isis: (craptastic squid by scarah)
Isis ([personal profile] isis) wrote2025-08-28 10:19 am
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Chicken Jockey from Minnesota

Perhaps you're having the worst day in a week of worst days. Here's your remedy:



(she is ten years old! I adore her! The world adores her!)
beatrice_otter: Me in red--face not shown (Default)
beatrice_otter ([personal profile] beatrice_otter) wrote2025-08-27 09:43 pm
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Dear Fic In A Box Author

I use the same name everywhere so I am [personal profile] beatrice_otter on AO3. Treats are awesome.

I would rather get a story you were happy with than "well, she said she liked x, so I guess I have to do x even though I don't like x and/or am not inspired that way." This letter is long with lots of suggestions and preferences if you find it helpful, but feel free to ignore it if it is not helpful. I'm fairly easy to please; I've been doing ficathons for over a decade and am usually very happy with my gifts.

The most important thing for me in a fic is that the characters are well-written and recognizably themselves. Even when I don't like a character, I don't go in for character-bashing. If nothing else, if the rest of this letter is too much or my kinks don't fit yours, just concentrate on writing a story with everyone in character and good spelling and grammar and I will almost certainly love what you come up with.

I have an embarrassment squick, which makes humor kind of hit-or-miss sometimes. The kind of humor where someone does something embarrassing and the audience is laughing at them makes me uncomfortable. On the other hand, the kind of humor where the audience is laughing with the characters I really enjoy.

General Likes and Dislikes

other things to keeep in mind:
  • I like stuff that takes side characters and puts them center-stage, especially when the characters and/or actors are marginalized. I enjoy seeing them come to life.
  • I don't like it when marginalized characters get relegated to the sidekick/supporting/helper role so that it can be All About The White Dude.
  • I like it when female characters are more than just the Strong Female Character(tm) or The Nurturer.
  • I like fluff
  • I like angst with a happy ending
  • I like stories that make me think about things in a new way.
  • I like to know that culture matters to people, and to see how different cultures interact and where the clashes are.
  • I like unreliable narrators.
  • I like acknowledgment that different people can have different points of view without either of them being wrong.
  • I like stories that engage with problematic aspects of the source, and which deal with privilege in one way or another instead of sweeping it under the rug.
  • Worldbuilding is my jam, I am pretty much always up for explorations of why the world is the way it is. I love hearing about the economics, the politics, the religion, the clothing, the history, the folklore, all of that kind of stuff. And I want to know why it matters--how is all this cultural background stuff affecting the characters, the plot, everything. You don't have to do deep worldbuilding, but I'll enjoy it if you do.
  • I don't like it when plots hinge on characters being selectively stupid, or selectively unable to communicate. Like, if they are stupid or a himbo or whatever in general, or have problems communicating in general, that's fine! Or if they canonically have a blind spot in that area, again, it's fine. But if it's just "the only way I can think of for this plot to work is if the character spontaneously and temporarily loses half their intelligence and competence," then I'm going to spend the rest of the fic wondering why the character didn't just ____?
  • I like AUs, but not complete setting AUs (i.e. no highschool or college or coffee shop AUs, and especially not mundane AUs--nothing where you keep characters but drop most of the worldbuilding). I like fork-in-the-road type AUs, where one thing is different and the changes all result from that one thing, and you explore what might have been if such-and-such happened.
  • I like the concept of sedoretu marriages.
  • I like historical AUs, but only when the author actually knows the history period in question and does thoughtful worldbuilding to meld actual culture of the time with the canon.
  • Crackfic is really hit and miss for me, sometimes I love it and sometimes I can't stand it. Basically, if it's the characters we know and love in a ludicrous situation, that's great. If they're OOC or parodied in order to make something funny ... it's not funny to me.
I like plotty, gen stories, and plotty stories in general. I don't care for explicit sex, particularly when it's just thrown in for teh porn. I'm asexual; a lot of the time I don't even bother to read the sex scenes. Romance is awesome (as long as both are in character and the romantic plot doesn't hinge on one or both of them being an idiot). I love it when friendship is held up as important and not secondary to romantic relationships and blood ties.

Please no incest or darkfic. I define "darkfic" as stuff where there's a lot of suffering and no hope even at the end and all the characters are terrible. Angst with a happy ending is fine, I enjoy it, but there's gotta be a payoff. Even an ambiguous ending is fine! But there has to be some note of grace or redemption or hope somewhere, it can't just be "people are awful and the world sucks, the end." I define incest as siblings and/or parents, cousins don't count.

I love outsider perspectives and academic takes on things. In-universe meta (newspaper articles, academic monographs--especially with the sort of snarky feuding common in actual real-world academia, social media feeds in current day or future worlds) is awesome.

Also, I'm picky about European historical clothing details. You don't have to talk about it at all! In fact, if you don't know much about historical clothing, I would prefer if you didn't mention it at all. My pet peeve is corsets: no, they weren't a restrictive tool of the patriarchy, no, they didn't interfere with most women's daily lives, no, most women weren't wearing them so tight they couldn't breathe.

I like religion but I'm picky about it. Basically, Christianity is deeply weird compared to most other religions, and a lot of people whose only experience with religion is living in a culturally-Christian nation assume that what they know about Christianity is some sort of universal principle of What Religion Is Like, and that's just not the case. For example, in Christianity what you believe is more important than what you do. This is not to say we Christians don't teach and practice Christian ethics or have rituals we are very attached to, but rather that if you don't believe in Jesus Christ, it doesn't matter what rituals you participate in or what ethical things you do, you are not a Christian (although you may be a "cultural Christian"). Every Christian group has at least a minimal core theology that members must affirm, but participation in ritual is far less rigidly a requirement. Most other religions rank what you do (both ethically and ritually) as more important than what you believe, and it is often quite possible to be a member in good standing if you participate in the practices and rituals even if you believe none of the teachings. Anyway, point is, if you are doing worldbuilding for a fantasy or SF or otherwise non-Christian religion ... unless it is explicitly a Christian-analogue, it should be different from Christianity. Question your assumptions and see where that leads you, and I will be fascinated and thrilled.


Fandom For Robots )

Rivers of London )

Goblin Emperor )

DS9 )

Star Wars Legends )

Enola Holmes )

Babylon 5 )

Enterprise )

TNG )

Sense8 )
kathleen_dailey: (Default)
kathleen_dailey ([personal profile] kathleen_dailey) wrote2025-08-27 08:08 pm

Star Trek: Palate Cleanser

Sigh, at some point I'll probably write about something other than Star Trek. But that unreal universe happens to be the place I'm escaping to right now, so here we are.

The CTV sci-fi channel has been running all the Trek movies from TMP to (presumably--we're not there yet) the Abramsverse. The viewing partner and I have been recording and rewatching all of them. So far we're up to First Contact (1996).

I remember having quite a few quibbles about plot points and characterizations when the film was first released. (KRAD rewatched the film in 2013, and he and his commenters noted many of its strengths and weaknesses in his review.) Now, from a distance of decades, I find that the film hits differently than it did thirty years ago.

This time--maybe because I'm feeling so bereft of optimism and hope these days--I was way less nitpicky about it. I was able to move past the plot-hole-riddled Borg stuff and focus on the underlying, and uplifting, story of Cochrane and Sloane and the Enterprise crew. Now I see the film as interweaving the right amount of humour and absurdity with serious-minded themes of human aspiration and exploration and the overcoming of apparently intractable political and personal shit. I was actually feeling happy by the time the credits rolled, and I was willing to believe that a better world--and eventual interstellar union--was on the horizon for the Cochrane-era characters.

I still hope I'll be able to say something similarly positive about SNW by the end of the season, but it's not looking promising.
umadoshi: (kittens - in box)
Ysabet ([personal profile] umadoshi) wrote2025-08-27 04:25 pm
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Twelve years of Jinksy!bear | Four work hours until the weekend (for purposes of Dayjob)

Today marks twelve years since Jinksy and Claudia came to live with us. Twelve! (I mean, this should be easier to believe, it having been Jinksy's twelfth birthday three months ago.) *selects icon* Look how little they once were!

We've decided to give ourselves a four-and-a-half-day weekend (I'm going to work only a half day tomorrow to match [personal profile] scruloose's schedule), and a good chunk of that has to be focused on freelance work--the volume of Pet Shop of Horrors I'm working on is due in just over two weeks, and they're hefty books. (IIRC this edition is seven omnibus volumes and the series originally came out as ten standard volumes.)

There, we'll call that an update.
musesfool: principal ava coleman, abbott elementary, with a skeptical look (no seriously)
i did it all for the robins ([personal profile] musesfool) wrote2025-08-27 02:22 pm
Entry tags:

trouble seldom sees what she leaves behind

So here's a question for you, especially if you do office-type work: when did people start sending pictures of things instead of actual documents in a work-related setting? And WHY???

I have had this happen repeatedly recently, and then instead of just going on with my work easily, I have to email back and ask for a version in a program that I can edit. (If I don't need to edit, I will sometimes just print it as a PDF so I can attach and send it to people, but that is still an extra step I have to take because someone else couldn't put their work in a work-appropriate format.)

Personally, I get not wanting to share a linked document - I do it but I kind of hate other people in my documents because of version control issues (...or maybe just control issues? 😬😬😬) - but anything is better than a useless JPEG pasted into the body of an email when what I ASKED FOR was a list of attendees for a meeting I may need to sort, or a purchase requisition that I will need to update.

As a related item, stop with the QR codes! Our HR department sends emails about training opportunities or other events and is like, "Use the QR code to register!" Like, how about no? And certainly not when it's an event to which we are inviting board members, some of whom are LITERALLY in their 90s and not tech-savvy. What is wrong with a nice LINK to a FORM on a regular WEBBED SITE?

I guess I am feeling very Abe Simpson yells at clouds today, but come on. These are not things that make work easier! (Well, maybe it's easier for the people who do this, but then they have to deal with my annoying follow up emails, so is it really easier for them???)

In other news, my younger nephew got a promotion that required him to move to California in a hurry, so he flew out last night. I will miss him! Who will I call now when I need a tall person to do things in my apartment??? (Just kidding! It's a great opportunity for him, and he is some kind of regional manager now with a region that includes Hawaii, so my sister and I are already like, "let us plan a trip to visit him IN HAWAII!" [note: I will likely never be able to afford a trip to Hawaii, but a girl can dream.])

*
tropicsbear: An iPod and earbuds greet one another with "Hey buds" and "'Sup player" (Music)
Bear ([personal profile] tropicsbear) wrote2025-08-27 09:26 pm

Media consumption: KPop Demon Hunters 📽️

KPop Demon Hunters (8/10)

(I watched this more than a month ago but only got around to writing about it now 🫠)

Went into this not really expecting much—I wanted to watch something that I could enjoy without using too much brainpower—and ended up becoming more invested than expected. Which isn't as much as some corners of the internet, but I didn't expect that I'd end up yeeting the soundtrack into my Spotify liked albums and having it play at least once every other day.

The title sums up the premise pretty nicely; there's a K-pop group called Huntr/x (made up of Rumi, Mira, and Zoey) and they're also demon hunters. They're actually the latest in a long line of hunters and omg that opening montage? Where they showed all the different trios over the generations??? I want the lore! I want the lore so bad.

Thinking about it, I actually kind of want a prequel more than a sequel. What is the hunter selection process? What's hunter training like? Do you get scouted on your singing talent first and then trained in hunting, or is it vice versa? I have questions!!

Cut for length and spoilers. )

umadoshi: (Middleman - specificity (cannons_fan))
Ysabet ([personal profile] umadoshi) wrote2025-08-26 03:24 pm
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Clarification about the actors in Glass Heart

The other day, my phrasing when I tried to describe what the Glass Heart actors are doing was not at all as clear as it should've been!

So: It's not that the main cast in this show are faking playing the instruments. It's that none of them are musicians at all, and they learned to play the specific material for the show well enough to visually pass not only as being able to play but as being very good (the male lead is explicitly a musical genius), with full shots of them doing bits of it rather than having body doubles or clever cuts or anything, AND doing some pretty heavy-lifting acting at the same time. (What I don't know is whether their performances pass as looking professional to actual professional musicians, but one of the supporting cast is an actual singer and seems pretty impressed with it.)

The making-of feature I linked in my last post is specifically about that aspect of the show/their performances.
sovay: (Viktor & Mordecai)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2025-08-26 01:39 pm

The shadows on the walls don't recognize me anymore

All these terrible people whose weight the earth cannot afford, doing their best to take the rest of us with them to their Armageddon with the most toys, and not a one of them will ever be a tenth of a thousandth as cool as the living tradition of an epic poem performed with chugging guitar riffs: Exhibit A, Ereimang's "(Kwakta Lamjel)" (2023). All you fascists bound to be boring.
anneapocalypse: Ariane Clairière, an Elezen Warrior of Light with light skin, green eyes, and dark blonde hair. (Default)
Anne ([personal profile] anneapocalypse) wrote2025-08-26 01:02 pm

[link] Dreamwidth fighting age verification legislation

dw_news | Mississippi legal challenge: beginning 1 September, we will need to geoblock Mississippi IPs ]

I don't have anything to add to this except that I'm grateful DW is fighting the fight. Though I never expected they'd roll over on age verification, it's heartening to see.
sovay: (Morell: quizzical)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2025-08-25 10:50 pm

When I invited Frank and you back to mine for a mange tout when I meant ménage à trois

The swallows have returned to Capistrano: last night there were three student parties on our street alone and a fourth around the corner. We are waiting to see if this weekend will bring a new installment of upstairs neighbors.

I opened the refrigerator door and the Brita pitcher fell off its shelf and disintegrated itself in several gallons across the hardwood, so the first thing I did within two minutes of getting up was essentially wash the kitchen floor. I spent the afternoon drying a load of towels and drinking cans of seltzer.

It jarred out of my head too much of the dream I had just woken up from, the slippage of a kitchen sink drama written by a less commonly revived playwright than Shelagh Delaney: a teenage girl and her father who was just about the same age when she was born and still has such a fecklessly fox-boned, adolescent look himself, the two of them as they knock about town, him getting into more fights than holding down jobs, always telling the secret histories of their city which sound half like industrial legend and half like he just made them up, are more often mistaken for a couple than his actual girlfriend with whom he seems to interact most in the form of sincerely less successful apologies. They are clearly each other's half of a double star, a nearly closed system without jealousy, only the exhilaratingly irresponsible habit of dodging the adult world as if it were the two of them against it. It is unsensationally apparent to the audience long before it would cross any other character's mind that in addition to his total improvisation of parenting, he is doing his damnedest not to pass on the next generation of his own implicitly incestuous abuse, which does him credit and gives him little help in figuring out how to support his daughter through a transition he never quite managed himself. Toward the end, it started to flicker between stage sets and the plain world, between rehearsals and history. "I won't meet you," I had to tell the actor, standing in between scenes outside the year of the original production, the same fragile shoulders and thistle-blond hair of his photographs in the role: he would be dead decades before I heard of the play, much less managed to track a copy down. I could tell him that his children had gone into the arts. Onstage she was outgrowing his frozen boyishness and if he could catch up to her, he would still have to let her go.

[personal profile] asakiyume linked Residente's "This is Not America (feat. Ibeyi)" (2022) and it made me think of Elizma's "Modern Life" (2025), both of which should come with content warnings for current events.

I have discovered that BBC Sounds became region-locked about a month ago, which means that one of my major sources for randomly discoverable audio drama seems to have spiraled down the drain. I am completely indifferent to podcasts. I am a simple person and just wanted to listen again to Lieutenant Commander Thomas Woodrooffe being just as lit up as the fleet.
bluapapilio: boufuurin from wind breaker (winbre boufuurin)
蝶になって ([personal profile] bluapapilio) wrote2025-08-25 04:57 pm

Anime Check-in:🎐Wind Breaker S2E6-10

Spoilers ⬇️

Wind Breaker
season 2

Episode 6: Everyone getting compliments. <33 Suou's smile when his earrings were said to suit him!

I teared up again seeing this part adapted. Got to see some lovely expressions. Nirei's precious smilesss.

Episode 7: Sakura's anger at Nirei being hurt!! And Nirei didn't lie, he did trip, multiple times.

Nirei hiding behind Suou, precious bean. And he was the first to stop Shizuka.

Nirei getting praise from Suou (and Sakura). 😊

Protecting Nirei! I feel like in the manga it was more both of them but in the anime it's Sakura pushing Nirei away but I could be misremembering.

I'm envious of Tsubaki's pole skills.

Episode 8: Tsubakiii. 🤣 Aw we got to hear Shizuka sing, it was so sweet and fit her and Kanji really well. <3

I got so caught up in the fight I forgot Suzuri was coming.

I like how Suou telling Nirei that winning wasn't as important as not losing ties in with Kenji saying 'I don't care if I can't win as long as the town's people are okay'.

Episode 9: Maybe it's because I read the manga already for this part, but I think I was able to enjoy it more this time around in anime form.

The twins are so freakin' cool. The music that started playing after Tsubaki caught Suzuri's fist!!

Episode 10: Suou comforting Shizuka. :')

Shizuka and Tsubaki are the most precious thing ever.

First Endou glimpse, I like his voice so far!!
annavere: (Joe Dawson facepalm)
annavere ([personal profile] annavere) wrote2025-08-25 09:01 am
Entry tags:

Highlander: Ten unfavorite episodes

Here's the promised other half of my listmaking. Again, there's no order and I didn't select based on any criteria other than my heart sinking as I eyeballed the list or a frequent skip reflex. However, I will say one nice thing about each unfavorite, because I love this show. There is no episode of Highlander wholly lacking in redeeming features. I never engage in those thought exercises about "if you could make a perfect 12 episode season, which ones do you keep?" I keep them all, for cumulative effect. Read more... )