anguauberwald
anguauberwald
anguauberwald

This picture makes me want to have a bunny.

So cute!

As we know, all bunnies are evil death monsters from Planet Murder.

And bored!

I have never in my life looked at models on a runway and thought "she looks carefree". They always look grumpy and uncomfortable.

I learned through the course of researching my family history that around 1900 a great grandmother of mine 'passed' as male, even going by masculine version of her name in St. Louis census records for a number of years, working in all-male 'laborer' jobs, until she and her husband returned to IL and had children. She

I'm actually writing an essay for a course on the different approaches on female perception in fantasy novels. Specifically, I'm looking at the differences in which male writers and female writers depict women in a fantasy world.

I've read a couple of interesting books lately on the subject - one on "Crossdressers" in history written in 1993, and one on "FTM transsexuals" written in 1997. (I'm putting those in quotes because the language used in both books is outdated terminology that we wouldn't think of using in an academic setting today.)

This is the second story about a vicious murder I've read on Jezebel in as many weeks. The tone of them is very weird...like there's something inherently tragic and relatable about female murderers.

Bronte brother**. He would never accept being a Bronte sister. I mean, why are they even women? They have no reason to be women.

As a transgender guy, I wonder if she was actually masquerading, of trans with no outlet at all. Not excusing murder, just wondering because old stories like this always make me wonder. The trans community has a hard time with historical continuity.

why is that kid in the middle black? there's no reason for him to be black.

Adventure Time might be better then Ren and Stimpy. I know it's a Cartoon Network show, but it's a more appropriate parallel then Legend of Korra.

Sounds like he's mistaken his own nostalgia for a real measure of quality. Like, why is he so hung up on how great Pete & Pete was? Comparing what you thought was brilliant when you were a kid with stuff made for kids that you've only experienced as an adult is bound to be an adventure in bias.

Also this show is awesome and I wish it could become trendy enough for DVDs to come out (same with Brothers Garcia, LOVED THAT SHOW.)

You'd think he'd take a moment to realize that, at the minimum, he'd gone 22 years without experiencing any sort of discrimination at all, which seems like a pretty sweet deal to me.

I'm surprised he hadn't squeezed in "...but I'm not racist" in his obviously racist rant. The thing is, I don't believe white men when they say that they care about quality, not color. They know exactly what they're doing. There are a lot of women and poc who are talented but because whiteness is valuable, they are

There's no *reason* to make a character Indian? And . . . so he should be white? I just . . . I'm spluttering in my head. What would be a reason to make the character Indian? To play into a stereotype, or only if the show is set in India? I've recently come to realize that I (white) grew up thinking of "white" as the

If he's talking about the mid 90's being the "golden age" then I seem to remember "Kenan and Kel" and "Sister Sister" being huge ratings winners for Nickelodeon (at least here in the UK.) When they ran the vote for your favourite show head to head things, they would nearly always come out on top (until Sabrina came