Category: General

  • tinytheursaring:

    rainnecassidy:

    fuckyeahcomicsbaby:

    VACCINATE YOUR FUCKING KIDS

    i know this isn’t my first time reblogging this post to this blog, and it probably won’t be the last. Stay educated.

  • appropriately-inappropriate:

    sharingan-is-caringan:

    castiel-for-king:

    this-is-life-actually:

    Watch: Michigan lawmaker explains why every man needs to care about the tampon tax.

    Follow @this-is-life-actually

    Maybe they’ll listen now that a man is saying it

    can we have this everywhere

    If it’s a “luxury” to buy tampons, then men should consider it equally luxurious to sit in a seat that’s been bled on.

    If not, then they’re blowing hot air out of both ends.

  • cyrilmusic:

    burairium:

    theneverendingdrums:

    fejes:

    peaceloveandbrittana:

    this wins over other pro-gay commercials because you had no idea he was gay and then you can’t tell which one is his husband

    they are showing them as people

    not as gays and straights

    fuckin love this commercial

    can we just talk abotu the fact that the husbands arent even bringing the drinks over theyre just standing there next to the drinks and chatting

    fuckin useless husbands

    they are showing anyone can be useless. Even gay people


    they are saying that it doesn’t matter if you are gay or straight. You can still be a useless person

    this post got better

  • Today’s favorable Federal Court ruling makes 2 things clear:

    ramonajp:

    1. Barack Obama is the best friend transgender folks have ever had in the Oval Office.

    2. Our best chance to defeat shit like HB2 is in the courts. To do that, you need more liberal judges. To get them, you need a Democrat in the White House.

    Don’t fuck this up, America.

  • elemeeple:

    Hi! This is Ava Jarvis. I’m in a rough state and need a little help/validation. Someone I know just emailed me: “You know, if the depression in your life is so bad, maybe you should consider suicide? It’s a valid solution just like any other.” They say they respect my decision if I choose to commit suicide, and that maybe I should stop fighting the urge. I’m pretty sure they’re wrong and I should block them. Indeed, I have blocked them, but I don’t know if I’m doing the right thing.

    seananmcguire:

    The first time I wanted to die badly enough to do something about it, I was nine years old.  I would have missed my entire adult life.  The last time I wanted to die badly enough to do something about it, I was thirty-eighty years old, and the fact that I’d had twenty-nine years depression didn’t want me to have didn’t matter nearly as much as the thought that I could fix everything with a single slice.

    Depression lies.

    You are a story no one else can tell: you are a miracle.  Those things sound trite, but “trite” doesn’t mean “untrue.“  Someday, you’re going to die, and the world will be less for your absence, and no matter what may come next, you won’t be able to do anything else here.  No more sentences, no more sodas, no more Saturdays.  And those things are so important, and you are so important.

    The person who told you to consider suicide sounds like they could use some help themselves, and I hope that they can get it.  I hope you can find whatever help you need.  I hope you can stay.  Please stay.  The world is better for having you in it.

    Please talk to someone who is closer than I am, who can be physically there for you, and please stay.

    I’ll see you tomorrow.

  • wilwheaton:

    micdotcom:

    Watch: Samantha Bee tears into the transphobic Tennessee lawmaker who has been called a danger to women.

    “Not that Republican fans of small government have ever needed something to actually exist in order to legislate against it.”

    PREACH, SAMANTHA BEE!

  • On Dr Strange and the Ancient One

    tinierpurplefishes:

    justice-turtle:

    stealthbaguette:

    i-so-informed-you-thusly:

    stealthbaguette:

    rapunzel-corona-lite:

    fairygodrobot:

    thirteenfunbreaker:

    i-so-informed-you-thusly:

    I’ve seen so many complaints about this. SO. FUCKING. MANY. And tbf, at any other time I would side with them, in that it is not ok to whitewash an already scarce major Asian role for the fuck of it.

    BUT….
    This is a sad case of truly shitty extraneous circumstances, and it looks like none of the people complaining understand why. So allow me to explain (and summerize for those who don’t know whats going on)
    The Ancient One (TAO) is a mystical and powerful being in the Dr Strange comics, and in the film is being played by Tilda Swinton. 

    So this guy:

    Is now this:

    Yeah. And certain people are calling Marvel racist whitewashers etc, but here is the dilemma they had.

    TAO is canonically Tibetan. All the mysticism and power of the character, and by extension that which he teaches to Dr Strange is influenced by this fact (not necessarily accurately but thats another story). Now this would never be an issue at all, except for a small group of people known as the government of the People’s Republic of China. For those who don’t know, China thinks they own Tibet, they invaded it back in 1950 and have fought against any major dissension of their claim to it ever since, be it political or otherwise. So basically, the Chinese government was not happy, and a boycott was on the cards if the character was depicted as Tibetan instead of Chinese.

    Well Marvel can’t then just make TAO Chinese, coz thats a big ol’ Fuck You to the Tibetan people, and they can’t make TAO Tibetan because then they lose a billion person audience AND could potentially sour US/China relations (yes, the Chinese take this THAT seriously). Marvel’s comics back in the day may not have given a fuck, but their movie industry now is not in a position to be making decisions that could have serious political consequences. You could say “well why not switch to a different Asian culture entirely”, but then they run into the mire of treating Asian cultures as an amorphous blob that are easily interchangeable, which is not a good thing to do and you know for a fact would get them called racists anyway. Which in itself was an additional minor reason for the change, since the original Ancient One had some pretty tired and stereotypical Asian trope nonsense going on, which given current accusations that major Asian characters are always mystic ninja types, Marvel didnt want to deal with seeing as its hard to write a mystic without the mysticism. 

    So this is what happened. Is it ideal? No. Is it fair? Not really. But given the shit circumstances here, it is hardly fair to be piling all the blame on Marvel, and certainly to put any blame on Tilda.

    Well, that’s disappointing to hear. “Lesser of two evils” is painful.

    damn, i didnt know this. it sucks that marvel was kinda backed into a corner by political shit.

    @horror-fairy @waheednayyirah

    Option three, the one that would most likely solve this particular nasty problem: DON’T MAKE THE FUCKING MOVIE UNTIL THIS POLITICS SHIT HAS BEEN RESOLVED AND GIVE US A STANDALONE BLACK WIDOW MOVIE INSTEAD YEAH?! IT’S NOT LIKE THERE WON’T BE A WHITE WOMAN IN THAT ONE IF YOU MUST HAVE A WHITE WOMAN IN YOUR MOVIE.

    Good point to this plan: Yay Black Widow movie, which is overdue by forever.
    Bad point to this plan: exactly when do you think this will be resolved? Because its 66 years and counting and its the strongest and most polarizing its ever been. The movie would be on hiatus indefinitely.

    Who knows: humans are fickle creatures and the situation could get neatly resolved within our lifetime through cosmic circumstances and deus ex machina or it could drag on forever.

    Mainly, I don’t know, but I also don’t care about Dr. Strange ¯_(?)_/¯.

    Also they’ve reportedly already changed the movie to saying the Ancient One is Nepalese instead of Tibetan – again, to get around this terrible political situation with China – so ummm they could have you know. cast a Nepalese actor/actress instead of Tilda “David Bowie Wasn’t Available” Swinton. I mean, that’s straight-up yellowface, this is goddamn 2016. :P

    Especially since they have Dichen Lachman available as an actual Nepalese actress. Yes, she’s already playing a different role on AoS, but come on, sufficiently different costuming, makeup, writing, etc. should be enough to let her play two distinct characters.

    Also, seriously, Dr. Strange is a property that really could have been left off indefinitely without running out of cool Marvel things to make movies out of.

  • Untitled post 12697

    becketted:

    daisywarriors:

    Agents of SHIELD’s Chloe Bennet: Why Marvel Needs to Diversify

    TV’s only Asian-American superhero opens up about the need for representation onscreen—and why her band of SHIELD agents totally belong in Marvel’s movies.

    “Four years ago, Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD star Chloe Bennet was known professionally as Chloe Wang, aspiring actress and teenage dabbler in Shanghai pop stardom. In the states, however, Hollywood casting agents were less than welcoming.
    At least until she changed her last name.
    “Oh, the first audition I went on after I changed my name, I got booked,” Bennet tells The Daily Beast, in an interview timed to Marvel’s Women of Power month. “So that’s a pretty clear little snippet of how Hollywood works.”

    That audition was for the role of Hailey, an office assistant on ABC’s Nashville. That same year, Bennet was cast as the lead in Marvel’s first cinematic universe TV show, the Joss Whedon-created SHIELD. Over three seasons, Skye, a headstrong young “hacktivist” who gets recruited by SHIELD and eventually discovers her real identity, the half-Inhuman Daisy Johnson (a.k.a. Quake), has evolved into what is still a rarity on TV: a superhero who happens to be both female and Asian-American.
    “I wish people talked about that more,” Bennet says. “I don’t know if it’s good or bad, but when Supergirl came out, people were like, ‘This is the only superhero on TV that’s a female!’ And I was like, ‘Hold on! I’m pretty sure Daisy’s been here.’ And I also happen to be half-Chinese and I’m so proud of that.”
    “I want to be clear because some of my Asian-American fans seem to think I did that [changed last names] because I didn’t want to known as Chinese, but it’s so the opposite,” she adds. “I just wanted to be known as me and let my personality define who I was, rather than my ethnicity.”
    Bennet—who is loud and funny and blunt in conversation—then launches into her SHIELD audition story, told with a mixture of endearing self-loathing and pride.
    “When we were down to seven girls [up for the role of Skye], it was this completely diverse group of girls I was up against. And it was really about who was right for the part,” she says. “We were testing and we came out of the room and I was up next and Joss Whedon was there and said, ‘Hi.’ I got kind of nervous and looked at him. He just looked really tired. And I was like, ‘You look like shit’—this right before I went in for my last audition.

    “He started laughing and was like, ‘Well I am tired,’” she says, groaning at the memory. “And I was like, ‘I mean, you look tired in a good way, like you’re really busy! And accomplished!’ It was so Skye Season 1 that I think he was like, ‘Yup, that’s her.’”
    Because of Marvel’s “cinematic universe” design, SHIELD takes place during the events of the comic book movie franchise’s big-screen exploits—meaning that whatever havoc the Avengers wreak in their city-smashing adventures has real-world consequences for the show’s on-the-ground SHIELD agents.
    When Captain America: The Winter Soldier revealed that the evil Nazi organization HYDRA had been embedded within SHIELD since shortly after World War II, the show, whose entire first season built up to the events of Winter Soldier, took that and ran with it, spinning out two seasons of intrigue.

    But while Marvel’s movies often affect the show, SHIELD’s narrative rarely bears weight on the big-budget blockbusters—even when the stories it’s telling should. In the upcoming Captain America: Civil War, for example, Marvel’s superheroes choose whether to submit to official government oversight, a measure (called the Sokovia Accords, the onscreen version of the comic books’ Superhero Registration Act) pushed on them by a United Nations panel.

    Incorporating SHIELD’s ongoing Inhumans storyline would actually raise the stakes of the movie: the presence of hundreds if not thousands of undiscovered Inhumans (people with the ability to develop superpowers) would give governments extra incentive to push the Sokovia Accords on all superhumans. Recent interviews with Civil War directors Joe and Anthony Russo, however, indicate the directing duo are entirely unconcerned with what’s going on in the world of SHIELD.

    “I think we’re all on the same page besides them,” Bennet says, sighing at the missed opportunity. “But they’re gonna do what they’re gonna do, and I’m really happy with our little show. We’ve been dealing with the topic of Civil War for a while now—at least, Daisy has. She’s a SHIELD agent but also a human and she’s completely torn.”

    If Bennet had her way, of course, Civil War would bring certain SHIELD-specific changes to the Marvel universe: “I would like us to be put in the movie,” she laughs. “That would make sense. I would like the Avengers to find out that Agent Coulson’s still alive. And Daisy’s incredibly powerful. I think you’ll see toward the end of the season her strength as a character and a leader, and her power as a superhero really expands—I’m just saying, the Avengers could use our help, if they just asked.”
    Marvel’s TV universe, in the meantime, continues to expand, with street-level heroes like Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, and Iron Fist getting their own Netflix shows. With the latter series’s casting announcement—revealing that Game of Thrones actor Finn Jones will be taking on the role of Danny Rand—a familiar refrain decrying the MCU’s lack of diversity reverberated across the Internet again.
    When asked if she was among the thousands calling for the traditionally white Danny Rand—a kung fu master—to be played by an Asian actor, Bennet answers without missing a beat.

    “One-hundred percent. I actually saw that [casting] news and I can’t lie, I was a little [disappointed],” she says, before breaking into laughter again. “I love Marvel, but…”
    “I know they want to stay true to their characters but, you know, every female character in Marvel comics also has, like, triple-Z-sized boobs,” she reasons. “So if they cast actors based on the way characters look on the page, I don’t think even Scarlett Johansson—well, maybe Scarlett Johansson—would be in the movies.”

    As for Marvel’s ever-expanding movie arm—which will feature its first character of color in a standalone film in 2018’s Black Panther—Bennet maintains there’s room for improvement there as well.
    “I think they could do better,” she says. “You know, there are a lot of white guys named Chris. But I think they will, because it’s important. It’s the right thing to do. Marvel’s a smart company and I think they will represent their fans from around the world. They can take note from the way we’re going on the show, ‘cause we’re doing a pretty good job.”

    This is amazing and good and wow.

  • theavc:

    Samantha Bee takes on Tennessee’s proposed “bathroom law”

    Bee covered the hypothetical threat of trans peeing on Full Frontal With Samantha Bee last night, pointing out that a trans person has never been accused of assaulting someone in a bathroom. Tennessee lawmaker Jeremy Durham, on the other hand, has been accused of inappropriately touching and otherwise sexually harassing his female employees, including texting two women late at night and asking them to send him nude pictures of themselves. So it’s a bit ironic that Durham supports “protecting” the girls and young women of Tennessee from the prospect of a trans person in the stall next to them, no? 

    More at avclub.com