HA
Cecil: *giggles*
Carlos: Cecil...I'm trying to catch my breath...and you're giggling???
Cecil: well....
Carlos: please don't say this on air
Cecil: you don't even know what I'm gonna say!
Carlos: S I G H
Carlos: what is it
Cecil: *giggles louder.* I guess you could say I'm very into science
*Pause*
*Hysterical laughter from both*
@fandomawesomeness SHAWL SHAWL SHAWL
finished the blue one, and tucking the ends will come somewhere in the future, possibly, i mean definitely, for sure for sure
i blossomed into a flower with the green one and i love the vibes š š¼ (i think my assistant approves)
Chaos Magic is the hardest to learn but the easiest to master. All it requires is the abject belief that your ritual will have an effect, despite all evidence to the contrary, and then it will.
when ur both striped!!
Gimli: Courting tip! Hold the door for your date. Rip the door off its hinges. Then use the door as a weapon to fight off other suitors. Establish your dominance -
Aragorn: Iām beginning to see why youāre still single.
Legolas: No, let him finish.
Today is always
Today I will not be relatable. Today I will be unhinged.
Alphonse Muchaās āPrimrose and Featherā homage
This print is available in my shop!
how to ask the demon you've been smitten over for 6000 years to dance: an angel's guide
bonus:
āFrodo was a very, very important character in the movies. But heās also a very difficult character to play and to cast. [ā¦] We were convinced that Frodo is gonna be an English actor, ācause we wanted the Hobbits to basically be English as Tolkien really wrote them. So, we went to London and we started auditioning.
We couldnāt think of any actor to play Frodo. We had nobody in mind. We thought it would be unknown English actor, a young kid. We were in London auditioning for about a month and weāve probably seen three hundred Frodos. There were two or three that were okay, but nothing magical, you know. āCause Frodo had to be magical. Every time the casting room door opened and some nervous young actor would come in, we were saying, āis this gonna be Frodo?ā And you sort of know within ten seconds that it wasnāt really Frodo. It was a worry, but we were plugging on.
And then our casting director said to us one day, āA packageās just come in the mail. Itās from Elijah Woodā. It was a video tape, a VHS tape. I had heard Elijahās name, but Iāve never seen a film heād done. I actually had no face for Elijah, I didnāt know how he looked like.
So, we put the video tape in. Elijah was in LA and heard that we were in London and weāre not gonna come to LA. He really wanted to get this role. So, he hired a dialect coach to teach him accent, heād gone to the local costume-hire, got some cheesy kind of Hobbit costume on. Heād gone into the trees somewhere behind his house with a friend, and he just videotaped his own audition. He didnāt have our script, so he was reading from the book, he was doing Frodo parts from the book.
I just put this video tape in, and literally, not having known who Elijah Wood was really, I just thought, āheās wonderful, heās absolutely greatā. And so, Elijah cast himselfā.
(x)
Do you have any tips on how to write a character whoās being manipulated?
Your blog has been very helpful to me! :) thanks a lot
To convincingly write a character who is being manipulated, you must first understand how to write a believable manipulator. Often hidden in plain sight, manipulators pull the strings, guiding the actions of those who are often unaware that they're dancing to someone else's tune.
Letās look at manipulators as puppet masters, exploring how they function and how their actions echo throughout your story. By understanding the manipulator, you'll better equip yourself to create realistic characters who are unwittingly under their sway.
Play the victim to garner sympathy
Charming and persuasive
Twist and distort the truth to suit their agenda
Play mind games
Are silver-tongued
Passive-aggressive when confronted
Use guilt to control others
Donāt hesitate to lie or deceive
Demonstrate a sense of entitlement.
Project their feelings onto others
Play different roles with different people
Prefer indirect communication to direct confrontation
Gaslight others, making them doubt their own perceptions
Shift the blame onto others
Exploit others' vulnerabilities
Use peopleās secrets against them
Make others feel obligated or in debt to them
Use flattery to get their way
Create conflict between other characters
Deliberately create confusion and chaos
Maintain intense eye contact
Use touch to seem friendly and intimate
Facial expressions often don't match their words
Use large, expressive gestures to dramatise
Have a confident and exaggerated posture
Soften expression to look more trustworthy
Smile artificially or excessively
Lean in close, invading personal space
Mirror othersā behaviours to seem more likeable
Mimic emotions they may not feel
Believe they are always right
Feel entitled and superior
Lack empathy
Highly competitive
Often impatient and intolerant
Controlling and like to be in charge
Rarely apologize sincerely
Often play the martyr, acting self-sacrificing
Can be sceptical of othersā intentions
Kindness is often an act
Paradoxically, manipulative characters can have a positive narrative effect on those they manipulate. These characters can act as a catalyst for change, pushing others to unlock hidden potential and indirectly teaching them to be more cautious. In the face of manipulation, characters can mature and grow resilience.
Manipulative characters can also reveal peopleās true natures by tricking them into revelations or by fostering unity as others band together against them. Furthermore, their actions can create dramatic plot twists, make people question their own perceptions and realities, and add intrigue.
Manipulators can cause emotional and psychological distress, breed distrust and insecurity, and disrupt relationships and friendships. These characters often lead others to make damaging decisions, creating a toxic environment.
By exploiting and exposing others' vulnerabilities, manipulators make individuals question their self-worth. The extent of their manipulation can even cause physical harm and lead to the downfall of other characters. Their lasting legacy? Emotional scars that define their victims long after the manipulator has exited the narrative.
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