just Newt being clumsy, tripping over nothing and dropping stuffs. well he’s been overworked lately.
Lettering Series based on Pacific Rim
I am deeply infatuated with this.
I found my favorite Pacific Rim fan art.
You can’t give me Pacific Rim and cool font use and NOT have me love it to bits.
Virginia Woolf was a hundred feet tall and menstruated knives, which was fairly unusual for Chinese women of her day.
Hilarious article in response to this idiotic interview, where author David Gilmour said things like:
“I’m not interested in teaching books by women. Virginia Woolf is the only writer that interests me as a woman writer, so I do teach one of her short stories. But once again, when I was given this job I said I would only teach the people that I truly, truly love. Unfortunately, none of those happen to be Chinese, or women. Except for Virginia Woolf. And when I tried to teach Virginia Woolf, she’s too sophisticated, even for a third-year class. Usually at the beginning of the semester a hand shoots up and someone asks why there aren’t any women writers in the course. I say I don’t love women writers enough to teach them, if you want women writers go down the hall. What I teach is guys. Serious heterosexual guys. F. Scott Fitzgerald, Chekhov, Tolstoy. Real guy-guys. Henry Miller. Philip Roth.”
(via lavieunlivre)
My class will be 100% Chinese lesbian writers.
(via saxifraga-x-urbium)
How seriously heterosexual do you want to be about F. Scott Fitzgerald? He and Hemmigway had a date to look at the dicks on the statues of the Louvre.
(via amarguerite)
Also, the first paragraph of his article is him praising Proust, especially Sodome et Gomorrhe for being “very, very funny about human vanity, particularly gay vanity.” No doubt Gilmour gets a kick out of reading about those silly foppish gay guys, but…really? You love seriously heterosexual guys and you open by praising Proust? That’s almost as bad as the Chinese Virginia Woolf thing.
(via inconvenient-carrot)Mozart - l’opéra rock || Le Bien qui fait mal
"a very (homo)erotic gifset for a very (homo)erotic song"
“With his party-boy days mostly in the past and unsure of how to proceed with the situation surrounding his best friend and bandmate, Urie coped his best way he knows how: by turning his sorrow into a song. You’ll immediately hear it on the first track on Too Weird To Live. “This is Gospel.” It’s one of the most personal songs the singer has ever written; so personal in fact, he was initially afraid to show it off. “I was… angry with Spence when I wrote the song.” Urie explains, noting that it wasn’t sparked by a specific event but rather a long series of occurrences. “It’s like, [pointed tone] ‘Why won’t you let me help you? Why won’t you let anyone in? All I want is to make a difference for you so we can rise above this.’ I showed Spence kind of early on, but he was still… cloudy at the time. I don’t think he fully got it. I showed it to him against after I did the demo at the studio. At this point, I was having a hard time getting him to come in and hang out. He had locked himself away, and it was making me sad. It was one of the first conversations we had—it certainly wasn’t the best one—but it was one of the early ones where it’s like, I know what’s going on. I didn’t ask him directly if he knew it was about him, but I think he figured it out”






