Quick reminder that it's always morally correct to punch nazis.
every day i wake up wishing i looked like the short stupid idiot from mcr
So what I'm getting from last episode is that these are just the stages of Faroe Lester
Podcasts are so funny, I can literally re-listen to the Magnus archives but picturing Jon with the most absurd hats, sombreros and ugly new year glasses or even galaxy leggings in the most heartbreaking and serious scenes and nothing could ever stop me. And it would be canon.
Just a sneak into my twisted mind and the power of one's imagination. Unstoppable. From now on, they're all bald.
Rip Arthur Lester, you would've loved Epic the musical
It would piss Gwen off so much but I imaging Alice and Sam would "yes, and-" an entire universe based off Chester and Norris while Celia sits back in silence at how right they are
saw someone say 'Gertrude Robinson is the Watchers problem child' and my mind just went 'and Elias is the spoiled brat'*
So enjoy the Watchers "children"
*It was between that and 'The Watchers biggest bitch' btw
also I lost the post where it said that abt Gertrude HELP
Taglist: @mocha-bunbun @creaturre @diah-the-demon @lauch-for-everyone
local girl shocked to discover that in the song "this is how all your favorite characters die" from the album "the album where all your favorite characters die" by the hit band "everybody dies eventualy, even immortals", all of her favorite characters die
rip neil perry you would have loved bleaching your hair in your dorm bathroom while your todd stands over you and tells you it’s bad idea and charlie lays on your bed and goads you on.
part 4: the voices
this is the first of multiple times that this phrase appears in the show. it appears to have originated from a medieval Persian fable, written by the Sufi poet Attar of Nishapur. the phrase was popularized in the west following an early nineteenth century translation and retelling of the story by Edward Fitzgerald.
part 5: the gift
this is a line from “Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening” by the American poet Robert Frost. it was first published in 1923, eleven years before the events of malevolent.
part 8: the caves
the quotation here comes from “Cassilda’s Song”, a poem written by Robert W. Chambers as a preface to his 1895 book, The King in Yellow, a collection of short stories.
part 12: the end
this isn’t poetry, but it is a notable reference, because it is a quote from H.P. Lovecraft. the full quote is: “The process of delving into the black abyss is to me the keenest form of fascination.”