ANIMATED: Tonight we witnessed a great moment in college basketball history
firehose
Shared posts
Photograph of Socks the Cat Standing on the Press Podium in the...

Photograph of Socks the Cat Standing on the Press Podium in the Press Room at the White House: 12/05/1993 by The U.S. National Archives on Flickr.
"Finally, an independent in the White House…" :)
gokicker: The Supreme Court is preparing to hear the arguments...

The Supreme Court is preparing to hear the arguments behind Sebelius v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. and Conestoga Wood Specialties Corp. v. Sebelius. Wondering why you should care? It just so happens that the ruling on these cases will set a precedent for how businesses are treated in courts and set guidelines for which employers have to provide birth control coverage to their employees.
Interested? Good. Here’s where you can find out more and take action:
Can a Business Be Religious? The Supreme Court Hobby Lobby Case.
// Follow gokicker //
Do You Still Post On Message Boards?
I don’t really, any more.
I still have a board at the Bendis Boards, it’s a nice group and I post there a bit.
But really, wow, I did a look around at some of the boards I used to post on about comics and they just…I don’t know how else to say it, they just seem to hate everything now.
I went to Scans Daily, I used to really enjoy it, and I had a bit of a dust-up there (that was my fault) but I remember it quite differently than how it reads now. Some of the other boards I was very fond of, I went to check them out and the poster counts seem very low in comparison to a few years ago.
Has everyone left them for other social media? Or am I misreading this?
I haven’t kept up but some of the few large remaining boards seem very mired in general misery.
Tumblr gets a lot of shit for this, I know, but every day I see tons of scans from comics people loved and happy photos of cosplay and fanart.
I don’t know if I see Tumblr through rose-colored glasses or not.
Anyway, just wondering. Do any of you still post on comics-specific message boards? If so, which ones?
laughterkey: cumaeansibyl: this is legit btw I mean, there...

this is legit btw
I mean, there were folkloric heroes like Robin Hood before the Scarlet Pimpernel, but they didn’t really do the secret identity — people might not have known Robin Hood’s real identity but he wasn’t out living a double life and his costume was just what he and his buds wore in the forest, whereas the Pimpernel was actually doing the exact same thing as Bruce Wayne (pampered aristocrat by day, avenging hero by night)
also I wanna point out that the Scarlet Pimpernel was actually the leader of a league of twenty people also living double lives — Baroness Orczy also invented the first superhero team
Also The Scarlet Pimpernel is goddamned amazing and if you’ve never read it you’re missing out.
stridersknowbest: geisttotend: no but seriously i have this...

no but seriously i have this text post stuck in my sketchbook it genuinely motivates me to do art
THIS IS THE BEST DAY OF MY LIFE
The Failure Fetish In Silicon Valley
trebled-negrita-princess: tedious-doubts: eshusplayground: wis...

A Beautiful Mind (2001) In the film, she is known by her first name only until she gets married and becomes "Alicia Nash". Her full name is Alicia Lopez-Harrison de Lardé.

Drive (2011) In the 2005 book of the same name Irene is a young Latina woman

30 Days of Night (2007) Based on the 2002 comic book of the same name. In the film the name was changed from Eben Olemaun to Eben Oleson.

Pay it Forward (2000) Based on 1999 book. In fairness, the part was first offered to Denzel Washington. Some promotional material still referred to Kevin Spacey's character as Reuben St. Clair

Argo (2012) Affleck cast himself in the lead role. The actual Tony Mendez did not have a problem with the casting.

The Lone Ranger (2013) The character of Tonto is more racist than the casting of Depp. He called the role "An opportunity for me to salute Native Americans.” See links for article about the Tonto look

21 (2008) The protagonist was changed from 'Jeff Ma' to 'Ben Campbell'. John Chang said about Kevin Spacey "Being played by a 2-time Oscar winner isn't exactly an insult."

The Hunger Games (2008) Other actresses shown (L to R) Hailee Steinfeld, Abigail Breslin, Emma Roberts, Saoirse Ronan, Chloë Moretz, Jodelle Ferland, Lyndsy Fonseca, Emily Browning, & Shailene Woodley

Michael B. Jordan has said “The characteristics of the Human Torch are his name is Johnny Storm, he’s charismatic, and he’s a playboy. That’s it. You know what I’m saying? That’s all there is."
Based on this list See Sources below for more info. View pictures fullscreen to see captions
30 Days 21 Hunger Games Argo Drive Pay it Forward Lone Ranger Fantastic 4
Lemme reblog again and let you know why casting that white woman as the female lead in “Drive” was so fucking wrong and fucked up.
Director literally gave her the part because she looked like someone he would want to protect (read: innocent, delicate, helpless).
These traits were ones he literally did not consider a Latina for. He picked her specifically because he fit that damsel in distress imagine that’s been coded as white (and what’s made women of color “unrapeable”).😳
>_>
Jim Henson's Creature Shop Brings You the Joy of Monster Making
A cat on HMAS Encounter by Australian War Memorial collection on...
Ossuary of the Cemetery Saint Hilaire de Marville, France

Ossuary of the Cemetery Saint Hilaire de Marville, France
kidnap - UFO Kamen Yakisoban (KID - SNES - 1994)
firehosewelp

kidnap - UFO Kamen Yakisoban (KID - SNES - 1994)
red - Hyakuju Sentai GaoRanger (Natsume/Bandai - PSX - 2001)

red - Hyakuju Sentai GaoRanger (Natsume/Bandai - PSX - 2001)
GDC panel provides tips on how to subversively queer games
At the 2014 Game Developer’s Conference last week a group of five queer game developers, writers and academics took the stage at San Francisco’s Moscone center to provide their colleagues with tips on bringing queer characters and issues into their projects.
The session, titled "How To Subversively Queer Your Work," was lead by writer Samantha Allen, a doctoral Fellow at Emory University and a contributor to The Border House.
First to give advice was Mattie Brice, a game critic and developer. By focusing on fantasy, Brice said, those who make games can provide inclusive spaces that transcend both gender and sexuality.
"You don’t necessarily need to make [your game a] 1-to-1 reality," Brice said. "I don’t think queerness needs to be [shown in games] how queerness looks today, because queerness in 2014 is really different from queerness in 2004 and 1994.
"What I think is really interesting about our potential [as game makers] is that games can imagine places. … I like that we can make those worlds, and even imagine something where we can feasibly see ourselves going in a certain way and not necessarily make it some sort of manifesto, but rather a meditation on someone’s life."
"Like it or not," said panelist Todd Harper, researcher at the MIT Game Lab, "games are culture. If we’re making games, we’re making culture.
"If you can understand that you’re making a cultural product, you understand that you’re worrying about how things matter [to other people]. … Those of us who aren’t represented have been making do with what matters to other people all our lives."
Harper agreed that many consumers of games may ask themselves why queer issues matter to them. That they feel free to ask themselves that question is, he said, a "marker of privilege," referring to the special rights and advantages straight, cisgendered people are granted in a heteronormative, Western society.
"If you’re a cisgendered, white male heterosexual you probably don’t need [queerness in your games]. But the rest of us kind of do.
"The point," Harper continued, "is that empathy is the ability to see what matters to other people. It’s the ability to see what matters to someone who isn’t you. Empathy is a muscle, and like any muscle you have to flex and use it over and over until it becomes strong. And the important thing about that is that empathy is the muscle we use to lift everybody up."
Harper went on to say that those who are not interested in making games that are inclusive, that foster empathy for the queer community don’t have to.
"More importantly," Harper said, "if you don’t want [to make inclusive games], if you feel like you shouldn’t have to care, then leave. We don’t need you. Increasingly. We don’t need you." His matter of fact statement was met with applause.
"If you don’t want to make inclusive games then leave. We don’t need you."
Other members of the panel, including independent game developer Zoe Quinn, focused on issues of sexual preference in their games. Her most widely known work, Depression Quest, featured a genderless main character by design. Initially other characters in the game were genderless as well, a strategy Quinn abandoned late in the development cycle. The result was that those who played her game imposed their own gender roles onto it.
"It’s this weird thing where if you don’t explicitly state in some way what a character," Quinn said, "people are oftentimes going to assume straight white male because that’s what we’re so trained to do.
"If you just leave it blank, people still fill it in with a default."
Panelists stressed how every player has their own default, and making games that allow every player to explore multiple outcomes is a subtle way to allow for the inclusion of the queer community.
For Harper, the solution was as simple as taking a game mechanic, or a character, and turning it 180 degrees.
"Did you make a bald, white, cismale space marine?" he asked. "Okay. Now make it a half-shaved head, purple haired, trans-woman Latina space marine.
"Did you tragically kill of a man’s wife to motivate his quest to save his daughter? … Go back and give him a husband and a kid. Keep them alive. Let him fight to protect them and keep them safe."
Developer Christine Love dispelled the myth that by simply including a queer character in a game that game makers are giving into the shallower aspects of tokenism.
"Even if you [include that one character]," Love said, "and someone else at developer X does that, then someone else at developer Y does that. Eventually you have an entire community of queer characters that people can identify with in our medium. And I think that would be really important."
All the panelists stressed how meaningful it would be for young, closeted queer players to have a safe space waiting for them in games, however small it might be.
"You don’t need to worry about only having one queer character," Love said. "What really matters is: Is this important to my story? Is this important to my character? Does this make sense in this setting? Does this fit in with the themes of what story I’m trying to tell in this game?"
You can read more about the queer games scene in Brendan Keogh’s feature.
8-Year-Old Japanese Girl Shreds on Her Electric Guitar While Playing the Heavy Metal Song “Scarified” by Racer X
firehoseactual baby metal
8-year old Japanese girl, Li-sa-X, effortlessly shreds on her electric guitar while playing along to the heavy metal song “Scarified” by Racer X. Rock on little girl… rock on.
via Digg
Never Forget That 16-Year-Old Girls Run The Internet
firehoseby the cofounder of deviantart
spodiddly: Okay seriously tho (x) Spock seriously. (x) Spock, you have work to do (x) Geez man,...
firehosevia Russian Sledges
#butts #annieshare
artistssaywhat: In The Princess Bride, Inigo’s quest for his...





In The Princess Bride, Inigo’s quest for his father’s killer is one of the most successful subplots in film history. Watching his performance, it’s such an emotional scene. I was looking up little known facts about the movie and found out that the reason this scene is so moving is because just after Mandy Patinkin took this role, his father died of cancer. In this fight he imagined that this was his chance to beat cancer, to come to terms with his father’s death by getting revenge on cancer (The Six-Fingered Man). Pretty sure I’ve cried whenever I see that scene ever since.
The infographic you need to see before choosing your next pet
Do you want a pet, but you’re completely stumped on what to get?
Answer this series of questions to help you sort out your dilemma…

(via Neatorama)
Stalked, Assaulted And Keeping Silent
Drone-Assisted Hunting To Be Illegal In Alaska
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Newswire: Nick Cannon sparks controversy by donning stupidface
firehose'Mariah Carey’s assistant Nick Cannon'
'donned stupid makeup and stupid clothes to introduce his alter ego, “Connor Smallnut,” a stereotypically stupid person, of the sort who would be excited for a Nick Cannon album'
'Cannon included numerous hashtags—the common lingo of the stupid person—shouting out numerous other things that stupid people enjoy, such as fist pumping and referencing Chappelle’s Show skits from a decade ago'

In a stunt that has succeeded in generating plenty of Internet controversy—and therefore publicity—for his upcoming album, Mariah Carey’s assistant Nick Cannon has posted a photo of himself in stupidface to Instagram. The host of America’s Got Talent and chief advocate of Nick Cannon’s Got Talent donned stupid makeup and stupid clothes to introduce his alter ego, “Connor Smallnut,” a stereotypically stupid person, of the sort who would be excited for a Nick Cannon album.
In the caption promoting that album, White People Party Music, Cannon included hashtags—the common lingo of the stupid person—shouting out numerous other things that stupid people enjoy, such as fist pumping and referencing Chappelle’s Show skits from a decade ago.
It's official... I'm White!!! #WHITEPEOPLEPARTYMUSIC #Wppm in stores April 1st!!!!!!Dude Go Get It!!!Join The Party!!!! #GoodCredit #DogKissing #BeerPong #FarmersMarkets #FistPumping #CreamCheeseEating #RacialDraft "Bro ...
Utsurun Desu.: Kawauso Hawaii e Iku!!! (Takara - Famicom -...
firehoseyo otters

Utsurun Desu.: Kawauso Hawaii e Iku!!! (Takara - Famicom - 1992)
from Wikipedia: “based on the popular Japanese manga character from the 1980s ‘the otter man’”
DIY fencing, including making all gear. (From common things,...






DIY fencing, including making all gear. (From common things, this isn’t pro level or something) Popular Mechanics, Jan 1930.

















