Thank you @ironvaliant2003 and everyone who got me to 5 reblogs!
Can drama affect critisism (RWBY)
This is the weirdest thing I've ever seen
I am watching Netflix's Pluto. I'll make a formal post later, there is too much to say, so I'll just do some nerd gushing for a moment.
I am watching Dr. Eggman and Goliath have a conversation.
(Closes my eyes and shutters with joy)
This all has been on my mind for a while. Animals are fun to personify, but the moment you forget to that it's all for show is the moment you start make an ethical justification for poaching
"dolphins are completely evil" I actually don't think we should assign human morality to animals with no concept of law or civilisation with an intelligence roughly equating to that of a toddler
Hhheeeeeyyyy
happy Thursday the 20th
Matt Braly and Rebecca Sugar are making a movie together?!?!! (Source)
We're saved! We're saved! Sa-aved! Sa-ved! Sa-aved!
Please go to the link.
this was one of the first serious defenses of Beauty and the Beast during the now infamous pop feminist craze of the late '00s to mid '10s. It was such a breath of fresh air at the time, and I'd argue is still the best of its kind.
I am so glad the nuance is coming back to the conversation about our childhood favorites, and I hope it continues to get better.
I want to take a few minutes to unpack a common criticism of Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, namely that it glorifies abusive relationships, telling impressionable young girls that it’s okay if their boyfriends shout at them and get physically violent, because they can “fix them with their love.” While it’s easy to look at the movie’s reputation in pop culture and make that assessment based on the broad strokes, if you look a little closer you’ll see that this conclusion is complete hogwash. Let me explain why.
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I don't know just how unpopular this opinion is, but I'm still a Walker fan and here's a good reason why. He can laugh at himself.