jacketslutjayse:

thenonbinaryspacegem:

commanderabutt:

apprenticenanoswarm:

film producers: *masculinity so terribly frail, sickly and vapid that, when tasked with depicting a canonically queer romantic relationship between a human and a genderless alien slime, decided to stick tits on the slime*

comic book writers: HEY GUYS! 😀 HERE’S EDDIE HAVING MORNING SICKNESS BECAUSE HE’S PREGNANT WITH HIS GOOEY LOVER’S ALIEN BABY!!! Y’ALL HAVE A GREAT FUCKIN DAY!!!!!! ❤

please tell me eddie brock isn’t actually romantically involved with the fucking symbiote

@commanderabutt

Sorry to have to break it to you but Eddie Brock is an alien fucker.

I thought i was all for this monster/alien fucking, but i never wanted to read

*splop* ‘Yeah…ohhhh, yeah. That’s it, baby’ *veech* *thwipp* *SPLAP* ‘Wrap those tentacles around me.’

A little….just a little too much for me. Little too graphic.

adamparrishes:

i think the best thing that trk opal confirmed was that adam and ronan are still in many ways the same teenage boys who dragged each other about on a moving dolly and crashed a shopping cart together. even after all they’ve been through they still want to run about like a pair of hooligans, yelling and throwing things into an accidental fire instead of y’know being concerned that an actual building is on fire, and they still want to dig a pool at the barns and splash and jump (and kiss!) in it, and they still want to invent their own games to play together. it’s so important that life has been shit and hard for them, that they’ve both felt and still do feel the weight of the world on their shoulders, but as adam and ronan experience their first proper romance, as they fall in love for the first time, they get to be teenage boys who just want to play and have fun with each other.

damondauno:

For the 75th anniversary production of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma!, she loves her and he loves him!

Rodgers and Hammerstein’s musical Oklahoma! was revived by the Oregon Shakespeare Festival with LGBT+ Casting. “This revival made the musical’s primary romantic couple, Laurey and Curly, lesbians. It made the comic sidekick couple, Will Parker and Ado Annie, gay men (with “Annie” renamed “Andy”). It’s not just the two romantic couples in the show who have been reimagined. Laurey’s starchy yet sometimes playful Aunt Eller will be a transgender woman (portrayed by a transgender female performer). Ali Hakim will be a bisexual man who has a great fling with Ado Andy, but winds up married to a young bi woman named Gertie Cummings (who also fell in love with Curly). The director, Bill Rauch, felt Jud needed to stay a troubled straight man who, with no changes to the book, is angry that Laurey prefers a woman instead of him. “We wanted also to make sure that the world was not just LGBTQ-inclusive, but that it was clear that this was a community that was thriving, because there are straight allies. They are choosing in this small rural corner of Oklahoma to make a community that is inclusive and that is loving.””

Major changes to a show must be approved by the copyright holder. "Ted Chapin protects the catalog of Rodgers and Hammerstein with great ferocity, and at the same time, he understands the way great classics remain relevant is through thoughtful expansion and reinvention and experiment. So, I was really, really honored — not only to get the permission in general, but the fact that this is the 75th anniversary of ‘Oklahoma!‘ 

The story of the Tony and Pulitzer Prize winning Oklahoma! centers around Laurey and Curly, who are in love but are too stubborn to admit it to one another. A troubled farmhand, Jud, will do everything in his power to make Laurey fall in love with him instead. "I think this casting really excels in the love song ‘People Will Say We’re In Love,’ a beautiful love song that Laurey and Curly share, but their fear that people will say we’re in love takes on a completely different resonance and a completely different depth when it’s sung by two women, and the courage that it takes for these two people then, you know, finally when they sing, ‘Let people say we’re in love.’ The audience just cries and cheers, because it’s an affirmation in a completely different way.

Sources: x / x / x ll Official Production Page

undercitytwerkteam:

not weird: grown ass adults taking part in fandom culture; roleplaying, drawing fanart, writing fics, sharing theories, shipping, etc

weird: grown ass adults making fandom culture their entire identity and attacking people over shipping wars or conflicting headcanons, generally exhibiting behaviour that is barely acceptable if you’re 15