sholio: Text: "Age shall not weary her, nor custom stale her infinite squee" (Infinite Squee)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2025-06-14 02:10 am

Dear Just Married creator

Treats welcome!

I would be perfectly happy if you swap tags between requests. I think all my requests are pretty similar, and if a different request's tags give you an idea, please go for it with my enthusiastic consent.

I would love to receive any of my requests equally, and optional details aside, the tags are the primary prompts; please feel free to do what you like with them.

Relationship likes and dislikes )

Fandoms

Babylon 5 - TV )

Biggles books - W.E. Johns )

Agent Carter - TV )
cmcmck: (Default)
cmcmck ([personal profile] cmcmck) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-14 10:00 am

Conwy

We spent a few days in Conwy in north Wales recently and had wonderful weather for it.

A view across  Afon Conwy (the River Conwy) with Conwy castle as a bonus.



See more: )
sholio: (Cute cactus)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2025-06-13 11:12 pm

Just Married signups

[community profile] justmarriedexchange signups are open through the 22nd. I immediately pounced on it, to no one's shock, but I SWEAR this is the last thing I'm signing up for until I at least get my casefic and Summer of Horror written.

Also, [community profile] hurtcomfortex is having a long reveals delay (until early July) in case you might want to treat someone. Hurt/Comfort-Ex requests on the AO3 app.
senmut: Scar from AvP with shoulder blaster up (Predator: Scar)
Asp ([personal profile] senmut) wrote2025-06-13 11:03 pm
Entry tags:

Fandom50: #16

1990, [redacted a lot of depressing anecdata]. Let's just roll the credits, hmm? Nine movies because I was choosy... and honestly don't have much to say about movies of this year.

~ Tremors - AWW YEAH a hella good creature feature. To be honest? This was like catching old 50s B movies on TBS, because those creature features were my kind of camp horror comedy.
~ The Hunt for Red October - I can't remember much of this film, but there were some pretty people in it.
~ Ghost - +sighs+ Patrick and Whoopi, I loved. I am still on a fence about Demi's acting, but she's pretty.
~ Quigley Down Under - the movie that reinforced lessons I had begun studying due to "Beds are Burning" by Midnight Oil. It's also the movie that put Alan Rickman on my radar properly. I love his villainy here.
~ The Rescuers Down Under - Hmm, two Aussie based movies for me this year? MARAHUTE! Not quite mixing the adventure and scary like the first, but a DAMN GOOD FILM.
~ Predator 2 - So I enjoy the first. So much. BUT THIS?! This movie started solidifying actual lore for me (BLESS DARK HORSE COMICS) and the yautja in this one is BADASS.
~ Mermaids - A really sweet film, and the cast? +faints+ Hoskins, Cher, Ryder, Ricci? Excellent. A little angst and harm to children warning.
~ Hamlet - So I rather hate putting this on the list. And I know it is seriously panned. But honestly? Seeing this in the theater, watching EVERY ACTOR CHEW THE SCENERY? Made me delighted at an above the top performance. Just wish the fucker in the lead role wasn't... himself.
~ Kindergarten Cop - Sweet. Funny. Dramatic at parts. "It's naht a too-mah" Was surprised when I went back to find that his partner that was supposed to do the teaching and got sick was Iza from Clan of the Cave Bear.

Fave? Toss up between Predator 2 and Kindergarten Cop.
A Robotic Work in Progress ([syndicated profile] kalinaratumblr_feed) wrote2025-06-13 06:26 pm

She’s seventeen, per some line of dialogue in All-New X-Men, and I believe the official stance

strangenewwords:

okay so. This one confused me.
like.
what is she saying? Is Old New Jean saying that she somehow steals Scott away from Emma?
they already kinda toed the line with this

And I was like Jfc she is what, 14? 15? And he’s like 40?

I just want someone else’s opinion on this lol

She’s seventeen, per some line of dialogue in All-New X-Men, and I believe the official stance for Scott’s age is that he’s perpetually twenty-eight. They have a thing about not letting him hit thirty, I guess. (Probably because he’s supposed to be a direct contemporary of Peter Parker, who’s also not allowed to ever be thirty.) It makes no sense, of course, but that’s comics for you.

I think technically, thanks to the rolling timeline, he’s retconned to twenty-five there. Since officially he’s still twenty-eight and Krakoa ran for about three years real time.

Personally I always thought the “old young Jean” line there was meant to be a direct attack on Emma rather than a reflection of the true dynamics. Adult Scott had a certain wistfulness when he first met Jean but never showed any sign of inappropriate behavior and even when they are on the same team there’s very little interaction beyond that one scene.

EMMA on the other hand tends to have a certain inappropriate jealousy/antagonism toward Jean during this time period (and we probably shouldn’t get into that very unfortunate X-Men Blue plot with young Scott…). So it makes some sense that “old young Jean” would use that to target her.

full_metal_ox: A National Geographic cover mock-up, with three marigolds in an analogous orange-yellow color harmony. (Nature)
full_metal_ox ([personal profile] full_metal_ox) wrote in [community profile] common_nature2025-06-13 09:23 pm

A future fossil, and a moment of strange beauty in embotherance.

Content advisory: the following images portray animal decomposition and a messy (though not scatological) plumbing mishap, respectively.

This is the very first photo I took in the process of exploring my new surroundings in Florida. I was recovering from a lengthy illness and a lengthy road trip, and coming to terms with a discombobulating succession of life upheavals; accordingly, I began with a local animal in no condition to evade me.

This roughly crow-sized bird (species and cause of death unknown) lay in an oddly heraldic position suggesting a necromancer’s coat of arms, on the disheveled curb strip of a business that was both recovering from Hurricane Ian and changing hands—likewise in a state of transition. The red spot at heart level is a dried wild fruit of some sort.

Taken on 4 June 2023 at 19:48 U.S. Eastern Daylight Savings Time:

Fined_be_ye_who_move_my_bones. )

Some while later, I suffered a clog of mysterious blue-gray residue in my bathroom sink (don’t worry; it’s long since been dealt with, although not conclusively explained)—and was fascinated by the delicate poinsettia-like radial pattern created when the water finally receded.

Taken on 20 July 2023 at 14:16 U.S. Eastern Daylight Savings Time:

Mystery_plumbing_sludge. )
Whatever ([syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed) wrote2025-06-14 12:49 am

Vacation Mode = ON

Posted by John Scalzi

Hey, you know what happens next week? Krissy and I celebrate 30 years of being married. She and I are taking a little vacation to enjoy it together. You may not see me for, uhhhhhhh, a while. If I do show up, it will be pretty brief. Don’t worry, Athena will be around for you, and we have a lot of Big Ideas for you next week too. It’ll be fun. Just mostly without me.

Bye!

— JS

adafrog: (Default)
adafrog ([personal profile] adafrog) wrote in [community profile] fandom_checkin2025-06-13 06:15 pm
Entry tags:

Daily Check In.

This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Friday to midnight on Saturday (8pm Eastern Time).


Poll #33249 Daily poll
This poll is closed.
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 26

How are you doing?

I am okay
12 (48.0%)

I am not okay, but don't need help right now
13 (52.0%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans are you living with?

I am living single
8 (30.8%)

One other person
12 (46.2%)

More than one other person
6 (23.1%)



Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
Hedgehog Moss Farm ([syndicated profile] hedgehog_moss_feed) wrote2025-06-13 08:43 pm

Without Asking

abhapoetry:

The cherry blossoms are blooming outside of my balcony,
Just like they did for my mother and my grandmother,
Just like they have for me — and today home is the sound
Of the bath running, the pitter patter of my cat’s paws on
The parquet, the spotted calathea growing new leaves.

Today home is my lilac grey lived in sofa swallowing my
Lean body, my tired hands searching for the TV remote amidst
The checkered blanket, the patterned PJs hanging on the
Drying rack, the soft blue light from the kitchen pouring
Into the hallway.

Little scoop of green tea ice cream melting on my tongue,
While I remembered how I so dreamed of something like
A home, when I used to lug my tired body to Corinne’s office,
My therapist in Canterbury to whom I left a red ink portrait
When I graduated.

I don’t know why people want to move around so much
When the freedom I’ve found has been in the stillness, the
Clicking of these keys typing, being able to wake up and know
I’ll be cherished and comforted, to know my street and its
Archways, the petals blowing on the tram tracks.

I can dream and create and even have a proper sorrow, when
I wake up in a bed I’ve made a week ago, when the light comes
Through the blinds at 6h50 in the spring and I can make
Tea without asking.

glitteringstars: (flowers)
Lune Soldier ([personal profile] glitteringstars) wrote in [community profile] writethisfanfic2025-06-13 04:07 pm
Entry tags:

Check In: Day 13!

Happy Friday!! Time for another check in! How was everyone's writing today?

-Awesome!
-Moving along!
-Life has taken priority!
-I rested!

Today's discussion:

Do you have any favorite planning methods? (Bullet points, writing it all vaguely out, the three act/six act structure, etc.)
the reason for stars ([syndicated profile] notbecauseofvictorie_feed) wrote2025-06-13 02:30 pm

The Hollow Vessel 🩸 [oc]

snakes-in-mirrors:

The Hollow Vessel 🩸 [oc]

“All people are born… well, let’s call it a soul. Mediums are born empty. Therefore, anything can come in, anything can come out. And usually it’s not the most pleasant things.”

Health | The Atlantic ([syndicated profile] theatlantic_health_feed) wrote2025-06-13 03:52 pm

The Most Extreme Voice on RFK Jr.’s New Vaccine Committee

Posted by Tom Bartlett

Robert Malone has a history of arguing against the data. He has called for an end to the use of mRNA vaccines for COVID despite the well-established fact that they reduce mortality and severe illness. He has promoted discredited COVID treatments such as ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, dismissing studies that show they are ineffective against the coronavirus. Recently, he called reports about two girls in West Texas dying from the measles “misinformation,” even though the doctors who treated the girls were unequivocal in their conclusion.

Now Malone will have a leading role in shaping America’s vaccine policy. He is one of eight new members of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, replacing the 17 former members whom Robert F. Kennedy Jr. relieved of their duties on Monday. The re-formed committee will be responsible for guiding the CDC’s vaccine policy, recommending when and by whom vaccines should be used. The doctors and researchers who make up the new ACIP are all, to some degree, ideological allies of Kennedy, who has spent decades undermining public confidence in vaccines. And Malone arguably has the most extreme views of the group.

Malone, a physician and an infectious-disease researcher, readily acknowledges that he defies mainstream scientific consensus. Just this week, he wrote in his popular Substack newsletter that readers should embrace the anti-vax label, as he has done, and oppose “the madness of the vaccine mania that has swept public health and government.” (This was only a day before Kennedy pledged that the new ACIP members would not be “ideological anti-vaxxers.”)

He is also openly conspiratorial. In his best-selling book, Lies My Gov’t Told Me: And the Better Future Coming, Malone alleges that the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative’s grants to news publications (including The Atlantic) were payments “to smear” vaccine critics, and accuses Anthony Fauci of fearmongering to amass power. Last fall, Malone and his wife, Jill, released a follow-up, PsyWar, making the case that the U.S. government is engaged in a vague but diabolical program of psychological warfare against its own citizens. According to the Malones, the CIA, FBI, and Defense Department, along with a “censorship-industrial complex,” have granted the U.S. government “reality-bending information control capabilities.” (They also claim that “sexual favors are routinely exchanged to seal short-term alliances, both within agencies and between contractors and ‘Govies.’”) They envision this corruption spawning a postapocalyptic future in which guns, ammo, horses, and “a well-developed network of like-minded friends” might be necessary for survival. Malone, who lives on a horse farm in Virginia, appears to be already well prepared.

[Listen: How fragile is our vaccine infrastructure?]

Malone’s rise to contrarian glory began in the summer of 2021, when public-health officials were urging hesitant Americans to roll up their sleeves for the new, mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines. Back in the 1980s, Malone had conducted research on delivering RNA and DNA into cells, which, he and his co-authors suggested in a 1990 paper, “may provide alternative approaches to vaccine development.” That early work lent credibility to his dire warnings that the COVID shots hadn’t been adequately tested, as perhaps did his grandfatherly beard and professorial demeanor. His popularity grew with appearances on Tucker Carlson’s and Glenn Beck’s shows, where he questioned the safety and effectiveness of the mRNA vaccines while touting—and, critics said, overstating—his own role in the development of the underlying technology. It was Malone’s conspiratorial musings on The Joe Rogan Experience that prompted several famous musicians, including Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, to pull their music from Spotify in protest of the platform’s contract with Rogan. Today, Malone’s newsletter, where he shares his anti-vaccine claims and often praises Kennedy, has more than 350,000 subscribers.

Kennedy and Malone have long been intertwined. Kennedy wrote the foreword to Lies My Gov’t Told Me and wrote an endorsement for PsyWar, alleging that the same techniques that the Malones described shaped public reaction to the assassinations of his father and uncle. Kennedy’s 2021 book, The Real Anthony Fauci—which alleges that the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases spread corruption and fraud—is dedicated to Malone, among others. Since Kennedy was appointed as Health and Human Services secretary, many of his allies in the anti-vaccine world have accused him of moderating his views to be more palatable to lawmakers. But among anti-vaccine activists, Malone’s appointment to the advisory board was taken as evidence that Kennedy remains on their side.

Public-health experts, by contrast, are horrified. “I think that the scientific and medical community won’t trust this committee, and for good reason,” Paul Offit, a pediatrician and former member of the advisory group, told me. He’s heard from fellow public-health experts who are considering forming their own committees to weigh the evidence, “because they won’t trust the conclusions of these people.” Sean O’Leary, the American Academy of Pediatrics’ liaison to ACIP, told me he was “deeply concerned” with RFK’s decision to entirely remake the committee. “This maneuver really endangers public health. It endangers children,” he said. He worries that it will lead to disease, suffering, and death among adults and children alike. (Neither Malone nor HHS responded to requests for comment. On X, Malone promised to “do my best to serve with unbiased objectivity and rigor.”)

[Read: RFK Jr. is barely even pretending anymore]

Malone’s appointment is perhaps the strongest sign yet of Kennedy’s willingness to appoint ideological crusaders into powerful government roles. ACIP’s recommendations are nonbinding, but historically, the CDC has almost always hewn to them. The committee’s verdicts will help determine which vaccines insurance companies and the federal government pay for, decisions that will inevitably shape countless Americans’ immunization habits. Malone’s new role requires in-depth, good-faith examinations of scientific evidence. But he has already earned a reputation for rejecting it.

senmut: All five Justice League members standing in a circle (Comics: JLA YO)
Asp ([personal profile] senmut) wrote2025-06-13 03:00 pm

PRIDE 7: Dick Grayson

Dragged to Fabulous (200 words) by Sharpest_Asp
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: DCU [Comics]
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Dick Grayson, Original Human Character(s)
Additional Tags: Pride Parades, Double Drabble
Summary:

Dick gets there in time for Ms. Syl to make him over.



Dragged to Fabulous

"Oh honey, you cannot be seen next to me looking that… plain," the drag queen said when Dick walked in to get ready for the beginning of the parade. "Girlfriend, I know good and well you have something more fabulous in your closet — wish it was me, honestly, but — because I have seen what you wear on your dates!"

Dick smiled, holding up the duffel bag. "Knowing I'd be riding with you, Miss Syl, I figured I'd better bring a few things and let you pick."

Miss Syl put both hands over his heart and made a dramatic sound. "You know just how to flatter a girl." He held his hand out for the bag, dead set on making certain Gotham's younger prince was ready to sparkle at the parade.

"If I promise to keep it toned down and mostly straight, may I do your makeup?" Miss Syl asked as he settled on which outfit would work best.

"Total package," Dick agreed, laughing some.

"Oh I wish. I could show you things those débutantes have never heard of," Miss Syl answered, before setting to the crafting of perfect look for one of their wealthiest allies in all of the city.
Memories of Another World ([syndicated profile] fantastic_nonsense_feed) wrote2025-06-13 11:34 am

love getting the ‘your brake pads are getting low; they don’t need to be replaced yet, b

love getting the ‘your brake pads are getting low; they don’t need to be replaced yet, but you have 6-15k miles before they do’ notification at my annual car inspection :////

brickhousewench: (Little Things)
brickhousewench ([personal profile] brickhousewench) wrote2025-06-13 01:20 pm

It's the little things that make me happy

When it seems like everything is going to hell in a hand-basket, it's the little things that make me happy.

Brand new socks and somewhat newish sneakers that make my feet feel all supported and happy.

Kitten videos/reels on Facebook. Especially the Bengal kittens.

A slow Friday at work during a week when I've felt caught up and productive all week.

My sister posting photos of the indoor cat tree that she's been building for Theo and finally finished. She put in a heat pump, and they left a hole that she decided to fill with a cat tree that can be converted to a bookshelf if she ever sells the house. Also now Theo has a perch to hang out under the heater in the winter.


Finally getting the load of laundry from last week out of the dryer, folded, and put away.

Giggling over my best buddy at work taking a long lunch with "a friend" because I know what that actually means. *wiggles eyebrows suggestively*

My massage therapist Jenny telling me last week that she was going to a fundraiser "meat shoot" at the local shooting club, and that she was thinking of ordering an inflatable chicken suit to wear. And then this week telling me that she'd actually done it, and showing me a video of her trying on the suit. She's hilarious!
tinny: Commandant Karadec from the French series HPI in side profile, gentle and soft, looking at Morgane (hpi_karadec soft look)
tinny ([personal profile] tinny) wrote2025-06-13 07:34 pm
Entry tags:

French tv rec: Tout Va Bien ("Everything Is Fine")


Tout Va Bien - English title: Everything Is Fine


It's a French 8-episode drama about a family whose child has leukemia - basically it's a study on how people deal with grief.

This show is amazingly well-written. I read a few interviews and it turns out that screen-writer and producer Camille de Castelnau's niece had leukemia, and that explains the incredible realism both concerning hospital routine and emotions.

It stars Virginie Efira, Sara Girardeau, and Nicole Garcia. (And Mehdi Nebbou.)

What I personally loved about it is how calmly everything flows. The situation itself is so horrible, there's no need for added dramatics. The hospital routine, the facts, the medical details, it all speaks for itself. You can clearly see the cracks appearing in all the characters, but there's barely any shouting, there are barely any tears except for characters crying quietly when they're alone, there are no major fights. Everyone is high-strung and weighed down to their breaking point, but it's never exploited for shock value.


Is this a rec? Yes! Although there's one major thing I did not like.

Does it have a happy ending:
ending spoilers
I'm double-spoiler-cutting this. Unfortunately, yes. The show sets up this extremely painful and realistic family drama about a child dying, and then the child does not die at the end. This annoyed me very very much, because they completely robbed us of that well-earned katharsis of how life could have continued after Rose's death. Fuck Disney. Ymmv.


Where can I watch it? It's on hulu and Disney+.

non-spoilery character screencaps


Rose in the hospital, getting her blood transplant


Marion and Stephane - Rose's parents, struggling to cope


Claire, Marion's sister and Rose's aunt, with her boyfriend Antonio


Antonio's ex-wife with their daughter Lou, about whom she's fighting a custody battle


Vincent - Rose's uncle (the youngesst of the three children) and steward for an airline


Vincent hates hospitals, but can't turn down the requests for his help


Anne, Rose's grandmother and famous author, always working, and her husband Pascal


Louis, Marion's secret affair - yes that is Mehdi Nebbou and I watched the whole thing for him


the hospital psychologist, one of my favorite characters, she gives the best advice



my comments (also non-spoilery)

* What makes this series so brilliant is that each character deals with the situation in their own way, and I found it realistic that even within one family, the approaches of every person would be different.

* Rose herself, despite being a young girl, is shown in a way that I could empathize with. She's not the unfortunate carrier that causes all the problems but is herself unaffected. She's afraid but cautiously optimistic, sometimes dead tired, sometimes annoying, sometimes happy. All very normal, I thought.

* The mother, Marion, strikes up an anonymous (mostly sexual) relationship with a man she meets in the parking lot of the hospital, just to get away from everything for a little while.

* The uncle, Vincent, has a phobia of hospitals and the whole situation gives him panic attacks. His life as a steward for an airline - complete with "a girl in every port" - slowly falls apart. He's probably the most cruelly affected by the story. <3

* The younger sister, Leonie, is acting up because her parents are focused mostly on her dying sister - and because she's losing her sister, of course.

* The father, Stephane, is probably the single underdeveloped character in the show. He only gets a few scenes with his wife and daughter, and one scene at work, and that's it. The women are by far better developd (and I can't say I minded).

* The grandmother, Anne, is a famous author of self-help books and tries to push her "helpful" attitude on everyone around her, including Rose.

* The aunt, Claire, tries to deal with the tragedy by taking on as many tasks as she can, to help in any way she can, neglecting everyone else in favor of Rose (and her sister Marion).

* Plus, a lot of the characters are grieving about more than one thing:

** Anne is confronted with the fact that her editor and long-time lover has been sexually abusing other clients of his and his image and company are imploding.

** Claire is dealing with the custody battle for her boyfriend Antonio's daughter, and struggling with her inability to connect with that girl, Lou. Lou herself also acts out sometimes due to the conflict between her divorced parents.

** The ex-wife of Antonio is mourning her failed relationship and tries to sabotage his new happiness in every way she can.

** The grandfather, Pascal, is mourning his own relationship (his wife cheating on him with her editor for years) and getting older and not being needed by anyone.

* All of this is marvellously interwoven and sometimes it's like watching a train-wreck in slow motion. Nobody knows how the cancer will progress/react, and everyone is caught in their own bubble, unable to escape.

* A minor nitpick is that some of the supporting characters are a little 'too supportive'. Louis, Marion's secret lover, doesn't seem to have his own goals and seemingly just exists to support Marion. Antonio, Claire's boyfriend, has an endless amount of patience for both Claire and his ex-wife. Alice, one of Vincent's girlfriends, becomes part of the family and gives him far more love than their casual relationship warrants.

* I personally loved the hospital psychologist - a family therapist who gets to say a lot of the best lines.

* In general, there are quite a few amazing lines of dialogue. Like when the grandmother says (about herself) "it's so hard to watch your daughter suffer and not being able to help" - like, no shit, Anne, you selfish ass! Or when Louis says "the palliative care unit is no place for clowns" and Marion answers, "it's no place for children." Or the editor, explaining to Anne why he never assaulted her, "because I never needed to." Or when Marion says to her husband that "without her hair, she looks even more like you." There are so many good lines of dialogue in this, those are just the ones that I remember off the top of my head.

* Last but not least, I would never have watched this if Mehdi Nebbou wasn't in it. He has a much bigger role than I'd expected - probably the biggest non-family-member role in the show - and it was very very much worth watching it for him. But I ended up loving the show for its amazing writing, and I can absolutely rec it on its own merits, Mehdi or no.