the ending of avatar is just so good. teal’c and daniel have reached the final stage of the game. the goa’uld could be any one of sam, jack, or siler and daniel’s two-second precognition isn’t enough to tell which one it is in time. the naquadah generator is about to explode and sg-1 is stuck in a four-way standoff.
and then at almost the last minute teal’c makes a decision to trust his team. he decides to trust that jack and sam are on his side just like he took a chance on trusting jack and betraying apophis in children of the gods.
and his trust pays off, sam defuses the bomb and they kill goa’uld!siler and win the game. and then:
“we have won”
“it’s what we do”
it IS what they do they are a FAMILY and they have so much FAITH and TRUST in one another i love them SO MUCH
Supreme Commander Thor but he's in a little wizard hat.
When do we find out this is an art project
just got back into gardening so i’ve forgotten. are basil leaves supposed to be this big
i made another thing
Why is there a cow at the dog park?
Tiny alien visits a dog park
"I just think that the John and Aeryn story is more like most people's stories," began Browder. "You know, in any relationship there's no linearity. It's not always, 'Just do this and now you've reached it.' I've been married for 36 years, yeah, almost 36 years I've been married, and I can guarantee you that one day you're going to try to kill each other, and the other day you're gonna be just so into each other over time. And so I think that it's real. I think it feels real to people. I think people feel the desires. They feel the pain that people cause one another. They feel the impossibility of it." He continued: "You know, you can be in a relationship and you can be madly in love, and something in life is gonna pull you apart. That could be work. It could be kids. It could be finances. It could be a pandemic, and it's going to stress your relationship, and that's what makes it real. That's what makes it interesting. And the fact that [...] you want to see them together is a testament to the writing staff and to Claudia Black. It's chemistry, which is the metaphor, but you take these [...] two vials, you pour them together, and you end up with something which is effervescent ."
theres another guy in my dorm who started T the same month i did and whenever we see each other we have an unspoken ritual of saying “hey” in the deepest we can get our voice to be and every time it’s deeper and we just keep walking in our respective directions & smiling its a good experience
Yo this is just having a panic attack in public
A restaurant named You're Not Supposed To Be Here, where the whole point is that the vibes are unnerving. The lighting is weird, the whole place has a faint scent that's not a bad smell, but it's certainly not food smell and you can't quite identify what the hell it is. The music is weirdly janky and you can't quite tell what's wrong with it, the vocals aren't exactly garbled but sung in a language you swear you've never heard anywhere and couldn't name if you tried. Only hiring staff who have anxiety and they're 100% permitted to show how much your presence here stresses them out.
Everybody I meet that’s not from Flint is always like “is it really that bad?”
It’s so much more than bad water. Its your children having seizures from lead poisoning. It’s the fear of contracting Legionnaires. It’s not being able to pay the hospital bills for your sick elderly and children. It’s not being able to bathe. It’s not being able to cook. It’s paying some of the highest water bills in the United States despite Flint being largely in poverty. It’s the fear of losing your house because you can’t afford to keep the water on. It’s the fear of losing your children because you lost the house.
“Is it really that bad?” No, its so much worse.
Shark from Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time