unpopular opinion but i think the film and tv industries should have better labor laws even if it makes it harder or impossible to depict certain things
My ship: *in the middle of a heated argument*
Me:
My ship: *Share a single heartwarming scene*
Me:
My ship: *Don’t interact for a whole season/film*
Me:
The producers: *Trying to stop the fans from shipping it*
Me, with the rest of the fandom:
The actors: *Supporting the ship even though the producers aren’t*
Me:
unmute
Chapters: 3/? Fandom: The Musketeers (2014) Rating: General Audiences Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings Relationships: Armand Jean du Plessis de Richelieu/Milady Clarick de Winter, Aramis & Athos & Porthos, Athos | Comte de la Fère/Milady Clarick de Winter Characters: Armand Jean du Plessis de Richelieu, Milady Clarick de Winter, de Tréville (Jean-Armand du Peyrer), Athos, Aramis, Porthos Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Modern Setting, Politics, Established Relationship, Treville is director of the secret service, Armand and Treville are frenemies, Milady and Athos weren't married, Past Relationship(s) Series: Part 2 of Mr. & Mrs. Richelieu- Washington Elite Summary:
The Richelieus are targets of assassination threats.
Last night I was hanging out with some people and the fact that ao3 won a Hugo came up and there was a mild sense of eye-rolling. No one said anything outright, and one person said they had “softened on fanfiction” lately, so all I said was “I’m very proud of my fanfiction archive and our Hugo award, thank you very much” and the conversation moved on. But in that moment, it occurred to me just how goddamn passionate I am about fanfiction. I felt myself rallying my arguments, girding my loins, ready to go into battle for fanfiction. Because, look, not everyone who paints wants to sell their paintings. Some people just want to paint along with Bob Ross or splatter something abstract on a canvass just to express their creative urges, to *make something.* Not everyone who starts a garage band is going to be the next Jimi Hendrix. The most “success” they may have is playing their cousin’s wedding for the price of free food, but they can still find fulfillment in wailing on their guitars or whatever it is the kids play these days (melodica?), having fun together and *creating something.* It’s not about success and fame and fortune. It’s about community and creativity. But, look, writing is a lonely hobby. You might be lucky enough to find a writing group that is healthy and stable, bit you know how many of those I have seen in two decades of hobby writing? One. Singular. One. And the people weren’t my types. I didn’t have much in common with them. But in fandom, hoo boy. You already have something in common with these people, you like the same dumb show and the same two idiots falling in love over and over. So it gives you a starting point. A built-in audience. And yeah, it can be hard to find a toehold, especially in a big fandom like destiel, but there is always *somebody* who will read your work. That’s not always true of original fiction. It’s a much harder sell.
People have been telling stories about their favorite characters since the dawn of civilization. Why do you think we have such a plethora of tales about the Greek gods and heros? These were our campfire tales. Before literacy, before the printing press, *everybody* was a storyteller. It’s about connection and expression.
There’s this toxic idea that if we’re good at something, we should try to make money off it. I don’t want to make money off my writing. I don’t want that kind of pressure on it. Writing is my joy and my escape from this capitalist rat wheel, and if I can do it for a group of wonderful friends who share in that joy, then by gods I’m going to.
Long live Ao3. Long live fanfiction.
Unlike vegan fur and leather, which is just plastic and causes horrific amounts of pollution, real fur and leather lasts a lot longer, meaning it can be reused for years, and it’s biodegradable when it’s no longer usable. There’s absolutely nothing wrong with wearing fur or leather that comes from a farm like a mink farm or is gathered through ethical, legal hunting.
So really, the only thing that makes Cruella de Vil a villain is the fact she wanted to make a fur coat out of puppies. If she had done something like went to Australia and had two, three, maybe even a few hundred fur coats made out of the wild rabbit population, which is an invasive, non-native species doing harm to the environment over there, she’d be a hero.
posting my writing always feels as if i threw a stone at someone’s window and ran away
me: male feminists have to put their body on the gears and use their privilege to confront true wrongness in order to be useful
john oliver: *publicly lays into dustin hoffman about his sexual misconduct*
me: ….. good