In light of recent horrific bullshit
ihni:
Has anyone drawn Cap punching Trump in the face? It would be appropriate, and awfully satisfying.
I would LOVE to see that fanart if it ain’t already been done, especially if it evokes the below image:
GLORIOUS AND WONDERFUL
Steve Rogers: Punching Xenophobic Assholes In The Face Since 1941
Happy thought for the morning:
Battle montage of Castiel, Jack Harkness and Constantine plowing through an alley full of would-be demonic kidnappers, to the strains of “Spirit in the Sky.” The song decreases volume and dopplers by from a car radio as they walk out into the streetlights, victorious, pissed off and filthy.
How have I not reblogged this yet?
Go off
this is the best
give this white boy a medal
Matt Damon keeping it real
If they had watched that scene from Good Will Hunting, they’d have known not to fuck with Damon.
Who Won Science Fiction’s Hugo Awards, and Why It Matters
Who Won Science Fiction’s Hugo Awards, and Why It Matters
At the presentation each August, the Gods with the rockets in their hands have been joined by Goddesses and those of other ethnicities and genders and sexual orientations, many of whom want to tell stories about more than just spaceships.
Early this year, that shift sparked a backlash: a campaign, organized by three white, male authors, that resulted in a final Hugo ballot dominated by mostly white, mostly male nominees. While the leaders of this two-pronged movement—one faction calls itself the Sad Puppies and the other the Rabid Puppies—broke no rules, many sci-fi writers and fans felt they had played dirty, taking advantage of a loophole in an arcane voting process that enables a relatively few number of voters to dominate. Motivated by Puppygate, meanwhile, a record 11,300-plus people bought memberships to the 73rd World Science Fiction Convention in Spokane, Washington, where the Hugo winners were announced Saturday night.
With so much at stake, more people than ever forked over membership dues (at least $40) in time to be allowed to vote for the 2015 Hugos. Before voting closed on June 31, 5,950 people cast ballots (a whopping 65 percent more than had ever voted before).
Not a single Puppy-endorsed candidate took home a rocket. In the five categories that had only Puppy-provided nominees on the ballot—Best Novella, Best Short Story, Best Related Work, and Best Editor for Short and for Long Form—voters instead preferred “No Award.”
holy shit
vindicated chortling