It's been... well not fine exactly, but I'm getting things done, so that's something.
For instance I finally finished watching N for Northwest
It was fine
I got a bit bored near the end, maybe because I put off watching it for about a week.
And yesterday I started Onepiece (the Netflix version that came out recently)
It's cool
bari saxthur got lucky in that kayne didn’t write him a part in The Wager so he didn’t have to go to the world’s longest and ugliest rehearsals
EDIT: moanin’ isn’t actually by mingus it was written by bobby timmons for art blakey and the jazz messengers i just listen to the mingus big band version and got confused. my sincerest apologies i love jazz i promise
I made this stick for an art project and it makes me giggle a little when I look at it 🤭🫶
me when im straight up archiving or whatever
// i just started tma btw hi hi
saw this post on twitter and I needed to do a jarthur version of it
Is it really that important?: Yes
Why is it important?:
It is incredibly powerful as an offensive weapon and as a healing item. The villains and heroes spend the whole first season seeking it out.
Is it really that important?: At first you think it isn’t, but then it becomes like the most important object ever
Why is it important?:
Okay, so I’m hoping this counts, because the object isn’t a specific cup of cocoa but rather the cocoa itself, which is made new and served and drank in a variety of different cups by a variety of different people throughout the course of the series. Despite it being *technically* new cocoa every time it appears, it is still the same recipe and serves the same purpose in the story. The cocoa comes from a French cafe and is frequently imported and drank by the one of show’s main character: The Interviewer. The Interviewer adores the drink, and consumes and ungodly amount of it. To express his enthusiasm for it, he has described it as “as pure as the angles”, “divine as deity”, and “sweet as sin”. He frequently offers it to his clients, who are people that come to him asking to fake their death and start over with a new life. Almost all of these clients, as well every other character in the show that tries the cocoa, remarks on how incredibly delicious it is. For the first couple seasons, you think it’s just a funny running gag. As time goes on, however, it is revealed that the cocoa actually has magic healing properties. The recipe involves adding a substance nicknamed “Patience” that can fix wounds and cure illnesses and just make you feel better in general. That is one of the main reasons everyone loves it; though I’m sure the cocoa by itself was probably pretty good too. Additionally, the reason the Interviewer drinks so much of it is because he is actually over 3,000 years old, and has been using the cocoa to keep himself alive and basically immortal. This becomes very plot relevant when the Interviewer no longer has access to the magical version of cocoa and starts to die because of this lack.
my two beautiful horse plinkos