connect deeply, because as an immigrant in this country, and especially with the state of the country right now, we didn't come with any one agenda," the Brazilian actor says. "I've never dreamed of being an actor. I never dreamed of living the life that I'm living now."
Shawn's goal of finding where he belongs slowly unfolds over the course of the show, against the backdrop of Harlan, Belle, Bree and Cane's (Jake Weary) scheming to keep their business operating and their drug smuggling under the radar.
"If we go to the core of who I think this character is ... I think there's just this very quiet but thunderous need to not feel alone in life," Silva says.
Silva says creator Kevin Williamson, also responsible for "Dawson's Creek" and "The Vampire Diaries," essentially "builds the foundation of a house." And Silva was able to add in details of the character from there, imagining key traits and a rich backstory. His key question was: Why is Shawn in Havenport, and why now?
"I did take my own creative place in justifying Shawn's relationship with his mother, and justifying, like, how come this m---------- can kick some ass, you know?" he says.
Silva says Shawn came to Havenport because his mother's death marked losing "the most important person." Now, he essentially has nothing to lose.
"Yes, the romantic partner is important, but (with) family, when it comes to blood, it's irreplaceable," he says. "Blood is irreplaceable when it comes to connection. And I think Shawn is after that."
But Shawn’s gradually introduced to the reality of the family’s dealings, which Silva says likely runs counter to his "strong moral compass" and respect for the rules as a future lawyer. And by the end, Shawn may have signed up for more than he bargained for. In the explosive finale, Shawn and Cane hatch a plan to rescue Bree, sneaking onto drug supplier Grady's (Topher Grace) boat before a bloody shootout leaves Grady dead.
"I think Shawn is brokenhearted a little bit by the reality that he's come across who this family, who his family, is," Silva says.
Silva imagines that his character hoped for a world in which the family he met in Havenport was "normal" — or at least, not at the helm of a criminal enterprise.
"He's that compass in the family that is just like, constantly being bombarded with things that makes him want to crawl out of his own skin," Silva says. "I also have questions for Kevin. Who is this guy in the face of all of this? Who has he become? Because at the end of the day, he's still Harlan's son."
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futuristicanoe · 2 days ago
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saw this post by @moileskane so here's what I have :
the link I had saved for this is dead, but it was on La Boîte à Questions circa 2011, I'm sure. :)
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jensenupdates · 2 days ago
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jxmimac · 10 months ago
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Best thing I’ve seen all day
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manchesterau · 7 months ago
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dan live on australian morning show said: "we're the guys that made your daughters hair blue, we're the person that made them a boy, maybe theyre a them now but you gotta love them because if you don't we will and that is a threat"
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mysticdragon3md3 · 1 year ago
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moxleyrollins · 14 days ago
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You could have folded. You could have put this behind you at any moment. But this is your time. — Big E on Naomi finally getting her flowers
MONEY IN THE BANK 2025: POST SHOW | 06.07.25
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intrepidheroesource · 2 months ago
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the intrepid heroes with their thoughts on performing at madison square garden
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fervi-g · 2 months ago
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David Foster Wallace.
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jbaileyfansite · 2 days ago
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Jonathan Bailey, Scarlett Johansson and Mahershala Ali for Jurassic World Rebirth promo in Germany (June 18, 2025) [x]
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rafaelsilvasource · 2 days ago
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Who is Shawn really in The Waterfront? 
In The Waterfront series premiere, Belle is suspicious of the Buckleys’ newest bartender, Shawn. Some of the details he shares are accurate: He is from Texas, and he doesn’t have a girlfriend. However, Shawn is hiding his most important truth: He’s Harlan’s son, and the product of an affair decades prior. Shawn’s mother was Bebe, a waitress in the Buckleys’ restaurant. Bebe kept Shawn’s paternity a secret until just before she died.  So, Shawn came to Havenport to meet his father. Over the course of the season, he comes to understand what it means to be a part of a big family. He grows close to Belle and eventually has a heart-to-heart with Harlan, who takes him under his wing.  “Belle confirms that my mom’s presence was there in this very place. That’s another way to say, ‘You are not lying, I see how much trouble you’ve gone to just get here. I see you,’ ” Silva says. “But Shawn doesn't know what it means to have a father calling him ‘son.’ ”  By the finale, Shawn leans into his Buckley roots. He goes on the family mission to save Bree, who was abducted by Grady, to a heavily guarded boat in the middle of the ocean. Shawn hesitates when it comes to accepting a gun from Cane, but ultimately brandishes the weapon. “He takes the gun because this is all something bigger than him now,” Silva says. “It’s about his family. It’s about the legacy that he didn’t know he had. All of a sudden, he doesn’t just have a father, he has two siblings.’” 
Is Shawn actually a good bartender yet? 
“I'm going to say, he’s an okay bartender,” Silva says with a laugh. “He’s not a good bartender. He’s not a great bartender. But he’s getting by.”  Relive Shawn’s entire journey — along with the rest of the Buckley family’s — by diving into The Waterfront Season 1 on Netflix. 
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