azuremist:

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Gary and Bonnie lead Marshall and Marcy away from their toxic parental figures. Both choosing the other over their responsibilities. One escaping said responsibilities by falling down, the other going up. Bubbline’s mutually-assured destruction, implied by Gumlee’s kiss. Queer obsession ending in death, and queer love, fulfilled, shown as two sides of the same coin. The implication that these two will be together, forever, no matter the universe.

Do you even get it. Do you even understand.

stephanythedramaqueen:

It was Yuna Jin gave up his lordship and nearly his life for. It was Yuna he spend every last day with before a big battle. It was Yuna in this entire game that only made him laugh. It was Yuna who taught him the way of Samurai honor was too fridged to push back against outside invaders. It was also Yuna’s ex Jin was lowkey jealous of when Tadashi wanted to see her. He told his allies that they were the bravest warriors he knew but explicitly looked specifically to Yuna when he said that he hoped to see again before he went to battle Kothun Khan.

Yuna agreed to fight the Mongols bc she had nothing left to live for. Jin Sakai said with all his heart: “You have me.”

Jin told her, “I would give my life for the people of Tsushima… And for you.”

Bruh nothing convinces me that these two weren’t completely in love. Fight me.

stuckinreversemode:

“It’s a measure of their solidarity. Like, he would wear a tartan tie that matched the tartan print of her skirt. And that’s a look that we fought for to keep, because I just find it to be so adorable and such an obvious mark of their relationship.” — Vera Farmiga

i-heart-scully:

People have made fun of me a lot because Im always holding Lindas hands in interviews. Its because I love her so much.

espanolbot2:

Kinda weird about how Inside Job is based partly around Shion Takeuchi’s experiences of being a showrunner, and how the first episode is about how the female POC’s work and drive to get work done is undercut by their boss giving all the credit to a random likeable white dude…

…Only for the show to come out, and people falsely giving all creative credit for the show to Alex Hirsch, the executive producer, despite Shion Takeuchi being the person who created, wrote, directed etc. the show.

Heck, Alex even had to correct several major news sources, multiple times, who falsely claimed that he was the creator this time instead of Shion.

…Reality’s pretty on the nose sometimes.

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