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[As much as I love DS9, I always thought season 7 had some major problems. Firstly, the space magic that had been on the backburner for the whole series just went nuts with the pagh wraiths, Sisko suddenly being half-prophet, and that book. Dukat’s arc that season never fit well with his character to me since he was an entirely different kind of evil up until that point. Then Odo going back to the founders was sending him back to a people who had done nothing but try to manipulate him by killing his friends so he’d join them and who disapproved of the way he lived his life. It’s a good thing that’s balanced out by how great the rest of the season is.]

you are one of the very few people in anti reylo community with some common sense

Depends on what the “community” is. A lot of vastly different people object to the ship/shippers for different reasons and we have a varied range of opinions. Probably the one thing all antis agree on is that they are against the idea of this ship becoming canon. Some are of the opinion that it shouldn’t be shipped even as a fanon/crackship/darkship, which does not describe me or most of the people I know. Some antis dislike shippers’ racist, misogynistic, abuse apologist, war-crimes apologist etc. etc. arguments and content, and I think most of my anti posts are in this vein. Some believe shippers deserve to be harassed and suicide baited, a stance no decent person agrees with. I think the essay Fiction, Reality, Fandom, and Adulthood: a media academic and CSA/incest victim’s account (link; incest, CSA, grooming, self-harm, and abuse warning) perfectly represents my stance on the issue. A quote:

I don’t think it’s too much to ask people to have a degree of responsibility for what they put online, especially in a community so full of young people. That doesn’t mean dictating what people create: it means accepting that you have influence over other people, and if you’re not willing to admit that, maybe that’s why you shouldn’t be posting online.

thelastjedicritical:

Whenever I hear that writers should “take risks” these days I’m like “how about NO!” because what most people perceive as risks are elements not natural to the story that exist JUST to forcefully write something “different” or refuse to ever let characters be happy or functional. These “risks” have just become annoying and at this point it’s surprising and refreshing if writers DON’T do this. 

Seriously. Truly risky and fresh writing doesn’t arise out of trying to be risky, but rather out of going where the story organically takes you without stepping back from the edge out of discomfort. Finn in his original conception is a risky character for SW because he is new for the movies and raises so many questions about humanity and morality. Stepping back from the implications of his character and borking a Stormtrooper uprising like RJ did in TLJ was cowardice. The titty milk alien or Luke’s momentarily-contemplated murder of Ben Solo, on the other hand, are examples of trying way too hard to be clever and subversive.

gallusrostromegalus:

psychabuse101:

peppylilspitfuck:

I HAVE THIS CONVERSATION WITH FATPHOBES EVERY FUCKING DAY.

This beautifully illustrates the abusive tactic of using the “thats just how I am” tactic, and the abusive lie of “just being honest”.

Thanksgiving is coming up, and I’ve found that Printing out this comic, stapling it into a little book and leaving it in “gift bags” (Be sure to inculde something genuinely nice, like the remaining Zucchini bread) for visiting relatives of dubious social graces made thanksgiving go a whole lot easier.

rootbeergoddess:

antifamutantdown:

anissapierce:

anissapierce:

anissapierce:

Wow … Is that a deaf actor on black lightning ?

https://sign1news.com/2018/08/27/deaf-actor-wawa-lands-role-in-cw-series-black-lightning-8-26-18/

It isssss like truly this show. Like hiring and actual Deaf actor is pretty great. I hope this gets this dude more roles. Shout out WaWa he did a fucking great job.

“Warren Snipe: Be on the look out of Lauren Ridloff, Michael Spady, CJ Jones, Michele Banks, and me. There’s more to come!”

“ It’s a huge deal for the Black deaf community & for POC deaf talent in general. We’re not repped enough nor are we called for rolls often because we are not written into scripts. We’re far more likely to be overlooked or passed by than our white fellow actor/actresses. We are extremely talented in many areas and STILL have to fight to get a notice. “Hollywood” would people who just simply doesn’t fit the character. If the character called for a black deaf person, sometimes the ethnicity needed, would get changed to prevent backlash and etc. I’ve seen it firsthand. Right now, I know about 5 POC deaftalents making waves now.. but there are so many of us who can fit the bill. Know what I mean”

(http://kriphopnation.com/black-deaf-actor-on-black-lightning-season-two-interview-with-warren-snipe/)

Holy shit.

God I need to stop being a bum and watch this show

cadesama:

amarielah:

zennistrad:

Honestly, I think the people mad at The Last Jedi for being “not like Star Wars” are missing the point of the movie.

At its core, the The Last Jedi is a film learning to move on from the past, and accepting that you can’t go back to the way things were. It’s not even particularly subtle about it. It’s not even subtext, the message is literally stated by at least two different characters in the film.

Heck, every plot twist and subversion of Star Wars tropes is done with the intent of sticking to this central message. The mystery of Rey’s parents is solved in the most anticlimactic manner possible. Snoke is killed before the trilogy even ends. Finn’s heroic rescue mission is given major focus, only for it to end in a failure that forces a change in tactics. All of this might seem dissatisfying, but it’s actually there for a reason. These plot points are set up in a way such that they appear similar to plot threads in the original trilogy. A mystery of the main character’s lineage, a powerful wielder of the Dark Side who commands a massive empire, a rescue mission against seemingly impossible odds. And in the end, they’re subverted, and they’re subverted specifically for the purpose of emphasizing that you can’t always cling to the past, that the Galaxy Far Away of today is not the same as it was forty years ago.

And keeping in line with this central theme? The primary villains, the First Order, are intentionally structured in-universe to evoke the Galactic Empire, which had been defeated decades ago. They want to re-create the past as they imagined it to exist, and are willing to commit any number of atrocities to do so. The villains are explicitly built around nostalgia for an idealized Old Days that disregards a history of brutal oppression, and that’s a part of what makes their fascist dogma so frighteningly close to actual fascists today.

Even putting aside the political commentary, on an even deeper level it’s a commentary on Star Wars as a cultural institution in itself. Star Wars as an icon of pop culture is one that is built on nostalgia, on the fond memories of the original trilogy that skyrocketed it to worldwide popularity in the first place. But at the same time, that nostalgia has also been hugely limiting, as anything new that comes out of it has to live within the shadow of its own legacy. The Prequel Trilogy has far and away suffered the most for this, as even if they weren’t bad films on their own merits, they couldn’t have been the films people wanted them to be. Both LucasFilm and fans of Star Wars built Episode I up as something that could fully recapture the magic of seeing Star Wars in theaters for the first time. But no matter how good Episode I was or could have been, it couldn’t have recreated that experience, because there is nothing in the world that could.

Rian Johnson recognized the problem, and chose to address it in a unique way: by writing a film that’s fundamentally about learning to accept that things aren’t going to be the same as they were, while simultaneously creating something new in the same spirit. Just as Yoda burned down the last of the ancient Jedi texts so that a new generation can build something better, The Last Jedi itself discards the old series conventions, while simultaneously building a movie that retains the central Star Wars spirit of finding hope against seemingly impossible odds.

The Last Jedi tells us that nostalgia is overrated. That’s why it’s such a brilliant film.

But this doesn’t stop Finn from being a wasted character, Luke’s characterization from being poorly handled, or the First Order’s swift conquest of the Galaxy, to the point that only one tiny faction of no political relevance is fighting them, from being absurd.

Star Wars is a serialized narrative. Ignoring basic in-universe logic and dropping story/character threads because they don’t suit your vision as a writer/director is something that’s difficult to overlook. It’s not that TLJ ‘doesn’t feel like Star Wars’, but that it feels almost entirely disconnected from the long-standing universe and serialized narrative of Star Wars.

Also, I disagree that the message is one of telling us nostalgia is overrated. Not when Luke’s final act it to perpetuate the legend of Luke Skywalker, and it is underlined as the most important sacrifice he could make – his self and his life for the legend. That is not disowning nostalgia. It is not a refutation of legends or of heroes. It is the deification at the price of humanity. If nostalgia is a toxic impulse, TLJ wholeheartedly embraces it in order to strip Luke and Leia of humanity and recreate them as walking gods.

TLJ’s story is one of passing of the torch, with the full intent of showing the growth of our heroes as they learn noble lessons from the Never Wrong Leia and Redeemed Redeemer Luke.The only problem is that Johnson has left a narrative so shattered and characters so gutted that I can only ask why the fuck I should care.

The Last Jedi subverted the entire idea of a movie having entertainment value why are you haters so mad