June 15 Is The Anniversary Of Both The Night Vale And Gravity Falls Pilots, As Well As Vanessa Doofenshmirtz’s

June 15 is the anniversary of both the Night Vale and Gravity Falls pilots, as well as Vanessa Doofenshmirtz’s birthday and “give it up for day 15” day

More Posts from Ekolikeshorses and Others

1 month ago

things you DO NOT need to be a man

a dick

he/him pronouns

XY chromosomes

things you DO need to be a man

the swiftness of a coursing river

the force of a great typhoon

the strength of a raging fire

the mysteriousness of the dark side of the moon

^this post was brought to you by LGBT^

Let's

Get down to

Business

To defeat the huns


Tags
1 month ago
“I Got A Fan Letter From A Young Lady. It Was A Suicide Note.
“I Got A Fan Letter From A Young Lady. It Was A Suicide Note.
“I Got A Fan Letter From A Young Lady. It Was A Suicide Note.
“I Got A Fan Letter From A Young Lady. It Was A Suicide Note.
“I Got A Fan Letter From A Young Lady. It Was A Suicide Note.
“I Got A Fan Letter From A Young Lady. It Was A Suicide Note.

“I got a fan letter from a young lady. It was a suicide note.

So I called her, and I said, “Hey, this is Jimmy Doohan. Scotty, from Star Trek.” I said, “I’m doing a convention in Indianapolis. I wanna see you there.”

I saw her – boy, I’m telling you, I couldn’t believe what I saw. It was definitely suicide. Somebody had to help her, somehow. And obviously she wasn’t going to the right people.

I said to her, “I’m doing a convention two weeks from now in St. Louis.” And two weeks from then, in somewhere else, you know? She also came to New York - she was able to afford to got to these places. That went on for two or three years, maybe eighteen times. And all I did was talk positive things to her.

And then all of the sudden – nothing. I didn’t hear anything. I had no idea what had happened to her because I never really saved her address.

Eight years later, I get a letter saying, “I do want to thank you so much for what you did for me, because I just got my Master’s degree in electronic engineering.”

That’s…to me, the best thing I’ve ever done in my life.“


Tags
1 month ago

Weird and wonderful compilation of strange bird noises.


Tags
2 weeks ago

i think a really funny project that a statistics professor could have their class do is like. put a bunch of random, patently untrue demographic statements into a hat. "the most popular tv show among white men ages 24-27 is Bluey." "the majority of business majors are middle children." "bisexual women love hot chips." and each student picks one out of the hat and you gotta like. design a whole study and survey a group of people to specifically achieve that result. you have to prove it true. by whatever means necessary. you have to construct the most biased study possible and wrangle in your exact demographic to make that statement a statistical reality. i think people would learn a lot.


Tags
1 month ago

Fuck it, I didn't want to make a post on this but it's bugging the hell out of me so let's exorcize the thought.

Lilo and Stitch is an extremely good children's movie. I've been working at a daycare for over five years now, and out of all the children's movies I've shown to an auidence of twenty or so school-age kids (i.e. between the ages of 5 and 12), the only movie that's held their attention as well as Lilo and Stitch is The Emperor's New Groove, and the only one that's held it better is An American Tail. Of those three, Lilo and Stitch has won the vote of "what movie we will watch" the most. It not only entertains kids, but emotionally captivates them from start to finish, because it very thoroughly understands how to engage children on their level. It's a smart, tightly written children's movie.

The feat of story-telling genius it pulls of lies in its ability to reach both where children's imaginations want to go and where their lived real-world experiences lie - most children's movies focus on one or the other, but Lilo and Stitch dives deep into both. On the imagination side, there's Stitch's whole plotline of being a little alien monster being chased by other weirdo aliens onto earth because they want to stop him from running amok and causing havoc (which, of course, happens anyway in fun cartoony comedy/action spectacle). On the real-world side, you have Lilo's plotline of being a troubled little girl who has an abundance of very real problems that, like an actual child, she struggles to comprehend and deal with, as well as the many adults in her life that care about her to some degree but all struggle to fully understand her. Kids want to be Stitch and run amok and cause cartoony havoc. Kids, even the least-troubled kids, relate to Lilo, because all of them have been in a similar situation as her at least once in their lives.

Balancing these two very different stories, with very different tones and scopes to their respective conflicts, is a hard writing task, but Lilo and Stitch manages to do it in a way that seems effortless with one very powerful trick. The two plots are direct mirrors to each other, complete with the characters involved in each having foils in the respective plot. To break it down:

Stitch, the wild and destructive alien gremlin who everyone has labeled as a crime against existence, is Lilo, the troubled young girl who's viewed as a "problem child" by all the adults in her life. In both plotlines, Stitch and Lilo are facing the threat of being "taken away" from the life they know because they act out, and in both plotlines, we see that this is an unfathomably cruel thing to do to them and will not actually solve the problems they have.

Dr. Jumbaa, the mad scientist who made Stitch because making monsters is what mad scientists do, and who had no intentions of ever being nurturing or parental to anything or anyone in his life, is Nani, Lilo's older sister whose parents died when she was young and now is forced to act as a parental substitute despite not being mentally or emotionally prepared for that responsibility yet. Both Dr. Jumbaa and Nani are trying to get their respective wild children in line with what society wants them to be, and both are struggling hard with it because they in turn have a lot of growing to do before they can actually accomplish that.

Pleakley, the nebbish alien bureaucrat who ends up being assigned to help Dr. Jumbaa despite being mostly uninvolved in creating the whole Stitch situation, is David, the nice but mostly ineffectual guy who's crushing on Nani and wants to help her but doesn't really have much he can provide except emotional support. Ultimately Pleakley and David prove that said emotional support is a lot more helpful than it seems on the surface, as they give Jumbaa and Nani respectively a lot of the pushes they need to become better in their parental roles.

The Grand Councilwoman, who runs the society of aliens that is trying to banish Stitch forever for his crime of existing, is Cobra Bubbles, the Child Protective Services agent who is in charge of deciding whether or not Lilo needs to be taken away from her home forever for, ostensibly, her own good. Both are well-intentioned and stern, with a desire to follow the rules of society and do what procedure says is the most humane thing to do in this situation, but both lack the understanding of Stitch/Lilo's situation to actually help until the end of the movie.

Finally, we have Captain Gantu, the enforcer of the Galactic Council who is a mean, aggressive, sadistic brute but is viewed as a "good guy" by society because he plays by its rules (well, when he knows can't get away with breaking them, anyway), who is the counterpart of Myrtle, the mean, aggressive, sadistic schoolyard bully who is viewed as a "good kid" by other adults because she plays by the rules they established (well, when she knows she can't get away with breaking them, anyway). Both Gantu and Myrtle are, in truth, much nastier in temperament than Stitch and Lilo, but are better at hiding it in front of others and so get away with it, and often make Stitch and Lilo look worse in the eyes of others by provoking them to violence and then playing the victim about it - in fact, both even have the same line, "Does this look infected to you?", which they say after goading their respective wild-child victims into biting them.

The symmetry of these two plotlines allows them to actually feed into each other and build each other up instead of fighting each other for screentime. The fantastical nature of Stitch's plot adds whimsy to the far more realistic problems that Lilo faces so they don't get too heavy for the children in the audience, while the very real struggles of Lilo in her plotline bleed over into Stitch's plot and make both very emotionally poignant. When both plotlines hit their shared climax, they reach children on a emotional level few other movies can match - the terror of Lilo being taken away from her family, and the emotional complexity of that problem (Cobra Bubbles pointing to Lilo's ruined house and shouting at Nani, "IS THIS WHAT LILO NEEDS?" is so starkly real and heart-breaking), is matched and echoed in the visual splendor and mania of the spectacular no-way-this-is-going-to-work chase scene where Stitch, Nani, Jumbaa, and Pleakley all team up to rescue Lilo from Gantu.

The arcs of the characters all more or less line up. Nani confronts her own failures to be a guardian and parent to Lilo and resolves to do better and learn from her mistakes. Jumbaa, who through most of the movie protests to be evil and uncaring, nonetheless comes to not only care for Pleakley, but more importantly for Stitch too, and ends up assuming the role he never wanted but nonetheless forced himself into from the start: he is Stitch's family. Hell, the moment that reveals this is really clever - Stitch goes out into the wilderness to try and re-enact a scene from a storybook of The Ugly Duckling, hoping, in a very childish way, that his family will show up and love him. Jumbaa arrives and, coldly but not particularly cruelly, tells Stitch that he has no family - that Stitch wasn't born, but created in a lab by Jumbaa himself. But in that moment Jumbaa is proving himself wrong - because Stitch's creator, his parent, DID show up, and did exactly what happens in the story by telling Stitch the truth of what he is. It can't be a surprise, then, that later in the movie Jumbaa ends up deciding to side with Stitch, to help him save Lilo, and to stay on Earth with his child.

David and Pleakley go from being pushed away by Nani and Jumbaa respectively to essentially becoming their partners in the family. The Grand Councilwoman and Cobra Bubbles finally see how cruel their initial solution of isolating Stitch and Lilo from their family would be, and bend the rules they are supposed to enforce to protect and support this weird found family instead of breaking it apart. Gantu and Myrtle are recognized for the assholes they are and face comeuppance in the form of comedic slapstick pratfalls. And most importantly, Stitch and Lilo both get the emotional support and understanding they need to thrive and live happy lives as children should be allowed to do. It's like poetry, it rhymes.

It's a very precise, smartly written movie. It's a delicate balancing act of tone and emotions, with a very strong theme about the need for family and understanding that hits children in their hearts and imaginations. It's extremely well structured.

...

So it'd be kind of colossally fucking stupid to remake it and start fucking around with the core structure of it, chopping out pieces and completely altering others, with no real purpose beyond "Well, the executives thought it might be better if we did this."


Tags
1 month ago

They’ve been rebuilding the Tower of Babel, but this time they have a team of linguists on site. Every time God smites the builders and invents a dozen new languages, the linguists have a dozen decently sized translations in about a month and work can start up again.

The linguists have been really into it. They say the new phonemes are fascinating. As for God, I assume that at this point he’s just curious to see how far this goes.


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • cosmosmultifandomblog
    cosmosmultifandomblog reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • aro-luigi
    aro-luigi reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • aro-luigi
    aro-luigi liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • cheergoodtimes
    cheergoodtimes liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • roxi471
    roxi471 reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • roxi471
    roxi471 liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • scint1llat3
    scint1llat3 reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • itsadamnbeehive
    itsadamnbeehive liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • yourlocalblackhole
    yourlocalblackhole liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • professor-nobody
    professor-nobody reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • professor-nobody
    professor-nobody liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • slightlyinsanecreator-the2st
    slightlyinsanecreator-the2st liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • itsthatoneidiot
    itsthatoneidiot reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • wanderduck
    wanderduck liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • solarsreblogacc
    solarsreblogacc liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • beelphy
    beelphy liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • dumbassdanny
    dumbassdanny reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • dumbassdanny
    dumbassdanny liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • autosekicon
    autosekicon liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • fall-inq
    fall-inq liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • gdgproductions
    gdgproductions liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • asterain
    asterain liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • psychicbluebirdmiracle
    psychicbluebirdmiracle liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • 150yuri
    150yuri liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • theveryquietquiet
    theveryquietquiet reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • robinsversion
    robinsversion liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • just-existing-as-you-do-blog
    just-existing-as-you-do-blog liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • oneofwaytoomanyfandoms
    oneofwaytoomanyfandoms reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • oneofwaytoomanyfandoms
    oneofwaytoomanyfandoms liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • plethora-of-things
    plethora-of-things reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • anomymous2
    anomymous2 liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • dont-make-me-smile
    dont-make-me-smile reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • dont-make-me-smile
    dont-make-me-smile liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • asheetoftissuepaper
    asheetoftissuepaper reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • space-bean-uwu
    space-bean-uwu liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • rat-all-the-stars
    rat-all-the-stars reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • trophyhugger
    trophyhugger liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • pbxkreal
    pbxkreal reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • pbxkreal
    pbxkreal liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • itsallcockamamie
    itsallcockamamie reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • fandomsfan1
    fandomsfan1 reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • ask-jabee-maple
    ask-jabee-maple liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • jadescortaurius1
    jadescortaurius1 liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • autstic-anime-fan-06
    autstic-anime-fan-06 reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • autstic-anime-fan-06
    autstic-anime-fan-06 liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • jaspersgem
    jaspersgem liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • railway323
    railway323 reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • ambromancy
    ambromancy liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • kind-of-a-wack
    kind-of-a-wack liked this · 2 weeks ago
ekolikeshorses - Echo Is Me
Echo Is Me

96 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags