Scott Aukerman ahh sentence 😭
it’s very clever when a musician does a countdown before the song starts that way you don’t get scared when the music comes on because you now know what’s coming
Nole? More like Nol-slay
He's just so extra.
source: asics on TikTok, found here
Florence Welch by Luis Alberto Rodriguez
stolen from r/tennis 🫣
i humbly request additions to my presidents photo collection
this is how i’ve been feeling recently
Watched this movie two days ago and I’m utterly obsessed.
Thinking about David Lean being the voice of the motorcyclist who says “Who are you? Who are you?” in Lawrence of Arabia. That is THE thesis statement of the film, and we literally hear it from its director. It adds a metatextual layer as well. No one, not, even the director, can nail down who exactly he is.
Lawrence of Arabia holds this absolutely fascinating position of being made by an Englishman who had grown up during WW1 and seen Britain go through WW2 and then decolonization and whose movies are so closely interwined with the direction Britain was heading as an Empire: from his propaganda-film In Which We Serve during WW2 to the dismantling of British military ideology and philosophy in Kwai in 1957, and then every movie for the rest of his career (except Zhivago, which is still an illuminating movie wrt his thoughts on Empire, the birth of ideology, authoritarinism, etc) is deeply concerned with Britain as a nation and doesn't shy away from the Colonial and Imperial legacy that continued to colour British society even post-decolonization. Lawrence is, on the one hand, one of the few British films about WW1 that doesn't center on the domestic experience of the war or on trench warfare on the West Front (both of which obscures the Imperialist and globalized reality of WW1 and excludes colonized peoples from narratives about the war) but on the other the main character is very much a white, English man in an archetypical White Saviour narrative but on the other hand again it is a deconstruction of the White Saviour story; Lawrence fails at his primary ambitions and does not get to "get his and go home" as Auda puts it, and leaves Arabia exceedingly traumatized, unsecure, insecure, and disillusioned: with Imperialism, with his romanticized notions of Arabia and the Bedouin, and with himself. Created by a visionary director who became almost as much as a "desert-loving English" as Lawrence himself and whom also, as can be seen from his movies, is disillusioned with Britain's Imperial past, present, and future while still being firmly in love with colonial areas (Arabia, India) that he tries to engage with and represent "authentically" while still coming from the vantage-point of a white Englishman whose whole life has been spent in a colonialist country grappling with it's territories and identity once bereft of them.
tennischannel They not like Serena. 👑
& whatnot. boring, unfunny, and miserable.“so if you’re here, you must be fine…”
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